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Enterprise axed

Re: Enterprise axed?

If we're talking about bad vs. "decent" vs. good vs. hit-its-stride, I would say War Zone was the one bad episode, Crusade was just beginning to hit its stride with Each Night I Dream of Home, and all the episodes in between are at least decent.

Each Night..., the Dr. Franklin guest spot, was the best episode and the only one I would say is in the A range of quality, most being B or C range. It was the last one aired and, in production order, the last of the first five "un-interfered" episodes, so either way you look at it, I think it was the sign of the quality that the show could/would/should have headed toward.

As far as Enterprise... I think they may have been heading in the right direction in year four by exploring the origins of Trek tech and doing crossovers with future characters, etc. That's probably what they should have done in season one.

However, the last Enterprise episode I bothered paying attention to was the one in which non-corporeal aliens were taking over bodies of crew members in order to study humanity. The only slightly original angle it took was the struggle of authority among the aliens and giving each one a distinct personality. But the moral in the end was the same as usual--humans have great potential and they could have discovered that more easily and less controversially by just talking to them. That kind of thing has been done before.
 
Re: Enterprise axed?

GKE,

I agree 100%. In fact, not only is there the possibility of the "Romulan War" coming up that we know happened from TOS, but also I saw a quick trailer that hinted it might be the start of the "United Federation of Planets" which doesn't exist yet, but will in TOS era. Good stuff was on the horizon. Its unfortunate so many fans have already tuned the show out. As I said, I already did, the only reason I turned back in is word about Manny's plans. But most fans of a TV show don't surf the web to the level most of us here do. We are definitely a-typical fans...
 
Re: Enterprise axed?

Congratulations to Rick Berman. It took him 18 years of grit and determination to remain steadfastly unchanging and repetitive, but he did it! It took a lot of trips to the well, but he finally got Paramount to cancel Star Trek (aka "The Franchise", aka "The Show that Saved Paramount" aka "A License to Print Money") on their own network. Most of us figured that as long as there was a UPN, there would always be a home for Trek. Guess not.

Also, kudos for calling in Dr. Coto after the death-rattle has already sounded.

I had high hopes for this show, but it turned out to be nothing I had hoped for.
 
Re: Enterprise axed?

Honestly, I was never enamoured with Enterprise, and can't say I'm sad to see it go. Outside of Trip, Porthos and Phlox there was little reason to watch the show. I only bothered watching a few episodes this season, and didn't really see much improvement over the past three.

Besides, I now have Battlestar Galactica for my space sci-fi fix. And it's really good.

I won't be able to ask old Mighty if the dog is still with them.

Hope Porthos makes it to the finale, at least. :eek:

Actually, this season really was better. It's just such a shame. As was said much earlier, if only this had been like their season 1, this might have been an interesting series. Very sad news. :(
 
What truly surprises me isn't the fact that they finally decided to cancel Enterprise (especially when it was getting good), it's that I'm totally indifferent to the cancellation. I utterly love Star Trek, but I could care less that there's not going to be any new Trek on television next year. I could care less that there's not got to be any new Trek in the theaters next year. I just don't care.
 
What truly surprises me isn't the fact that they finally decided to cancel Enterprise (especially when it was getting good), it's that I'm totally indifferent to the cancellation. I utterly love Star Trek, but I could care less that there's not going to be any new Trek on television next year. I could care less that there's not got to be any new Trek in the theaters next year. I just don't care.

I have to agree. I watch Enterprise each week, and I find it a satisfactory 45 minutes each week. But really bothered? No.

I do feel a bit sad that I probably won't interview the cast as much, and it feels *weird* that it'll be the first time in 18 years without Trek. But that's it really.
 
On Terrestial we have only had two seasons. Don't know about sattelite.

Quick question, did ANY red shirts get killed at all in Enterprise?
 
I didn't see much of Enterprise, but what I did see was okay. I'm not really sad about it going off the air because I never really developed a following of the show. I was just never home to watch much of it.
 
I gotta agree with P10 on this too. As I said above, I do think this season was the best of the series, and I did enjoy it. But after all its been through, and with Trek movies being on the decline, it really isn't ruining my day thinking about Enterprise not being on the air. I really do like this season, but its not something I *HAVE* to see.
 
Ron Moore's latest blog entry has some intersting thoughts on what will happen to the franchise:

http://blog.scifi.com/battlestar/

February 04, 2005
Trek goes back to the Fans

Now that Enterprise has been cancelled, we're about to enter a period not seen since the orignal series ended its run just a few weeks before Apollo 11 landed on the moon: a time without a Star Trek film or TV project on the horizon. From the reaction I've seen thus far, the consensus view seems to be that this is merely a pause in the trek, and that before too long, we'll be talking about the newest take on Roddenberry's universe, be it television, feature, animation or sock puppet. I tend to agree, insofar as I know first hand that Viacom considers "the Franchise" to be one of their crown jewels and I've personally heard them refer to the "next fifty years of Star Trek" as a corporate priority.

So Star Trek isn't dead and it isn't dying. It has, however, entered into an interregnum, a pause in the treadmill of overlapping productions that have become the norm for the series that was once considered "too cerebral for television."

Certainly there is sadness in this news. There has been a Star Trek production either in prep or being filmed on Stages 8 & 9 on the Paramount lot since 1977, when Star Trek: Phase Two began initial construction for a second series featuring all the original characters but Spock (these sets were then revamped for Star Trek: The Motion Picture). An entire infrastructure has been built around the productions, staffed by people whose involvement in the Franchise goes back over two decades. The dedication, passion, and talent of these artisans and craftsmen cannot be overstated. The unsung heroes of Trek, the people who sweat every detail, who take the time to think through continuity and try to make the vast universe consistent, people like Mike and Denise Okuda, Dave Rossi, Michael Westmore, Herman Zimmerman, Bob Blackman, and many others, are about to leave and take with them an enormous body of knowledge and talent that cannot be and will not be replicated again. That is cause for both tears and eulogies as the close of Enterprise signals the true end of an era.

However, there is another side of this story, one that perhaps is somewhat more hopeful and positive: Star Trek has now been returned to the care of its community of fans.

I say returned because there was a time when the fans were the exclusive owners and operators of what would later become the Franchise. From 1969 until 1979, a genuine grassroots movement of fans gathered together in conventions, published newsletters (in the primordial ooze of the pre-internet era, no less), wrote scads of fan fiction, created their own props and uniforms, and dreamed the dream of what it was to live aboard the good ship Enterprise.

I was one of those fans; I was a kid growing up in the 1970's who found Star Trek in strip syndication and bought every book and magazine I could lay my hands on and every piece of fan merchandise I could con my parents into buying and I can tell you that some of those efforts were abysmal and some were brilliant, but all of them were driven by a sense of passion rooted in a belief that Trek was our secret club. We, the fans, embroidered the Trek tapestry while the powers that be at Paramount dawdled. In those years, the best stories told not those written by Gene or any other "professional writers" (no offense to the short-lived, but well intentioned animated series), but by people like Sondra Marshak, Myrna Culbreath, and Jacqueline Lichtenberg. Who are they? Fans. People who loved Star Trek and were able to breath life into it during the interregnum between the show and the Franchise.

Star Trek now returns to the care of its fans and its fans can decide for themselves what kind of experience they want to have during this next interregnum. They can consume the seemingly endless licensed products available to them from the Franchise, everything from barware to shower curtains, and read only the mainstream, officially licensed and sanctioned books, or they can go their own way. Some of the most daring and creatively challenging Star Trek material has been created not by Paramount, but by amateurs, who simply had an idea for an interesting twist on the Trek universe. Think Kirk and Spock were secret lovers? Wonder about the social and cultural history of the planet Vulcan? Believe the Mirror Universe is more fascinating than our own? All these topics and many others were, and are, tackled by fans in their own fiction, their own stories, their own dreams.

Step back from the merchandising. Rediscover the joy and wonder of the universe Roddenberry created. Talk to people who share your common interest and who understand the difference between phaser mark I and mark II (duh!). You don't need another series to enjoy Star Trek. You need only your own imagination and the desire to boldly go where no man has gone before.
 

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