Subject: Neshomeh reviews Star Trek: Enterprise
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Posted on: 2019-07-15 02:36:00 UTC

The extended pilot/first episode and eps two and three, anyway. I noticed it's on Netflix, so I started watching. I figure I owe it to Nume to check it out so he can have a properly informed negative opinion. {= )

I, however, think it's fine so far! The only thing I really hate is the opening theme, so I'll get that out of the way up front.

"Where My Heart Will Take Me" doesn't sound like Star Trek at all. It sounds like they wanted to be the first to do what Firefly did really well the following year with "The Ballad of Serenity," but instead of using a cool, original steel-guitar folk ballad of defiance, they used a preexisting song that goes on about "faith of the heart" and reminds me of the blandest, safest, most boring type of Christian pop rock. (I'm not slamming ALL Christian pop rock here, please note.) I want a soaring, majestic trumpet fanfare in a Trek theme, and not only is this not that, it's not even an original song. BLAH.

... If I were a pessimist, I'd say that probably sets the tone for the show. See, I could forgive them if it seemed like they were really trying to set a tone that makes them stand apart from the preexisting Trek series, but they're really, really not. They're playing it very safe so far, and all the other music and effects sound like what you'd expect. Therefore, I will continue to hate the theme song with a passion and be extremely glad Netflix lets me skip it.

But, again, I'm actually enjoying the show so far! I like that it feels like Star Trek; I consider this a good thing, especially for the earliest eps. It has room to grow into its own identity down the road. For now, I'm cool with it following a lot of the same beats.

I even think they're doing a good job with the adventure-of-the-week formula. They're really leaning into the scientific exploration thing in ways that I dig, such as having one of the main characters be an exolinguist. ENT is set before TOS, so a lot of the tech we're familiar with is relatively new and untested here, including the Universal Translator. That means it doesn't always work, and sometimes the intuition of another living, feeling being is better than machine logic. I do raise my eyebrows at how quickly Ensign Hoshi seems to pick up a new language from a very limited sample; even though they acknowledge that she isn't going to get it right, it's a bit of a stretch that she gets it within the time shown at all. But, I make allowances for the limitations of the medium, and I think it's pretty cool that they build a conflict around a language barrier at all. I give it a thumbs-up.

The only problem is that, so far, they've kind of depended on Captain Archer being an excitable idiot to get the plots rolling in the first place. I want to like how keen Archer is on getting out there and exploring those strange new worlds for the first time, because that IS part of what I'm here for. However, he has a bad habit of ignoring the advice of his Vulcan science officer, T'Pol, basically to spite the entire Vulcan race for telling the Humans they weren't ready for the last hundred years.

I hate to tell ya this, Archer, but you're still not ready. Not if you won't even wait a week to do standard scans of a new planet to make sure it's safe before bopping down there for a camping trip. No, I don't care that it "looks fine." This is your basic responsibility to look after the safety of your crew. There is no excuse for not doing this, you goober.

Ugh. I don't hate Archer—yet. But I might if his character doesn't go through some major growth that involves the show acknowledging when everything that happens is his fault and him learning when to listen to good advice even if he doesn't like it. From what I've heard, I fear I may be disappointed, but please don't tell me. I'll find out on my own.

I like the rest of the cast enough to make up for him, anyway.

T'Pol fills the role of Vulcan science officer. She gets there more or less by accident, but it's a happy accident that (I think) directly leads to the position being standard by Spock's time. T'Pol is a full Vulcan, so she doesn't have Spock's baggage about having the occasional emotion or being uncertain where she fits in. Her deal is that she's here half-unwillingly babysitting these idiot children and trying to keep them from peeing themselves in public, setting themselves on fire, or accidentally starting an interstellar war. Her frustration is palpable, and her patience with their bullshit is admirable. Like a good guardian, she gives her charges the tools they need to succeed, but also gives them room to do things their own way even if it means they'll fail sometimes, and she's there to help if things get too bad. Also, I think she likes exploring more than she wants to let on. I like her.

We've got our Kirk analog and our Spock analog. We also have a Bones analog in Chief Engineer Trip. I'm not sure how I feel about Trip yet. They're leaning a bit hard on this familiar dynamic, right down to the good ol' Southern boy accent, so I'm not too sure who he is besides the token "guy who doesn't like Vulcans very much." He's as keen on getting out and exploring as Archer; he's loyal; he has a more or less level head... but I dunno, I just don't have a strong feel for him. At least they're working on getting him over his issues with T'Pol right away, so I hope to get to know the real Trip better soon.

Dr. Phlox is the other resident alien on the Enterprise (which they insist on referring to simply as Enterprise, again anticipating something Firefly pulls off but somehow making it weird).

Er, right, Chief Medical Officer Phlox. He's fun. I haven't caught what his species is, but the few hints we've gotten about his backstory is that his people are more restrained than Humans—no talking allowed during mealtimes being the main example. He's very cheerful, very interested in everything new, occasionally to the point of being a little inappropriate for Human mores. "I think they're preparing to mate! ... Do you think they'd let me watch?" Uh, no, Doc. No. ^_^; But he takes his job seriously. He's passionate about it and he's good at it. I like him.

Let's see, I talked about Hoshi, so... the other two main characters are Chief Engineer Reed and... Mayweather. Who I think is the main helmsman? I dunno, they're more or less O'Brien and LaForge redux. They're both fine. Mayweather is a "Boomer," meaning he grew up in space flying around on starships at low warp, which is cool. He tells a good ghost story.

Ooh, we met an entomologist in episode three. She didn't really have anything to do besides collect bugs and I don't remember her name, but it was nice to have her and the other low-ranking away-team members treated as more than just cannon fodder. I hope we see her and the other guy again.

Final point on my mind: I don't think the Prime Directive is a thing yet? If it were, I don't think they'd have let Hoshi pick up a slug-critter from one planet and let it go on a totally different planet when it wasn't thriving in captivity. If that's not interfering with the development of a pre-spacefaring species, whooo-ee, I don't know what is. I chalk it up as another count of Archer being an irresponsible goober and setting a bad example for his crew, and I hope his butt has a good kicking coming to it.

More on this later if I feel like it!

~Neshomeh

P.S. Archer's pet beagle, Porthos, is pointless, but cute. I prefer Data's pet cat, Spot, though. {= P

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