There's the Archer encounter. It's nice to see the crew get shore leave(Shore Leave, you say? What could go wrong???) I would say it's definitely better than DS9's "Let He Who is Without Sin," probably better than TOS' "Shore Leave," and quite as good as TNG's "Captain's Holiday."Just watched this episode for the first time in years. It just reminds me why I lost interest in Enterprise early. What really happens in this episode? A couple characters get mugged? Wow...not even the romantic encounter with Hoshi was that hot.
The Woman was Tandaran. In the episode "Detained," Archer and Mayweather are...well..detained with some Suliban. They are just average Joe Suliban who live in a concentration camp. The Tandarans have relocated all Suliban in their territory to concentration camps for their protection from other Tandaran citizens, and to keep an eye on them so they don't get recruited by the "cabal."That woman Archer was interested in (can't remember her name) never returned which I found weird. Who was she working for Silick, another Cold War faction? A stupid episode
There's the Archer encounter. It's nice to see the crew get shore leave(Shore Leave, you say? What could go wrong???) I would say it's definitely better than DS9's "Let He Who is Without Sin," probably better than TOS' "Shore Leave," and quite as good as TNG's "Captain's Holiday."
I like the guest actress. She appeared in the DS9 episode where Odo has to protect a woman who keeps hacking into the station computer. Odo sleeps with her and it's his first encounter.
Another thing we see in this episode is that Enterprise is more serialized than previous shows. I don't consider that a positive necessarily, but fans had been asking for this, and continue to.
The Woman was Tandaran. In the episode "Detained," Archer and Mayweather are...well..detained with some Suliban. They are just average Joe Suliban who live in a concentration camp. The Tandarans have relocated all Suliban in their territory to concentration camps for their protection from other Tandaran citizens, and to keep an eye on them so they don't get recruited by the "cabal."
Archer feels sympathy and breaks them out. Word of this act spreads, as we hear a few episodes later in "Desert Crossing." The woman in "Two Days..." is a Tandaran agent following Archer. She tries to play on his sympathies and sift information about the Suliban, whom the Tandarans are at war with.
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