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Star Trek: Enterprise (2001 -
2005)
Country of Origin: USA
Date(s) of Broadcast: 26 September 2001 - 13 May 2005
Number of Seasons: 4
Total Number of Episodes: 97
Average Episode Running Times: 45 mins
Format: colour videotape
HDTV (1080p/24)
Ratio: 1.78:1
Sound: Dolby Digital
CREDITS
see individual episodes for credits
SUMMARY
IIn the early twenty-second century the crew of the starship Enterprise
is sent out to find signs of life in the galaxy. The crew is led by
Captain Jonathan Archer and consists of a Vulcan and a handful of NASA
trained astronauts. Their work will eventually lead to the formation
of the United Federation of Planets.
EPISODES
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Broken
Bow (26 September 2001)
Fight or Flight (3 October 2001)
Strange New World (10 October 2001)
Unexpected (17 October 2001)
Terra Nova (24 October 2001)
The Andorian Incident (31 October 2001)
Breaking the Ice (7 November 2001)
Civilization (14 November 2001)
Fortunate Son (21 November 2001)
Cold Front (28 November 2001)
Silent Enemy (16 January 2002)
Dear Doctor (23 January 2002)
Sleeping Dogs (30 January 2002)
Shadows of P'Jem (6 February 2002)
Shuttlepod One (13 February 2002)
Fusion (27 February 2002)
Rogue Planet (20 March 2002)
Acquisition (27 March 2002)
Oasis (3 April 2002)
Detained (24 April 2002)
Vox Sola (1 May 2002)
Fallen Hero (8 May 2002)
Desert Crossing (8 May 2002)
Two Days and Two Nights (15 May 2002)
Shockwave Part 1 (22 May 2002) |
Shockwave Part 2 (18 September 2002)
Carbon Creek (25 September 2002)
Minefield (2 October 2002)
Dead Stop (9 October 2002)
A Night in Sickbay (16 October 2002)
Marauders (30 October 2002)
The Seventh (6 November 2002)
The Communicator (13 November 2002)
Singularity (20 November 2002)
Vanishing Point (27 November 2002)
Precious Cargo (11 December 2002)
The Catwalk (18 December 2002)
Dawn (8 January 2003)
Stigma (5 February 2003)
Cease Fire (12 February 2003)
Future Tense (19 February 2003)
Canamar (26 February 2003)
The Crossing (2 April 2003)
Judgment (9 April 2003)
Horizon (16 April 2003)
The Breach (23 April 2003)
Cogenitor (30 April 2003)
Regeneration (7 May 2003)
First Flight (14 May 2003)
Bounty (14 May 2003)
The Expanse (21 May 2003) |
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The Xindi (10 September 2003)
Anomaly (17 September 2003)
Extinction (24 September 2003)
Rajiin (1 October 2003)
Impulse (8 October 2003)
Exile (15 October 2003)
The Shipment (29 October 2003)
Twilight (5 November 2003)
North Star (12 November 2003)
Similitude (19 November 2003)
Carpenter Street (26 November 2003)
Chosen Realm (14 January 2004)
Proving Ground (21 January 2004)
Stratagem (4 February 2004)
Harbinger (11 February 2004)
Doctor's Orders (18 February 2004)
Hatchery (25 February 2004)
Azati Prime (3 March 2004)
Damage (21 April 2004)
The Forgotten (28 April 2004)
E² (5 May 2004)
The Council (12 May 2004)
Countdown (19 May 2004)
Zero Hour (26 May 2004) |
Storm Front Part 1 (8 Octover 2004)
Storm Front Part 2 (15 October 2004)
Home (22 October 2004)
Borderland (29 October 2004)
Cold Station 12 (5 November 2004)
The Augments (12 November 2004)
The Forge (19 November 2004)
Awakening (26 November 2004)
Kir'Shara (3 December 2004)
Daedalus (14 January 2005)
Observer Effect (21 January 2005)
Babel One (28 January 2005)
United (4 February 2005)
The Aenar (11 February 2005)
Affliction (18 February 2005)
Divergence (25 February 2005)
Bound (15 April 2005)
In a Mirror, Darkly Part 1 (22 April 2005)
In a Mirror, Darkly Part 2 (29 April 2005)
Demons (6 May 2005)
Terra Prime (13 May 2005)
These Are the Voyages... (13 May 2005) |
AWARDS
2002
ASCAP Film and Television Music Awards, USA
Top TV Series (Paul Baillargeon, David Bell, Jay Chattaway, Dennis McCarthy,
Diane Warren) - winner
Academy of Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror Films, USA
(Saturn Awards)
Cinescape Genre Face of the Future Award Female (Jolene Blalock) - winner
Best Supporting Actress in a Television Series (Jolene Blalock) - winner
Best Actor in a Television Series (Scott Bakula) - nominated
Best Network Television Series - nominated
Best Supporting Actor in a Television Series (Connor Trinneer) - nominated
Emmy Awards, USA
Outstanding Hairstyling for a Series (Michael Moore, Gloria Pasqua Casny,
Roma Goddard, Laura Connolly, Cheri Ruff) - winner (for Two Days and
Two Nights)
Outstanding Special Visual Effects for a Series (Dan Curry, Ronald B.
Moore, Arthur J. Codron, Elizabeth Castro, Paul Hill, Steve Fong, Gregory
Rainoff, Rob Bonchune, Dave Morton) - winner (for Broken Bow)
Outstanding Makeup for a Series (Prosthetic) (Michael Westmore, Art
Anthony, Belinda Bryant, David DeLeon, Suzanne Diaz, Earl Ellis, Jeff
Lewis, Brad Look, Joe Podnar, Karen Westerfield, June Westmore, Natalie
Wood) - nominated (for Broken Bow)
Outstanding Sound Editing for a Series (Bill Wistrom, James Wolvington,
Ashley Harvey, Masanobu 'Tomi' Tomita, Dale Chaloukian, Shaun Varney,
Stephen M. Rowe, Hilda Hodges, Katherine Rose) - nominated (for Broken
Bow)
Outstanding Special Visual Effects for a Series (David Stipes, Adam
Buckner, Paul Hill, Gregory Rainoff, Adam Howard, John F. Gross, Steven
Joseph Rogers, Fred Pienkos, Eddie Robison) - nominated (for Breaking
the Ice)
2003
Academy of Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror Films, USA (Saturn
Awards)
Best Actor in a Television Series (Scott Bakula) - nominated
Best Network Television Series - nominated
Best Supporting Actor in a Television Series (Connor Trinneer) - nominated
Best Supporting Actress in a Television Series (Jolene Blalock) - nominated
Emmy Awards, USA
Outstanding Makeup for a Series (Prosthetic) (Michael Westmore, Suzanne
Diaz, Brad Look, Jeff Lewis, Earl Ellis, Michael Burnett, Joe Podnar,
Todd McIntosh, Barry R. Koper, Art Anthony, Robert Maverick, Steve E.
Anderson, Debbie Zoller, Judith Silverman, Roxy D'Alonzio, Ruth Haney)
- nominated (for Canamar)
Outstanding Music Composition for a Series (Dramatic Underscore) (Dennis
McCarthy) - nominated (for The Expanse)
Outstanding Special Visual Effects for a Series (Dan Curry, Ronald B.
Moore, Elizabeth Castro, Paul Hill, Fred Pienkos, Gregory Rainoff, Sean
M. Scott, Eric Hance, Bruce Branit) - nominated (for The Expanse)
Outstanding Special Visual Effects for a Series (Dan Curry, Ronald B.
Moore, Armen V. Kevorkian, Paul Hill, David R. Morton, John Teska, Sean
M. Scott, Pierre Drolet) - nominated (for The Crossing)
Outstanding Special Visual Effects for a Series (Mitch Suskin, Arthur
J. Codron, Steve Fong, Gregory Rainoff, Rob Bonchune, Pierre Drolet,
Sean M. Scott, John Teska, Koji Kuramura) - nominated (for Dead Stop)
Hugo Awards, USA
Best Dramatic Presentation - Short Form - nominated (for A Night in
Sickbay)
Best Dramatic Presentation - Short Form - nominated (for Carbon Creek)
Visual Effects Society Awards, USA
Best Models and Miniatures in a Televised Program, Music Video, or Commercial
(John Teska, Koji Kuramura, Pierre Drolet, Sean M. Scott) - winner (for
Dead Stop)
Best Visual Effects in a Television Series (Dan Curry, Ronald B. Moore,
Elizabeth Castro) - nominated (for Shockwave Part 1)
2004
Academy of Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror Films, USA (Saturn
Awards)
Best Actor in a Television Series (Scott Bakula) - nominated
Best Network Television Series - nominated
Best Supporting Actress in a Television Series (Jolene Blalock) - nominated
POSTER TAGS
Meet Kirk's Childhood Hero
Back to Where It All Began
The final frontier has a new beginning.
For decades man has dreamed of going beyond his galaxy... this fall
we will.
The Star Trek Saga Begins
A new era of discovery is about to begin.
The first trek into the unknown
Before Janeway... Before Sisko... Before Picard... Before Kirk, there
was... Enterprise
Where the new adventure begins...
Forget what you think you know, it won't help you here
ALTERNATIVE TITLES
Enterprise
LINKS
PREQUEL TO
Star Trek (1966 - 1969)
Star Trek (1973 - 1975)
Star Trek: The Next Generation (1987 - 1994)
Star Trek: Deep Space Nine (1993 - 1999)
Star Trek: Voyager (1995 - 2001)
SEE ALSO
Star Trek: The Motion Picture (1979)
Star Trek: The Wrath of Khan (1982)
Star Trek III: The Search for Spock (1984)
Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home (1986)
Star Trek V: The Final Frontier (1989)
Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country (1991)
Star Trek: Generations (1994)
Star Trek: First Contact (1996)
REFERENCES
MAGAZINES
Dreamwatch no.97 (November 2002) p.16 (UK)
illustrated article (Romulans' Return by Rod Edgar)
Entertainment Weekly no.617 (28 September 2001) p.58
(USA)
illustrated review (Television: On The Right Trek (B+) by Ken Tucker)
Entertainment Weekly no.621 (19 October 2001) pp.28-37
(USA)
illustrated article (2001: A New Space Odyssey by Dan Snierson)
Entertainment Weekly no.671/672 (13 September 2002)
pp.114-116 (USA)
illustrated article (Eyes on the Enterprise by Brad Hines)
Génération Séries no.38 (April
/ May / June 2002) pp.43-50 (France)
illustrated article (No.5, de Star Trek by Stéphane Van Geel)
TV Guide vol.49 no.34 (25 August 2001) pp.18-25, 55;
26-29 (USA)
illustrated article (Star Trek: The First Generation by Michael Logan);
illustrated article (Ship Tease by by Michael Logan)
TV Guide vol.51 no.9 (1 March 2003) pp.28-31 (USA)
illustrated article (Star Trek: Lost. In: Space? by Mark Nollinger)
TV Guide vol.51 no.15 (12 April 2003) pp.30-31 (USA)
illustrated article (The Long Trek Back: We had our say, Now TV Guide
readers weigh in on how to save Enterprise)
TV Guide vol.51 no.19 (10 May 2003) pp.36-38 (USA)
illustrated article (A Whole New Enterprise by Michael Logan
TV Guide vol.52 no.8 (21 February 2004) p.28 (USA)
review (Spaced Out by Matt Roush)
NEWSPAPERS
The Washington Post TV Week 10 August
2003 p.7 (USA)
article (Enterprise Sets a New Course for the Fall Season: Is the Series
Jumping the Quark by Michael E. Hill)
KEYWORDS
aliens, astronauts, prequels, space exploration, space wars, spaceships,
star trek, teleportation, time travel
Last Updated:
15 October, 2008
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