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Reviews of the Original Star Trek Movies 1979-1991 |
The original STAR TREK series is a miraculous enigma: it only lasted three seasons and grew more popular throughout the years, spawning countless spinoffs and a reboot, making TREK perhaps the greatest cult franchise of all time...
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year: 1979 rating: **1/2 |
A decade after the original series came to an end, and after over ten years with an animated series in-between, Trekkies got these handful of films with the original cast... some of the films are better than others but all are pretty entertaining in their own right, winding up on the big screen by the success of STAR WARS paving the way...
Although it wasn't initially meant to revitalize TREK onto the big screen, it happened, and, here's what Alan Dean Foster has to say about creating/writing the rudimentary MOTION PICTURE: "Gene Roddenberry gave me a two-page outline titled ROBOT'S RETURN and asked
if I could expand it," author Alan Dean Foster, who also adapted the STAR TREK cartoon into LOG BOOKS: "I developed a long treatment I called IN THY
IMAGE. This was to be the opening episode of the new, revived network series. They then decided they wanted to open with a two-hour movie for
TV, and I again expanded and revised the treatment, which subsequently
became the basis for the film..." This collected bagful of reviews, covering all six STAR TREK original-cast movies, were taken from individual archives, each written in various stages, and some opinions have changed, especially with this review...
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ORIGINAL STAR TREK CINEMA |
STAR TREK: THE MOTION PICTURE: Veteran director Robert Wise brings to the big screen the beloved characters from the classic '60s sci-fi TV show that, although it didn't last very long, snowballed into an even larger cult following throughout the '70s, enough to merit (thanks to STAR WARS, which made outer space bankable) a
motion picture: too bad it had to be this one...
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Stephen Collins |
William Shatner, as Captain James T. Kirk, returns to the Enterprise with a solemn bitterness, as does McCoy, with a fake beard and even grumpier than his boss... And finally Spock, duller than even a Vulcan should be... As they set out to intercept a giant mysterious cloud destined to blow up earth. A slow-paced side-story involves the new young Enterprise commander, played by an otherwise talented
Stephen Collins, and a sexy bald woman as grumpy as the rest
of the cast...
especially when she becomes a robot, or something possibly non-human.
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New new guy and old new guy bonding |
Most of the film has the crew standing on the bridge, gazing out in
awed-wonderment at all the expensive, and impressive, special effects...
The only thing somewhat worthwhile. But the eye-candy gets stale quick since there's nothing "solid" to chase it with, and we're finally led to a limp twist ending that tries hard for Kubrick inspired wonderment but ends up pretentiously stale...
If this were a condensed forty-five minute
episode of the original series, it'd still be a throwaway, lacking the
mysteriously brainy chess match that made the show so endearing,
interesting, and fun. Kirk, having no chance at outsmarting this
particularly formidable "alien,” must simply
learn about it... so
where's the challenge?
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1982 rating: **** |
STAR TREK: THE WRATH OF KHAN: What probably makes KHAN the fan favorite of the STAR TREK films, featuring the cast of
the original television series, is not only the villain, played
wonderfully by Ricardo Montalban... returning from
a beloved episode titled THE SPACE SEEDS... but the fact
there's a real challenge for Captain Kirk.
An important aspect of any
key Trek plot is how Kirk and crew... as one mind and body with various
traits all serving a single frame...
has to overcome an impending element out to destroy them. There's no
attempt to save the human race or an over-done sense of awe like the
first movie, but rather, a head-to-head grapple based on pure vengeance
that doesn't neglect the mental element, essential to the franchise, and there's a perfect mix of brain and brawn, and a side-story involving
Chekov and his new Captain, played by Paul Winfield, adds a nifty
peripheral factor. The only drawback is the far-fetched "Genesis"
project, and while it's extremely important to the plot, for some
reason, with all the fun of watching Kirk and Khan as loggerheads,
doesn't mean much in the end.
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1984 rating: ***1/2 |
STAR TREK: THE SEARCH FOR SPOCK: It’s said that
every other original cast TREK movie is good, beginning
with WRATH OF KHAN. So with that rock-skipping theory in place, the
only decent Trek flicks are two, four and six... Not true!
Part three, while merely serving as a
wedge between two and four, has some terrifically intense moments: like the
crew "stealing" the Enterprise from dry-dock; or a Vulcan, having lined
up three people, walking behind each, choosing which to kill. Meanwhile, the lack
of Spock throughout most of the film gives other characters a chance to
shine a bit...
Sulu beating up a six foot bully soldier is a hoot and
McCoy, moved to second-banana, gets particularly more attention as he
channels Spock's personality, turning him into a punch-drunk
"spaced-out" loon (what Spock would become in part four). And Christopher
Lloyd, as a menacing rogue Klingon, is almost too perfectly cast and
somewhat dated today... Sure he overacts... but it's Star
Trek!
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Christopher Lloyd's Devil Dog |
Plot has the crew out to find Spock's body that was left in a coffin on a revived planet, all the while battling the nefarious Lloyd. The "Genesis" concept, introduced in part two, is a bit far-fetched even for sci-fi... But seeing this sublime invention destroy itself lends more believability to the entire concept.
Directed by Leonard Nimoy, this outing,
although ultimately filler, is pretty entertaining, and at times
borrows from the Star Wars universe: like when McCoy's
looking for illegal transport in a Cantina full of strange-looking
aliens, or Lloyd's pet monster-hell-dog, seeming right out of Jabba's
palace.
The last twenty minutes, showing in detail the Vulcan ritual
in bringing Spock back to life, is long-winded and suited for hardcore
Trekkies only. And yet, despite the flaws, this is a decent enough entry that
blows the
every-other theory to smithereens.
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1986 rating: **** |
STAR TREK: THE VOYAGE HOME: The concept of humpback whales saving the planet is hokey and, at times, environmentally preachy, but one of the great things about
part four is the entire cast getting their own special time on screen,
filling out their abilities like in no other Trek film.
Our story begins
with an odd spaceship resembling a giant link-sausage carrying an
illuminating fooz-ball, trying to read the ocean to make contact with
what Kirk and Spock realize are extinct humpback whales. So the crew
must go back in time (by circling the sun... not an easy feat) to the
20th century/mid-1980's to find the whales and bring them home before
the vessel blows up earth. The crew takes to the streets of modern
day San Fransisco and not only must find the whales, but a container in which to hold the “beasties” (as Scotty describes them),
and
something nuclear to fix the Klingon ship inherited from the previous
film.
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Culture Spock |
In this thoroughly involving journey we really get to know the
side-characters: Scotty trying to
communicate with a computer by speaking into the mouse is hilarious; Sulu knows his stuff as a helicopter pilot; and Chekov is given a nail-biting mission.
On the forefront, William Shatner's acting is less contrived, his speech not as halting,
and HOME is possibly his best performance in all the Trek films.
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Scotty beams Mac to the Future |
The
moments where Kirk plays off Spock, punchy from having been resurrected
in the last outing, are hilarious. And Catherine Hicks, as an idealistic,
uptight and beautiful whale researcher, is a terrific addition – and we
get to see Kirk's famous ability with the ladies at a more mature,
genuine level.
The highly progressed 23rd Century humans dealing with
20th century chumps is not only fun but downright insightful: kind of
how Spock sees advanced humans in the 23rd century, giving the crew a Vulcan-like perception into our very own "primitive" society. And a fantastic pre-climax, rescuing a dying Chekov from a hospital, is suspenseful and humorous – especially as McCoy critiques our "medieval" surgical
methods. So while WRATH is, technically, the best of the series, VOYAGE HOME is personal favorite and the peak of the franchise.
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year: 1989 rating: *** |
STAR TREK: THE FINAL FRONTIER and THE MOTION PICTURE have something in common: Both are thoroughly maligned and, upon initial viewing, lack the adventurous elements that make the other Trek theatricals worthwhile… And yet they also attempt to be more low-key and cerebral like the classic, groundbreaking television series, and FRONTIER is, for the most part, a far superior episode than its predecessor…
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Spock & Kirk Go Climb A Rock |
There are several problems, most having to do with uneven, awkward direction by William Shatner, who doesn’t allow the story to flow like his co-star Leonard Nimoy did for SEARCH FOR SPOCK and especially VOYAGE HOME... Also, the budget seems much lower this time around... Then again, this adds to the nostalgic value, bringing us back to basics:
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Asian posters rule |
The lackluster opening desert sequence, establishing the film’s troubled antagonist Sybock, a Vulcan in search of God, is bland, overwrought... And then we change location to Yosemite, where a middle-aged overweight Kirk climbs a mountain before falling to his near-death and, at the very last minute, is rescued by a hovering Spock: like a Roadrunner cartoon...
And then... get this... Kirk, Spock and McCoy attempt to sing
Row, Row, and Row Your Boat around a campfire: Cringe-worthy moments that feel nothing like science-fiction... But the ball gets rolling once Sybock takes over the Enterprise to reach this “final frontier” to literally meet his maker, and the ragtag crew has to work together, as captives on their own vessel… This following a fun, horse-riding siege on a primitive planet, where the gang initially meet the rogue Vulcan… And in that role, character-actor Laurence Luckinbill delivers an antagonist both formidable and sympathetic.
Through all the ups and downs, it's the last act that really matters, a mind-trip conclusion at the brink of the galaxy where, once again, Captain Kirk has to make a decision that can make and break everything, providing enough suspense and camaraderie that not even the "merrily" return of
Row, Row, Row Your Boat can diminish.
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1991 rating: **1/2 |
STAR TREK: THE UNDISCOVERED COUNTRY: Not a terrible movie, but seemed too much like NEXT GENERATION in its 90's squeaky-clean-TV special-effects, while a much too obvious modern commentary on politics, bringing the
viewer out of the 23rd Century... like Spock mentioning Richard Nixon... is downright distracting...
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DC Comics Adaptation |
Meanwhile, The
Klingons quote Shakespeare (hence the title) and their benign planet
way-too-obviously represents the just-fallen Soviet Union... This feels like STAR TREK invading C-SPAN, or vice versa... And other
distractions include Sulu as the captain of his own ship, something Takei wanted for many years; a pointlessly
intrusive cameo by Christian Slater; and the feeling
that the original cast are simply going through the motions...
In all, COUNTRY is more of a courtroom drama than a mission of any kind: Basically A
Bridge too far... Standard orbit, and nothing more...
But not entirely shabby either... There are moments of suspense and good performances... After all, you've got Christopher Plummer on board and they brought back KHAN director Nicholas Meyer to close the book on the original STAR TREK movie franchise.
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