fade
Staff member
WARNING: THE FOLLOWING CONTAINS OPINION. IT MAY DIFFER FROM YOURS, WHICH--WHILE PAINFUL--IS TOTALLY ACCEPTABLE. SOME NEGATIVE OPINIONS MAY OR MAY NOT BE EXPRESSED, BUT REALLY, THAT'S OKAY, TOO.
The theme song sucks.
There I said it. We all know it, now let's move on. Who knows what was going on behind the scenes with that decision. It happened.
I just watched the pilot for the first time. I have two words: nailed it. I couldn't care less about continuity breaches, by the way. Although given the fact that the villain revealed in the very first scene is temporal, doesn't that make for an excuse of sorts? It's better than a whiny teenager pounding on the walls of reality.
I really thought they hit a lot of points lacking in the older shows. The set designers and costumers did an excellent job connecting 2001 with the year in which the show is set. I especially like the restlessness with which the humans view the Vulcans. For all the griping about continuity (which usually goes "BLAH BLAH BLAH TRANSPORTERS BLAH BLAH") Enterprise got some things correct that other shows and movies seemed to get wrong. It was nice to see right in the pilot the acknowledgement that Vulcans have emotions, they just suppress them. We even have the ambassador raising his voice, and T'Pol showing gratitude. So many other writers seem to think they don't have them at all. It's nice to see the Captain have flaws, too. And character growth, which in TNG seemed to be limited to Data and Worf.
Humans having libidos, aliens being interested in humans rather than just the other way around. Non-sterile alien environments, acknowledgement of multiple cultures and languages on alien worlds, etc... all in the pilot.
Now the negatives.
In TOS and TNG and DS9 and even VOY, humans kick ass. Our tech is awesome. It's actually a breath of fresh air compared to most scifis where we suck. ENT does go back to the humans suck paradigm a bit too much. The Vulcans went from being benevolent big brothers to assholes. While it was nice to see the equivalent of marines again, they seem to suck at combat. Tucker is smart, yet dumb as a brick. Oh. And the acting. It's as though the director said, "be as over the top about EVERY emotional reaction as possible". Geez if this is the way humans act in the future, no wonder Vulcans think we're whiny babies.
The theme song sucks.
There I said it. We all know it, now let's move on. Who knows what was going on behind the scenes with that decision. It happened.
I just watched the pilot for the first time. I have two words: nailed it. I couldn't care less about continuity breaches, by the way. Although given the fact that the villain revealed in the very first scene is temporal, doesn't that make for an excuse of sorts? It's better than a whiny teenager pounding on the walls of reality.
I really thought they hit a lot of points lacking in the older shows. The set designers and costumers did an excellent job connecting 2001 with the year in which the show is set. I especially like the restlessness with which the humans view the Vulcans. For all the griping about continuity (which usually goes "BLAH BLAH BLAH TRANSPORTERS BLAH BLAH") Enterprise got some things correct that other shows and movies seemed to get wrong. It was nice to see right in the pilot the acknowledgement that Vulcans have emotions, they just suppress them. We even have the ambassador raising his voice, and T'Pol showing gratitude. So many other writers seem to think they don't have them at all. It's nice to see the Captain have flaws, too. And character growth, which in TNG seemed to be limited to Data and Worf.
Humans having libidos, aliens being interested in humans rather than just the other way around. Non-sterile alien environments, acknowledgement of multiple cultures and languages on alien worlds, etc... all in the pilot.
Now the negatives.
In TOS and TNG and DS9 and even VOY, humans kick ass. Our tech is awesome. It's actually a breath of fresh air compared to most scifis where we suck. ENT does go back to the humans suck paradigm a bit too much. The Vulcans went from being benevolent big brothers to assholes. While it was nice to see the equivalent of marines again, they seem to suck at combat. Tucker is smart, yet dumb as a brick. Oh. And the acting. It's as though the director said, "be as over the top about EVERY emotional reaction as possible". Geez if this is the way humans act in the future, no wonder Vulcans think we're whiny babies.