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Favorite director

commodore64

Vice Admiral
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Here's a category that doesn't get very much attention. My favorite in ENT was Robbie McNeil for Twilight.

* He took a great script and made it greater - he worked with the actors on choices that really helped this story stand out. Jolene gives an outstanding performance as a Vulcan who has emotion, and yet is competent and smart. Also Robbie suggested minor changes to the script that increased the complexity and enhanced the meaning. Instead of clarifying whether Archer and T'Pol have any feelings for each other, through subtly the audience for the most part gets to make up their own minds. In my opinion, few directors really took a script and made it better!

* I like the choice of tight camera angles and sad music in the story. They all work together to tell a tale of desperation. Even the low lighting - nice touch - is used well in the story -- it saves power (a written line) and adds to the depression and desperation everyone has.

* Special effects were good and yet didn't take over the show. Earth blowing up, people flying through space as the bridge is destroyed ... all these shots were great, but didn't stand out as the coolest thing that happened in the episode. Archer and T'Pol realizing the Bridge is gone is maybe more poignant than seeing dead bodies floating through space and knowing it's our beloved bridge crew.

* Costume and makeup. T'Pol looks beautiful, but is not forced into "hot babe gear." OMG - she wears a uniform competently and wears a loose-fitting outfit that looks comfortable in her elder Vulcan years as she plays caregiver. Tucker looks well-aged, just the right amount. Reed's mirror universe goatee is fun. More over, Hoshi isn't wearing the melon-head pony tail; she looks lovely and mature.

I think it's the director's job to bring everything together in harmony and Robbie does a brilliant job in Twilight. My only complaint would be Archer getting shot twice before dying, but to me that's such a tiny nitpick it doesn't detract from the show.
 
Good question!!!

I have two favs---Robbie McNeill for Twilight and Jim Conway for Damage. In Twilight it was Robbie's decision to have T'Pol just give Archer a look(and an eyebrow!) in response to How far has it evolved? My other favorite scene was as Archer runs to the patio trying to assimilate what T'Pol has told him and T'Pol starts to reach for him and pulls her hand back.The camera hilighting this action spoke volumes. In Damage Jim Conway did it all---but the sickbay scene was my fav---from the showing of the body bags to Archer grasping T'Pol's shaking hand.
 
Agree Levar did a great job in Similitude. I wish I knew alot of the other directors I know that Roxann and Robert Duncan did some eps but not sure which one but you guys did name some good eps and agree with what you said about them.
 
internet movie data base page for enterprise

scroll down for the directors

david livingston
shuttle pod one
united
council
regeneration


kroeker
azati prime

vejar
observer effect (did a real nice job of letting of know who the organians
were possesing plus stuff like the trip jon scene and the end part..

stratagem ..another complex one with the dual story of the fake history
one of the best performances by scott.

catwalk for many reasons but also has one of my favorite scenes as archer walks through checking on his crew. how it was directed has some to do with that.

dawson
andorian incident
dead stop (she also did the computer voice)

straiton
desert crossing
cease fire especially the planet side stuff

levar burton

forgotten
cogenitor
first flight

conway
in a mirror darkly part one

grossman
the forge

whitmore
future tense

norris
singularity

rush
terrra prime

windell
breaking the ice

kolbe
silent enemy
 
David Straiton for North Star. I just love how the directing choices really enhanced the episode as an homage to the western. From the bleached out film processing to the gorgeous lamplight-only scene in the school room, to the foreground/background focusing - I love watching every frame. This is one episode that I could tell on a viewer level that it was terrific, but really got how awesome the direction was after I listened to the audio commentary on the DVD.

Levar Burton for both Similitude and First Flight. He just got all the complex emotions out of the actors just right (even down to letting Bakula not shave during the shoot to demonstrate the captain's distress over the cloning issue).
 
Good point about Grossman and The Forge, pookha. I loved how Vulcan it looked in The Forge as opposed to other episodes. Looking at the scripts, Reeves-Stevens were very detailed in what it was supposed to look like, but the orangey tint in the color processing and the music (a true departure for ENT) really added to the intrigue and mystery of the episode.

I also liked Damage. You're right, Angie, the hand scene is a great moment in ENT and the lighting in the scene with Archer and Phlox was incredible. I would chalk up the Archer and Phlox scene as among some of my favorite moments. (Billingsley and Bakula packed a lot of punch into that one.)

And although I wasn't crazy about North Star's script, I definitely appreciate how Western-like it was, including the grainy film quality. (Although, there were some great one-liners in North Star, like "Can I get a cup of coffee before you kill him?" and of course the scene where Reed shoots T'Pol.)
 
Roxann Dawson - I liked her eps and she really seemed to highlight the Archer/Trip friendship the best, which is one of my fave parts of the show.
 
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