The scene in "The Enemy Within" between Kirk and Rand is still hard to watch. My brother still thinks Balok is scary. And then there's the Salt Creature.
TOS did good monsters . . . who often turned out to be more than meets the eye.
The scene in "The Enemy Within" between Kirk and Rand is still hard to watch. My brother still thinks Balok is scary. And then there's the Salt Creature.
Don’t knock the new films! They’re broadening the audience to a new generation![]()
My tale is a long and strange one, in that Star Trek was always a part of my life, but in my case I was exposed exclusively to The Next Generation from the start, because that was all that was on the air for a long time. Since I was born in 1989, I was too small and too late to the party to see any of the classic Trek films, and I had no knowledge whatsoever of the original Trek. At around age 3 or 4, I caught a scene of "Best of Both Worlds, Part 1", the scene after the commercial break following the infamous "We have engaged the Borg" scene. In it, I saw something that would be permanently etched into my psyche, an image that strongly influences my entire life to this day. Here was a symbol of humanity at its peak of perfection, the 24th century starship Enterprise, commanded by a human named Jean-luc Picard, facing a no-win scenario (I would learn about the Kobayashi Maru years later) against a threat the likes I had never seen before. The stoic borg voice said "You will surrender yourselves or we will destroy your ship." I expected Picard to wet himself, hide behind his chair, or at the very least, try to escape. What happened next I could not have anticipated. He YELLED back at them. "You have committed acts of aggression against the United Federation of Planets!" He was angry. And he wasn't going to let those jerks win. From that moment on, to this very day, Picard has been a hero of mine, and the above is my argument for why he is the greatest Star Trek captain of all time.
The years passed, as they do too often. I got a playmates toys Enterprise that Christmas (which my little brother promptly lost the warp engines to) and when I was six, my dad set me down and gave me the space talk playmates 7" Picard and Riker figures, on the condition that I take very, VERY good care of them (I only wish I had). At age 7, my dad ordered a collection of Star Trek TNG vhs tapes, a subscription of sorts if I recall, since we got a new tape every week. Around this time I also got the blueprints to the Enterprise-D, and learned that much of TNG was inspired by The Motion Picture (more on that later). I am sorry to say that I never got into DS9 or Voyager very intensively, but after I saw Generations and William Shatner ("The guy from 'Rescue 911'"?) was revealed as a lost captain of the Enterprise, I had to find out more about him. And I did; by watching all six classic Star Trek films (except for TSFS, which my dad refused to watch for at-the-time unspecified reasons) and reruns of the original series on NBC. I fell asleep during The Motion Picture, but the death of Spock in Wrath of Khan felt to me as grave and serious as the death of Jesus Christ. Around this time I also saw First Contact, the only TNG movie I love.
For years I looked for a new Enterprise to replace the lost TNG ship, and my moment came in 1998, when I was once again offered a choice of the bridge crew from Insurrection, or the Enterprise-E from the same film. I chose the latter, and it lasted with me until the 2009 trek film was released. In 1999, I borrowed the Star Trek Encyclopedia from the library, and in 2001 I finally accepted my Trekkie destiny and went back to rewatch TNG. I needed more Trek, though (especially after I went to see my first Trek in the movie theaters, "Nemesis", and hated it), and for some reason I wanted to re-rent The Motion Picture, mainly because I remembered the theme music being the same as in TNG and the latter films. I didn't get a chance, however Christmas 2003. From that moment on, everything changed. I had been a moody teenager suffering from a broken heart and severe bipolar and depression, but Star Trek The Motion Picture was like a sponge for all my negative emotion, feeding me positive vibes in return. TNG may have been my first love, but TMP literally saved my life, and showed me that there was a future for me and others like me if I was willing to work towards it.
I went back and watched all the movies, even TSFS (which I later learned contained the death of Kirk's son, the reason my dad refused to watch it). I never did get to see as much of DS9 as I would have liked, nor Voyager, nor even Enterprise (although I enjoyed what I saw of the latter of those three shows, hence my avatar). But when These are the Voyages ended, I was CRUSHED. Not because I thought the episode was bad, per se (I am a rare Trekkie who enjoyed it for the most part, except for Trip's death), but because it was over. My whole life there had been a steady stream of Trek in the media, and now, there was nothing.
My tale is getting close to it's ending (at least at the time of this writing). In 2008, I went to see Cloverfield so I could see the Enterprise (and Star Trek itself) being rebuilt from the ground up. The next year, I watched with tears in my eyes as Star Trek returned. I loved that movie, and I loved Into Darkness. Then came Beyond, which I wasn't so fond of (seriously how many times do you have to blow up the poor ship?) but Discovery has rekindled my interest. And here I am waiting patiently for Discovery Season 2, and what may lie over that next horizon, as Captain Archer would say...
Fascinating recollectionsI do recall both TOS and TNG being available by subscription on VHS, I remember TV adverts. Was it via Time Life? They often did those kinds of things...
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