menuBarBack
Beam Up News | Join | Your Account
Home
Advanced Search
boxBottom
News Tribblets
boxBottom
Stardates Calendar
Feature Story

Features

Deus Unsatisfied With Recycled, Out of Place "E2"

Features

By O. Deus / 11:52, 7 May 2004 / ENTERPRISE Reviews

Reviews Ex Deus

Title: "E2"

Overall: 5
Performances: 6.5
Writing: 5
Direction: 7.5
FX & Prod Value: 5


Synopsis: ENTERPRISE does VOYAGER and encounters its future in the form of reruns of previous STAR TREK episodes hashed together.

Review: DS9's "Children of Time" was hardly all that great of an episode, so it's unclear as to why ENTERPRISE felt the need to remake it again. Or why after already doing one episode that showed Enterprise's dark future if the Xindi mission failed, they chose to do another one. Or why they chose to interrupt the concluding arc of the season that had just begun gathering steam with an episode that distracts by rehashing a bunch of old episodes. But such are the mysteries that earn one a position on the writing staff of a television series.

It's not that "E2" is a particularly bad episode. In fact, Mike Sussman has generally done good work and so has Roxann Dawson. But as the saying goes, there's only so many times you can go to the well. The STAR TREK franchise has managed to drain the life out of such strengths as the Klingons and the Borg, and ENTERPRISE is well on its way to doing to time travel VOYAGER to the Borg. "E2" is not a bad episode but we've seen better versions of it plenty of times before. Take "Children of Time," hash it together with some bits and pieces of "Yesterday's Enterprise," "Deadlock" and "Equinox" and you pretty much have this episode.

Worst of all, "E2" really doesn't manage to do anything significant with the material. None of the future descendants are particularly interesting and aside from the great mess hall scene with Hoshi, Mayweather and Reed, the encounter with a future version Enterprise seems redirected into yet another round of Trip -n- T'Pol. And that is what really manages to reduce "E2" to a pile of barely digestible mush. Much as ENTERPRISE Season 3 took the destruction of Earth and the death of Trip's sister and turned it into an excuse for erotic massages, "E2" takes the encounter with a future Enterprise and turns it into yet another round of gracelessly shoving Trip and T'Pol together. But of course even this silliness isn't original because "Children of Time," the DS9 episode this episode is cribbed from, featured a futuristic version of Odo revealing his love to Kira.

But it isn't the turpid scenes between T'Pol and Trip themselves that destroy the episode but the outcome of twisting the episode to accomodate them by the creation of Lorian. Despite being derivative, however, "E2" had some possibilities. Imagine an encounter with a more wolfish and desperate Archer a decade or two down the road. Or even the same aged T'Pol we see in this episode in command and becoming more unstable as she desperately tries to achieve her goal by any means necesarry. It wouldn't be the greatest STAR TREK episode of all time but it could have been compelling. It would have been about the crew and the choices they've made and what they can become if they continue down this path. It would have tied neatly into the previous episodes.

But instead as an articulation of Trip and T'Pol's Love That Dare Not Speak Its Ratings, we get Lorian the first Redneck Vulcan on STAR TREK. He might have been entertaining if played for laughs, maybe meditating under a Confederate flag to a piece from a Harley's motor. But instead David Andrews portrays him with all the intensity of a coma patient being pumped full of extra sediatives. Meanwhile, the child of Trip and T'Pol combines Trip's boneheaded stupidity with T'Pol's emotionlessness to produce a truly boring idiot. Aside from his emoting scene in the brig, Lorian isn't just boring, he taps into a whole dimension of tediousness we never thought previously possible. God knows when you're looking forward to Mayweather saying a line, something is seriously wrong.

Not only does "E2" waste enormous amounts of time on a character who does not seem to survive this episode but it wastes more time drawing out this round of the 'Will They Or Won't They Game' for T'Pol and Trip, a game best reserved for the viewership of teenage girls, and ultimately is not about the choices Archer makes so much as the moral struggle of a boring character who is not a member of the crew and whom we will never see again. While it was a nice touch of irony to see the Enterprise crew end up on the other side of the treatment they handed out in "Damage" and for the same reason, "E2" manages to flub even this scene by centering the confrontation on Trip rather than Archer (you know, Archer, the guy who struggled with that tough decision to steal a warp coil from innocent people to save Earth only to find himself in the same predicament from the other side.)

There are worthwhile moments in the episode, however. Reed's worries about remaining a bachelor, the two beaten ships docked together, the revelation of who Phlox married, Archer's disappointed expression when he realizes that it's Degra's ship and not the other Enterprise and Degra becoming even more desperate and determined as Randy Oglesby continues stealing every scene he's in. Jolene Blalock turns in another surprisingly good performance as the aged T'Pol, which perhaps might remind the producers that they might consider more possibilities involving her than getting her on drugs or taking her clothes off. But when all is said and done this episode simply does not work.

It is a poorly hashed together mix of older episodes that fits poorly into the arc, has the wrong focus and is a letdown in every way. Even the production values seem poor with the corridor effects looking cheap and terrible and T'Pol's caked makeup making her look more like a swamp monster than an old woman. Makeup this bad was understandable on TOS when Kirk, Spock and McCoy underwent dramatic aging. But it's completely unacceptable in 2004. But then T'Pol's makeup, like this episode, shows the age of a creaking franchise in its last throes. With two episodes this season showing a dead and doomed ancient Enterprise fighting a hopeless battle, one almost wonders if the writers are prophecying the eponymous show for which they work.



More Top StoriesComments
Nov 23J.J. Abrams and Chris Pine Talk How Gratifying That Star Trek was Well Received, Working with Leonard Nimoy and Star Trek XII0
Nov 23Chuck returns to NBC with a special two-hour show on Sunday, Jan 10, 2010, before returning to its regular time slot, Mondays at 8pm on the following night. It's return to prime time television can be attributed to a successful fan renewnal campaign last year. CHUCK is a one-hour, action-comedy series that follows Chuck Bartowski (Zachary Levi, "Less Than Perfect") -- a computer geek who is catapulted into a new career as the government's most vital secret agent. This upcoming season will include some special guest stars, including Brandon Routh of "Superman Returns" who will play CIA agent Daniel Shaw in an episode, and the addition of SUBWAY restaurant as a major advertiser to the show. Chuck averaged a 4.0/6 rating last season, about eight percent better than the recently cancelled "Trauma". Ratings-challenged Heroes moves back an hour when Chuck returns on Monday nights. STAR TREK VOYAGER's Robert Duncan McNeill serves Chuck as a supervising producer and director.0
Nov 235-Page Preview of Third Issue of Galactica 1980 Comic Book  0
Nov 22Quinto, Urban, Saldana, Cho and Greenwood on Their Hopes for Star Trek XII3
Nov 22Exclusive Digital Content Now Available With New Star Trek Movie on iTunes
1
Story Archives...Browse:   

Talkback

89 comments Post New | Help
View:

RE: Racism | Report this post to moderator
By: takeitnomore (Odo's file, contact) @ 00:43:09 on May 12, 2004

Stroker, I have to admit, your post is one of the most intelligent and well thought out I have read yet.

I appreciate that you understand where I am coming from. You know as well as I that if a White comedian got on TV and said the same things about Black people that they say about White people, he would be destroyed. And not just comedians. Remember Howard Cosell and Jimmy the Greek? Did Jessie Jackson receive the same treatment for "hymietown?" Let's not forget who enslaved the Jews for 2000 years.

It is not so much the words I am talking about. I am talking about this double standard, and feel it is time for White people to demand equality, as in the same protections that minorities enjoy. If this double standard is allowed to continue, it can only make race matters worse.



--------

"The Iraqi regime's record over the decade leaves little doubt that Saddam Hussein wants to retain his arsenal of weapons of mass destruction and to expand it to include nuclear weapons. We cannot allow him to prevail in that quest. The weapons are an unacceptable threat." -- John Kerry, 10/9/02


"There are all kinds of atrocities, and I would have to say that, yes, yes, I committed the same kind of atrocities as thousands of other soldiers have committed in that I took part in shootings in free fire zones. I conducted harassment and interdiction fire. I took part in search and destroy missions, in the burning of villages. John Kerry, April 18, 1971


"I actually did vote for the $87 billion before I voted against it." -- John Kerry, presidential campaign,2004


Reply
Reply
Quote
Quote
Parent
Parent
Talkback Top
Top

RE: Racism | Report this post to moderator
By: Chris Pike (Odo's file, contact) @ 22:48:55 on May 11, 2004

Well said.

--------

"Worlds may change, galaxies may disintegrate, but a woman always remains a woman."
--James Kirk, "The Conscience of the King"

"Vulcan children are never late with their sehlats' dinner."
--T'Pol, "The Forge"



Reply
Reply
Quote
Quote
Parent
Parent
Talkback Top
Top
Promenade










TrekWeb Merchants
Amazon.com
Amazon.co.uk
Amazon.ca
Amazon.de
Barnes & Noble

Get Firefox!
Privacy Policy | About Us | Legal Notice | Contact Us | | Get Firefox!
© 1996-2009 TrekWeb.com and Steve Krutzler. All rights reserved.