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Blu-Ray Star Trek TV Series Video

Star Trek: Strange New Worlds: Season One

2 min read

Order it from theLogBook.com StoreStar Trek: Strange New Worlds is a unique entity in the pantheon of Star Trek spinoffs. For all intents and purposes, this show exists because the fans demanded it. Though Captain Christopher Pike, Number One, and a younger, less experienced Spock first appeared to the public in the 1966 Star Trek two-parter The Menagerie, itself brilliantly built around footage from Star Trek’s unsold 1964 pilot The Cage, Pike and Number One only made comebacks in “expanded universe” media of uncertain canonicity after that. An alternate-universe Pike, played to perfection by Bruce Greenwood, figured prominently in the first two J.J. Abrams-produced movies, but…wasn’t that in the same lane as those comics and novels that, while they might have been authorized products, weren’t official where the ongoing TV productions were concerned? And yet it wasn’t like anyone was going to recast Jeffrey Hunter and Majel Barrett and try to build new stories out from The Cage on TV, was it?

That is, until Star Trek: Discovery did precisely that in its second season, with Anson Mount’s Pike and Ethan Peck’s Spock serving as regulars for that season. Rebecca Romijn recurred as Number One as well. One episode hearkened back to the events of The Cage, and another confirmed that Pike’s grisly fate retold in The Menagerie was an unavoidable certainty. And there’s the real challenge of picking up Pike’s story between his only two appearances in the classic 1960s series: we know what happens to him. He will suffer a fate that’s both as bad as it looks – and better than Pike himself knows, because thanks to some timey-wimey visions in Discovery’s second season, he knows precisely what will happen…but only the bad part. Is there any story to be told between those two established fixed goalposts in Star Trek lore?

Strange New Worlds demonstrates that the answer is “yes”, and does so wonderfully. … Read more

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Blu-Ray Star Trek TV Series Video

Star Trek: Prodigy – Season 1, Episodes 1-10

1 min read

Order this CDAt a point when there have been new Star Trek series of one kind or another – or, more recently, of every kind spread across a calendar year – there’s literally a show for every Star Trek fan, or future Star Trek fan, in the audience. And while all five (!!) of the current series have come to exemplify the compassionate, positive, inclusive Star Trek ethos to varying degrees, perhaps none of them is more purely Star Trek than the animated series Star Trek: Prodigy – despite the fact that its opening two-parter seemed like it was as far away from Trek as you could get. In the copious bonus material featured in this two-disc set of the first half of the 20-episode first season, Prodigy’s creators, Dan and Kevin Hageman (of Trollhunters fame) describe Prodigy as an “on-ramp” for younger viewers to begin exploring the rest of the Star Trek franchise. The first ten episodes, and the bonus material accompanying them, leave virtually no room to argue with that assessment. … Read more

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Blu-Ray Movies Star Trek Video

Star Trek: The Motion Picture: Director’s Edition: The Complete Adventure

1 min read

Order it from theLogBook.com StoreI’ve made no secret of the fact that, in a world where every Trekkie worth their weight in salty dodecahedrons worships at the altar of The Wrath Of Khan, I have been, and always shall be, a Motion Picture guy. I’ve never seen it as plodding or “motionless”. The characters never seemed wooden to me, the sets and uniforms never seemed colorless. And finally, there’s a version of the movie that seems to show everyone else what was in my head all along – this is not a bad movie at all. … Read more

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DVD Star Trek TV Series Video

Star Trek: Voyager – Season One

8 min read

Order it in theLogBook.com StoreI was there at the dawning of the fourth age of Trek-kind. Working at a Fox affiliate at the time, which had recently undergone a bit of mitosis and spawned a second TV station which was earmarked from early on as a potential UPN station, I was more keenly aware of Star Trek: Voyager than I was of any Trek spinoff before it. I was aware of it not only as a fan, but in a more businesslike sense. I cringed at the hasty exit of Genevieve Bujold, and cringed again when the WB premiered a week ahead of UPN (though, again at the time, I predicted they’d never make it when their coolest offering was the series of Michigan J. Frog commercial bumpers and their lead program was a pale clone of Married…With Children).

Star Trek: Voyager - Season One Star Trek: Voyager - Season One

Then Voyager premiered, on January 15th, 1995. I watched the live satellite feed at work – mainly because our little independent sister station hadn’t made the deadline for UPN’s consideration before the premiere. The local ABC station carried Voyager instead, dropping it into Next Generation’s old 10:40pm Saturday night time slot (ironically, at the time of this writing, that’s where I work now). The new series promised so much, and the cast was rich with possibilities, and the effects raised the bar from what we had come to expect from Next Generation. Star Trek lived again! And then, by the end of the season, Voyager’s greatest enemy was…cheese.

This set chronicles that first season, in broadcast order, and boy does it bring back the memories. Actually, the first season wasn’t bad at all – for most of it, Voyager truly was a worthy successor to the Trek throne. Kate Mulgrew, as Captain Janeway, doesn’t get nearly enough credit for endowing the series with a massive amount of credibility. Poor as the scripts were from time to time, Mulgrew was magnificent, never giving the character of Janeway anything less than her all. Even later on, when Voyager became more and more derivative and shallow, Mulgrew’s performance alone was enough to merit at least one viewing of any given episode. Actually, it’s a bit disingenuous for me to heap all the praise on her: the cast of Voyager was excellent across the board. If there was a single weak link, it may have eventually been Robert Beltran as Chakotay, though the drought of stories focusing on and strengthening his character is more at fault than the actor is – Beltran simply had nothing to work with later on while other characters, even newcomers, were more fully developed. In this first season, Beltran gets his juiciest material, in these early episodes where there’s a more sharply defined division between Voyager’s original crew and the Maquis rebels.

Star Trek: Voyager - Season One Star Trek: Voyager - Season One

Many of my thoughts, and those of fellow theLogBook.com writer Rob Heyman, on those early episodes have been chronicled here already, so to save a bit of time I’ll refer you to those early, written-the-day-after-the-episode-aired reviews. One thing that occurs in hindsight is how rollicking and fast-paced the series premiere, Caretaker, is. It cruises along at a breakneck pace, establishing – for better or worse – that Voyager would be an action-adventure series, with the emphasis on action. Next Generation’s more introspective moments would be a thing of the past, as would DS9’s engrossing empire-building and serialization. Voyager’s early fortè would be what former Next Generation producer Herb Wright dubbed “weird shit,” and that weirdness was the specialty of future executive producer Brannon Braga. The first two Voyager hours out of the gate after the pilot were time paradoxes, and strange ones even by Star Trek standards. The first real standout episode was Phage, which introduced the underused and/or misused Vidiians, a race of plague-stricken aliens whose only means of survival was harvesting organs from others. And even their first outing, though arguably their strongest, spent a great deal of time on more “weird shit”, including a space chase through a gigantic hall of mirrors big enough for Voyager herself to get lost in. The Cloud is a bizarre mix of a jeopardy plot and several character vignettes, all of which are jockeying for “A”-story status. Eye Of The Needle is one of the show’s better “tech” mysteries, a good example of a ship-based bottle show that works.

Star Trek: Voyager - Season One Star Trek: Voyager - Season One

And then the first real bona fide stinker hits in the form of Ex Post Facto, a murder mystery that can’t decide if it wants to focus on Tuvok as the investigator or Tom Paris as the wrongfully-accused suspect. The next few episodes are better-than-average and set up some far-reaching story arcs, particularly where Seska, a Maquis crewmember who turns out to have been a treacherous Cardassian spy all along, is concerned. Where I really got a kick in the stomach was from the episode Cathexis, yet another paint-by-numbers crewmembers-possessed-by-aliens plotline, a device that had grown miserably stale from what seemed like once-every-third-week use on Next Generation. Following that, Faces at least scores points for being one of Voyager’s better attempts at horror, while Jetrel does an interesting war-criminal-meets-war-survivor tale and gives Ethan Phillips a chance to do some heavy drama that belies his appearance. With Learning Curve, there’s an interesting story about Tuvok trying to give some of the more rebellious Maquis crew a crash-course in proper Starfleet protocol, but it’s brought down by a B-plot in which Voyager – a ship that has survived being transported 70,000 light years, bombarded by Kazons, attacked by Vidiians, and brought to a halt by a warp core ejection – is sent to its knees by cheese. The predictable feel-good ending of the episode doesn’t help matters either.

Star Trek: Voyager - Season OneAs with previous Star Trek series DVDs, there are no commentaries, but there’s at least a healthy slate of bonuses taking up the set’s fifth disc. Featurettes examine the location shooting, special effects, and the creation of the series itself, and one nice featurette gives Kate Mulgrew a chance to say whatever she wants about the show and on her work since, particularly her one-woman biographical play about Katherine Hepburn, Tea At Five. There’s a brief feature about the evolution of Star Trek on the world wide web, which to me is interesting because I’d forgotten how much the original Paramount Voyager site looked like…well, an only slightly fancy fan site. But the show is really stolen by a featurette simply titled The First Captain: Bujold, offering us the first glimpses of Genevieve Bujold as Captain Nicole Janeway (changed from the original character name of Elizabeth to reflect Bujold’s middle name). Several scenes are shown in their entirety without any sort of commentary – comments are heard from Rick Berman in between scenes – and the difference between Bujold and Mulgrew is absolutely, jaw-droppingly striking. It’s not that Bujold plays Captain Janeway badly, or in some way that subverts the whole legacy of actors-as-starship-captains before her, but it’s so different – Bujold’s take is quiet and, in places, almost emotionless. It’s unfair to really deliver any kind of value judgement when we have nearly 200 hours of Mulgrew to hold up against several minutes of Bujold, but it’s interesting to finally see what might have been. Genevieve Bujold herself wasn’t interviewed for the featurette – not much of a surprise, what with the press reports of the time attributing to her a quote about not wanting to play “a comic book character” anymore – and Berman remains very complimentary of her, but admits that her style of working is more suited to filming a movie.

Sadly absent from the proceedings is the late-1994 Robert Picardo-hosted documentary Star Trek: Voyager – Inside The New Adventures, distributed by UPN to its newly-signed-up affiliate stations to air…well, really, whenever, however and as often as they wanted to. I remember running this hour-long (well, 40-odd minutes with commercial breaks) program endlessly in time slots where infomercials hadn’t been sold, and as sick as I grew of it at the time, I have to admit to being sad that it’s not featured here. No doubt, a lot of this box set’s extra feature material was originally shot for the special (though I’m sure there where hints even then of digital media that would demand value-added material), and yet there are quite a few interesting bits from that special that didn’t make it to DVD.

A mixed bag as far as the episodes themselves go, but the bonus features – especially the truly unusual sight of Genevieve Bujold occupying the captain’s seat – just about make up for it. Is it worth the price? Hard to say. Paramount is charging as much for this five-disc set as they previously charged for seven-disc sets of Next Generation and Deep Space Nine, which is just short of highway robbery in my book. It really depends on how much you liked this season of this particular series.… Read more

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DVD Movies Star Trek TV Series Video

Star Trek: The Motion Picture – The Director’s Edition

7 min read

Order it in theLogBook.com StoreOften hailed as love-it-or-hate-it fare among Star Trek fans, Star Trek: The Motion Picture remains possibly my favorite movie of the entire franchise to date. Seriously. I’m not joking.

What do I like about ST:TMP? Maybe that it’s as brainy and as close to hard science fiction as the original Trek franchise ever got. Granted, that probably didn’t gain this movie the widest possible audience, but in 1979, Star Trek was thought of more fondly than it is by the public in 2002, and also in 1979, the most likely audience for a Star Trek flick was Trekkers themselves – so it was safe to throw a bit of real SF at them. Future movies made much more obvious attempts to appeal to a broad action-adventure audience.

Star Trek: The Motion Picture - The Director's Edition Star Trek: The Motion Picture - The Director's Edition

And contrary to all the complaints about an antiseptic, emotionless feel, I thought ST:TMP did a great job of taking the characters where we left off at the end of the original series and building on them, with some hints as to what they’d been doing in the interim, and some expansion on the characters, bringing them from the stereotypes that they occasionally were in the original TV series to more fully-rounded characters.

The double-disc DVD edition of ST:TMP revamps only a handful of special effects shots, but does a great deal more in the cutting room. Entire sequences with which fans are well-acquainted are dropped, the editing is generally tightened up, and the picture is digitally remastered overall, providing a very crisp visual. The effects replacements are very minor indeed, with only a few even standing out – the formation of the bridge leading from the Enterprise saucer to V’Ger’s central complex, an exterior shot of V’Ger (based on original 1978 production sketches) approaching Earth, and a shot of the Enterprise blasting the asteroid which throws it into a wormhole.

There’s just one problem with reworking and re-editing the visuals – the sound mix has to match. And this is one of my most glaring complaints with this otherwise nifty update to one of my favorite movies. In a small number of places, the legendary Jerry Goldsmith music score is butchered in the editing process, and there’s something else which pervades the entire film in this new version which I find even more intensely annoying: they seem to have lost the original sound effects source material and had to start from scratch. In some cases, sound effects hearkening back to those from the original series are used, which makes some sense, but in other cases completely different sounds are used, including one of the most annoying red alert sirens I’ve heard since the animated series. As many times as I’d seen ST:TMP, I found that this new sound mix was more than just a little bit distracting. Granted, those charged with remixed the soundtrack into Dolby 5.1 Surround probably had to start from scratch for their surround sound mix, but the techology exists to lift some of the effects from the original audio track of the movie – it’s not asking too much, really.

Star Trek: The Motion Picture - The Director's Edition Star Trek: The Motion Picture - The Director's Edition

I was stunned that some oddities of the original film weren’t fixed. In several scenes on the Enterprise bridge, you probably noticed instances where a blurry area seemed to smudge the background scenery between two characters, in some cases even seeming to warp the background set in a funhouse-mirror way. According to the audio commentary (of which more in a moment), this was an unavoidable side-effect of a special multi-focus lens called a diopter, which Robert Wise was forced to use to compensate for the sets’ low lighting. Now, all of the diopter shots are locked-off, steady shots, for that aforementioned blur would’ve been much more noticeable otherwise. Why not fix that blur? Granted, it might necessitate painting in set details in the background that may not match up, but frankly, I find that blur far more distracting then whether there should be two or three little round monitors on the panel behind Kirk and Decker. I suppose it might drive others crazy, but the diopter blur makes my teeth itch, to say nothing of my eyes.

The 2-disc set is rounded out by the most elaborate package of Trek extras Paramount has yet assembled, including no fewer than three special documentaries, an audio commentary from several key members of the behind-the-scenes crew and actor Stephen Collins, a full slate of TV and theatrical promo trailers, and an on-screen “text commentary” by Trek expert Michael Okuda. The documentaries are the real prize here, particularly the too-short-by-far piece on the aborted Star Trek Phase II television series which eventually mutated into the first Star Trek feature film. For the first time ever, the legendary screen test footage of the engineering sets, Persis Khambatta trying on one of the original series miniskirt uniforms, and David Gautreaux’s screen test for the part of new Vulcan science officer Xon are seen. Numerous new interviews help tell the story, though truth be told, one would be better off having read Judith & Garfield Reeves-Stevens’ book on the series that wasn’t before seeing this. Still, it’s a real treat finally getting to see that stuff, and it makes one wonder if we might wind up seeing the existing footage of Genevieve Bujold as Star Trek: Voyager’s Captain Janeway someday in a Voyager DVD box set.

The other two documentaries cover the making of the movie in general, with some annoying self-back-patting from Shatner and Nimoy, and a look at the restoration and re-working of the film. Some of the stuff in the documentaries makes me cringe with the cloying, pro-Paramount Studios spin that has been put on them – it’s common knowledge that ST:TMP was, behind the scenes, an excessively troubled movie – and if Paramount itself thought so highly of it, why did future movies only put Gene Roddenberry on the payroll as a consultant whose advice didn’t have to be heeded? I would’ve been happier with some more frank discussion in these interview segments.

The TV ads and teaser trailers are also highlights of the bonus features, with their very 70s and very cheesy ad copy and stand-in effects. Hindsight being 20/20, and being a promo writer myself, I can think of about a dozen ways this movie could have been teased better. But the tight filming schedule and availability of any footage, either special effects shots or from the set, probably made it challenge to come up with any kind of a pitch that would sell this movie. And hey, they’re better than the original theatrical trailers for Star Wars by far.

A little bit more mystifying is a sales-pitch-esque preview/promo for Enterprise, the latest ship off the old Star Trek block. Why this was included, I’m not sure, when there were other things much more closely related to ST:TMP that aren’t on here, including the original 1978 press conference announcing the movie’s production – footage of this event, which happened the same day as NASA rolling out the space shuttle test orbiter Enterprise, does still exist.

Mike Okuda’s text commentary is informative, sure to please triviaholics, and most of all funny. When Kirk notes for the umpteenth time that the Enterprise is the only Starfleet ship standing between Earth and V’Ger, Okuda’s subtitle pops up: “This seems to happen a lot.”

Though my qualms with some aspects of the presentation – most notably the sound effects and the hack-‘n’-slash music editing – keep me from, in all good conscience, giving this title a four-star rating, I do still recommend Star Trek: The Motion Picture – The Director’s Edition to Trek fans out there. However it sounds, the movie has never looked better.… Read more