Star Trek: Enterprise season 4
Star Trek: Enterprise | |
---|---|
Season 4 | |
No. of episodes | 22 |
Release | |
Original network | UPN |
Original release | October 8, 2004 May 13, 2005 | –
Season chronology | |
The fourth season of the American
Season four was the final season of the series, with the show being cancelled during the filming of the episode "
Plot overview
Following the season-long
Cast
Main cast
- Scott Bakula as Captain Jonathan Archer
- Jolene Blalock as T'Pol
- Connor Trinneer as Commander Charles "Trip" Tucker III
- Malcolm Reed
- Linda Park as Ensign Hoshi Sato
- Anthony Montgomery as Ensign Travis Mayweather
- John Billingsley as Doctor Phlox
Guest cast
- Soval(6 episodes)
- Shran(5 episodes)
- Derek Magyar as Commander Kelby (5 episodes)
- Eric Pierpoint as Harris (4 episodes)
- Brent Spiner as Arik Soong / Lt. Cmdr. Data (voice only) (4 episodes)
- Maxwell Forrest/Captain Maximilian Forrest (3 episodes)
- Abby Brammell as Persis (3 episodes)
- Michael Reilly Burke as Koss (3 episodes)
- Robert Foxworth as Administrator V'Las (3 episodes)
- Erika Hernandez(3 episodes)
- Brian Thompson as Admiral Valdore (3 episodes)
- Lee Arenberg as Tellarite Ambassador Gral (2 episodes)
- James Averyas General K'Vagh (2 episodes)
- Joanna Cassidy as T'Les (2 episodes)
- Adam Clark as Josiah (2 episodes)
- Jack Donner as Vulcan Priest (2 episodes)
- J. Michael Flynn as Nijil (2 episodes)
- Adam Grimes as Lokesh (2 episodes)
- Harry Groener as Nathan Samuels (2 episodes)
- Peter Mensah as Daniel Greaves (2 episodes)
- Alec Newman as Malik (2 episodes)
- Richard Riehle as Dr. Jeremy Lucas (2 episodes)
- John Rubinstein as Minister Kuvak (2 episodes)
- John Schuck as Antaak (2 episodes)
- Geno Silva as Senator Vrax (2 episodes)
- Terrell Tilford as Marab (2 episodes)
- Johanna Watts as Gannet Brooks (2 episodes)
- Peter Weller as John Frederick Paxton (2 episodes)
- Daniels(2 episodes)
- T'Pau(2 episodes)
- Molly Brink as Lieutenant Talas (2 episode)
- Jim Fitzpatrick as Commander Williams (1 episode)
- Silik(1 episode)
- Seth MacFarlane as Ensign Rivers (1 episode)
Episodes
In the following table, episodes are listed by the order in which they aired.
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Date | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Prod. code | U.S. viewers (millions) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
77 | 1 | "Storm Front" | Unknown | Allan Kroeker | Manny Coto | October 8, 2004 | 40358-077 | 2.89[1] |
After destroying the Xindi weapon, Enterprise finds itself in the 20th century during World War II with Nazis in control of the North Eastern USA. | ||||||||
78 | 2 | "Storm Front, Part II" | Unknown | David Straiton | Manny Coto | October 15, 2004 | 40358-078 | 3.11[2] |
Temporal Cold War . | ||||||||
79 | 3 | "Home" | Unknown | Allan Kroeker | Mike Sussman | October 22, 2004 | 40358-079 | 3.16[3] |
encounters prejudice on Earth. | ||||||||
80 | 4 | "Borderland" | May 17, 2154 | David Livingston | Ken LaZebnik | October 29, 2004 | 40358-080 | 3.18[4] |
Dr. Arik Soong restores his relationship with his genetically-enhanced "children," Augments . | ||||||||
81 | 5 | "Cold Station 12" | Unknown | Mike Vejar | Alan Brennert[a] | November 5, 2004 | 40358-081 | 3.39[5] |
A space station crew is held hostage as Dr. Arik Soong and his Augments work to obtain hundreds of Augment embryos in hopes of creating an Augment population. | ||||||||
82 | 6 | "The Augments" | May 27, 2154 | LeVar Burton | Mike Sussman | November 12, 2004 | 40358-082 | 3.39[6] |
Dr. Arik Soong finds himself overthrown as "father" of the Augments and Archer rushes to prevent the destruction of a Klingon colony. As a result of his dashed hopes of enhancing humans, Soong turns in a new direction of research. | ||||||||
83 | 7 | " Judith Reeves-Stevens | November 19, 2004 | 40358-083 | 3.15[7] | |||
Earth's embassy on Vulcan is partially destroyed by a bomb, killing Admiral Forrest . Archer and T'Pol travel to Vulcan in search of an alleged terrorist group blamed for the explosion, of which T'Pol's mother is a member. | ||||||||
84 | 8 | "Awakening" | Unknown | Roxann Dawson | André Bormanis | November 26, 2004 | 40358-084 | 3.38[8] |
Archer and T'Pol find katra . | ||||||||
85 | 9 | "Kir'Shara" | Unknown | David Livingston | Mike Sussman | December 3, 2004 | 40358-085 | 3.19[9] |
Archer and T'Pol bring back the Kir'Shara (Surak's artifact) that will lead to vast changes in the Vulcan world. T'Pol's Pa'nar Syndrome is cured by T'Pau. | ||||||||
86 | 10 | "Daedalus" | Unknown | David Straiton | Alan Brennert[a] & Ken LaZebnik | January 14, 2005 | 40358-086 | 3.03[10] |
Dr. Emory Erickson, inventor of the transporter, conducts a long-range experiment in order to recover his lost son. | ||||||||
87 | 11 | "Observer Effect" | Unknown | Mike Vejar | Garfield Reeves-Stevens & Judith Reeves-Stevens | January 21, 2005 | 40358-087 | 2.76[11] |
Organians test the Enterprise crew by observing their reactions to a deadly silicon-based infection. | ||||||||
88 | 12 | "Babel One" | November 12, 2154 | David Straiton | Mike Sussman & André Bormanis | January 28, 2005 | 40358-088 | 2.53[12] |
Tellarites after apparently being attacked by a Tellarite vessel en route to trade talks. | ||||||||
89 | 13 | "United" | November 15, 2154 | David Livingston | S : Manny Coto T : Judith Reeves-Stevens & Garfield Reeves-Stevens | February 4, 2005 | 40358-089 | 2.81[13] |
Archer and Shran engage in mortal combat as Archer tries to unite the Andorians and Tellarites who are being set at each other's throats by a remote-controlled Romulan vessel. | ||||||||
90 | 14 | "The Aenar" | Unknown | Mike Vejar | S : Manny Coto T : André Bormanis | February 11, 2005 | 40358-090 | 3.17[14] |
The drone Romulan ship that attacked the Andorians is under the control of an Aenar , an offshoot race of the Andorians. Archer and Shran join forces to rescue the Aenar and stop the Romulan plot. | ||||||||
91 | 15 | "Affliction" | November 27, 2154 | Michael Grossman | S : Manny Coto T : Mike Sussman | February 18, 2005 | 40358-091 | 3.17[15] |
Phlox is kidnapped by the Klingons who are seeking to cure a disease caused by an attempt to create Klingon/Augment hybrids; T'Pol's mental abilities grow after she conducts her first mind meld. | ||||||||
92 | 16 | "Divergence" | Unknown | David Barrett | Garfield Reeves-Stevens & Judith Reeves-Stevens | February 25, 2005 | 40358-092 | 2.96[16] |
With the Columbia's help, the Enterprise crew grapples with sabotage to their ship as they pursue the truth behind the kidnapping of Phlox. The disease is cured, but genetic mutations will make many Klingons appear human-like for generations to come. | ||||||||
93 | 17 | "Bound" | December 27, 2154 | Allan Kroeker | Manny Coto | April 15, 2005 | 40358-093 | 2.56[17] |
As a gift for negotiating with the Orion Syndicate, Archer receives three Orion Slave Girls, but these "gifts" have their own agenda. Meanwhile, Trip and T'Pol come to terms with the psychic bond that has been created between them. | ||||||||
94 | 18 | "In a Mirror, Darkly" | January 13, 2155 | James L. Conway | Mike Sussman | April 22, 2005 | 40358-094 | 2.59[18] |
In the Tholian space. | ||||||||
95 | 19 | "In a Mirror, Darkly, Part II" | January 18, 2155 | Marvin V. Rush | S : Manny Coto T : Mike Sussman | April 29, 2005 | 40358-095 | 2.92[19] |
In the Mirror Universe, Archer commandeers the 23rd-century Defiant from the Tholians and uses it in a nefarious power grab. | ||||||||
96 | 20 | "Demons" | January 19, 2155 | LeVar Burton | Manny Coto | May 6, 2005 | 40358-096 | 3.01[20] |
A xenophobic faction of humanity threatens to undermine talks to form a new coalition of planets. | ||||||||
97 | 21 | "Terra Prime" | January 22, 2155 | Marvin V. Rush | S : André Bormanis T : Manny Coto S/T : Judith Reeves-Stevens, Garfield Reeves-Stevens | May 13, 2005 | 40358-097 | 3.80[21] |
A human isolationist leader threatens to destroy Starfleet Command unless all aliens leave Earth immediately. His bargaining tool: a baby cloned from DNA belonging to Trip and T'Pol. | ||||||||
98 | 22 | "These Are the Voyages..." | 47457.1[b] | Allan Kroeker | Rick Berman & Brannon Braga | May 13, 2005 | 40358-098 | 3.80[21] |
Two centuries in the future, two crew members of the USS Enterprise (NCC-1701-D) (Commander William Riker and Counselor Deanna Troi) observe a holodeck creation of the final voyage of the NX-01 in 2161 (six years after the events of "Terra Prime") as it returns to Earth for decommissioning and the signing of the United Federation of Planets charter. |
- ^ a b Credited as Michael Bryant
- ^ Set during "The Pegasus".
Production
The series had been at risk of cancellation following the third season.[22] But the rights holders, Paramount Television, reduced the cost per episode that it charged network UPN from $1.7 million per episode to $800,000.[23] The broadcast schedule was subsequently changed and repeat episodes were moved to Friday nights at 8pm ET / 9pm PT,[24] with season four making its debut in that timeslot on October 8, 2004.[25] TV Guide described the new time slot as "where the network was drawing virtually no viewers with what one executive calls 'eighth runs of slasher movies'".[23] Enterprise was not the first Star Trek series to be moved to a Friday night timeslot following a budget cut, as Star Trek: The Original Series for the third season was moved to a 10pm ET timeslot where it was subsequently cancelled.[26][27] Manny Coto said the budget cuts were mostly offset by the cost savings of filming using digital cameras.[28]
The fourth season also saw a change in the production team. Enterprise had previously been run by the show's creators, Rick Berman and Brannon Braga, who were also the executive producers.[29][30] Manny Coto joined the production team during the third season as a co-executive producer following his work on the series Odyssey 5. His scripts were well received, having written such episodes as "Similitude". For the fourth season, Coto was credited as the show runner. He explained in an interview that "What's been publicized, that Rick and Brannon have stepped back and I've moved in, is not exactly true. I've kinda moved in with them, so to speak, so we're all three running the show. I'm actually more in charge of writing, I guess, dealing with the writers and the 'writing room,' coming up with stories that Rick and Brannon approve or not approve, or give notes on."[24] He explained that the process was for the three of them to pitch stories together and work on fleshing them out.[24]
Following Coto's appointment as executive producer, he also sought to make changes to the writing team.
Cancellation
It was announced on February 3, 2005 that Enterprise had been cancelled.
The President of
The cancellation of Enterprise was protested by fans of the series. Actions included around a hundred fans picketing the gates of
Themes
The fourth season sought to be different from the previous series of Enterprise in the way that story arcs worked. In the earlier series there was the ongoing
The producers also sought to resolve issues with the difference in Enterprise compared to the other series. One of these was the actions and attitudes of the
Reception
Ratings
Following the move to a Friday evening timeslot, Enterprise was going up directly against episodes of
Reviews
The links to The Original Series were seen as positive improvements to Star Trek: Enterprise by critics, including elements such as the appearance of the
In 2019, CBR rated Season 4 of Star Trek: Enterprise as the 19th best of 31 seasons of all Star Trek shows at that time, and said although it was a strong season "there were some big misses."[62][59]
"These Are the Voyages..."
The critical response to the final episode, "These Are the Voyages..." was mostly negative. For example, the Wisconsin State Journal described it as "hands down the worst series finale ever".[60] The episode featured a holodeck simulation on the USS Enterprise (NCC-1701-D) from Star Trek: The Next Generation during the events of the episode "The Pegasus" and the return of Commander William Riker (Jonathan Frakes) and Counselor Deanna Troi (Marina Sirtis).[63] It was written by Berman and Braga, who responded to negative criticism of the episode by saying "You have to remember that under normal circumstances most people probably would have thought this was a very cool episode because it has a great concept driving it".[64] Berman later said: "I would have never done it if I had known how people were going to react."[29]
Iain Miller of
The Boston Herald described the episode as one of the best ways to disappoint fans during 2005, saying that it "turned out to be an inappropriate ode to Star Trek: The Next Generation."
Awards
Episodes from the fourth season of Enterprise received three nominations for the 2005 Emmy Awards. The hairdesign/stylist team were nominated for Outstanding Hairstyling For a Series for their work in the episode "In A Mirror, Darkly" but lost to the team on Deadwood.[70][71] Vince Deadrick Jr was nominated for Outstanding Stunt Coordination for his work in the episodes "Borderland" and "Cold Station 12" but was beaten by Matt Taylor for 24.[70][72] The third nomination was not for a specific episode, but for the overall season with the makeup team nominated for Outstanding Prosthetic Makeup For a Series, Miniseries, Movie Or a Special.[70] The award went to HBO's The Life and Death of Peter Sellers.[73] The series was nominated for Best Network Television Series at the 31st Saturn Awards,[74] but the award went to Lost.[75]
The second part of "Storm Front" was awarded the Outstanding Visual Effects for a Broadcast Series at the 2005 Visual Effects Society awards. Ronald D. Moore received the award on behalf of the production team.[76][77] The dogfight over New York City seen in that episode was also nominated for Outstanding Created Environment in a Live Action Broadcast Program, but lost to the opening sequence of the television series Spartacus.[77]
Media information
Following the end of the series, the fourth season was released on DVD before the end of 2005.[78] It was also included in a complete set containing all four seasons of the series.[79]
Star Trek: Enterprise – Season 4 | |||
Set details | Special features | ||
|
Blu-Ray:
| ||
Release dates | |||
DVD | Blu-ray | ||
Region 1 | Region 2 | United States (Region free) | United Kingdom (Region free) |
November 1, 2005[78] | October 31, 2005[81] | April 1, 2014[80] | April 14, 2014[82] |
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External links
- Episode guide at StarTrek.com