TV Rewind: Star Trek: Enterprise’s Origin Story Walked So Strange New Worlds Could Run

TV Rewind: Star Trek: Enterprise’s Origin Story Walked So Strange New Worlds Could Run

Almost sixty years on, the Star Trek franchise is once again having itself a bit of a moment. Though the franchise restarters Discovery and Picard have wrapped, spinoff Strange New Worlds is still rollicking along in its third season (with two more on the way before its five-year mission concludes). And a new series set at Starfleet Academy is currently in production, slated for premiere in 2026. But as we celebrate this embarrassment of Trek riches, we should take a look back at the series that wrapped the franchise’s TV run in the early-to-mid 2000s: Enterprise

A prequel that followed the original USS Enterprise on its first exploratory mission into deep space, the series landed at a precarious time in the franchise’s history. It came at the end of a two-decade-long run of Star Trek shows that spanned classic series like The Next Generation, Deep Space Nine, and Voyager. Enterprise looked to reorient the franchise after the long run of increasingly dense its various series had been telling in shows like Deep Space Nine and Voyager. (Which were great, but hard for new fans to break into.)

Where those shows primarily focused on internal lore and world-building, Enterprise was a soft reboot of sorts, taking the Trek franchise back to its origins (literally) by following humanity’s first baby steps out into the stars. The series was a big swing for the now-defunct UPN, and would run for four seasons from 2001 to 2005, staving off cancellation a couple of times before the network finally pulled the plug.

Enterprise starred Quantum Leap fan favorite Scott Bakula as Captain Jonathan Archer, Jolene Blalock as Vulcan science officer T’Pol, and Connor Trinneer asthe  ship’s engineer “Trip” Tucker, alongside an expansive supporting cast of the ship’s main crew. Though Bakula will likely best be remembered for his seminal stint as Sam Beckett, his turn as Archer is also a career-defining role. He brings a likable humanity that you can’t help but root for in his leadership style when faced with the greatest of odds, and even when the show goes through some creative retooling, his performance helps keep it grounded.

Most of the crew was human, and the series was able to tackle the earlier versions of themes we only got to explore several steps down the evolutionary line on The Next Generation and its sequels. This was a version of Star Trek we could see ourselves in, because their present wasn’t all that far away from our own. This was the story of humanity still trying to figure out how to create the better, more aspirational perspective that has come to define the franchise.

The series hit at a sweet spot that Paramount would eventually revisit to great success with Strange New Worlds, telling a story in a world not wildly removed from our own. There’s just something about those early days of the Star Trek franchise. Enterprise made some very particular (and possibly peculiar) decisions along the way, like featuring a—very controversial among fans—theme song with lyrics, showing the crew wearing more casual “off duty” clothes like baseball caps, and Archer bringing his pet dog Porthos along for the journey. It was a version of humanity still trying to prove itself to the wider universe, with every new episode taking Archer and his crew a little further out than humanity had ever been before.

Of course, there are also reasons Enterprise’s legacy isn’t often mentioned with the great entries in the franchise. Network meddling led to creative overhauls throughout the show’s run, including a temporal Cold War storyline and a shocking terrorist attack on Earth that turned the previously exploratory adventure into more of a straight-up action story, tracking humanity at war for the back half of the show’s run.

Yes, it made for some interesting creative twists to see the Enterprise and its crew grapple with the change in their mission. But it was also an awkward transition that felt forced (because it kinda was), and that makes the series feel a bit disjointed in hindsight. But even when it wasn’t working at its best, Enterprise was paving the way for the kinds of stories and action the franchise would eventually return to in its modern era. 

Arguably the biggest current hit in the world of Trek? That’d be the aforementioned Strange New Worlds, a critical darling that is itself a prequel to Star Trek: The Original Series. That earlier era of Trek just feels more tangible, and in revisiting Enterprise two decades later, it’s much easier to see the awkward through lines they were connecting on the fly.  It was an attempt to create a Star Trek that could recapture fans who may have peeled off over the years, and though Enterprise ultimately failed in that goal (the pilot was watched by an eye-popping 12+ million viewers, while the final season hovered under 3 million generally), the series still paved the way for the franchise’s eventual revival and the hit run of Trek shows we’re enjoying now.

Though Enterprise was unceremoniously cancelled after four seasons with a series finale that remains one of the most underwhelming in franchise history (spoiler alert: the final episode is actually a holodeck simulation from the Next Generation era), it still holds a crucial place in Trek history as the awkward show that transitioned the franchise’s TV legacy from what it was to what it would become.

With Strange New Worlds having just wrapped its third season and Season 4 not slated to arrive until 2026, it’s the perfect time for an Enterprise rewatch. Just remember to pet Porthos; he loves it when you rub him behind the ears.

Star Trek: Enterprise is currently streaming on Paramount+. 


Trent Moore is a recovering print journalist, and freelance editor and writer with bylines at lots of places. He likes to find the sweet spot where pop culture crosses over with everything else. Follow him at @trentlmoore on Twitter.

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