I have just finished watching Enterprise S4's Vulcan arc. As you can notice from my avatar, I'm a huge fan of Vulcans, and I consider myself if not an expert on them at least someone who clearly knows the difference between a Human and a Vulcan. Right. In this arc, I didn't see it.
Let's play a little game, pick up the differences between Vice Admiral Leyton:
and Administrator V'las:
Let us keep things in-universe here, so I will gloss on their, ahem, surprising physical similarity. What I saw as an INSULT to 47 years of Trek history (starting from the 1964 in which The Cage script was written) was seeing emotional post-Surak Vulcans. I have nothing against the episodes' plot per se: I actually quite like the concept of Vulcans straying from their path, being xenophobic and paranoid, with the Syrannites setting things to right. It's a solid plot, it makes sense, it's entertaining and fascinating. What I'm criticizing is THE ACTING and here I need to get in IRL mode. V'las looks just as ruthless as Leyton in creating false intelligence as an excuse to militarize his planet and launch a pre-emptive strike against his opponents; and he does so jumping from one side of the screen to the other, being grumpy, pissed off and sarcastic all the time. I mean, he's just a cliché evil guy who then gets what he deserves so that the audience can say "in your face!". The actor who portrays him was great in the DS9 S4 two-parter, but in the Vulcan arc he just did eveything wrong. Very wrong. And they let him do it. I can see Spock raising his eyebrow to the floor when witnessing yet another outburst of 'Vulcan Gratuitous Rage'. Same goes for all his minions: fists clenched tight, faces distorted by anger. I also don't buy into the "corrupted Vulcans" explanation some might offer. They were corrupted in their actions, not in their ability to suppress emotions. I would have portrayed them, rather, as cold, efficient, Machiavellian leaders ready to do what they perceive as logic in order to protect Vulcan from foreign intereferences. Instead, they looked like stereotyped bad guys. Besides, the "Syrannite being the Vulcans we got to know in previous series" argument doesn't work: T'Pau in the arc is a hottie who shows too much emotivity for a radical adept to Surak's teachings. Where is the magnificent, regal, self-possessed and absolutely Kohlinar-ish T'Pau of The Amok Time and ST III? T'Pol's mother is also too emotional.
This one character, though, maintained high the aura of dignity and composure Vulcans are known for:
A masterful piece of acting.
Finally, it would be unfair not to mention that ENT anyway showed Vulcan and Vulcans in all their beauty. Their costumes are wonderful, the CGI effects stunning, the artifacts beautiful. Visually, the best Star Trek series. But seeing angry Vulcans who looked more like rogue CIA agents in some Cold War film about a high-level conspiration to have the USA declare war on the URSS was more than I could bear.
Peace and long life, set your phasers on pleasure.
Let's play a little game, pick up the differences between Vice Admiral Leyton:

and Administrator V'las:

Let us keep things in-universe here, so I will gloss on their, ahem, surprising physical similarity. What I saw as an INSULT to 47 years of Trek history (starting from the 1964 in which The Cage script was written) was seeing emotional post-Surak Vulcans. I have nothing against the episodes' plot per se: I actually quite like the concept of Vulcans straying from their path, being xenophobic and paranoid, with the Syrannites setting things to right. It's a solid plot, it makes sense, it's entertaining and fascinating. What I'm criticizing is THE ACTING and here I need to get in IRL mode. V'las looks just as ruthless as Leyton in creating false intelligence as an excuse to militarize his planet and launch a pre-emptive strike against his opponents; and he does so jumping from one side of the screen to the other, being grumpy, pissed off and sarcastic all the time. I mean, he's just a cliché evil guy who then gets what he deserves so that the audience can say "in your face!". The actor who portrays him was great in the DS9 S4 two-parter, but in the Vulcan arc he just did eveything wrong. Very wrong. And they let him do it. I can see Spock raising his eyebrow to the floor when witnessing yet another outburst of 'Vulcan Gratuitous Rage'. Same goes for all his minions: fists clenched tight, faces distorted by anger. I also don't buy into the "corrupted Vulcans" explanation some might offer. They were corrupted in their actions, not in their ability to suppress emotions. I would have portrayed them, rather, as cold, efficient, Machiavellian leaders ready to do what they perceive as logic in order to protect Vulcan from foreign intereferences. Instead, they looked like stereotyped bad guys. Besides, the "Syrannite being the Vulcans we got to know in previous series" argument doesn't work: T'Pau in the arc is a hottie who shows too much emotivity for a radical adept to Surak's teachings. Where is the magnificent, regal, self-possessed and absolutely Kohlinar-ish T'Pau of The Amok Time and ST III? T'Pol's mother is also too emotional.
This one character, though, maintained high the aura of dignity and composure Vulcans are known for:

A masterful piece of acting.
Finally, it would be unfair not to mention that ENT anyway showed Vulcan and Vulcans in all their beauty. Their costumes are wonderful, the CGI effects stunning, the artifacts beautiful. Visually, the best Star Trek series. But seeing angry Vulcans who looked more like rogue CIA agents in some Cold War film about a high-level conspiration to have the USA declare war on the URSS was more than I could bear.
Peace and long life, set your phasers on pleasure.
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