Actually, once he asked her to stay on board -- and she agreed -- his perogative to distrust her and ignore her counsel went right out the airlock. As far as I was concerned, the "conflict" was contrived and phony. If T'Pol's permanent posting to Enterprise had been shoved down his throat and hers, the conflict would have been credible.
Didn't stop them from having conflict in the first season in pretty much every episode. I think Andorian Incident summed it up pretty well: where do your loyalties lie? And even after that, the crew still eavesdropped on her communications with Vulcan (Breaking the Ice), etc. I saw Fallen Hero as a turning point -- both in Archer's acceptance of T'Pol and his trust in her as well as T'Pol's ability to appeal to his emotions.
I thought that was set up well and handled not too shabbily.
Too much, IMO. I frankly didn't need the ham-handed "Look! Look! We're just like TOS, except the black character is driving and the Asian character is answering the phone!")
I think that's what I mean about weak female characters in my criticisms. Hoshi could've been interesting, but unlike Joss Whedon, our writers had a hard time pining down how to make female characters interesting and hot at the same time. They shouldn't have worried about hot, imo.
So, I would argue that Trip's remarks (re: "T'Pol's non-interference crap") in The Expanse were colored by the vaporization of his sister.
Considering Cogenitor was
very recent, I'm not so sure. Cogenitor proved to me Trip doesn't get non-interference or why it's important yet, which is why he took on Charlie's plight and she ended up committing suicide.
The crew's reactions are of less interest to me than Archer's behavior. He's the one who asked her to stay. And then dismissed her recommendations. Kirk listened to Spock, even if he didn't always follow his advice.
Vulcan didn't seem like they'd let him continue without her. She was assigned. Archer asking advice from Trip shifts to T'Pol over time. In fact, I think it shifts after ANIS.
T: She also told me that if we return her to Mazar, she'll be killed.
A: By who?
T: She didn't tell me.
A: But you believed her.
T: Yes.
A: Why?
T: I can't accept that she'd sacrifice a lifetime of accomplishment with an act of criminal misconduct.
A: It happens all the time.
T: Not to her. We must take her to the Shuran.
A: You're asking me to put the lives of everyone on board in jeopardy based on your talking to this woman for a couple of hours.
T: (pauses) Captain. (He turns to face T'Pol) Since I've served aboard Enterprise, I've never asked you for anything. I'm asking for this now. Don't return the ambassador to Mazar. Please. (Archer pauses, nods slightly) Thank you.
While Archer does agree to protect V'Lar, he clearly doesn't do it for her.
I bolded the part I thought was what backed up my point: he was swayed by an emotional appeal to his compassion: I have never asked you for anything. I'm asking for this now.
He does it for T'Pol. Which is a nice reflection on the development of their friendship, but also makes my point that the so-called conflict between them is evaporating too quickly in light of Archer's long history of deeply held distrust of Vulcans.
Yes, he does it for T'Pol. But in the course of the episode, he also has more respect for V'Lar. Archer, in my mind, is weeding out "good Vulcans" from "bad Vulcans." He's got more to learn as we see in later episodes.
Point taken in general. I actually think it's well-timed. It's taken him an entire year to develop trust. And even though they have trust, they don't have equality. I am more disappointed that instead of reaching equality, Archer stops asking for her advice and surpasses her -- as we see in season 4. What would've been a great arc would've been:
* Archer doesn't want her advice - season 1. Check!
* Archer begins to listen to her advice and trust her - season 2. Check!
* Archer makes decisions contrary to T'Pol, using gut instinct more often or his own logic. Check!
* Archer realizes T'Pol's strengths and knows when to ask for her advice and T'Pol recognizes when to ask for Archer's. NO CHECK!
Imagine how much more effective this scene might have been if she was still the outsider.
Totally disagree. There's without purpose conflict and with purpose conflict. I'm pro "with purpose conflict." Here are two examples:
BSG has
forced conflict. (Oh no - no one is brawling in this episode - let's make Tigh and Adama punch it out.) I like the show, but I get tired of people angry at each other for no reason ...
every episode. Conflict is appropriate when it serves a purpose. Otherwise, like with BSG, it's just spectacle: a neat, people are punching it out.
I hated Voyager because the conflict was resolved in the first show. It's too bad, the conflict served a purpose: how can we get along and find our home way?
I never felt that ENT rushed to resolve conflict. I can safely say that Archer and T'Pol had mistrust until the very end of season 1. Even if Archer asked her to stick around, he didn't immediately trust everything she had to say. On the contrary, even in Strange New World the audience was concerned Archer would listen to Trip and that T'Pol would be dead meat. It took Archer the entire episode to make that decision, mostly after he heard his friend start spouting some pretty weird stuff. And as I indicated previously, even after Andorian Incident, he still has her communications bugged.
Besides, season 1 is usually when characters begin to fit in: Farscape and Firefly immediately come to mind.
Well, it might have worked if male Vulcans had also been strutting around in catsuits that left nothing to the imagination.
Heee!
You mentioned Spock. I always found it so affecting when his emotions came to the surface because it was so important to him to be in control.
Exactly. He rarely let his emotions come to the surface and was self-reliant.
When I learned there was going to be a female Vulcan on ENT, I was looking forward to seeing how they would have her handle the emotional control without making her seem like that cold *itch T'Pring.
Unfortunately, we never got to find out.
I liked T'Pring. Logical.
I think T'Pol has more softness than T'Pring though -- which is why she appeals to the crew's emotions sometimes. Season 2 T'Pol, I would argue, was awesome ... minus missing some of the self-reliance she should've had. I felt like in parts of season 3 and 4, the ears were an illusion: she was human. I guess that's what I'm talking about.
I always knew that T'Pol would accept emotion, but I never expected her to not only embrace it but show emotion often herself.
Why make an alien only to quickly make them "human"? Data took many years before he began to feel emotion. Spock let his emotions out in fits and spurts only to repress them again.
T'Pol would've fared better if they'd done the same to her. Maybe if her character was a man, they would've succeeded.
Good discussion.