Once again, I'm forced to give an episode of ENT a low grade, and I wish I didn't have to. "Horizon" had some nice moments, but taken as a whole, it just didn't seem to accomplish
anything.
Now we see why Mayweather doesn't get many lines:
he's dull! The tension between him and his brother could be cut with a
sponge, for crying out loud! There were so many opportunities to really make something out of Mayweather in this episode, at least based upon the premise, but they were just left lying about, gathering dust.
Mayweather loses his father. It happens offscreen, and it has almost no impact at all upon him aside from a poignant moment in the sweet spot with Archer (which, based upon that description alone, sounds much more exciting than it really was

). And in that scene, after depending upon the fact that they were in a zero-gravity environment, we see a tear plummet to the 'floor' from Mayweather's cheek. Whoops!

I hate it when the setup for a scene then is ignored for something that should 'move' the audience. And the "letter from your father" reminded me of the Suliban cell-ship that just as conveniently had been in the ship for months; it was a throwaway line. I really hate this sort of 'retroactive' development.
I still wonder what the point of the "B" plot with the movie was (did that make the volcanic action a "C" plot?); it didn't seem to have any correlation to the "A" plot, and since they didn't seem to have much going on with that, either, one would hope that the "B" plot somehow supports it and offers another perspective, but it just seemed like another opportunity to show a 'slice of life/T'Pol fraternizes' bit of filler. This show doesn't
need filler; it
needs fully-developed stories!
One thing I
did like: I have to admit I got a big kick out of T'Pol's admonishment to Phlox; it was deftly ironic, and his reaction was perfect. I laughed loudly and long at that line. Sadly, the rest of the show couldn't maintain my level of enthusiasm or enjoyment.
There was nothing fundamentally
bad about "Horizon"; it's just that there was nothing fundamentally
good about it, either. They had the opportunity to really examine the contrast of Mayweather's current and former lives, how it affected him now and how it had made him what he is, but there was nothing that different about life on
Horizon compared to life on
Enterprise. They could have done something with the potential mutiny situation that Nora told him about;
that could have been the major conflict, but they stuck with the flashy and ultimately superficial alien attack.
I could have also done without the nod to families and counselors aboard starships; ENT relies
way too much upon in-jokes and allusions to the other series, when it should be creating its
own voice. 'Cute' foreshadowing just doesn't substitute for intelligent storytelling; every time I see or hear something like this on ENT, it seems more like the show is supposed to be a commercial for TNG. It's especially bad when a story premise has so much potential to express that voice, but then I've said many times that nearly
every episode they've shown in the series' two seasons has had such potential; usually it's so obvious that it's frustrating to watch the show, as one opportunity after another slips by, unresolved. "Horizon" is very much one of those episodes.
What did we learn about Mayweather? That he has a family? We knew that. That running cargo is hard? We already knew that from "Fortunate Son." That he's a great pilot? Well, we haven't really seen that at any time, but like so many other times in this series, it must be true because the other characters made a point of telling us so.
In the end, "Horizon" was a pleasant diversion, but nothing more. It certainly wasn't an "event" as it had been hyped, and it really didn't add anything to either the characters or the overall development of the series. Because it played it far too safe and didn't strive to achieve
anything, the best I can give it is a
C+.