B5's writing didn't help.Bester is what happens when you try way too hard to sound diabolical. He wasn't Mirror Chekov so much as he was a cheap knockoff of a Bond villain.
B5's writing didn't help.Bester is what happens when you try way too hard to sound diabolical. He wasn't Mirror Chekov so much as he was a cheap knockoff of a Bond villain.
It sure didn't.B5's writing didn't help.
Always just felt like he was channeling Mirror Chekov for Bester.
Bester is what happens when you try way too hard to sound diabolical. He wasn't Mirror Chekov so much as he was a cheap knockoff of a Bond villain.
Bester is what happens when you try way too hard to sound diabolical. He wasn't Mirror Chekov so much as he was a cheap knockoff of a Bond villain.
She did well in Carbon Creek. No one could have done much with most of the scripts they were given in the first two seasons. I felt she, like the rest of the show, improved afterwords.The following quote is from Jolene Blalock's acting coach: ""
For me, the big miss on Enterprise was Scott Bakula. He never seemed comfortable in the role.
And yeah, Koening just isn't a good actor. Bester was a fun character (sometimes), but the performance was way too overdone. And no one likes their ham with watery egg
I credit Bakula for being a one of the few saving graces of Enterprise (along with Linda Park and John Billingsley). Anthony Montgomery was the very definition of "zero charisma". I will agree the writing on ST:E was lousy with neither Berman nor Braga giving two shites about quality, therefore, Bakula couldn't get "comfortable" with the substandard material.
In all seriousness Walter Koenig is a fine actor. His pre-Star Trek appearances on Mr. Novak, The Alfred Hitchcock Hour, and I, Spy was excellent and more than justified his hire on Star Trek. Granted, Bester on B5 was a bit "overdone," however, that was more to do with J. Michael Straczynski's overwrought melodramatic style than Koenig's acting choices. You make it sound as if he was Derek Jacobi's character of "Jackson Hedley" on "Frasier," and nothing could be further from the truth. I would rank Koenig in the upper half of all Star Trek series regulars across ALL the series.
The only thing "watery" were my eyes when I watched his performance on Columbo!
How about too many supposed "aliens" that aren't plausible for a moment as anything other than actors in foam rubber drag? That, honestly, is the limitation of Star Trek that makes most of it irredeemably hokey these days.
I know I'm a bit of clown, but there was nothing flippant about my post.In all seriousness
I know I'm a bit of clown, but there was nothing flippant about my post.
For me, the big miss on Enterprise was Scott Bakula. He never seemed comfortable in the role.
Archer was a Starship Captain in name only.Agreed. He's an incredibly likable actor, but his relaxed, aww shucks demeanor just made it really hard for me to buy him as a starship captain.
Archer was a Starship Captain in name only.
That was the whole point of the character, and I think Backula nailed it perfectly.
Archer had no experience to go with and was constantly managing to get things done just by the seat of his pants.
LUCK was what got him through the first couple of years as the Captain of the NX-01 and eventually that developed into the skill to be the first Great one.
I think folks spend too much time internally comparing him to Kirk and Picard (probably not even realizing it) and lose sight of the fact that this was a time before humans had any idea of how to contend with what was out there.
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There wasn't much I didn't like about STE.
And it's still a better series than what we're getting now.
And it's still a better series than what we're getting now.
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