Tags: Visual edit apiedit |
Tag: sourceedit |
||
Line 42: | Line 42: | ||
The ''[[Star Trek: Department of Temporal Investigations]]'' novel ''[[Watching the Clock]]'' also concludes the [[Temporal Cold War]] arc started in the series, revealing the true identity of [[Future Guy]]. |
The ''[[Star Trek: Department of Temporal Investigations]]'' novel ''[[Watching the Clock]]'' also concludes the [[Temporal Cold War]] arc started in the series, revealing the true identity of [[Future Guy]]. |
||
+ | |||
+ | The first chapter of the multiple-era-spanning videogame ''[[Legacy (game)|Legacy]]'' is an ''Enterprise'' story. |
||
{{ENT prose}} |
{{ENT prose}} |
Revision as of 19:59, 13 October 2015
Star Trek: Enterprise (originally entitled Enterprise during its first two seasons) was the fifth live-action incarnation of Star Trek. As a television series it ran from September 26, 2001 to May 13, 2005, spanning four seasons before it was canceled due to low ratings. The series continues in novels and other media.
Overview
The series depicts the voyages of Earth's first warp five starship, the Enterprise (NX-01). The series began with a focus on Humanity's early deep space exploration. Recurring story arcs in the series included: the interstellar-politics of the era, pointing towards the eventual formation of the United Federation of Planets; growing hostilities with the Romulan Star Empire, building up the Earth-Romulan War; and the Temporal Cold War.
In addition to the Enterprise itself settings for the series include: The Enterprise's sister ship, the Columbia and Earth and its galactic neighbors, including the Confederacy of Vulcan, the Andorian Empire, the Klingon Empire and the Romulan Star Empire. Other antagonists in the series have included the Suliban Cabal and the Xindi.
Characters
The primary characters in the series are the crew of the Enterprise: Captain Jonathan Archer; Charles "Trip" Tucker III, the chief engineer; T'Pol, the Vulcan first officer and science officer; Phlox, the Denobulan chief medical officer; Malcolm Reed, the tactic officer, come Section 31 spy; Hoshi Sato, a linguist and communications officer; and Travis Mayweather at the helm.
Prominent recurring characters include: The Andorian Shran; Ambassador Soval, of Vulcan; Starfleet admiral Maxwell Forrest; Erika Hernandez, captain of the Columbia; Future Guy, and his Suliban henchman Silik; and the enigmatic time traveler Timot Danlen, known as Crewman Daniels on the show.
Media
Episodes
Star Trek: Enterprise aired ninety-eight episodes (including five two-parters) over the course of four seasons. Due to declining ratings, the series was canceled during its fourth season.
Prose
As the most recent television series of Star Trek: Enterprise has so far spawned only a limited number of stories in novels and short stories.
Relaunch
Enterprise novels have expanded the series beyond its television ending. Novels in the Enterprise Relaunch initially focused on the events leading upto the Romulan War, before moving on to the events of the war itself and are currently exploring the early days of the Federation.
Crossover with Other Series
Enterprise stories have also featured in several multi-series prose projects. The first crossover Enterprise tale was a short prelude to the The Brave and the Bold duology. Enterprise short stories and novels have also been published in the Mirror Universe and Myriad Universes series. The starship Columbia and crew play a significant role in the Destiny crossover trilogy.
The Star Trek: Department of Temporal Investigations novel Watching the Clock also concludes the Temporal Cold War arc started in the series, revealing the true identity of Future Guy.
The first chapter of the multiple-era-spanning videogame Legacy is an Enterprise story.
Star Trek: Enterprise prose publications | ||
---|---|---|
Novelizations | Broken Bow • Shockwave • The Expanse | |
Original novels | set during the series | By the Book • What Price Honor? • Surak's Soul • Daedalus • Daedalus's Children • Last Full Measure • Rosetta |
set after the series | The Good That Men Do • Kobayashi Maru • The Romulan War (Beneath the Raptor's Wing • To Brave the Storm) • Rise of the Federation (A Choice of Futures • Tower of Babel • Uncertain Logic • Live by the Code • Patterns of Interference ) |
Star Trek: Enterprise collected short stories, novellas and short novels | ||
---|---|---|
Strange New Worlds | V ("Remnant" • "A Girl for Every Star" • "Hoshi's Gift") • VI ("Savior" • "Preconceptions" • "Cabin E-14") • VII ("Earthquake Weather") • 8 ("Egg Drop Soup" • "Hero" • "Insanity") • 9 ("Rounding a Corner Already Turned" • "Mother Nature's Little Reminders" • "Mestral") • 10 ("The Dream" • "Universal Chord" • "You Are Not in Space") | |
Misc. short stories | "Prelude: Discovery" • "Have Beagle, Will Travel: The Legend of Porthos" • "Nobunaga" • "The Offer" • "Control" | |
Misc. novellas & short novels | "Age of the Empress" • "A Less Perfect Union" | |
Comics | "The Fragile Beauty of Loyalty" |
Other media
Enterprise has not had any video games based purely on it, but the series does feature in the franchise-spanning games such as Legacy and Encounters, while storylines and events from the series are sometimes mentioned in Star Trek Online.
Enterprise is the only Star Trek series not to have any comics based on it. The most Enterprise has so far achieved in comics are a handful of references in IDW Publishing publications: A shuttlepod appeared in TNG comic: "Captain's Pleasure" and flashback to the ENT episode: "Divergence" was included in TOS comic: "Against Their Nature", making Phlox the first, and so far only, Enterprise character to appear in a comic. The NX-01 features as a hologram in young Kirk's bedroom in the comic Operation: Annihilate, Part 1 .
Enterprise references can be found in several of the RPG books published by Decipher, and the Star Trek: Customizable Card Game.
Whilst there are no reference works based solely on the series, elements from the series are incorporated into the Star Charts book, and Star Trek: Fact Files and Star Trek: The Collector's Edition part-work publications. Images based on Enterprise have also appeared in the Ships of the Line calendars and Ships of the Line book. The reference book Federation: The First 150 Years heavily details the events of Enterprise in the first few chapters.
The Star Trek: The Visual Dictionary features a large section on Star Trek: Enterprise. The USS Enterprise Owners' Workshop Manual features a chapter on the Enterprise (NX-01).
Real world information about the series is detailed in Star Trek 101, and Enterprise prose is listed in Voyages of Imagination.
Appendices
External links
- Star Trek: Enterprise article at Memory Alpha, the wiki for canon Star Trek.
- Star Trek: Enterprise article at Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.