Article 3QK7T A dozen years after near-death, Star Trek’s future may be stronger than ever

A dozen years after near-death, Star Trek’s future may be stronger than ever

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Ars Staff
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On May 13, 2005, Star Trek: Enterprise ended its four-season run with the controversial two-part finale, "These Are the Voyages" " The finale infamously brought in cast members from The Next Generation to tell the final chapter in Enterprise's story, and it was viewed by some as a disrespectful and ignominious end to 18 almost-unbroken years of Trek on the small screen.

Generously put, many fans considered this a low point in the franchise's history. With Enterprise, some fans blamed the anemic finale on the series' often-uneven writing. Others blamed Rick Berman, who had been Star Trek's Nerd-in-Chief since Gene Roddenberry's passing in 1991. And still others blamed the rise of "darker" and more heavily serialized sci-fi fare like Battlestar Galactica (although BSG showrunner Ron Moore first dabbled in this style, largely successfully, in the latter seasons of Deep Space Nine).

But no matter who or what was to blame, Trekkies everywhere were suddenly in an odd position-left to wonder if the universe they'd come to know and love for almost four decades would make it to its 50th birthday. Star Trek was off the airwaves with no successor series waiting in the wings for the first time since 1987. And for some salt in the wound, it had even been three years since the last TNG-cast film, Nemesis, which had been poorly received by most fans and critics. (Its predecessor, Insurrection, hadn't fared much better.)

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