Friday, 22 May 2009

An Enterprise …

You know, I’ve got to confess to having had a very long day, today.

For various reasons.   And it doesn’t help — from a blogging viewpoint — that the less time I have, the less opportunity I have to write constructively.

But — if nothing else — I can at least do something …

Or, at least, tell you what I was watching on television.

Now I’ve had a Freeview box for a few years, now, and I’ve found it something of a mixed blessing; tons of free stuff often is.

And Freeview — the UK’s free to air digital TV platform — has tons of free stuff.   And like the open source software scene, there’s usually tons of stuff to wade through, before you find something you like.

Or want to watch, in this case.

One of the gems — I think — is something of an oldish favourite; “Star Trek: Enterprise”, the most recent entry in the franchise, and one that Virgin 1, now available 24-7 on Freeview, has been showing for the past few months.

I’ve got to confess, I’ve been enjoying catching up with the series.

You see, I first caught it, a few years ago, when its UK broadcaster, Channel Five, showed it.   And, working shifts the way I have for the past few years, I, inevitably, missed the odd episode.

Saying that, tonights episode, “E2” is one that I’ve seen before.


And thoroughly enjoyed.

Mostly for those emotional tones that US science fiction has generally done a touch better than its UK equivalent.   Granted, there’s been a sparsity of UK genre TV, over the past … oooohh …decade and a half or so, and that “Doctor Who”, under Russell T. Davies’ captaincy, has rapidly closed up the gap, but …

Not that E2” is one of the better episodes in that regard.

But the plot — showing us what happens when an alternative timeline NX-01 Enterprise — meets the ‘real’ one, does show us how the crew react to meeting their children and grandchildren.   And is a nicely scripted and directed episode.

Plaudits to director, Roxanne Dawson, there, I think, and to Jolene Blalock, as T’Pol, as well, I think; nicely turned out performance.   And to John Billingsley, as Doctor Phlox.

Now there was an underused, character, I think; certainly in this episode.

You can never have too much Phlox.

But E2” is a good episode to watch, if you’ve nothing else else on.   It’s not the work of genius that “Genesis of the Daleks”, “Talons of Weng Chiang”, or “Next Generation” episodes “Sarek”, or “Darmok”.

But it is a competently entertaining one to watch.

And speaking personally, I think it’s a shame that “Star Trek: Enterprise” ended when it did; I always thought it had a few more years in it …




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