the story: Archer becomes overly protective of Xindi-Insectoid eggs.
what it's all about: "Hatchery" is the same kind of episode as "Similitude" before it, but there's a big difference. Where "Similitude" shown a bright light on characters and character dynamics, "Hatchery" loses itself in its episodic material. But both are symbolic of the kind of frayed nerves the crew experience during the Xindi conflict.
Once more I must remind viewers that Star Trek for the bulk of its history was episodic rather than serialized in nature, in that episodes were conceived to be self-contained, often with metaphorical value that served the story rather than characters or the overall fictional landscape. Where Next Generation introduced serialized storytelling, it still favored episodic storytelling even in its efforts to serialize, and even Deep Space Nine spent the bulk of its time in episodic storytelling. Enterprise chose to do a completely serialized season, but still sought after episodic material for much of it; "Hatchery" is one of the more arc-flavored episodic stories, in that it features the Xindi, when much of the other such material didn't. It even depicts the Insectoids as ultimately sympathetic, even though just a little later they will be depicted as one of the more aggressive Xindi species.
The bulk of the story rests on the crew mutinying against Archer, who has been chemically induced to obsess over the Insectoid eggs. However, the character who benefits most from the experience is Hayes, the lead MACO whose primary motivation is following orders. Despite "Harbinger" showing his progress in integrating with the regular crew, Hayes actually seems to revert here. Still, it's interesting use of the character, about what you'd expect from a military guy, and it does emphasize the differences continue to exist.
criteria analysis:
franchise- The increasingly impatient casual viewer ironically has no time for traditional Star Trek storytelling.- series - The episode's usage of the Xindi-Insectoids is relatively inspired.
- character - Hayes, and the MACOs at large, receives a subtle nod.
essential- Taking away the episodic gimmick would have improved the story in this instance.
Steven Culp (Hayes)
Daniel Dae Kim
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