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Twilight (Star Trek: Enterprise)

"Twilight" is the eighth episode of the third season of the American science fiction television series Star Trek: Enterprise, originally broadcast on November 5, 2003. It was the sixtieth episode of the series overall. It was written by co-producer Michael Sussman, and directed by former Star Trek: Voyager actor Robert Duncan McNeill.

"Twilight"
Star Trek: Enterprise episode
Episode no.Season 3
Episode 8
Directed byRobert Duncan McNeill
Written byMichael Sussman
Featured musicDennis McCarthy
Production code308
Original air dateNovember 5, 2003 (2003-11-05)
Guest appearances
Episode chronology
← Previous
"The Shipment"
Next →
"North Star"
Star Trek: Enterprise season 3
List of episodes

Set in the 22nd century, the series follows the adventures of the first Starfleet starship Enterprise, registration NX-01. In this episode, following an accident, Captain Jonathan Archer's (Scott Bakula) long term memory is affected and he is relieved of duty. The crew of the Enterprise subsequently fail to stop the Xindi attack on Earth resulting in the remnants of the human race resettling another planet. Dr Phlox (John Billingsley) finds a way of curing Archer in the past, in the hope that it would undo everything since the Captain was originally injured.

The episode and script was praised by Bakula during the shoot, which required the actors and sets to be aged to appear older in later time frames. Production was suspended for a day following the death (at home) of first assistant director Jerry Fleck, who was in pre-production on the next planned episode, "North Star", which subsequently resulted in crew changes on "Twilight". References in the episode were made to locations previously mentioned in the Star Trek: The Original Series episode "Space Seed" and the film Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan. On first broadcast, "Twilight" was watched by 3.88 million viewers, more than the following episode. The critical response was positive.

Plot edit

While rescuing Sub-Commander T'Pol from a spatial anomaly, Captain Archer is infected by subspace parasites in his cerebral cortex, resulting in anterograde amnesia. His condition prevents him from forming new long-term memories. This allows him to remember everything prior to the accident, but any new memories fade within a few hours. It soon becomes clear that Archer is not fit for duty, and he is subsequently relieved of his command. T'Pol is granted a field commission to Captain, but the mission fails and Earth, alongside every other human colony, is destroyed by the Xindi weapon. The few surviving humans form a convoy, led by the Enterprise, which travels to the planet Ceti Alpha V.

Twelve years pass and Archer, still plagued by memory loss, lives with T'Pol in a house on the colony. She has given up her career to care for him. They are visited by Doctor Phlox, who has finally engineered a cure after years of research. He also discovers that when the subspace radiation treatments kill one of the parasite clusters in Archer's brain, it also vanishes from every other previous medical scan – as if the parasite had never existed. Therefore, since Archer will never have been infected, he would have remained Captain and possibly prevented the chain of events that led to Earth's destruction.

Unfortunately, the ship, now captained by Captain Tucker, is observed and attacked by Xindi vessels before the treatments can be completed. The Enterprise is outnumbered and heavily damaged and the entire bridge crew are killed. Phlox, T'Pol, and Archer race to create a subspace implosion to kill the parasites. As their procedure nears completion, Phlox, T'Pol and Archer himself are wounded by Xindi invaders but Archer manages to complete the procedure. The ship is destroyed in the subspace implosion, but their plan works and the subspace parasites are also destroyed by the implosion, and wiped out through time. The timeline is reset; Archer is in sickbay recovering from a physical injury but will never develop the amnesia he originally suffered.

Production edit

 
"Twilight" was the third episode of Enterprise to be directed by Robert Duncan McNeill

"Twilight" was written by Enterprise co-producer Mike Sussman,[2] who had previously pitched the story as an episode of Star Trek:Voyager during season seven of that series. Sussman said that his story was inspired by the notion "that someone with Alzheimer's disease, in some ways, could be thought of as a time-traveller..."[3] The Voyager producers chose not to buy Sussman's earlier pitch, which would have featured a time-crossed romance between Captain Janeway and First Officer Chakotay.[4] Sussman ultimately sold the story to the producers of Enterprise, who said they would have preferred filming and airing the episode closer to the end of the season and the conclusion of the Xindi story arc, but had to produce it earlier as there were no scripts available to replace it.[5]

"Twilight" was directed by Robert Duncan McNeill, his third directing credit for the series following "Cold Front" and "The Breach". McNeill had previously starred in Star Trek: Voyager as Tom Paris.[2] McNeill was interviewed for the magazine Star Trek Monthly shortly after reading the script for "Twilight" for the first time. He explained that after reading it, he said "Holy crap how are we going to do that?" He explained that the episode would see the Enterprise destroyed but wasn't yet sure how they were going to film certain sequences such as the roof being blown off the bridge and the crew being sucked out into space.[6][7]

Filming on the episode began on September 10, 2003, the same day as the airing of the season three premiere episode, "The Xindi". Production ran through to September 17. Production was suspended for a day on 8 September following the death of first assistant director Jerry Fleck over the preceding weekend.[8] Fleck had been in pre-production for the following episode "North Star". Following the death of Fleck, the first assistant director on "Twilight", Michael DeMeritt, moved on to working on "North Star" and Arlene Fukai took over on "Twilight".[2]

Whilst filming the episode, Bakula described it as "potentially the best script we've had and the best show to date".[9] He found it hard to describe, saying it involved "time travel into the future, parasites in my hippocampus, and Xindi and subspace implosions".[10] In order to represent the changes in time frames throughout the episodes, several of the cast were required to have their make-up adjusted between scenes.[2] This included adding grey make-up to the dog actor who portrayed Archer's dog, Porthos, but the scene was cut from the final broadcast.[5] Costume changes were made to represent promotions granted to the characters over the changes in time periods.[2] These included Bakula who wore a wig during the later time periods shown in the episode. The wig he wore had originally been created for Gary Graham in his role as Ambassador Soval.[5] The sets on the Enterprise were dressed to represent ongoing wear and tear.[2]

During the shoot of the previous episode, "The Shipment", director David Straiton wore a suit and tie on the final day of shooting, something that Bakula described as being out of character. After McNeill heard about Straiton, he sought to outdo his fellow director. So instead, he arrived on the final day of shooting for "Twilight" wearing the uniform he wore as Tom Paris in Star Trek: Voyager.[10] He hoped this would cheer the cast and crew up after a week of working on such a somber episode.[2]

Guest stars included Gary Graham in his sixth appearance as Ambassador Soval, he filmed for one day and appeared in two scenes.[2] Brett Rickaby made a guest appearance as Yedrin Ross. Rickaby had previously appeared in the television series Carnivàle. Richard Anthony Crenna was also credited in this episode as a security guard on board the Enterprise.[2] "Twilight" contained references to the Star Trek: The Original Series episode "Space Seed" and the associated film Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan. These references included the survivors of humanity settling on Ceti Alpha V,[11] the planet that Khan Noonien Singh and his followers were exiled to in "Space Seed" and escaped from in Wrath of Khan;[12] Sussman chose this new homeworld as a "cruel joke", since the planet would become all but uninhabitable within a hundred years. Reference is also made to the Mutara Nebula, where the climactic battle occurred between Captain James T. Kirk and Khan.[13]

Ratings edit

"Twilight" first aired on November 5, 2003 on UPN. The episode received a Nielsen rating of 2.6/4%. This means the episode was seen by 2.6 percent of all television-equipped households, and four percent of all households watching television at the time of the broadcast. This was the same rating as the following episode, "North Star."[14][15] These figures placed "Twilight" sixth in the time slot based on the Nielsen ratings, and fifth in the number of viewers.[15]

Reception edit

"Twilight" proved to be one of the most popular episodes of the series with reviewers and with fans. As Enterprise was nearing the end of its first-run airings on UPN, the episode was chosen as the "#1 Fan Favorite Episode" in a Viewer's Choice poll at UPN.com, and rebroadcast in that context on April 8, 2005.[16] In November of that year, readers of Star Trek Magazine selected the episode as one of the Top Five episodes of the series.[17] The guidebook Star Trek 101 named "Twilight" as one of the "Ten Essential Episodes" from Star Trek: Enterprise when it was published in 2008,[18] while The Washington Post noted that "Twilight" was Enterprise's "highest rated episode" in their analysis of ratings from the Internet Movie Database in 2014.[19]

Critic Stephanie V.W. Lucianovic at Television Without Pity, aka "Keckler," said that the episode will "get your Heart of Khan pumping with righteous Trekkie excitement," adding that the producers have "come up with something amazing that is completely, unabashedly, and unreservedly worthy of high praise." She gave the episode a grade of A+.[20]

Jamahl Epsicokhan on his website Jammer's Reviews wrote, "if I were a cynic I might say that I've already seen elsewhere most of what 'Twilight' has to offer." He wrote that the episode's dark alternate future bore similarities to the Star Trek: The Next Generation episode "Yesterday's Enterprise", and that Archer's memory issues were analogous to those in the film Memento. Epsicokhan also suggested that the flashback sequences were similar to the Star Trek: Deep Space Nine episode "The Visitor", but was a "substantially less poignant take on hypothetical material". Nevertheless, he said that the episode "repackages the material well, plausibly ties it into the current Enterprise story arc," and has "something for everyone," with an "apocalyptic" action storyline tied in to an "intimate character story that works in its own right." He gave the episode a score of three and a half out of four.[11]

Reviewer James Michael Kozak on Ain't It Cool News, aka "Hercules Strong," said that the storyline "cribs shamelessly" from a number of episodes in the Star Trek franchise, including the Voyager installments "Year of Hell" and "Endgame", as well as The Next Generation's "Yesterday's Enterprise" and "All Good Things...", but added that "this [episode] remained just different enough for me to kind of love it." Kozak wrote that the episode presented the viewer "a very real sense of what is at stake in this bizarre conflict with the Xindi" for the first time, and that he was "moved" by the evolution of T'Pol's relationship with Archer. He gave the episode four out of five stars.[21]

Writer Darren Mooney at The M0vie Blog.com says that "'Twilight' is a surprisingly affecting love story, one that uses a science-fiction premise to capture a very human situation." He added that, "Mike Sussman is a writer with a very clear fascination and engagement with continuity and consistency... ['Twilight'] is a beautiful and thoughtful piece of Star Trek, an absolute triumph."[22]

Blogger J.P. Halt at his website Random Musings rated the episode 10/10, writing, "Mike Sussman, who is arguably the show's best writer, has crafted a very smart script." Halt added: "Overall, this is probably the best 'reset button' episode the Trek franchise ever crafted. It's one of a very small handful of outstanding Enterprise episodes, and a contender for the series' best."[23]

"Mike Sussman's script for 'Twilight' is an intriguing piece of work," writes Matthew Kresal at WarpedFactor.com. He adds, "It's also a turning point for Enterprise as a whole and was the first sign of what the series might be capable of. On its own it stands out as one of Star Trek best alternate timeline episodes and rightfully so."[24]

Critic "Ex Deus" at TrekWeb.com gave the episode 9.5 out of 10 stars, saying "Scott Bakula gives one of his best performances as Archer.[25] In 2015, WhatCulture ranked it as one of the "30 Best Star Trek Episodes Of All Time," saying that, "like many great episodes of Trek in the past, 'Twilight' had something interesting to talk about and did it exceptionally well... doing it within the confines of a mesmerizing character piece between Archer and T'Pol."[26]

In 2014, io9 ranked "Twilight" as the 33rd best episode of Star Trek, out of the more than 700 made by that time.[27] In 2021, The Digital Fix said this was the best episode in season 3.[28]

Executive producer Manny Coto called "Twilight" the best episode of Enterprise's season 3.[29]

Home media release edit

The first home media release of "Twilight" was as part of the season three DVD box set, released in the United States on September 27, 2005.[30] It subsequently became one of three Enterprise episodes to be included in the Star Trek: Alternative Realities Collective DVD set which was released in 2009. The other episodes were "" and "In a Mirror, Darkly", and also featured were other mirror universe installments including "Mirror, Mirror" and three of those from Deep Space Nine.[31] The Blu-ray release of the third season of Enterprise took place on January 7, 2014.[32] The Blu-Ray has a surround sound 5.1 DTS-HD Master Audio track for English, as well as German, French, and Japanese audio tracks in Dolby audio.[33]

Music edit

Jay Chattaway's music for the episode was released as part of the four disc Star Trek: Enterprise Collection on December 2, 2014, including the orchestral pieces:[34]

1-16 Armageddon 1:38
1-17 Rip Van Winkle / Angst 2:03
1-18 Showdown / Back To The Past 6:55

References edit

  1. ^ . Radio Times. Archived from the original on 2013-08-28. Retrieved 2021-07-01.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i . Star Trek.com. September 24, 2003. Archived from the original on October 9, 2003. Retrieved June 13, 2020.
  3. ^ Steve Krutzler (7 November 2003). . TrekWeb.com. Archived from the original on 2004-02-23.
  4. ^ "Catching Up with Star Trek Writer Mike Sussman". StarTrek.com. 25 July 2023.
  5. ^ a b c Green, Michelle Erica (October 5, 2005). "Sussman Discusses "Twilight" in Podcast". TrekNation. Retrieved June 13, 2013.
  6. ^ Green, Michelle Erica (October 14, 2003). "McNeil Talks Twilight". TrekNation. Retrieved June 15, 2013. Excerpt from Issue #110 of Star Trek Monthly
  7. ^ Ian Spelling (2003). "Taking A New Direction: Robert Duncan McNeill". Star Trek Magazine – via RobertDuncanMcNeill.net.
  8. ^ . StarTrek.com. 2003-09-15. Archived from the original on 2003-09-25.
  9. ^ . Star Trek.com. September 11, 2003. Archived from the original on September 21, 2003. Retrieved June 13, 2013.
  10. ^ a b . Star Trek.com. September 22, 2003. Archived from the original on December 7, 2003. Retrieved June 13, 2013.
  11. ^ a b Epsicokhan, Jamahl. "Star Trek: Enterprise "Twilight"". Jammer's Reviews. Retrieved June 15, 2013.
  12. ^ "Ceti Alpha V". Star Trek.com. Retrieved June 15, 2013.
  13. ^ Hoffman, Jordan (January 14, 2008). . UGO. Archived from the original on December 24, 2013. Retrieved June 15, 2013.
  14. ^ Krutzler, Steve (November 14, 2003). "Final Ratings: Household Remains Steady But Audience Gains Elusive for "North Star"". TrekWeb. Retrieved June 15, 2013.[permanent dead link]
  15. ^ a b Berman, Marc (November 13, 2003). . Mediaweek. Archived from the original on November 19, 2003. Retrieved June 15, 2013.
  16. ^ "Breaking News - Viewers Can Vote Now on UPN.com for Their Favorite Episode of 'Star Trek: Enterprise' and Enter to Win One of Captain Archer's Uniforms Or the First Season of the Series on Dvd, in UPN's 'Fan Favorite Episode' Contest". TheFutonCritic.com (Press release). Retrieved 2022-03-02.
  17. ^ Freeman, John, ed. (November 17, 2005). "Who's on Top?". Star Trek Magazine. No. 124. Titan Magazines. pp. 16–19.
  18. ^ Erdmann, Terry; Block, Paula M. (2008). Star Trek 101: A Practical Guide to Who, What, Where, and Why (Illustrated). Gallery Books. p. 260.
  19. ^ Peterson, Andrea. "These graphs prove Star Trek: The Next Generation is better than The Original Series". Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved 2022-03-19.
  20. ^ Lucianovic, Stephanie V.W., aka "Keckler" (2014-04-09). . Archived from the original on 2014-04-09. Retrieved 2022-03-15.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  21. ^ Kozak, James Michael, aka "Hercules Strong" (November 5, 2003). "Hercules Quite Likes The First Star Trek Of Sweeps!!". Ain't It Cool News. from the original on January 3, 2004. Retrieved June 15, 2020.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  22. ^ "Star Trek: Enterprise – Twilight (Review)". the m0vie blog. 2015-08-12. Retrieved 2022-03-15.
  23. ^ Halt, J.P. (2011-03-27). "Star Trek: Enterprise (2001 - 2005) 3-8. Twilight". Random Musings. Retrieved 2022-03-15.
  24. ^ Kresal, Matthew (2016-08-31). "STAR TREK At 50: Enterprise - Twilight - Words in the Key of Geek". www.warpedfactor.com. Retrieved 2022-03-19.
  25. ^ Ex Deus (2003). . TrekWeb. Archived from the original on 2012-06-06.
  26. ^ Fisher, Matthew (2015-04-28). "30 Best Star Trek Episodes Of All Time". WhatCulture.com. Retrieved 2019-07-15.
  27. ^ Anders, Charlie Jane (2 October 2014). "The Top 100 Star Trek Episodes Of All Time!". io9. Retrieved 2019-06-26.
  28. ^ Baz Greenland (2021-04-05). . The Digital Fix. Archived from the original on 2021-04-16. Retrieved 2021-04-16.
  29. ^ . StarTrek.com. October 8, 2004. Archived from the original on October 13, 2004. Retrieved April 20, 2021.
  30. ^ Douglass Jr., Todd (September 27, 2005). . DVD Talk. Archived from the original on March 4, 2016. Retrieved August 3, 2013.
  31. ^ Birch, Aaron (May 1, 2009). . Den of Geek. Dennis Publishing. Archived from the original on October 2, 2018. Retrieved March 1, 2021.
  32. ^ Miller III, Randy (January 7, 2014). . DVD Talk. Archived from the original on March 3, 2016. Retrieved August 24, 2014.
  33. ^ "Star Trek: Enterprise - The Complete Third Season Blu-ray Review". High Def Digest. Retrieved 2021-04-20.
  34. ^ "Various – Star Trek: Enterprise Collection (Original Television Soundtrack)". Discogs. 2 December 2014. Retrieved February 5, 2015.

External links edit

twilight, star, trek, enterprise, twilight, eighth, episode, third, season, american, science, fiction, television, series, star, trek, enterprise, originally, broadcast, november, 2003, sixtieth, episode, series, overall, written, producer, michael, sussman, . Twilight is the eighth episode of the third season of the American science fiction television series Star Trek Enterprise originally broadcast on November 5 2003 It was the sixtieth episode of the series overall It was written by co producer Michael Sussman and directed by former Star Trek Voyager actor Robert Duncan McNeill Twilight Star Trek Enterprise episodeEpisode no Season 3Episode 8Directed byRobert Duncan McNeillWritten byMichael SussmanFeatured musicDennis McCarthyProduction code308Original air dateNovember 5 2003 2003 11 05 Guest appearancesGary Graham Ambassador Soval Brett Rickaby Yedrin Koss Richard Anthony Crenna Guard 1 Episode chronology Previous The Shipment Next North Star Star Trek Enterpriseseason 3List of episodes Set in the 22nd century the series follows the adventures of the first Starfleet starship Enterprise registration NX 01 In this episode following an accident Captain Jonathan Archer s Scott Bakula long term memory is affected and he is relieved of duty The crew of the Enterprise subsequently fail to stop the Xindi attack on Earth resulting in the remnants of the human race resettling another planet Dr Phlox John Billingsley finds a way of curing Archer in the past in the hope that it would undo everything since the Captain was originally injured The episode and script was praised by Bakula during the shoot which required the actors and sets to be aged to appear older in later time frames Production was suspended for a day following the death at home of first assistant director Jerry Fleck who was in pre production on the next planned episode North Star which subsequently resulted in crew changes on Twilight References in the episode were made to locations previously mentioned in the Star Trek The Original Series episode Space Seed and the film Star Trek II The Wrath of Khan On first broadcast Twilight was watched by 3 88 million viewers more than the following episode The critical response was positive Contents 1 Plot 2 Production 3 Ratings 4 Reception 5 Home media release 6 Music 7 References 8 External linksPlot editWhile rescuing Sub Commander T Pol from a spatial anomaly Captain Archer is infected by subspace parasites in his cerebral cortex resulting in anterograde amnesia His condition prevents him from forming new long term memories This allows him to remember everything prior to the accident but any new memories fade within a few hours It soon becomes clear that Archer is not fit for duty and he is subsequently relieved of his command T Pol is granted a field commission to Captain but the mission fails and Earth alongside every other human colony is destroyed by the Xindi weapon The few surviving humans form a convoy led by the Enterprise which travels to the planet Ceti Alpha V Twelve years pass and Archer still plagued by memory loss lives with T Pol in a house on the colony She has given up her career to care for him They are visited by Doctor Phlox who has finally engineered a cure after years of research He also discovers that when the subspace radiation treatments kill one of the parasite clusters in Archer s brain it also vanishes from every other previous medical scan as if the parasite had never existed Therefore since Archer will never have been infected he would have remained Captain and possibly prevented the chain of events that led to Earth s destruction Unfortunately the ship now captained by Captain Tucker is observed and attacked by Xindi vessels before the treatments can be completed The Enterprise is outnumbered and heavily damaged and the entire bridge crew are killed Phlox T Pol and Archer race to create a subspace implosion to kill the parasites As their procedure nears completion Phlox T Pol and Archer himself are wounded by Xindi invaders but Archer manages to complete the procedure The ship is destroyed in the subspace implosion but their plan works and the subspace parasites are also destroyed by the implosion and wiped out through time The timeline is reset Archer is in sickbay recovering from a physical injury but will never develop the amnesia he originally suffered Production edit nbsp Twilight was the third episode of Enterprise to be directed by Robert Duncan McNeill Twilight was written by Enterprise co producer Mike Sussman 2 who had previously pitched the story as an episode of Star Trek Voyager during season seven of that series Sussman said that his story was inspired by the notion that someone with Alzheimer s disease in some ways could be thought of as a time traveller 3 The Voyager producers chose not to buy Sussman s earlier pitch which would have featured a time crossed romance between Captain Janeway and First Officer Chakotay 4 Sussman ultimately sold the story to the producers of Enterprise who said they would have preferred filming and airing the episode closer to the end of the season and the conclusion of the Xindi story arc but had to produce it earlier as there were no scripts available to replace it 5 Twilight was directed by Robert Duncan McNeill his third directing credit for the series following Cold Front and The Breach McNeill had previously starred in Star Trek Voyager as Tom Paris 2 McNeill was interviewed for the magazine Star Trek Monthly shortly after reading the script for Twilight for the first time He explained that after reading it he said Holy crap how are we going to do that He explained that the episode would see the Enterprise destroyed but wasn t yet sure how they were going to film certain sequences such as the roof being blown off the bridge and the crew being sucked out into space 6 7 Filming on the episode began on September 10 2003 the same day as the airing of the season three premiere episode The Xindi Production ran through to September 17 Production was suspended for a day on 8 September following the death of first assistant director Jerry Fleck over the preceding weekend 8 Fleck had been in pre production for the following episode North Star Following the death of Fleck the first assistant director on Twilight Michael DeMeritt moved on to working on North Star and Arlene Fukai took over on Twilight 2 Whilst filming the episode Bakula described it as potentially the best script we ve had and the best show to date 9 He found it hard to describe saying it involved time travel into the future parasites in my hippocampus and Xindi and subspace implosions 10 In order to represent the changes in time frames throughout the episodes several of the cast were required to have their make up adjusted between scenes 2 This included adding grey make up to the dog actor who portrayed Archer s dog Porthos but the scene was cut from the final broadcast 5 Costume changes were made to represent promotions granted to the characters over the changes in time periods 2 These included Bakula who wore a wig during the later time periods shown in the episode The wig he wore had originally been created for Gary Graham in his role as Ambassador Soval 5 The sets on the Enterprise were dressed to represent ongoing wear and tear 2 During the shoot of the previous episode The Shipment director David Straiton wore a suit and tie on the final day of shooting something that Bakula described as being out of character After McNeill heard about Straiton he sought to outdo his fellow director So instead he arrived on the final day of shooting for Twilight wearing the uniform he wore as Tom Paris in Star Trek Voyager 10 He hoped this would cheer the cast and crew up after a week of working on such a somber episode 2 Guest stars included Gary Graham in his sixth appearance as Ambassador Soval he filmed for one day and appeared in two scenes 2 Brett Rickaby made a guest appearance as Yedrin Ross Rickaby had previously appeared in the television series Carnivale Richard Anthony Crenna was also credited in this episode as a security guard on board the Enterprise 2 Twilight contained references to the Star Trek The Original Series episode Space Seed and the associated film Star Trek II The Wrath of Khan These references included the survivors of humanity settling on Ceti Alpha V 11 the planet that Khan Noonien Singh and his followers were exiled to in Space Seed and escaped from in Wrath of Khan 12 Sussman chose this new homeworld as a cruel joke since the planet would become all but uninhabitable within a hundred years Reference is also made to the Mutara Nebula where the climactic battle occurred between Captain James T Kirk and Khan 13 Ratings edit Twilight first aired on November 5 2003 on UPN The episode received a Nielsen rating of 2 6 4 This means the episode was seen by 2 6 percent of all television equipped households and four percent of all households watching television at the time of the broadcast This was the same rating as the following episode North Star 14 15 These figures placed Twilight sixth in the time slot based on the Nielsen ratings and fifth in the number of viewers 15 Reception edit Twilight proved to be one of the most popular episodes of the series with reviewers and with fans As Enterprise was nearing the end of its first run airings on UPN the episode was chosen as the 1 Fan Favorite Episode in a Viewer s Choice poll at UPN com and rebroadcast in that context on April 8 2005 16 In November of that year readers of Star Trek Magazine selected the episode as one of the Top Five episodes of the series 17 The guidebook Star Trek 101 named Twilight as one of the Ten Essential Episodes from Star Trek Enterprise when it was published in 2008 18 while The Washington Post noted that Twilight was Enterprise s highest rated episode in their analysis of ratings from the Internet Movie Database in 2014 19 Critic Stephanie V W Lucianovic at Television Without Pity aka Keckler said that the episode will get your Heart of Khan pumping with righteous Trekkie excitement adding that the producers have come up with something amazing that is completely unabashedly and unreservedly worthy of high praise She gave the episode a grade of A 20 Jamahl Epsicokhan on his website Jammer s Reviews wrote if I were a cynic I might say that I ve already seen elsewhere most of what Twilight has to offer He wrote that the episode s dark alternate future bore similarities to the Star Trek The Next Generation episode Yesterday s Enterprise and that Archer s memory issues were analogous to those in the film Memento Epsicokhan also suggested that the flashback sequences were similar to the Star Trek Deep Space Nine episode The Visitor but was a substantially less poignant take on hypothetical material Nevertheless he said that the episode repackages the material well plausibly ties it into the current Enterprise story arc and has something for everyone with an apocalyptic action storyline tied in to an intimate character story that works in its own right He gave the episode a score of three and a half out of four 11 Reviewer James Michael Kozak on Ain t It Cool News aka Hercules Strong said that the storyline cribs shamelessly from a number of episodes in the Star Trek franchise including the Voyager installments Year of Hell and Endgame as well as The Next Generation s Yesterday s Enterprise and All Good Things but added that this episode remained just different enough for me to kind of love it Kozak wrote that the episode presented the viewer a very real sense of what is at stake in this bizarre conflict with the Xindi for the first time and that he was moved by the evolution of T Pol s relationship with Archer He gave the episode four out of five stars 21 Writer Darren Mooney at The M0vie Blog com says that Twilight is a surprisingly affecting love story one that uses a science fiction premise to capture a very human situation He added that Mike Sussman is a writer with a very clear fascination and engagement with continuity and consistency Twilight is a beautiful and thoughtful piece of Star Trek an absolute triumph 22 Blogger J P Halt at his website Random Musings rated the episode 10 10 writing Mike Sussman who is arguably the show s best writer has crafted a very smart script Halt added Overall this is probably the best reset button episode the Trek franchise ever crafted It s one of a very small handful of outstanding Enterprise episodes and a contender for the series best 23 Mike Sussman s script for Twilight is an intriguing piece of work writes Matthew Kresal at WarpedFactor com He adds It s also a turning point for Enterprise as a whole and was the first sign of what the series might be capable of On its own it stands out as one of Star Trek best alternate timeline episodes and rightfully so 24 Critic Ex Deus at TrekWeb com gave the episode 9 5 out of 10 stars saying Scott Bakula gives one of his best performances as Archer 25 In 2015 WhatCulture ranked it as one of the 30 Best Star Trek Episodes Of All Time saying that like many great episodes of Trek in the past Twilight had something interesting to talk about and did it exceptionally well doing it within the confines of a mesmerizing character piece between Archer and T Pol 26 In 2014 io9 ranked Twilight as the 33rd best episode of Star Trek out of the more than 700 made by that time 27 In 2021 The Digital Fix said this was the best episode in season 3 28 Executive producer Manny Coto called Twilight the best episode of Enterprise s season 3 29 Home media release editThe first home media release of Twilight was as part of the season three DVD box set released in the United States on September 27 2005 30 It subsequently became one of three Enterprise episodes to be included in the Star Trek Alternative Realities Collective DVD set which was released in 2009 The other episodes were E and In a Mirror Darkly and also featured were other mirror universe installments including Mirror Mirror and three of those from Deep Space Nine 31 The Blu ray release of the third season of Enterprise took place on January 7 2014 32 The Blu Ray has a surround sound 5 1 DTS HD Master Audio track for English as well as German French and Japanese audio tracks in Dolby audio 33 Music editJay Chattaway s music for the episode was released as part of the four disc Star Trek Enterprise Collection on December 2 2014 including the orchestral pieces 34 1 16 Armageddon 1 38 1 17 Rip Van Winkle Angst 2 03 1 18 Showdown Back To The Past 6 55References edit Star Trek Enterprise Series 3 8 Twilight Radio Times Archived from the original on 2013 08 28 Retrieved 2021 07 01 a b c d e f g h i Production Report McNeill in the Zone for Twilight Star Trek com September 24 2003 Archived from the original on October 9 2003 Retrieved June 13 2020 Steve Krutzler 7 November 2003 TrekWeb Chat Transcript Writer Mike Sussman Talks Twilight and More TrekWeb com Archived from the original on 2004 02 23 Catching Up with Star Trek Writer Mike Sussman StarTrek com 25 July 2023 a b c Green Michelle Erica October 5 2005 Sussman Discusses Twilight in Podcast TrekNation Retrieved June 13 2013 Green Michelle Erica October 14 2003 McNeil Talks Twilight TrekNation Retrieved June 15 2013 Excerpt from Issue 110 of Star Trek Monthly Ian Spelling 2003 Taking A New Direction Robert Duncan McNeill Star Trek Magazine via RobertDuncanMcNeill net Production Halted to Mourn 1st A D Jerry Fleck UPDATE StarTrek com 2003 09 15 Archived from the original on 2003 09 25 Scott Bakula Capt Jonathan Archer ENT Star Trek com September 11 2003 Archived from the original on September 21 2003 Retrieved June 13 2013 a b Scott Bakula Capt Jonathan Archer ENT Star Trek com September 22 2003 Archived from the original on December 7 2003 Retrieved June 13 2013 a b Epsicokhan Jamahl Star Trek Enterprise Twilight Jammer s Reviews Retrieved June 15 2013 Ceti Alpha V Star Trek com Retrieved June 15 2013 Hoffman Jordan January 14 2008 Star Trek s Top Nebulas Ionic Disturbances and Gaseous Anomalies UGO Archived from the original on December 24 2013 Retrieved June 15 2013 Krutzler Steve November 14 2003 Final Ratings Household Remains Steady But Audience Gains Elusive for North Star TrekWeb Retrieved June 15 2013 permanent dead link a b Berman Marc November 13 2003 Programming Insider Mediaweek Archived from the original on November 19 2003 Retrieved June 15 2013 Breaking News Viewers Can Vote Now on UPN com for Their Favorite Episode of Star Trek Enterprise and Enter to Win One of Captain Archer s Uniforms Or the First Season of the Series on Dvd in UPN s Fan Favorite Episode Contest TheFutonCritic com Press release Retrieved 2022 03 02 Freeman John ed November 17 2005 Who s on Top Star Trek Magazine No 124 Titan Magazines pp 16 19 Erdmann Terry Block Paula M 2008 Star Trek 101 A Practical Guide to Who What Where and Why Illustrated Gallery Books p 260 Peterson Andrea These graphs prove Star Trek The Next Generation is better than The Original Series Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved 2022 03 19 Lucianovic Stephanie V W aka Keckler 2014 04 09 Twilight in the Garden of Good and Better Archived from the original on 2014 04 09 Retrieved 2022 03 15 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Kozak James Michael aka Hercules Strong November 5 2003 Hercules Quite Likes The First Star Trek Of Sweeps Ain t It Cool News Archived from the original on January 3 2004 Retrieved June 15 2020 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Star Trek Enterprise Twilight Review the m0vie blog 2015 08 12 Retrieved 2022 03 15 Halt J P 2011 03 27 Star Trek Enterprise 2001 2005 3 8 Twilight Random Musings Retrieved 2022 03 15 Kresal Matthew 2016 08 31 STAR TREK At 50 Enterprise Twilight Words in the Key of Geek www warpedfactor com Retrieved 2022 03 19 Ex Deus 2003 Xindi Arc Sees the Twilight in Excellent Episode TrekWeb Archived from the original on 2012 06 06 Fisher Matthew 2015 04 28 30 Best Star Trek Episodes Of All Time WhatCulture com Retrieved 2019 07 15 Anders Charlie Jane 2 October 2014 The Top 100 Star Trek Episodes Of All Time io9 Retrieved 2019 06 26 Baz Greenland 2021 04 05 Star Trek Enterprise Revisited A Look Back At Season Three The Digital Fix Archived from the original on 2021 04 16 Retrieved 2021 04 16 Manny Coto Executive Producer Star Trek Enterprise StarTrek com October 8 2004 Archived from the original on October 13 2004 Retrieved April 20 2021 Douglass Jr Todd September 27 2005 Star Trek Enterprise The Complete 3rd Season DVD Talk Archived from the original on March 4 2016 Retrieved August 3 2013 Birch Aaron May 1 2009 Star Trek Alternate Realities Collective DVD box set review Den of Geek Dennis Publishing Archived from the original on October 2 2018 Retrieved March 1 2021 Miller III Randy January 7 2014 Star Trek Enterprise Season Three Blu ray DVD Talk Archived from the original on March 3 2016 Retrieved August 24 2014 Star Trek Enterprise The Complete Third Season Blu ray Review High Def Digest Retrieved 2021 04 20 Various Star Trek Enterprise Collection Original Television Soundtrack Discogs 2 December 2014 Retrieved February 5 2015 External links edit nbsp Speculative fiction portal nbsp Television portal Twilight at Wayback Machine archived from the original at StarTrek com Twilight at Memory Alpha Twilight at IMDb nbsp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Twilight Star Trek Enterprise amp oldid 1216695639, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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