In a Mirror, Darkly
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Star Trek: Enterprise episode | |
"In a Mirror, Darkly" | |
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Episode no. | 94 |
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Prod. code | 418 |
Airdate | 22 April 2005 |
Writer(s) | Mike Sussman |
Director | James L. Conway |
Guest star(s) | Vaughn Armstrong Franc Ross David Anderson, James Cromwell |
Year | 2155 |
Stardate | unknown |
Episode chronology | |
Previous | "Bound" |
Next | "Demons" |
In a Mirror, Darkly is a two-part episode of Star Trek: Enterprise. Its title is from 1 Corinthians chapter 13, verse 12 (American Standard Version). The same verse (from the King James Bible, which reads, "For now we see through a glass, darkly") is quoted by Captain Picard in Star Trek: Nemesis. The episode is the only Star Trek episode which takes place entirely within the mirror universe.
"In a Mirror, Darkly, Part I" was the 700th live-action Star Trek episode broadcast.[1] With this episode, actress Majel Barrett, widow of Star Trek creator Gene Roddenberry, became the first and only actor to participate in every Star Trek series, including the Animated Series, as well as both the Original Series-based and Next Generation-based film series. In this episode, she provided the voice of the Defiant computer.
Contents |
[edit] Synopsis
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The episode's teaser opens with the closing scene from the feature movie Star Trek: First Contact, and features footage originally used in that feature film. Most of the footage - of the Vulcans landing on Earth - is directly lifted from the film, up until the point where Zefram Cochrane greets a Vulcan, who has arrived on earth to make First Contact with the young human species, and attempts to perform a Vulcan salute. But the scene does not play out as viewers remember: Cochrane shoots the Vulcan, and footage - of Cochrane and the assembled humans executing the Vulcan crew and stealing the T'plana'hath with cries of conquest - was newly created with stunt actors dressed identically to James Cromwell (Cochrane) and Cully Fredericksen (Vulcan Captain).
The credits then roll, depicting not peaceful exploration, but milestones in humanity's history of war, both terrestrial and interstellar. Notably, it appears that the human history of conquest and exploration up to that point are different from both regular Star Trek chronology and from regular history. Though, the differences are also nuanced in their commonality - the Saturn V rocket still exists and man successfully lands on the moon - but the flag of the Terran Empire, and not the US flag. Yet, if there is a single "point of divergence" for the Mirror Universe, this is not it.
The show's starring cast are crewmembers on the ISS Enterprise of the Mirror Universe, under command of Captain Forrest. The Terran Empire is on rocky ground; their hegemony over the alien races of the universe is being threatened by constant rebellion. Deep inside Tholian space, the Enterprise encounters the USS Defiant, NCC-1764 fresh from its last appearance in the Original Series episode "The Tholian Web." It appears that, after disappearing into interphase, the Defiant was carried not only a century back in time, but into the mirror universe, where the Tholians of 2155 are intent on using it to break away from the oppressive and anthropocentric Terran Empire. Archer takes an away team to the Defiant to capture it for the humans. Meanwhile, the Enterprise is caught and destroyed by the Tholians, with Forrest lost but the rest of the crew escaping in escape pods. Archer declares himself captain of the Defiant and orders his crew to take the fight to the enemy.
In Part II, Archer repopulates his ship with the escaped crew of the Enterprise, defeats a rebel alien fleet, and decides to declare himself Emperor, using the Defiant and its advanced technology as his trump card. Several crewmembers, including Archer, don 23rd Century Starfleet uniforms in lieu of wearing their environmental suits from Enterprise. A conspiracy led by various alien members of his crew, including T'Pol, Phlox and Soval, fails to stop him. However, he is incapacitated by his lover Hoshi Sato, and she declares herself Empress upon arriving at Earth. The episode closes on that note, with the final fate of all main characters unknown (many have been threatened with death, and Archer poisoned via champagne, but since their deaths have not been explicitly depicted, it is not known for certain whether they are actually dead, with the exception of Forrest, Soval, and Admiral Black). “No honey, that’s not moss growing out of my navel — it’s mistletoe!” - Alec
[edit] Background Information
These episodes foreshadow the future of the Mirror Universe (The Terran Empire as seen in Star Trek: The Original Series and its downfall and the rise of an alien-led coalition as seen in Star Trek: Deep Space Nine) in its dialogue. They also include numerous references to the other parts of the original series; besides the Defiant, they depict Tholians and Gorn on screen for the first time since the 1960s. They also contain many TOS-era sets, props, costumes and other paraphernalia, which were re-created solely for these episodes. Interestingly, the Mirror Universe version of Starfleet is shown to be considerably more diverse than its real world counterpart, with Vulcans, Andorians and even an Orion seen serving in various capacities, although it is implied that these are conquered races.
[edit] Altered credits
The altered opening credits sequence for this episode depicts historical archive footage of World War I troops on the march, a squadron of Stuka dive-bombers, a V-2 rocket launch, a hydrogen bomb exploding, aerial carpet bombings, a T-90 tank, an F-15 Eagle, and a B-1B Lancer.
Other scenes used in the opening credits come from earlier Star Trek productions, including the launch of the Phoenix (from Star Trek: First Contact), a shot of several torpedoes striking a building (from the Star Trek: Voyager episode "Dragon's Teeth"), the destruction of a Klingon Bird-of-Prey (from the Star Trek: Enterprise episode "The Expanse"), an assault by a team of MACO troops (from the Star Trek: Enterprise episode "The Xindi"), and a battle between Enterprise and the Xindi.
These credits also show scenes from different properties belonging to Paramount Pictures, including The Hunt for Red October (of the Konovalov firing a torpedo), Call to Glory, and The Jacket.
[edit] References
[edit] See also
- Mirror, Mirror (Star Trek)
- The Tholian Web
- Crossover
- Through the Looking Glass (DS9 episode)
- Shattered Mirror (DS9 episode)
- Resurrection (DS9 episode)
- The Emperor's New Cloak (DS9 episode)
[edit] External links
- In a Mirror, Darkly episode guide at StarTrek.com
- In a Mirror, Darkly, Part II episode guide at StarTrek.com
- In a Mirror, Darkly article at Memory Alpha, a Star Trek wiki.
- In a Mirror, Darkly, Part II article at Memory Alpha, a Star Trek wiki.
Preceded by: None |
Star Trek Mirror Universe episodes | Followed by: "Mirror, Mirror" |