Product Description
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Prepare to boldly go where no man has gone before with the Star
Trek: Original Motion Picture Collection, an action-packed box
set featuring the six films in their original theatrical versions
starring the U.S.S. Enterprise's legendary crew. The films have
been digitally remastered and The Wrath of Khan has been fully
restored in high definition with brilliant picture quality and
7.1 Dolby TrueHD. Star Trek: The Motion Picture (1979) Star Trek:
The Wrath of Khan (1982) Star Trek: The Search for Spock (1984)
Star Trek: The Voyage Home (1986) Star Trek: The Final Frontier
(1989) Star Trek: The Undiscovered Country (1991)
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Star Trek I : The Original Motion Picture
Back when the first Star Trek feature was released in December
1979, the Trek franchise was still relatively modest, consisting
of the original TV series, an animated cartoon series from
1973-74, and a burgeoning fan network around the world. Series
creator Gene Roddenberry had conceived a second TV series, but
after the success of Star Wars the project was upgraded into this
lavish feature film, which reunited the original series cast
aboard a beautifully redesigned starship U.S.S. Enterprise. Under
the direction of Robert Wise (best known for West Side Story),
the film proved to be a mixed blessing for Trek fans, who
heatedly debated its merits; but it was, of course, a phenomenal
hit. Capt. Kirk (William Shatner) leads his crew into the vast
structures surrounding V'Ger, an all-powerful being that is
cutting a destructive course through Starfleet space. With his
new First Officer (Stephen Collins), the bald and beautiful
Lieutenant Ilia (played by the late Persis Khambatta) and his
returning veteran crew, Kirk must decipher the secret of V'Ger's
true purpose and restore the safety of the galaxy. The story is
rather overblown and derivative of plots from the original
series, and avid Trekkies greeted the film's bland costumes with
derisive laughter. But as a feast for the eyes, this is an
adventure worthy of big-screen trekkin'. Douglas Trumbull's
visual effects are astonishing, and Jerry Goldmith's score is
regarded as one of the prolific composer's very best (with its
main theme later used for Star Trek: The Next Generation). And,
fortunately for Star Trek fans, the expanded 143-minute version
(originally shown for the film's network TV premiere) is
generally considered an improvement over the original theatrical
release. --Jeff Shannon
Star Trek II :The Wrath of Khan
Although Star Trek: The Motion Picture had been a box-office hit,
it was by no means a unanimous success with Star Trek fans, who
responded much more favorably to the "classic Trek" scenario of
Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan. Inspired by the "Space Seed"
episode of the original TV series, the film reunites newly
promoted Admiral Kirk with his nemesis from the earlier
episode--the genetically superior Khan (Ricardo Montalban)--who
is now seeking revenge upon Kirk for having been imprisoned on a
desolated planet. Their battle ensues over control of the Genesis
device, a top-secret Starfleet project enabling entire planets to
be transformed into life-supporting worlds, pioneered by the
mother (Bibi Besch) of Kirk's estranged and now-adult son. While
Mr. Spock mentors the young Vulcan Lt. Saavik (then-newcomer
Kirstie Alley), Kirk must battle Khan to the bitter end, through
a climactic starship chase and an unexpected crisis that will
cost the life of Kirk's closest friend. This was the kind of
character-based Trek that fans were waiting for, boosted by
spectacular special effects, a great villain (thanks to
Montalban's splendidly melodramatic performance), and a deft
combination of humor, excitement, and wondrous imagination.
Director Nicholas Meyer (who would play a substantial role in the
success of future Trek features) handles the film as a
combination of Moby Dick, Shakespearean tragedy, World War II
submarine thriller, and dazzling science fiction, setting the
successful tone for the Trek films that followed. --Jeff Shannon
Star Trek III : The Search for Spock
You didn't think Mr. Spock was really dead, did you? When Spock's
casket landed on the surface of the Genesis planet at the end of
Star Trek II, we had already been told that Genesis had the power
to bring "life from lifelessness." So it's no surprise that this
energetic but somewhat hokey sequel gives Spock a new lease on
life, beginning with his rebirth and rapid growth as the Genesis
planet literally shakes itself apart in a series of tumultuous
geological spasms. As Kirk is getting to know his estranged son
(Merritt Butrick), he must also do battle with the fiendish
Klingon Kruge (Christopher Lloyd), who is determined to seize the
power of Genesis from the Federation. Meanwhile, the regenerated
Spock returns to his home planet, and Star Trek III gains
considerable interest by exploring the ceremonial (and, of
course, highly logical) traditions of Vulcan society. The movie's
a minor disappointment compared to Star Trek II, but it's
a--well, logical--sequel that successfully restores Spock (and
first-time film director Leonard Nimoy) to the phenomenal Trek
franchise...as if he were ever really gone. With Kirk's willful
destruction of the U.S.S. Enterprise and Robin Curtis replacing
the departing Kirstie Alley as Vulcan Lt. Saavik, this was
clearly a transitional film in the series, clearing the way for
the highly popular Star Trek IV. --Jeff Shannon
Star Trek IV : The Voyage Home
Jumping on to the end-of-the-century bandwagon a little early,
Para Pictures released 10 of their top films in one 10-pack,
the Millennium Collection, in 1998. All the films are presented
in their widescreen editions; one, Breakfast at Tiffany's, is
offered in this format for the first time. The set includes 5
Best Picture O winners and films that took home an additional
33 Academy Awards. All the tapes are available to buy
individually. The pack, with a handsome mosaic of faces from the
movies, also features collector s (a movie version of
baseball cards) and a commemorative booklet detailing the
productions of all 10 films. The collection is oddly weighted
toward the last 25 years, offering only one film from the 1950s
and one from the 1960s. Your taste in current cinema will define
the value of the set. Besides Tiffany's, one of Audrey Hepburn's
finest films, the collection contains: The Ten Commandments with
Charlton Heston, Grease with John Travolta, Francis Ford
Cla's Apocalypse Now and The Godher, the funny,
whale-saving Star Trek IV--The Voyage Home, Tom Cruise's hit Top
, the smash hit Ghost with Demi Moore, Mel Gibson's Celt fest
Braveheart, and Forrest Gump with Tom Hanks. --Doug Thomas
Star Trek V :The Final Frontier
Movie critic Roger Ebert summed it up very succinctly: "Of all of
the Star Trek movies, this is the worst." Subsequent films in the
popular series have done nothing to disprove this opinion; we can
be grateful that they've all been significantly better since this
film was released in 1989. After Leonard Nimoy scored hits with
Star Trek III and IV, William Shatner used his contractual clout
(and d ego) to assume directorial duties on this mission,
in which a rebellious Vulcan (Laurence Luckinbill) kips
Federation officials in his overzealous quest for the supreme
source of creation. That's right, you heard it correctly: Star
Trek V is about a crazy Vulcan's search for God. By the time
Kirk, Spock, and their Federation cohorts are taken to the Great
Barrier of the galaxy, this journey to "the final future" has
gone from an embarrassing prologue to an absurd conclusion, with
a lot of creaky plotting in between. Of course, die-hard Trekkies
will still allow this movie into their video collections; but
they'll only watch it when nobody else is looking. After this
humbling experience, Shatner wisely relinquished the director's
chair to Star Trek II's Nicholas Meyer. --Jeff Shannon
Star Trek VI : The Undiscovered Country
Star Trek V left us nowhere to go but up, and with the return of
Star Trek II director Nicholas Meyer, Star Trek VI restored the
movie series to its classic blend of space opera, intelligent
plotting, and engaging interaction of stalwart heroes and
menacing villains. Borrowing its subtitle (and several lines of
dialogue) from Shakespeare, the movie finds Admiral Kirk (William
Shatner) and his fellow Enterprise crew members on a diplomatic
mission to negotiate peace with the revered Klingon Chancellor
Gorkon (David Warner). When the high-ranking Klingon and several
officers are ruthlessly murdered, blame is placed on Kirk, whose
subsequent investigation uncovers an assassination plot
masterminded by the nefarious Klingon General Chang (Christopher
Plummer) in an effort to disrupt a historic peace summit. As this
political plot unfolds, Star Trek VI takes on a sharp-edged tone,
with Kirk and Spock confronting their sing views of
diplomacy, and testing their bonds of loyalty when a Vulcan
officer is revealed to be a traitor. With a dramatic depth
befitting what was to be the final movie mission of the original
Star Trek crew, this film took the veteran cast out in
respectably high style. With the torch being passed to the crew
of Star Trek: The Next Generation, only Kirk, Scotty, and Chekov
would return, however briefly, in Star Trek: Generations. --Jeff
Shannon