The sad thing is I can see their thought process with utilizing the Vulcans in that role, flawed as the final result was.CmdrKing wrote: ↑Tue Mar 16, 2021 12:34 am honestly I think that's one thing I would credit Enterprise with in its best moments, despite Andorians existing in Star Trek from the very early days it was the first one to really DO anything with them, and of course the entire season 3 arc, while not without problems overall, was premised around a divided and complex society as antagonists.
(Why they decided to spend the entire first half of the show doing EVEN MORE VULCANS, and in a way that was guaranteed to piss off some fans even if they did it well, is beyond me.)
-Enterprise's status as a prequel meant it would involve the early Starfleet/Federation, which based on both First Contact and stuff like Journey to Babel states that Vulcans were there from the beginning.
-Vulcans were a familiar race to the audience and thus were an easy draw to get curious Trek viewers in.
-Given Archer's characterization as a determined frontier pilot type often driven by emotion, a potential clash with the Vulcans would make sense.
That third element has potential, but has to be done very carefully to work and Brannon & Braga just ended up botching the whole thing. Their fundamental inability to write Archer well often meant the Vulcans were made to look worse in order for him to appear better. Even beyond the fact that's a dubious way to make your protagonist more appealing to an audience, that very familiarity with the Vulcans the audience had made them all the more likely to dislike the extreme direction the latter were taken in.
it was symptomatic of the Trek machine taking the audience for granted at that point and assuming that turning a beloved race into a group of two dimensional, smug, and intolerant assholes would be fine because fan sympathies would be with Archer and company. A story arc involving the likes of Syrrannites would have never been written by the likes of B&B because its likely the disconnect between the Vulcan depiction in Enterprise and other series was not something they seemed to either notice or care about.