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- Season 1 overviewSep 26, 2001-May 22, 200226 episodesSeason 1 episodes1. Broken Bow Sep 26, 2001
- Captain Jonathan Archer commands a crew at the front lines of intergalactic upheaval.
- 2. Broken Bow Sep 26, 2001
- Captain Jonathan Archer commands a crew at the front lines of intergalactic upheaval.
- 3. Fight or Flight Oct 3, 2001
- The crew encounters an abandoned ship containing alien corpses.
- 4. Strange New World Oct 10, 2001
- A violent storm during a research mission on an Earthlike planet leaves the away team stranded.
- 5. Unexpected Oct 17, 2001
- An alien impregnates Trip, and the crew has to deal with the consequences.
- 6. Terra Nova Oct 24, 2001
- The crew investigates a legendary Earth colony whose inhabitants disappeared decades ago.
- 7. The Andorian Incident Oct 31, 2001
- The crew visits an ancient Vulcan spiritual sanctuary occupied by a paranoid race of aliens.
- 8. Breaking the Ice Nov 7, 2001
- Vulcans observe the crew members as they encounter an uncharted comet.
- 9. Civilization Nov 14, 2001
- The crew members disguise themselves as aliens to explore a civilized, Earthlike planet.
- 10. Fortunate Son Nov 21, 2001
- The Enterprise aids a ship that transports humans, when the vessel is under attack by pirates.
- 11. Cold Front Nov 28, 2001
- Archer encounters Silik, his Suliban nemesis, when he invites alien tourists aboard the ship.
- 12. Silent Enemy Jan 16, 2002
- An unidentified vessel attacks the unprepared Enterprise.
- 13. Dear Doctor Jan 23, 2002
- Dr. Phlox declines to help an alien race because of his philosophical beliefs.
- 14. Sleeping Dogs Jan 30, 2002
- Crew members become stranded aboard a disabled Klingon vessel.
- 15. Shadows of P'Jem Feb 6, 2002
- Archer and crew learn that the Vulcan high command has ordered T'Pol to leave the Enterprise.
- 16. Shuttlepod One Feb 13, 2002
- A malfunction strands Trip and Reed on the shuttle, adrift in an asteroid field.
- 17. Fusion Feb 27, 2002
- The crew welcomes aboard Vulcans who are eager to experience new emotions.
- 18. Rogue Planet Mar 20, 2002
- The crew encounters aliens who hunt indigenous creatures for recreation.
- 19. Acquisition Mar 27, 2002
- The Ferengi stun the Enterprise crew with a noxious gas and attempt to pillage the ship.
- 20. Oasis Apr 3, 2002
- The crew encounters apparitions while exploring a ship that crashed on a desolate planet.
- 21. Detained Apr 24, 2002
- The Suliban detain Archer and Mayweather, who have accidentally entered a military zone.
- 22. Vox Sola May 1, 2002
- A creature spins a cocoon around Archer and Trip and feeds off them to survive.
- 23. Fallen Hero May 8, 2002
- The Enterprise escorts a Vulcan ambassador accused of criminal misconduct.
- 24. Desert Crossing May 8, 2002
- An alien leader invites Archer and Trip to his desert planet to repay them for fixing his ship.
- 25. Two Days and Two Nights May 15, 2002
- Shore leave on the pleasure planet Risa leaves the crew in various states of disarray.
- 26. Shockwave May 22, 2002
- Starfleet orders the Enterprise home after it appears to have caused the destruction of a planet.
Episodes. Season 1 (2001–02) Season 2 (2002–03) Season 3 (2003–04) Season 4 (2004–05) Ratings. See also. References. External links. List of Star Trek: Enterprise episodes. Star Trek: Enterprise is an American science fiction television series that originally aired on the UPN network from September 26, 2001 to May 13, 2005. [1] .
Find out the titles, ratings, and summaries of the 26 episodes of Star Trek: Enterprise season 2, which aired in 2003. See the top-rated episodes, such as Regeneration, Dawn, and Future Tense, and the season finale, The Expanse.
Find out the best and worst episodes of Star Trek: Enterprise, the clunkiest of the Star Trek series, with brief ratings and reviews. Learn about the seasons, the key episodes, and the characters of the show that follows the Enterprise's voyages across the galaxy.
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- Overview
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- Opening credits
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, originally titled Enterprise until Season 3, is the sixth series set in the Star Trek universe. Created by Rick Berman and Brannon Braga, and based upon Gene Roddenberry's classic 1966 Star Trek (and its subsequent spin-offs), Enterprise was a prequel set a century before the time of Kirk and Spock. The series followed the voyages of the first starship Enterprise and mankind's first steps into the "final frontier". Initially titled as simply Enterprise, the series ran an abbreviated four seasons. The series debuted in 2001 on the United Paramount Network replacing Star Trek: Voyager. It was canceled in 2005.
As of 2024, due to its placement in the Star Trek timeline, Enterprise is the only Star Trek production whose continuity is not affected by the events of the 2009 film reintroducing the crew of James T. Kirk, making it the only TV series in the Star Trek universe to maintain continuity in both the prime and alternate realities.
•Main Title Theme (seasons 1-2) file info
•Main Title Theme (seasons 3-4) file info
•"Where My Heart Will Take Me" lyrics (composed by Diane Warren, vocals by Russell Watson)
•Mirror Main Title Theme file info (used in episodes "In a Mirror, Darkly" and "In a Mirror, Darkly, Part II", composed by Dennis McCarthy & Kevin Kiner)
This article or section needs citations was created in the hopes of revitalizing the Star Trek franchise since ratings for the previous series, Star Trek: Voyager, had waned near the end. Intended to be more modern, with characters far from Gene Roddenberry's 24th century Utopian Humanity, Enterprise was situated in one of the least explored eras in the Star Trek universe and a time only 150 years from present day.
was set in the 22nd century, at a time before the Federation and while United Earth was just becoming a player in interstellar politics.
The producers – under the guidance of Roddenberry's successor, Rick Berman – sought to set the series apart from those that had come before, creating nearly every set, prop and costume anew and tending toward a more encompassing, "you-are-there" style of storytelling.
According to comments made by Executive Producer Brannon Braga in discussions with fans at TrekMovie.com, Berman's original idea for the series was to have the entire first season set on Earth as Humanity's first-ever warp starship was constructed. This was soon decided to be too far removed from the style of the franchise as a whole, and so the premise was redrafted.
, like Star Trek: Deep Space Nine before it, featured numerous story arcs throughout its run. Story lines included the Temporal Cold War and the Xindi arc that took up the show's entire third season.
The series was the first to incorporate lyrics into its opening theme song (unused lyrics did exist for the original series' fanfare); it also did not include the words Star Trek in its title until the third season episode "Extinction".
Launched in the year 2151, the NX-class starship Enterprise (the first of United Earth's advanced warp five vessels) was at first on temporary assignment. Though years of preparation still lay ahead, the ship was unexpectedly put into service when a Klingon national crash-landed on Earth, putting the entire planet at stake should he not make it back to his people. Under the command of United Earth Starfleet Captain Jonathan Archer, son of the famed scientist Henry Archer, the crew of Enterprise succeeded in their mission, but found themselves surrounded by deeper mysteries. Warranting the extension of their assignment into a full-blown mission of deep space exploration, the crew of Enterprise set off into the unknown, taking with them a Vulcan science officer (or chaperone) named T'Pol and a Denobulan doctor named Phlox.
's first years were rocky; while the ship made contact with such species as the Suliban and the previously mentioned Klingons, such contact was not peaceful. In its first two years alone, the ship's crew found themselves in armed conflict with a range of species from the Tholians to the Coridanite to the Borg... and things only got worse. By its third year in space, an alien species known as the Xindi brutally attacked Earth, killing millions.
The NX-01 was dispatched to a remote and previously uncharted area of space known as the Delphic Expanse in order to prevent the Xindi from completing their ultimate goal of destroying Humanity. While the mission was successful, after nearly a year in the Expanse, the ship suffered severe damage and many losses.
Upon returning home, Enterprise served a more diplomatic role in the service of United Earth, easing relations between the Vulcans, the Andorians, and the Tellarites, and paving the way toward a Coalition of Planets, an alliance that eventually lead to the founding of the United Federation of Planets. Though still often tumultuous, Enterprise continued its mission of exploration as well, bringing Humans in contact with even more new worlds and new civilizations.
During its four-year run, Enterprise was nominated for 17 Emmy Awards, mostly in "technical" categories such as visual effects and makeup. It won four: "Outstanding Hairstyling For A Series", "Outstanding Music Composition For A Series (Dramatic Underscore)", and "Outstanding Music Composition For A Series (Dramatic Underscore)" (twice).
•Scott Bakula as Jonathan Archer
•John Billingsley as Phlox
•Jolene Blalock as T'Pol
•Dominic Keating as Malcolm Reed
•Anthony Montgomery as Travis Mayweather
•Linda Park as Hoshi Sato
•Rick Berman – Co-Creator, Executive Producer, Writer
•Brannon Braga – Co-Creator, Executive Producer, Writer
•Chris Black – Co-Executive Producer, Writer
•Manny Coto – Co-Executive Producer, Writer
•John Shiban – Co-Executive Producer, Writer
•David A. Goodman – Supervising Producer, Writer
The opening credits for Star Trek: Enterprise contained a number of images referencing modern-day as well as historical exploration and space travel leading up to the launch of Enterprise NX-01 in 2151, including the Enterprise OV-101 shuttle, named in real life in honor of Star Trek. Also used in the sequence is a clip of Zefram Cochrane's ship, the Phoenix, from Star Trek: First Contact, and the real-life animated footage of the Mars rover.
Two versions of the opening title sequence were created, one for the prime Star Trek universe to the tune of "Where My Heart Will Take Me" which was seen at the beginning of the majority of episodes, and the other which documented the rise of the Terran Empire in the mirror universe episodes "In a Mirror, Darkly" and "In a Mirror, Darkly, Part II" which was done to an instrumental.
Season 1
ENT Season 1, 25 episodes:
Season 2
ENT Season 2, 26 episodes:
Season 3
ENT Season 3, 24 episodes:
•ENT directors
•ENT performers
•ENT recurring characters
•ENT studio models
•ENT writers
•Composers
Find background information, screencaps, and Blu-ray features for every episode of Star Trek: Enterprise. Also get the latest news on Star Trek movies, shows, games, and more.
Jan 20, 2024 · Episode # Original Air Date Titles : Season 1 : 1. 1-1 : 26 Sep 01: Broken Bow (1) 2. 1-2 : 26 Sep 01: Broken Bow (2) 3. 1-3 : 03 Oct 01: Fight or Flight: 4. 1-4 : 10 Oct 01: Strange New World: 5. 1-5 : 17 Oct 01: Unexpected: 6. 1-6 : 24 Oct 01: Terra Nova: 7. 1-7 : 31 Oct 01: The Andorian Incident: 8. 1-8 : 07 Nov 01: Breaking the Ice: 9. 1-9 ...
Oct 8, 2017 · Season 1. Broken Bow (1) Episode: 1x01 | Airdate: Sep 26, 2001. In the early 22nd century, Captain Jonathan Archer commands a crew at the front lines of intergalactic upheaval as he takes command of the Enterprise, Earth's first warp-speed space vessel.