"The Catwalk" | |
---|---|
Star Trek: Enterprise episode | |
Episode no. | Season 2 Episode 12 |
Directed by | Mike Vejar |
Written by | Mike Sussman Phyllis Strong [1] |
Featured music | Jay Chattaway |
Production code | 212 |
Original air date | December 18, 2002 |
Guest appearances | |
| |
"The Catwalk" (S02, E12) is the thirty-eighth episode (production #212) of the science-fiction television series Star Trek: Enterprise . To survive a radiation storm, the entire crew of the Enterprise is forced to shelter inside one of the starship's warp nacelles. Tensions rise and the motives and strange behaviour of the passengers they took on are questioned. [2]
This episode aired on December 18, 2002 on UPN.
Enterprise is hailed by a trio of aliens, who warn that a deadly neutronic wavefront, many light years across, is approaching at a speed close to warp 7. Since the ship is capable of only warp 5 and cannot outrun the storm, everyone must shelter in order to survive the storm's radiation. The one place onboard that may be heavily shielded enough for the eight-day ordeal is the catwalk, a maintenance shaft running the length of each nacelle. Commander Tucker must take the main reactor offline, as the temperatures on the catwalk can reach 300 °C (573 K) (572 °F) when online.
After only hours to prepare, these crew evacuates to the catwalk. They entertain themselves playing cards, reading, and watching old films, gathered around a small screen. The storm envelops the ship, and as the days wear on, nerves fray, particularly when the alien guests start up a barbecue near a flammable conduit. Tucker and Archer discover that the injectors have started to come online. Tucker must return to Engineering to shut them down again, and his EV suit will only protect him for 22 minutes. When he reaches Engineering, he discovers that an alien ship has docked and intruders are interfering with the ship's systems. Doctor Phlox deduces that the aliens must be immune to the storm's radiation.
When confronted, the trio confesses that the other aliens are looking for them, explaining they deserted from the Takret Militia when they learned their commanders were capturing other ships and killing all onboard. As T'Pol and Reed work to shut down the warp reactor, Archer hails the alien leader, pretending to be the ship's sole survivor. He demands they leave and threatens to destroy the Enterprise rather than let it be taken, and sends the ship straight for a plasma eddy. As the reactor shuts down, the intruders abandon ship. When the Enterprise clears the storm and the crew return to their quarters, Tucker invites T'Pol to join their movie night every Tuesday. The trio of alien visitors apologize for the trouble they brought and depart.
The episode was written by Mike Sussman and Phyllis Strong who also wrote the episode "Dead Stop". Mike Vejar had directed many episodes of Star Trek, and this was the fourth time he has directed a script by Sussman and Strong. [1]
Filming took eight days, starting Wednesday, October 23, and finishing Friday November 1, 2002. Existing sets were used for the first three days. New sets of the catwalk, built especially for the episode, spanned two soundstages and were named "Catwalk-3", "Catwalk-5", "Catwalk-Command" and "Catwalk-Infirmary". The second block of shooting took place almost entirely on the new sets. [1]
"The Catwalk" first aired on UPN December 18, 2002. It had a 3.0 rating with a 5 share, and an audience of 4.73 million viewers. [3] [4]
In a 2013 review of the season 2 Blu-ray box-set, The Morton Report felt this was one of the season's standout episodes, and called it a "successful example of the writers combining a 'ship episode' (lo-tech and talky) with a suspenseful, somewhat more action-oriented approach." [5]
In 2014, The A.V. Club noted this episode as one of ten in the series that epitomized what the show was about, with the crew "operating at the very edge of their knowledge and their technology", and praised its fascinating premise. [6] In his 2022 rewatch, Keith DeCandido of Tor.com gave it 7 out of 10. [7]
In 2016, Vox rated it one of the top 25 essential episodes of all Star Trek, and described it as "a fun look at the rough-and-tumble early days of Starfleet." [8]
In 2021, The Digital Fix described it as "entertaining" and "one of the good episodes from season two". [9]
The first home media release of "The Catwalk" was as part of the season two DVD box set, released in the United States on July 26, 2005. [10] A release on Blu-ray Disc for season two occurred on August 20, 2013. [11]
Jay Chattaway's music for the episode was released as part of the four audio disc box set Star Trek: Enterprise Collection on December 2, 2014, including the orchestral piece "Taking Back Enterprise / Captain A Captain / Core Is Down" on compact discs. [12]
"Harbinger" is the sixty-seventh episode of Star Trek: Enterprise, the fifteenth episode from the third season. "Harbinger" works together three plot lines in a single episode: the T'Pol-Tucker relationship, the Hayes and Reed tension and uncovering the nature of a mysterious alien discovered in an anomaly and its possible links to the expanse sphere builders. Guest star Thomas Kopache plays the alien guest and Noa Tishby plays Amanda Cole, the third in the T'Pol-Tucker love triangle.
"Hatchery" is the seventeenth episode of the third season of the American science fiction television series Star Trek: Enterprise, the 69th overall. It was written by André Bormanis and Michael Sussman, and was directed by Michael Grossman; his first episode of Star Trek.
Enterprise (NX-01) is the fictional spaceship that serves as the primary setting of the American science fiction television series Star Trek: Enterprise. The ship predates the other Starfleet ships named Enterprise and was first seen in the pilot episode "Broken Bow". Its missions included an initial period of deep space exploration and a mission into the Delphic Expanse following the Xindi attack on Earth; it was also instrumental in the formation of the United Federation of Planets with the Vulcans, Andorians and Tellarites.
"Extinction" is the 55th episode of the American science fiction television series Star Trek: Enterprise, the third episode of season three. It first aired on September 24, 2003 on UPN in the United States. This was the first episode to include the prefix "Star Trek" in the title of the series. Set in the 22nd century just prior to the formation of the United Federation of Planets, the series follows the adventures of Starfleet's first Warp 5 starship, Enterprise, registration NX-01.
"Home" is the third episode of the fourth season of the American science fiction television series Star Trek: Enterprise. It first aired on October 22, 2004, on UPN in the United States. It was the second episode of the season directed by Allan Kroeker and the first in season four to be written by Michael Sussman.
"Regeneration" is the forty-ninth episode of the American science fiction television series Star Trek: Enterprise, the twenty-third episode of the second season. It first aired on May 7, 2003, on UPN in the United States. The episode was written by Mike Sussman and Phyllis Strong, and was directed by David Livingston. It was a follow-up to the feature film Star Trek: First Contact.
"Strange New World" is the fourth episode of the television series Star Trek: Enterprise and was written by Mike Sussman and Phyllis Strong based on a story from producers Brannon Braga and Rick Berman. David Livingston served as director for the episode.
"Unexpected" is the fifth episode of the television series Star Trek: Enterprise, and was written by Brannon Braga and Rick Berman. Mike Vejar was the director.
"Civilization" is the ninth episode of the television series Star Trek: Enterprise, and was written by Phyllis Strong and Michael Sussman. Mike Vejar served as director for the episode.
"Cold Front" is the eleventh episode of the television series Star Trek: Enterprise. It was written by Stephen Beck and Tim Finch, and directed by Robert Duncan McNeill. The episode reveals more about the Temporal Cold War story arc first introduced in "Broken Bow". Captain Archer is confronted by a member of his crew who claims to be from nine hundred years in the future – and is there to capture a Suliban operative who has boarded Enterprise.
"The Crossing" is the forty-fourth episode of the television series Star Trek: Enterprise, the eighteenth of the second season.
"Future Tense" is the 42nd episode of the television series Star Trek: Enterprise, the 16th of the second season. Set in the 22nd century of the Star Trek universe, a spaceship and its crew deal with aliens as they explore space.
"Silent Enemy" is the twelfth episode of the television series Star Trek: Enterprise, and was written by André Bormanis. Winrich Kolbe served as director for the episode, which has music by Velton Ray Bunch. Several guest stars include Jane Carr, Guy Siner, Paula Malcomson, and John Rosenfeld. This episode first aired on UPN on January 16, 2002.
"Acquisition" is the nineteenth episode of the first season of the American science fiction television series Star Trek: Enterprise that originally aired on March 27, 2002, on UPN. The episode was developed into a teleplay by Maria and Andre Jacquemetton from a story by Rick Berman and Brannon Braga, and was directed by James Whitmore, Jr. Set in the 22nd century, the series follows the adventures of the first Starfleet starship, Enterprise, registration NX-01. In this episode, a group of interstellar alien thieves knock out the Enterprise crew and begin looting the ship. Commander Charles "Trip" Tucker III is the only one left to stop them.
"Two Days and Two Nights" is the twenty-fifth episode of the television series Star Trek: Enterprise. The episode won the 2002 Emmy Award for Outstanding Hairstyling For A Series. The television show episode first aired on UPN on Wednesday May 15, 2002. This episode was directed by Michael Dorn, with the story by Rick Berman and Brannon Braga, and the teleplay by Chris Black.
"Shockwave" is a two-part episode of the television series Star Trek: Enterprise. Part one is the first-season finale, the twenty-sixth episode, and part two is the second season opener, the twenty-seventh episode. Because of this, common to the Star Trek franchise in this period, part one aired on UPN on May 22, 2002, with a cliffhanger ending, but it was nearly four months before the second part aired on September 18, 2002.
"The Communicator" is the thirty-fourth episode of the television series Star Trek: Enterprise, the eighth of the second season. Set in the 22nd century, the starship Enterprise has set out from Earth to explore the galaxy.
"Singularity" is the thirty-fifth episode of the television series Star Trek: Enterprise, the ninth of the second season. The science fiction episode is set in the 22nd century of the Star Trek universe, where the NX-01 Enterprise with Captain Archer is exploring space.
"Vanishing Point" is the 36th episode of the television series Star Trek: Enterprise, the tenth of the second season. Hoshi is on an away mission which requires teleportation for evacuation. Hoshi is the communications officer aboard the starship NX-01 Enterprise, on this television show set in the 22nd century of the Star Trek science fiction universe.
"Precious Cargo" is the thirty-seventh episode of the American science fiction television series Star Trek: Enterprise airing on UPN. It is the eleventh episode of the series' second season.