with a title like this, there was no way it would end with Admiral Kirk turning to the audience and saying "Sorry, folks, we didn't find him." If it had, people would've thrown rocks at the screen.
with a title like this, there was no way it would end with Admiral Kirk turning to the audience and saying "Sorry, folks, we didn't find him." If it had, people would've thrown rocks at the screen.
Yeah, this is exactly it, and the joke was bandied about right after Spock died in TWOK. "The next one should be In Search Of...Spock!" I always felt this title was simply a play on it.I thought the title was inspired by the 1970's television programme In Search Of... hosted by Leonard Nimoy..
The best part of this thread is that it shows that The Search For Spock was a much better title than some others they could have gone with.
I rewatched the movie last week. Still great.
This. With only one TV series/cast, each movie, each new official adventure was an event. If you didn't live it, that impact is lost on you. We didn't have dozens of shows, 13 movies, and hundreds and hundreds of episodes to make it commonplace. This was HUGE and existed at all mostly because of fan passion.But even in 1984, never saw TWOK, this film - even in promotionals/teasers/etc, or even just the poster only - felt like an event. In a franchise that already became an event in other ways...
This. With only one TV series/cast, each movie, each new official adventure was an event. If you didn't live it, that impact is lost on you. We didn't have dozens of shows, 13 movies, and hundreds and hundreds of episodes to make it commonplace. This was HUGE and mostly because of fan passion.
Star Trek III was for the fans and people who enjoyed the previous film. No other real crossover appeal. And it made a tidy profit.
I miss that feeling: the agonizing wait for another adventure with the cast of the only Trek game in town. Waiting on line for hours opening night and excitement of the lights going down and the Paramount logo coming up. Knowing that the entire fan community was as excited to see this.
I was in high school and even I, a social pariah, had people to talk too just as the semester was ending....
Not quite so, I had the first 2 movies on VHS tapes by then, I watched them endlessly. They were $24.95 each and I asked my dad to get them for me for my birthday. The movies also ran on cable, so they were being revisited prior to Star Trek III's premiere.And with no home video at the time, the recaps in-movie to fill in viewers who missed the previous installment were succinct yet satisfying.
Probably because of the more crowded sci-fi/fantasy landscape by then. Summer 1982 was chockablock with incredible choices:Gotta wonder how TWOK managed to make less than TMP.
TVH is a headscratcher, probably with casuals finding it "accessible", since most of this sequel spent more time in 1986 San Francisco and playing the "fish out of water" trope, keeping Klingon intrigue sidelined.
Because Paramount didn't realize that it wasn't the jokes per se that people liked, it was the 23rd century (as you said) fish out of water situation. Star Trek V also didn't have a consistent tone. Star Trek IV kept most of the humor to the 20th century scenes. TFF had it everywhere, mixed with heady themes and tragic backstories. It was also steeped in Trek characters that general audiences didn't have an investment in. There's a good film in there somewhere, but too many cooks destroyed the dish.The same comedy trope just couldn't work in TFF,
Ehhhh, this was supposed to be a "darker" story but it was sabotaaged at every turn by really awful gags. Chekov being a borderline simpleton (he really takes a pounding in this movie), Uhura and the books, the Kirk loves himself meta humor, and the heavy handed Shakespeare quotes dilute what really should have been a nifty political thriller (the DC is even worse with the Scooby-Doo climax). I really mean to do an edit of this movie, removing the idiocy and seeing how it plays. After Star Trek III, none of the TOS films were allowed to take themselves seriously and the first 3 really feel like they were made for adults more than the rest.TUC not only sidelines some of the character-assassinating comedy (sadly, some remains)
Well, many fans have been upset about Spock's death, so they had to reconcile them.with a title like this, there was no way it would end with Admiral Kirk turning to the audience and saying "Sorry, folks, we didn't find him." If it had, people would've thrown rocks at the screen.
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