Mott, I think this episode is one of the best Trek episodes I've seen. I really can watch it repeatedly, and still get a little bit of that tingly dread when the Xindi show up that last time. Lots of
oh, sh*t! moments, starting with the teaser, and going all the way through to watching the Bridge crew fly out into space. Archer's reactions, especially in the teaser, at dinner, and as he listens to T'Pol's weary but gentle explanation of what happened, hit me every single time. Everybody is on their A-game in this episode. As for how many shots does it take . . .? Who cares, really? I might as well get upset at every shoot-em-up cop show where the hero hits his mark in one, and the bad guy misses a million times.
Well, the planet's a big place... few creatures the size of the ceti eel live everywhere on the planet. Besides, it didn't even know how to fly (or possibly even swim). Maybe the colonists chose to live on the continent that had no ceti eels.
Exactly. Rattlesnakes are a problem in, say, Arizona; not so much in New England. Or Sweden.
I'm pretty sure that they reference the fifth planet in the Ceti Alpha system, which we learn in TWOK was devastated when Ceti Alpha VI blew. Khan says that it was only his "superior intellect" that caused them to survive. That doesn't mean that ordinary humans scraping along would have. I think, as
startrekwatcher says, we're meant to make the connection that these last 6000 humans were doomed anyway. I appreciated that it wasn't spelled out; the writers trusted fans to make that pickup.
Twilight is tied, in my mind, with
Similitude and
Cogenitor for drama played well, and with the last 6 or so episodes of Season 3 (
Azati Prime through
Zero Hour) for enjoyment. Although
E2 is a reset episode, and not one of "The Best," in my opinion, I do think it's very good in taking a different "what if?" tack than
Twilight does.