1.1/ 1.2 : Broken Bow. Parts 1&2

Dave

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Broken Bow 1:1

I justed wanted to have the first post. :D

I haven't a clue what it is about (other than disasterous Klingon first contact after a Klingon crashlands on Earth) and I don't want to know any more, it spoils it. :D
 
What are u like........ wean idea of what its about if u wanna know...
 
BOO BOO!

Neo, trying to be clever, I now realise that I made a big Boo Boo.

It's called 'Broken Bow' not 'Broken Arrow'-- can you change the thread title for me, please. Otherwise, just delete it and start it again.
 
i am gonna try to edit it now dave...
 
CAnt do it right now as i am not a moderator in this thread... but padders is going to put me on it next time he goes into his control pannel.... Will do it then..

I have read bits about this episode but dont know any more than u do Dave .. was pulling ya leg...LOL
 
We can only but try.....was i am added i will change it
 
Ive been thinking (a rare event, but there you go !) If the Enterprise will be set around the beginning of the 22nd century - around the collonisation of Mars (2103) and setting up of world government (2113)then for me that poses 2 problems - first, Travis Mayweather, the new helmsman, is supposed to have graduated to the Enterprise from a background in interstellar cargo haulage. in fact it states on the character file that he has more interstellar experience than Archer. If the only colony is on Mars, where would he have to haul from ? Amore likely timeframe would be around 2155 - by that time more colonys would have been set up - also allowing for more varied storylines - aliens ravaging new colonies, mining disputes etc. This would also solve the next prob - If a world government isnt set up until 2113, then a ship before that would have to be American, right? (im english but i have to accept this!) then how come there is both a fellow englishmen and a japanese ensign on board? again, this ties in with the series being set around 2155 - also agreeing with the fairly reliable source who has read the script.
 
I haven't read the script, but you seem to see me as a trivia guru, so here is my take.

I have read that the setting is definitely around the mid-2000's post 'First Contact', the Phoenix flight and Vulcan first contact.

We may not colonize Mars until 2103, but we could still have ships mining asteroid belts and Jovian satelites, and there were deep space explorations even that early.

There has been massive destruction during a World War III, when Colonel Green was a key figure in a horrific conflict which results in the death of untold millions, and returns human society to the stone age. The climate experiences a 'nuclear winter' caused by the thousands of tons of dust and debris kicked into the atmosphere.

Although a World Government is not established until 2113, I don't think there would be much of a world left to govern until that time!! 'A Piece of the Action' TOS gives the death toll as 37 million, while 'First Contact' gave a much higher figure.

At least two Earth ships were launched during this period-- S.S. Valiant in 2065 (on a mission of deep space exploration) and the Charybdis in 2082, so some sort of world co-operation must have existed, as well as the technology to build a ship.

I think it is almost impossible for them to make this show, under the pressure of a weekly TV schedule and not make some mistakes with the previous continuity. I just hope they aren't big enough to spoil it for me.
 
Enterprise date of launch

Despite earlier rumours that suggested UPN wanted to launch Enterprise as soon as August, the network is now apparently planning to air the two-hour pilot episode of the new Star Trek series Wednesday the 26th of September.

TrekToday reader Jason Redmond called Paramount on an unrelated matter and was told that Enterprise would debut on that date. At UPN's upfront meeting, the network had previously said it had planned to "start early to get a jump on the other networks" (story).

Though the premiere date is a month later than was originally expected, Enterprise will still debut in the very first week of the official Fall season. The opening episode is expected to attract a very large amount of viewers, and this may have been the reason UPN decided not to air it in August. Viewership averages for the big networks are calculated solely on the basis of programming airing during the official season, and UPN likely not wanted to lose the boost the Enterprise premiere will give it.

According to Ain't It Cool News, Enterprise will still launch before UPN's other science fiction shows. As the Series V pilot will be a two-hour episode, Enterprise lead-out Special Unit 2 will only be able to start in its new 9:00pm timeslot a week later, on the 3rd of October. Buffy the Vampire Slayer will make its UPN debut on Tuesday the 9th of October with a two-hour episode, while Roswell will launch on UPN on the 16th of October.

The delayed Enterprise launch is sure to be a disappointment for Star Trek fans, who will have waited more than four months get new episodes once Enterprise premieres. However, the later start also means that more Series V episodes will be left for later in the season, limiting the length of the rerun periods. In addition, the long wait should be made easier by the publicity material that is bound to appear over the coming months, including the first images and first footage of Enterprise.
 
Soory got this news from trektoday....
 
Got this from Trektoday.......

When fans heard that Rick Berman and Brannon Braga had decided to set Enterprise before the Original Series, many were surprised the show would go back so far in time. However, apparently even the retrospective premiese wasn't enough yet for the producers, as the series' pilot episode will open with a flashback to Captain Archer's childhood.

According to sources who read part of an early-May version of the 'Broken Bow' script, the episode's teaser will begin with a young Jonathan Archer building a model starship together with his father. In early May, the script was already in a final version, though minor changes may have been made to the script in the remaining time before shooting started.

Following this opening scene, the episode moves forward to the 'present time' of the series. We see a Klingon crashing through an Oklahoma cornfield, chased by the series' recurring villains, the Suliban. The original Enterprise casting sheet described the Suliban as "a deadly species obsessed with genetic enhancement," while the recent script review said they would be able to change their skeletal structure.

We catch up with Captain Archer in the present time again as he is given orders to return the seriously wounded Klingon to his homeworld. Tension between the humans and the Vulcans arise at this point, as the Vulcan advisors say that he should be euthanised in order to avoid dishonouring the Klingons.

Previously it has been revealed that the humans will disregard this suggestion and bring the Klingon to Qo'noS anyway, thereby creating the very bad relationship with the Klingons that was also seen in the Original Series. Unfortunately, our source was not able to read more of the script, but hopefully information on the large remainder of the opening episode's plot will surface as the Enterprise premiere comes closer.

This source did mention that no Orion slave girls were included in the opening scenes of the episode, despite recent reports suggesting that they would be. In all likelihood, those reports were the result of a misinterpretation, possibly confusing the first scene shot with the first scene shown, and the slave girls will in fact be shown at a later point in the episode. However, a possibility of course also exists that at some point during the final week before shooting producers decided to replace Jonathan Archer's childhood scene with an Orion slave girl scene.
 
thanks for that, Neo.

Originally posted by Neo
no Orion slave girls were included in the opening scenes of the episode, despite recent reports suggesting that they would be.

WHAT! No slave girls! That's my favourite part.

Actually, that may just be someones idea of a joke, since the final clips in TOS always featured the 'Orion Slave' girl from "The Cage."
 
More Broken Bow Info

A new review appeared online today of the script of 'Broken Bow,' the two-hour opening episode of Enterprise, containing both more plot info as well as thoughts on the quality of the series."[I'm] happy to say that, in current script form anyway, Enterprise is the best Trek pilot yet," wrote editor Garth Franklin at Dark Horizons. "[Enterprise] plays like a straight out action-adventure with the characters getting down to business right away and a lot more phaser shooting involved than all the previous pilots put together - the only sentimentality creeping in with the very hokey last two pages. [...] Of all the Treks I've seen before, the mix of politics and action as such in this pilot resembles 'Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country' the most - it ain't Trek at its best but its solid, very engaging and fun as well as being more appealing to non-Trek fans."
Dark Horizons based its review on the second draft of the Enterprise opening episode, dated November 2000. Changes may have made to the script since then, though the basic storyline is likely still the same. The review provides the following major new story points:

'Broken Bow' will show the first mission of Captain Archer's crew, hastily pulled together to bring home the injured Klingon who crashed on Earth. They will travel to Qo'nos in the S.S. Enterprise, the first ship capable of reaching Warp 5, built by Archer's father. However, shortly into the mission the Klingon is kidnapped by the Suliban Silik, who is taking orders from an unknown power from the future. The Enterprise goes after the Suliban to recover the Klingon and find out why the Suliban so badly want him.

The relationship between Archer and T'Pol is described as similar to the Skinner/Mulder relationship on the X-Files, with "a mutal level of respect and animosity." As a Vulcan, T'Pol knows more about the situations the crew encounters, but doesn't volunteer this information until she has to. According to Dark Horizons, strong characters in the pilot script include Doctor Phlox, whose brand of medicine seems to involve lots of solutions with leech-like creatures, Comm Officer Hoshi Sato, who has problems with traveling at high speeds, and Charlie 'Spike' Tucker, who is slightly xenophobic.

The Suliban, Enterprise's main recurring villains, are a nomadic race who specialise in genetic engineering. Each member of their race looks different, depending on which genetic elements are enhanced by the faction they belong to, but most seem to have a chameleonic skin and are able to crawl along walls and roofs. According to Dark Horizons, the race itself has a lot of potential, though their leader Silik is not very well developed.

The November 2000 draft of the script featured a mysterious figure from the distant future, who the audience only sees as a shadow in a special "temporal chamber," where time itself is distorted. This gives Silik the advantage of knowing the outcomes of situations before they happen, but also will lead to a Matrix-style fight scene in the pilot. Interestingly, the first reports about Enterprise in early 2000 also mentioned a villain from the 29th Century, though none of the later reports included this aspect of the series. It is of course still possible that this aspect was cut since November 2000.

The Orion slave girls mentioned last week will apparently indeed not appear in the opening sequence, but may be featured later on in the show, when the crew visit an alien underground market place. Malcolm Reed and Travis Mayweather end up in an alien red-light district, where they are offered the 'services' of the Orion girls by a space pimp.

Garth Franklin at Dark Horizons concluded by saying he felt 'Broken Bow' would be "more elaborate, more gritty and more adventurous" than Star Trek has been in a while. "Its certainly got off to a more interesting start than either DS9 or Voyager did," he wrote. "It's the type of series that will pull in newcomers and those who thought the spin-offs lacked the gung ho and fun of the original series. [...] As a result I'm sure opinion of this series will be more argued over than any previous spin-off. - in my opinion though, it's not earth shattering but it's certainly a very good start and should be an interesting show."
In the full review, containing much more info on the characters and the premise of Enterprise, the episode was awarded a 7/10. As usual, please be aware that Paramount has released no official information on the Enterprise plot yet, and until then any such information from unofficial sources should be treated as you would any rumour.
 
Thanks for the info, but someone please change this thread title:blush: :blush: :blush:

Or we could keep it as 'broken arrow', then start a new one 'broken bow' when someone has actually seen the real thing!
 
There u go Dave... i have changed the thread title for ya....

I like the sepculation talk we are having.... its a great build up to the episode then we can really get into it...
 
i do like the sound of this show, some interestign characters, and a real break from the trek mould, but still in the trek universe :cool:
 

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