Re: The end of \'Enterprise\'
I missed Terra Prime because my stupid ReplayTV recorded the final twice (I must have had it set to keep 2 episodes, so the finale repeat deleted Terra Prime or something).
So can someone just tell me how the baby came to be?
* Insignificant distraction to save that dudes daughter. Who cares?
I guess they just wanted to involved Jeffrey Combs somehow, like TNG built an episode around Q.
* Somehow these aliens catch up to a warp 5 Enterprise, and appear on board, and right near where the Captain is? Whatever
I know. WTF?! Ok, surprise us like that, fine, but at least explain it?
* The holodeck stuff was ANNOYING.
Seeing Riker had the same effect as the narration at the end did:
1. Just made me think of how crappy Enterprise was compared to TOS and TNG
2. I now understood why Jolene Blalock called the finale "abysmal"- the treated the finale as a finale for the franchise, not just the series. Even if the series was subpar, it still deserved its own finale, not be validated by including outside stuff.
or TNG with people talking to Guinan or counsoler Troi.
I like when Troi said "in those days they didn't have a ship's counselor" Yeah, 'cause maybe they were tougher! The worst part about TNG is how PC polite, nice and neat everyone is.
The time gap was also quite arbitrary.
Well that didn't bother me. At least we know what happens to them.
he only solid part was the ending montage of the three Enterprises, but even there, why wasn't there at least a gesture towards DS9 or Voyager?
Because they weren't Enterprises.
Was Tasha Yar killed because Denise wanted to leave the show?
I believe so, yes.
- Troi's comment ruins any possible shock value upon the result of Trip's final action
I guess this was supposed to make us nervous and excited during the shoot-out scene rescuing Shran's daughter, a red-herring since he was saved by Archer.
to hell with the chance they could make a return someday for whatever reason, let's kill 'em off!
Even though Denise Richards came back a number of times. The great thing about science-fiction is that nobody is really "dead." With Yar, yer first re-apparence (Yesterday's Enterprise) was one of the greatest moments of Trek history. Her subsequent reappearances as Yar's Romulan daughter were fun but corny.
In fact, I think the only main character's departure that didn't end in their demise was Wesley Crusher's.
Because I don't think Weaton was quitting at that point, he was already gone for years. They just knew it was the last season and wanted to send him off on a positive note.
they can just say that it was another holodeck program created for entertainment, and not a 100% historical one
What else could it be?
One thing that bothered me a lot is that a "historical record" portrays private, intimate conversations between the people involved. Yes, I suppose it would have been a result of compiling what the people involved said happened in interviews and memoirs, but still... creepy.
To me Enterprise was this very last season, with the deletion of 2 episodes. The season premier, where Cotto had to clean up the mess left to him from the Season 3 cliffhanger, and the finale. Take those 2 out of the picture and there is the show that we should have been given from day 1.
Nerd nitpick: the "cleaning up" actually took two episodes.
I said it before and I'll say it again. When GeneR died, Trek died with him.
Riker was deciding whether or not to disobey the orders of the highest ranking officer in his current situation (the Pegasus captain, who out-ranked Picard) as opposed to doing what he felt was right (telling Picard about the cloaking device).
Tripp disobeyed Archer's command to not cooperate with the bad guys (taking them to Shran). He actually told an enemy to knock out his captain so that he could accomplish his sneaky act of sabotage.
The conncetion is there but tenuous. Both went against protocol for a greater good and following their conscience. But Riker was making a careful, tortured, deliberate decision and was dealing with competing loyalties (Riker didn't resent or hate his old Pegasus captain), while Tripp operated on instinct.
So yeah, it was bullshit.
Despite the fact that the TNG characters crossing over were two of the less interesting characters,
I used to not like Rker, but upon re-watching the series a couple of years ago, he became my favorite character after the Big Three (Picard, Data, Worf, the three that most people would consider their favorites). Mainly I like him because he's the least TNG-ish character. In other circumstances, I can imagine him being less noble and pure and good.
Oh, LH, B&B didn't kill off Kess either. One more they let 'evolve' to a higher being, like Wesley, instead of dying.
I think axing here was their idea, not hers. So basically when an actor decides to leave, they die, but when they want to can someone, they evolve or some shit.
Re: Roddenberry/Berman
I think Roddenberry lost or gave up creative control of the franchise long before his death. I don't think he had much input in the films, and even some of his TNG ideas were questionable (Crusher is his fault). Roddenberry, like Lucas, created great universes, but both often work better when other folks help out.
If Roddenberry had seen how DS9 turned out he probably would have rolled over in his grave, but that show kicked ass.