"Star Trek: Enterprise" Cold Front (TV Episode 2001) Poster

(TV Series)

(2001)

User Reviews

Review this title
8 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
7/10
Stepping Stone
Samuel-Shovel16 May 2017
Warning: Spoilers
Captain Archer and the crew glad-hand with a bunch of pilgrims awaiting a religious ceremony. When the Enterprise is inexplicably saved from an energy tempest, the crew tries to figure out whether this was divine intervention or just blind luck.

Finally! After a handful of episodes without any reference to the Suliban, Cabal, or Temporal Cold War, we finally get a little action! Unfortunately, this episode leaves us with even more questions than we had before: Whose this Time Cop? Who does he work for? Why did Silik save the Enterprise? Is there an alternate timeline where the Enterprise was destroyed? What was Night of the Killer Androids about? None of these questions are answered in this episode.

Not a spectacular episode but it feels like we're building towards something so this is a step in the right direction.

Sidenote: What race was that Captain Fraddock? He was pretty cool looking.
9 out of 9 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
More to come....
planktonrules21 March 2015
A theme that is recurring on "Star Trek: Enterprise" is about some temporal jerks who bounce back in time in order to screw with history. This is how the episode begins--as you see one of the Suliban agents is being sent on some sort of mission there.

Enterprise encounters a ship and the captain of this vessel is very funny--this and the make-up job make this minor character a treat. Anyway, he's transporting some pilgrims and Enterprise decides to tag along. During this trip, Archer invites these pilgrims aboard the ship--and they are given way too much freedom of movement as once again the humans are just way too trusting (like a ship manned by puppies!). Not surprisingly, one is a Suliban in disguise. What IS surprising is that a crew member comes to Archer to tell him he's not really a part of the crew but a time cop!! So who do they believe and what do they do?!

This is a decent episode as I grew to enjoy the temporal cop episodes through the course of the shows. However, the ending might disappoint some, as it really doesn't answer very many questions, so you'll just have to keep watching.
13 out of 14 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
This is where the temporal cold war fun begins
snoozejonc19 August 2020
The Enterprise encounters the Suliban whilst hosting some religious pilgrims on their way to witness a major space phenomenon.

This is a strong episode that appears to have kicked off a story arc surrounding the Temporal Cold War. Time travel is overused in Star Trek (and Sci-Fi in general) but this concept is excellent. After witnessing The Borg, The Dominion and various other antagonists within the franchise you do wonder what other credible threat the writers could conjure. The creation of a war involving time travel as an emerging technology was a top drawer idea.

It's all done rather well in terms of plot, pacing and character moments. Archer is at the centre of it all with some good support from Dr Phlox and T'Pol who's personalities come through in a number of scenes. Scott Bakula took a panning from several reviewers for his performance here, but I didn't think it was that bad. I just think of him as a Jim Kirk inspired Sam Beckett in space and it all works fine for me.

The only character I have really struggled with so far is Travis and in this one he is presented as a man-child that would make Tom Paris cringe. It probably doesn't help that Anthony Montgomery's performances have been quite unconvincing and he hasn't had much decent dialogue to work with.

I definitely won't be giving up on Enterprise yet as this particular arc has hooked me. Let's hope it lives up to the promise.
7 out of 7 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
fun and fresh
lisaweaver11 March 2006
OK, so what if time travel is the most over-used plot device in sci-fi, particularly in star trek. This episode gives us one grand, independent, fresh perspective on the whole idea. I must of seen this ep. over a hundred times and I still find fresh ideas and hidden messages within the work. It's well worth the time it takes up. You just need a little patience at the start.

Admittedly this is not exactly Bakula's finest hour. he didn't give the most believable performance, neither did John Fleck for that matter. But the congrats here go to the writers more than anyone. Whoever came up with the idea for this ep deserves serious praise. That goes for all eps in it's line. From Shockwave to Zero Hour that is.

This ep may be a cornerstone. It may be one of the most well told eps of it's time. However, because of the relatively poor acting, I must give it only 3 of 5 stars.
10 out of 14 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
What Were the Results of Their Actions
Hitchcoc9 March 2017
While I pretty much enjoyed this episode, I never really understood the totality of the actions of the Time Traveller. A group of aliens is invited on board the Enterprise. Secrets are shared and certainly the possibility of sabotage is all around. Why is Archer so trusting? Being new to his position, one would think he would have some element of caution with strangers. You can show kindness to them without selling the store. He is really a careless man who often puts his ship and crew in danger. We again have the Suliban, who appeared in an early episode. They can shape shift and seem to sense this time traveling thing is somehow going to harm them. Let's hope things become a bit more secure.
7 out of 10 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
Those trusting, perhaps gullible humans.
wwcanoer-tech11 November 2021
Warning: Spoilers
How would you meet others in space?

Seek out other ships, fly up to them, introduce yourself, invite 20 of them onto your ship at once, and have one tour guide as you show them your engine room?

Surprisingly, that works well for Archer. We meet one of the most agreeable captains ever, docile people, and an intruder who saves the warp core from exploding. Well, that intruder also kills a second intruder who was posing as a member of the crew, but overall, a win for the Enterprise.

Of course, it would have been more effective for the either intruder to tell Archer to steer well clear of the approaching storm, but where would the fun be in that?

Why do the writers include things that make you step out of the plot? Maybe it's different for different people. For me, when Archer dons the magic glove that lets him walk through walls, I immediately thought "Ok, how are they going to disable or lose that? Because no way they're going to have that ability going forward. It would ruin so many plots." Then, again, when Archer drops the glove out of the cargo bay, I just thought "how lame." And then they don't even mention searching for it (but failing)?! Simpler if the shock of opening the bay doors throws Archer and his gloved hand smashes into something, breaking it. Then we could see an engineer say "It's hopeless. I can't figure out how to fix this." It was a silly gimmick device that didn't really add anything.

Strange ending. "Seal Daniel's quarters because we don't know what else is in there." (paraphrasing). There would be nothing more important than searching that room before any other time traveler dropped in to retrieve lost equipment.

I am curious. Daniels doesn't have enough detail to know exactly when the Silik arrives but Silik knows exactly when and how to save the ship. Unsure how long Daniels was delivering Archer's breakfast but it seems poor planning and a poor use of his time to wait until the crisis to ask Archer to install a Suliban detector (to detect Silik).

Overall it was a good episode and clearly sets the stage for further time travel adventures.
3 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Time Travelers From the Future
claudio_carvalho21 November 2007
The Enterprise encounters an alien spacecraft with amicable aliens that will watch the Great Plume of Agosoria, a phenomenon considered religious by them that happen every eleven years, and Archer invite the group to come on board of Enterprise. When a plasma storm hits Enterprise, there is a miracle interrupting a serious cascade failure, preventing the reactor breach and explosion of Enterprise, and Trip finds that someone of the alien group disconnected a cable saving Enterprise. Later, the crewman Daniels tells Archer that he is a time traveler that has come from the future to chase the Sulliban soldier Silik, his opponent in a temporal cold war.

"Cold Front" is an engaging episode of this series, but the explanation of Daniels and his motives are very confused. I confess that in the end I did not understand why Silik was the enemy, and why he saved the Enterprise from blowing up. My vote is seven.

Title (Brazil): "Frente Fria" ("Cold Front")
16 out of 22 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
A Senior Trekker writes........................
celineduchain10 April 2022
I really liked Cold Front. When a story is good enough to grab my attention and get my imagination working I can overlook all the "wibbly-wobbly timey-wimey" complaints and cast aside any disparaging thoughts about the writers of prequels needing to go into the future to avoid messing with cannon. I'm just going to go along for the ride. Maybe this explains the "love it or loath it" response to so many time travel episodes.

It helps that Matt Winston as Temporal Agent Daniels and John Fleck as Silik the Suliban are two of the best recurring guest actors we see in Enterprise. It also helps that the introduction of an agent from the future and the concept of a Temporal Cold War is treated with so much genuine scepticism by the crew. It helps that branching time lines and the idea of historians being able to study past events such as the building of the pyramids are so convincingly explained and, of course.....

......it helps that the insertion or removal of body modifications by the Sulibans' mysterious handler is so "gorram" cool.

We also have a secondary plot in which Dr Phlox experiences the Great Plume of Agosoria along with some chanting devotees who were apparently added in to the story as the cover for Silik's infiltration and acts of sabotage. Perhaps the writers were trying to demonstrate a greater interest in seeing religious faith as an aspect of diversity rather than sticking with the "what does God want with a starship?" approach of the original Star Trek writers and cast. We tread on dangerous ground with such subjects but, then, isn't that what SciFi is for?

Please excuse the references in this review to other shows and films: Senior Trekker scores every episode with a 5.
1 out of 9 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

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


Recently Viewed