"Star Trek: Enterprise" Bounty (TV Episode 2003) Poster

(TV Series)

(2003)

User Reviews

Review this title
8 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
6/10
Half a decent story, whereas the other half is a porno plot device
snoozejonc24 September 2020
Archer is captured by a Tellarite bounty hunter.

Surely Captain Archer is the most captured character in Star Trek history. That point aside, the plot unfolds in a fairly interesting way and it's nice to see a Tellarite character to feel a bit of connection to the franchise universe. The plot line also has good continuity from the Enterprise episode 'Judgement'.

This one includes a rather ludicrous sub-plot that wouldn't be out of place as a device to move along the events of a porn film. Apparently T'Pol has contracted an infection that induces Pon Farr. In other words the writers have concocted an excuse to get Jolene Blalock semi-naked and make her behave like she's permanently sexually aroused for the duration of the episode.

If you'd enjoy the prospect of seeing Archer implement yet another daring escape and enjoy lingering shots of T'Pol in her underwear this is the perfect one for you.
24 out of 33 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
I'm Sure Many Will Find It Objectationable
Hitchcoc22 March 2017
With Archer, for every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction. Now it's the Klingons who want to get him back after his escape from the penal colony. He is captured by a bounty hunter who is living with some bad judgment in the past. At first the guy is stone cold and indifferent to the pleadings of Archer (some might think he would put him someplace where he can't complain), then he begins to soften a bit. He feels the Klingons will play fair with him. The Enterprise has to work hard to locate their captain. Meanwhile, returning from an exploratory search, Phlox and T'Pol are in a decontamination chamber, getting cleaned up, but a virus of some sort has invaded their bodies. Obviously, this is an exploitative event because T'Pol goes into a premature mating cycle, but must remain, isolated with Phlox, who is having a hard time dealing with it. Still, the story is interesting and so is this event, even if it could be interpreted as eye-candy for the males.
14 out of 18 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
The Bounty Hunter and the Pon Far
claudio_carvalho28 January 2008
The Enterprise crew is in shore leave in an uninhabited planet, when a Tellarite ship hails and her Captain Skalaar asks for Captain Archer. He is kidnapped while welcoming Skalaar on board, and finds that the Tellarite is a bounty hunter working for the Klingons that intend to send him back to the penal colony. Meanwhile, T'Pol and Phlox return from the planet infected by a resistant bacteria and while in quarantine, the metabolism of T'Pol is affected and she unexpectedly enters in the Pon Far, asking Phlox to "help" her.

In "Bounty", Captain Archer is abducted again but succeeds to escape. However, this episode is dedicated to T'Pol, more precisely to the sexy Jolene Blalock, who has a very erotic performance. Surprisingly Dr. Phlox adheres to the human morality and does not use a non-orthodox treatment to heal T'Pol, what is an inconsistency with his principles. My vote is eight.

Title (Brazil): "Recompensa" ("Bounty")
26 out of 42 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
3/10
Lowers the Bar
mstomaso26 May 2007
This disjointed, exploitative episode is probably the worst of Enterprise's second season, and its awfulness is compounded by the fact that it immediately followed the excellent "First Flight". Archer is kidnapped (again) and threatened with return to a Klingon penal colony. T'Pol and Phlox are infected with a microbe which has caused T'Pol to enter Pon Far. This is, of course, just a set up for showing a lot of Jolene Blalock's skin and indulging the audience's prurient interests. Pon Far will kill her unless she mates and she is in quarantine with Phlox, who is, despite his several open marriages, characterized as a prude.... huh? Blalock's acting is fair, and she sometimes seems very uncomfortable with what she is expected to do. The rest of the plot receives relatively little attention. A good episode to skip. Filler.
46 out of 84 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
4/10
Archer Goes Full Rambo
Samuel-Shovel19 December 2017
Warning: Spoilers
In "Bounty", Captain Archer's troubles with the Klingon Empire finally catch up with him as he is captured by a bounty hunter seeking the Klingon's reward for the bounty on Archer's head. Back on Enterprise, a microbe has caused T'Pol's mating cycle to prematurely commence. Her emotions are frayed and her hormones uncontrollable. It's up to Dr. Phlox to cure her.

This one isn't one of the better episodes of Season 2. The plot involving T'Pol's illness felt like an excuse to sexualize T'Pol and it wasn't appreciated. A Vulcan having sexuality is fine but not the way T'Pol's portrayed in this episode. I could do without anymore like that.

Archer's subplot is more interesting but doesn't make a whole lot of sense. If this bounty hunter is piloting this "piece of junk" as he calls it, how in the world is it able to disable the Enterprise? It's practically a shuttle!

Then Archer decides to instigate things further with the Vulcans by agreeing to this hairbrained scheme straight out of The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly where he allows his new friend to collect the bounty on him before escaping capture. It seemed far too risky to attempt.

I guess the main plot development in this one that Archer has now strained even further his relationship with the Klingons. I wouldn't be surprised if they send they're own people after him now. He's enemy number one as far as they're concerned.
11 out of 21 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
4/10
Horny Vulcan alert!!
planktonrules29 March 2015
This is not a particularly good episode of "Star Trek: Enterprise"-- mostly because the show seems highly sensationalistic and titillating instead of being intelligently written.

When the show begins, Trip and Archer are attacked and Archer is taken prisoner by a Tellarite. It seems that the Klingons put a bounty on him after he escaped from their custody ("Judgment", episode 2, 19). Much of the episode consists of their voyage across space to meet up with the Klingons.

The other plot is a doozy that will probably appeal to very horny teenagers but is frankly very embarrassing. When T'Pol and Phlox go on a mission, some strange infection necessitates keeping themselves in isolation--but the same infection has somehow induced Pon Farr-- the Vulcan mating urge. Through most of the show, T'Pol is an incredibly frisky lady and demands the Doctor service her! And, throughout all this, she's nearly naked. This plot is in many ways a low point for the show, as it bowed to prurient content instead of something a bit more high-minded and enlightening!

The first plot isn't bad--that's why the show manages to score a 4.
22 out of 50 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
3/10
Stupid and Tiresome
zombiemockingbird6 June 2023
I gave it a 3 because the Tellarite character was interesting. Too bad he didn't have an interesting show to go with him. How many times can Archer be kidnapped/captured/imprisoned? It's getting tiresome.

Then there's the T'Pol/Phlox porn show. I'm sorry, but it was nothing but an excuse to show Jolene Blalock half-naked. She's rubbing oil all over herself, her voice all throaty while she practically humps the doctor. Ick. Talk about cringy. Not sure why the writers/producers/whoever, decided to gear the show toward horny teenage boys.

I turned it off half-way through because I knew Archer would eventually get free/rescued/whatever, and I didn't want to see what happened with T'Pol/Phlox.
5 out of 8 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
One for the boys
richardshaw-2388112 August 2021
Oh dear the PC brigade don't like this episode do they so it can't be all bad. T'Pol's condition is a sub plot to Archer's kidnap at the hands of a rather ridiculous bounty Hunter but it's the different side of T'Pol that lingers most in the mind of red (or green) blooded males.
15 out of 35 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed