Sybok makes a grand entrance ...
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Starfleet Chief of Staff: "Now, I know the Enterprise isn't exactly up to specs..."
Kirk: "With all due respect, the Enterprise is a disaster! There must be other ships in the quadrant."
Starfleet Chief of Staff: "Other ships, yes. But no experienced commanders. Captain... I need Jim Kirk."
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Ent. Flight Deck.rewrite
Cut To Bridge.
Everyone but Spock is laughing. Kirk asks Uhura to notify both the Romulan and the Klingon governments that their ambassadors are safe. Kirk then orders Sulu to set course for the closest Federation penal colony.
Roll Credits.
That teaser, in 1989, had me quick to notice the reused effects and sound. It definitely is a teaser as most of the scenes they used they removed the punchlines from to increase dramatic effect. Of course, we all know they couldn't get ILM in time - not a showkiller in of itself - but the movie also relies on a few too many comedic musical cues, though why they couldn't take Jerry Goldsmith's serious scene cues and mix those in instead... it might have been worse, if they had no teaser showing anything from the movie apart from the crew waving at the camera.
Being late-23rd century, there could have been ways other than the oft-used "you're the only ship in the area" - so be glad the Klingons weren't picking up that transmission... I like the idea there are individual Klingons wanting Kirk's head on a platter, and VI does suggest rising tensions between the empires so V arguably could have kept the serialized nature and build up on the animosity more, keeping the movie from feeling out of place compared to the arc of II-IV, VI. Especially as the ending has everyone in happy harmony together - like "Day of the Dove", but that's the thing: Apocryphal or not, V does capture the feel of 60s TOS and does it with some style. Shatner's direction has some very positive moments, starting with Sybok's revelation of laughter with only the backlit lighting and lens flare - which works at face value or even if (humor me) that Sybok was a Romulan incognito...
A rewrite to take out the comedy, comedy that Paramount wanted because the previous movie - a fishy whale tale - brought success with it, might have been enough to actually save it. And the movie does get more serious as it goes along, thankfully. Most of the ideas in the movie in of themselves are certainly sound if not interesting (though a means of barrier other than "the center of the galaxy", though it's easy to understand why the center of the galaxy would be the hip place to go to, assuming the Milky Way is in the precise middle of the universe and there's no way to prove that, much less to make inferences from such a face either, right now...)
The ships defensive, offensive & engine systems are in good nick, so they are good to go. The "I need Jim Kirk." is based on his reputation as a "big name" in the galaxy which by conventional logic will help intimidate these hicks into giving up the diplomats in negotiations as well as keeping the Klingon's off balance. We don't know what the other vessels are like; they could be lightly armed science vessels captained by anybody. Transporters are basically repairable but I presume if Sybok is worth his salt he'd be able to inhibit transporter traffic if only in the immediate vicinity. So -- if that is the case -- whether by shuttle or by transporter a guerrilla assault would probably still need to happen.![]()
Starfleet Chief of Staff: "Now, I know the Enterprise isn't exactly up to specs..."
Kirk: "With all due respect, the Enterprise is a disaster! There must be other ships in the quadrant."
Starfleet Chief of Staff: "Other ships, yes. But no experienced commanders. Captain... I need Jim Kirk."
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I always took it that most of the crew didn't know what was going on, That if Sulu/Chekov was game, it must have been good. The assumption being that these are just aliens that the ship might ally with to pursue some objective or other.What tickles me about the mutiny is, no matter how small the crew is (and how skeleton can a skeleton crew be on a ship with 70 odd decks?), Sybok still converts most of them over the tannoy rather than via the full mental mojo thing. Either his telepathic powers are far reaching and amazing, or everyone really hates Kirk.
I don't find the jokes at all bothersome. Could do without Data befriending that kid though. And the cloying "perfect moment in time stuff." The TV quality production design for the enemy ship interiors, the Michael Westmore generic-alien-of-the-week style make-up, and the TV quality post-production work. All of that can go.imagine insurrection without the boob jokes and pimple jokes and data is a floatation device jokes.
and you know ... without the jokes.
I don't find the jokes at all bothersome. Could do without Data befriending that kid though. And the cloying "perfect moment in time stuff." The TV quality production design for the enemy ship interiors, the Michael Westmore generic-alien-of-the-week style make-up, and the TV quality post-production work. All of that can go.
Or just start over completely. We didn't really need a TV two-parter on the big screen. Or another pointlessly arbitrary Prime Directive story of the Berman era.
While there were aspects of the movie I didn't like, I found the quality of the story to of had more depth than other Trek movies. It raised some important ethical issues.TV quality
To be honest, there are a greater number of good stories in the Trek TV series, than in the Trek movies. The movies (perhaps understandably) expend a a lot of effort being large and "epic" visually, and lose in characterization. Personally I'd rather see the familiar actors and excellent writing, over special effects and pew-pew.a TV two-parter
It's common that the subject of a thread expands.You're talking about the wrong film...
To be honest, there are a greater number of good stories in the Trek TV series, than in the Trek movies. The movies (perhaps understandably) expend a a lot of effort being large and "epic" visually, and lose in characterization. Personally I'd rather see the familiar actors and excellent writing, over special effects and pew-pew.
And yet the Excelsior was right there in Spacedock right alongside the Enterprise. You mean to tell me that it was in worse shape than the Enterprise, and had even less of a skeleton crew than the Enterprise did, Admiral Bob?
Being late-23rd century, there could have been ways other than the oft-used "you're the only ship in the area" - so be glad the Klingons weren't picking up that transmission...
I've seen fan edits of STV that have removed the comedic elements and it really made me realize that underneath it all could've been a really deep, solid adventure story in TOS tradition. In his memoirs Shatner does note that the comedy was very much mandated from above, as TVH had been so well recieved by a casual audience and it basically played up the screwball comedy moments which was attributed to be a reason for it's popularity.
To be honest, there are a greater number of good stories in the Trek TV series, than in the Trek movies. The movies (perhaps understandably) expend a a lot of effort being large and "epic" visually, and lose in characterization. Personally I'd rather see the familiar actors and excellent writing, over special effects and pew-pew.
One reason Star Trek is better suited for TV, where they can better tackle deeper issues. Unfortunately, at least in the world of Star Trek, the movies that do tackle bigger issues don't do as well.
the backlash started, as often it does, when the movie failed to make coin and the fanbase turned opinion from predominantly positive to almost overwhelmingly negative. Group-think.
Beyond, too. I seen with my own eyes how the 'accepted opinion' about that movie changed as its box office failed to meet expectations, and fans who'd been perfectly fine with the movie suddenly decided it had been one of the failures and started turning on it. This is a phenomena I've rarely seen in any other fandom than ours and I don't totally understand it
FWIW I must be one of the other 10 who like Nemesis![]()
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