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STAR TREK MOVIE MEMORIES

Written by William Shatner & Chris Kreski

SUMMARY:

Released by HarperCollins Publishers in 1994, this 358-page hardcover is William Shatner & Chris Kreski’s follow-up to their popular 1993 memoir: Star Trek Memories, which revisited the original TV series. 

Utilizing the same narrative-by-committee format as before, Star Trek Movie Memories incorporates perspectives from: producers Harve Bennett, Rick Berman, & Ralph Winter; actors David Gautreaux, Ricardo Montalban, Malcolm McDowell, & Patrick Stewart; Gene Roddenberry’s former assistant, Richard Arnold; screenwriters Harold Livingston & Ron Moore; and directors Robert Wise & Nicholas Meyer. 

Among Shatner’s long-time co-stars, Leonard Nimoy and George Takei are significant contributors.   Included only briefly in the text are: Nichelle Nichols; Walter Koenig; Michael Dorn; James Doohan; Persis Khambatta; Christopher Lloyd; Kim Cattrall; and DeForest Kelley.

Shatner first recalls his July 1968 meet-and-greet with NASA personnel a year before Apollo 11’s historic launch.  A few days later, Star Trek would commence production on its third and final season, which Shatner ruefully notes is soon doomed to failure.  Recovering from Trek’s cancellation (both personally and professionally), the ex-Captain Kirk describes the franchise’s subsequent rebirth. 

He covers the full gamut: Roddenberry’s controversial God Thing script; the dawn of the convention circuit, the animated TV program, and Trek’s misfired relaunches as either a low-budget feature film or a sequel TV series (Star Trek: Phase II). 

Supplemented by his colleagues’ observations, Shatner recalls each of the original cast’s six Trek films, including their collective satisfaction re: The Wrath of Khan.  He also discusses his recruitment for 1994’s Star Trek: Generations, which includes the deleted orbital skydiving sequence.  In detail, Shatner reveals, from Nevada’s scorching Valley of Fire, the filming of Kirk’s original death scene.  The book’s last-minute final page reveals that he is being unexpectedly recalled to Generations’ Valley of Fire set for additional filming.

Notes: As with Star Trek Memories, this book is available in hardcover and paperback formats.  Movie Memories’ paperback edition sports a different introduction discussing Star Trek Generations’ reshoot of the Picard & Kirk vs. Soran sequence (as well as mentioning Shatner’s second divorce).

REVIEW:

Shatner & Kreski’s likable style ensures that Trekkers again consume an insider’s account that is consistently both entertaining and intriguing.  For instance, producer/screenwriter Harold Livingston’s take on his ugly feud with Gene Roddenberry, during the prolonged production of The Motion Picture, seems plausible.  Comments from Leonard Nimoy (effectively Trek’s reliable statesman) and Nicholas Meyer coping with Paramount’s studio politics amidst creating Treks II, III, IV, and VI are also illuminating, as such obstructionism becomes a recurring pattern. 

One should also give some credit where it’s due: Shatner concedes that Star Trek V was a failure, as he explains how it wasn’t necessarily all his fault, given the circumstances. It’s fairly acknowledged why Bennett, Nimoy, Kelley, Roddenberry, and screenwriter David Loughery all had misgivings re: The Final Frontier‘s dubious script. Unsurprisingly, Shatner doesn’t accept that the biblical-like epic he had first envisioned was his own bizarre Captain Kirk ego trip that Paramount gradually deep-sixed. Suffice to say, the heavily-diluted dreck Final Frontier became almost looks good by comparison to what first-time director Shatner’s initial story synopsis sought to do.

Shatner, at least, keeps his other self-serving claims to a minimum — i.e., an eye-roller about how, at a post-Star Trek IV premiere party, he amusingly pressures Paramount’s studio chief, Frank Mancuso, into letting him direct Star Trek V, or how he ‘improves’ Kirk’s weakly-devised murder on the Generations set just prior to its original filming. 

The former, of course, stems from the long-standing Shatner/Nimoy ‘favored nations’ contractual requirement where they received equal everything, so Paramount already knew long before of Shatner’s directorial ambitions.  As for the Generations death scene, the fact that test audiences despised the concept of Kirk being mortally wounded (by a cowardly phaser blast) enough to force a subsequent reshoot speaks for itself. 

Still, the bulk of what Movie Memories states happened appears accurate, as corroborated by others, which stands consistent with Shatner’s mission statement in the acknowledgments section.  No matter the extent Kreski actually penned Movie Memories, what Shatner has devised is a refreshing treat for any Trek fan.  The only caveat is that its smattering of profanities should preclude middle schoolers as a potential audience.       

ADDITIONAL FEATURES:

The acknowledgments section spells out Shatner’s mindset researching this project.  Aside from black-and-white photos, there is an eight-page color photo spread between pages 150 and 151.

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                           8 Stars

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THE RATINGS GAME: BEST & WORST OF THE STAR TREK MOVIES

In tribute to the Star Trek movie franchise, Odd Moon Media Reviews offers its own candid assessment.  Ignoring box office numbers, we will consider each Trek film’s watchability. 

ANALYSIS:

13. I: The Motion Picture (TMP) (132 Min.+) 1979.  Producer Gene Roddenberry stubbornly insisted upon peddling Trek’s answer to 2001: A Space Odyssey, no matter the cost — let alone deeming every colorful asset the TV series once had as insufficient for moviegoers.  Hence, Roddenberry’s cast and viewers are both stuck with a vastly overblown and condescending retread of the Season 2 episode: “The Changeling.” 

It’s no wonder the sumptuous F/X fail to salvage a middling plot where the cast’s icy performances are totally inconsequential.  Even the reliable Kirk-Spock-McCoy chemistry is forced to convey ‘big screen tension’ rather than welcome fans back to Trek.        

Worse yet, revamping everything from the U.S.S. Enterprise model on down to the drab, gray-footed pajamas posing as Starfleet uniforms sterilizes TMP past the point of no return.  Sadly, even forty-some years later, The Motion-less Picture remains a surefire cure for insomnia. 

12. V: The Final Frontier (105 Min.) 1989.  In most aspects, Final Frontier is a far worse film than TMP.  From a blandly derivative plot (i.e. loosely resembling Roddenberry’s unproduced “The God Thing” concept) to Jerry Goldsmith’s recycled musical score, Leonard Nimoy’s tired acting, weak gags, and the franchise’s absolute worst F/X, Final Frontier pitches far too little that is fresh to viewers. 

The sole reason it even scores a slight nod over TMP is that director/writer/star William Shatner tries to entertain fans, no matter how ineptly – whereas TMP actually dares to lull viewers to sleep.  How exactly Shatner’s team squandered the franchise’s largest budget (during the II-VI era) remains a mystery, but his basic premise of sending out the U.S.S. Enterprise out in search of ‘God’ was doomed to fail from the get-go. 

On a positive note, Hiroshima’s fusion jazz tune, “The Moon is a Window to Heaven,” is a welcome treat on the film’s soundtrack.     

11. X: Nemesis (117 Min.)  2002. Given four years to forget the lackluster Insurrection, there should have been an infinite number of ways to satisfyingly conclude The Next Generation.  Aside from finally marrying Riker & Troi, Nemesis inexplicably fails to deliver any of them.  Resorting to a clichéd assortment of the TV show’s old sub-plots (i.e. a Data duplicate, mind-rape, etc.), Nemesis even swipes Wrath of Khan’s best twist, but its execution invariably falls flat. 

Although both farewell films depict dark vibes, a critical difference distinguishing Undiscovered Country from Nemesis is the geriatric original cast’s concept of a classy exit.  The Next Generation’s cast, in contrast, appears bored in what they evidently sense is a clunker finale.  Their instincts aren’t wrong.   

10. IX: Insurrection (103 Min.)  1998.  One shouldn’t blame director Jonathan Frakes too much for floundering, especially given the bland script producer Rick Berman and his screenwriting team dealt him.  Much like Final Frontier, Insurrection’s fable-like plot is merely an unnecessary sequel and, for that reason, the less said the better.  

9. XIII: Beyond (122 Min.) 2016.  For a 50th Anniversary celebration, Beyond falls far short of anything special.  A nod to the original cast and the J.J. Abrams’ cast sharing of Kirk’s iconic TV series voice-over are classy touches, but the plot, otherwise, displays nothing justifying the film’s awe-inspiring title.  Probably what’s worst is a clichéd twist re: the Enterprise’s fate (for the third time in thirteen films) that confirms Beyond’s screenwriters couldn’t think nearly enough outside the box – pardon the expression. 

8. XII: Into Darkness (132 Min.) 2013.  Already far too derivative of Wrath of Khan, director Abrams insists on shoveling even more fan service (i.e. look for winks at The Empire Strikes Back and Raiders of the Lost Ark) versus concocting a genuine sense of originality. Worse yet, squandering Nimoy’s last appearance as Spock doesn’t help matters, either.  Still, had Benedict Cumberbatch been instead cast as a vengeful Gary Mitchell in an re-imagining of “Where No Man Has Gone Before,” then Darkness might have been an impressively sinister follow-up to 2009’s reboot film.

7. VII: Generations (118 Min.) 1994.  Make no mistake: Generations is a high-concept movie lacking sufficient substance to save the dubious Nexus gimmick being pitched to audiences. Opting for a ham-fisted approach to justify its unnecessary ‘passing the torch’ mantra, the contrived script merely checks boxes on Paramount’s insisted to-do list promoting The Next Generation into the big leagues.  Producer Rick Berman and his handpicked screenwriters’ lack of movie experience is all too evident, as Picard’s Enterprise crew awkwardly shifts into big-budget heroics.

Case in point: with the exception of Patrick Stewart (and Brent Spiner’s mostly annoying performance), the disinterested cast demonstrates minimal effort. William Shatner’s grinning last ride as ‘Captain Kirk’ is his weakest Trek acting; even so, his star power readily outshines his castmates. While Jacqueline Kim’s Demora Sulu is a welcome treat, the weakly-conveyed prologue squanders her introduction in setting up Generations’ storyline. Just the sight of James Doohan’s Scotty during the prologue reciting stilted techno-babble (one suspects from off-screen cue cards) is cringe-worthy. Worse yet, Data’s nerve-grating struggles later on with an emotion chip provide even less incentive to witness the historic Kirk-meets-Picard arc.

Only occasionally fulfilling the studio’s grand intentions, Generations is a mostly mediocre Trek. There’s just no mistaking how the Next Generation’s cast and crew tread their way through a middling, if not preposterous, storyline and uninspired CGI. In retrospect, had the producers instead utilized the Guardian of Forever concept and recruited Joan Collins for a poignant cameo, a reworked Generations could have supplied an ideal 30th Anniversary film in 1996. That way, a nostalgic (and far less ridiculous) premise could have heralded the Next Generation’s 1994 film debut.

6.  III: The Search for Spock (105 Min.) 1984.  Competent but hardly great, Search for Spock spells out that it was produced solely on soundstages. It’s little wonder why the supposedly lush Genesis Planet looks so underwhelming.  Designed as a direct continuation of Wrath of Khan, the film’s bleak tone is peculiar, as it instantly contradicts Khan’s concluding sense of optimism. 

Various plot holes (i.e. Starfleet’s sudden scuttling of the 40-year-old (not 20-year-old) Enterprise; Federation cadet Saavik’s promotion to Grissom’s lead science officer; the total absence of competent Federation security at the Genesis Planet; etc.) chip away at a cookie-cutter storyline sorely missing Nicholas Meyer’s scripting.  The same applies to Nichelle Nichols’ under-utilized Uhura, as she isn’t even allotted a solo scene depicting her escape from Earth to Vulcan.

Unlike the film’s expedited pace, Vonda McIntyre’s solid novelization explores unused sub-plots (i.e. David & Saavik’s ill-fated romance; Scotty’s family grieving over his nephew’s death during Wrath of Khan and subsequent blaming of Kirk; a newly promoted Sulu losing out command of Excelsior’s trial runs to Captain Styles, etc.) that would have been intriguing to see play out on-screen, even if only for a few extra minutes. 

Such what-if’s contribute to director Nimoy’s biggest obstacle (far more than blandly recasting Kirstie Alley’s Saavik), which is that even he can’t hurdle over such a predictably convenient plot. 

5. VI: The Undiscovered Country (110 Min.)  1991.  Though it’s a welcome upgrade over Final Frontier, Undiscovered Country suffers its own self-inflicted detriments.  Besides director Nicholas Meyer’s gleefully eye-rolling excess of Shakespearian quotes, the cast’s coolly detached acting and too many lethargic moments bog down this movie’s entertainment value as a galactic political thriller. Hence, the film is practically blinking in neon that this storyline will be the last adventure for Kirk’s crew – just like it’s hyped in the superb film teaser that co-star Christopher Plummer narrates.

Still, along with George Takei finally receiving his due, the original cast proves it still has potent magic left.  That’s why Undiscovered Country’s last few minutes are absolutely worth waiting for.  It’s the gracious bow that Kirk’s generation deserves. Speaking of which, Kirk’s last Captain’s Log entry is a far more eloquent and appropriate ‘passing of the torch’ than the heavy-handed Generations.     

4. VIII: First Contact (111 Min.) 1996.  Aside from a deliberate continuity glitch (James Cromwell’s cantankerous Zefram Cochrane isn’t even close to The Original Series incarnation), First Contact generally succeeds on all thrusters.  Adapting a militaristic action style reminiscent of 1986’s Aliens, the storyline pitting Picard’s new Enterprise vs. the time-traveling Borg is well-played.  Frakes, in his big-screen directorial debut, delivers all the necessary goods for the franchise’s 30th Anniversary.

3.  IV: The Voyage Home (122 Min) 1986.  Cleverly playing off the cynical mid-80’s, Voyage Home is Nimoy’s comedy masterpiece that retains its family-friendly charm decades later.  Utilizing well-played humor and poignancy, Voyage Home is undoubtedly the franchise’s classiest installment.  Considering the script’s original premise meant to co-star Eddie Murphy, the first-rate teamwork between Nimoy, Meyer, & producer Harve Bennett recrafting this inspired storyline speaks for itself.

2. (XI): Star Trek (127 Min.)  2009.  Scoring big originality points, Abrams’ first Trek sorta-prequel is, by any definition, a resounding triumph.  Exemplified by Zachary Quinto’s new Spock, the reboot cast is mostly in excellent form.  Yet, Nimoy is its true MVP, as his poignant credibility selling the film’s alternate past concept accomplishes exactly what obvious paycheck efforts from Shatner, James Doohan, & Walter Koenig failed to do endorsing Generations.

And, unsurprisingly, the best Star Trek flick is:

1. II: The Wrath of Khan (113 Min.) 1982.  The bottom line is the inspired cast, Meyer, and Bennett’s production team all bring their A-game, which reinvigorates the franchise.  More significantly, Wrath of Khan conclusively proves that Trek wouldn’t need Roddenberry to thrive in the future. 

In closing, thanks in large part to Nimoy & Meyer (Treks II, IV, & VI), the argument that even-numbered Treks best odd-numbered Treks among the first several films appears valid. 

Yet, one can only speculate what Abrams or somebody else will conjure up come Star Trek XIV.  Following Abrams’ inspired reboot, enormous budgets didn’t keep his two sequels from sliding down Hollywood’s mediocrity slope.  Perhaps a collaboration teaming Abrams & Meyer finally makes sense?  Considering that Abrams worked with Lawrence Kasdan on the Star Wars: The Force Awakens, this notion isn’t impossible.  Thanks for reading!       

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STAR TREK: THE MOTION PICTURE (KLINGON BATTLE VS. V’GER) {Cover} (by Erich Kunzel & The Cincinnati Pops Orchestra: Symphonic Star Trek)

SUMMARY:                      RUNNING TIME: 5:27 Min.

Originally composed and conducted by Jerry Goldsmith for 1979’s Star Trek: The Motion Picture, this instrumental theme narrates the film’s opening deep space sequence.  Specifically, three Klingon battle cruisers are depicted confronting the ominous ‘V’Ger’ space cloud.  The track was subsequently covered by Erich Kunzel & The Cincinnati Pops Orchestra for 1996’s Symphonic Star Trek instrumental album.   

REVIEW:

Conveying V’Ger’s interstellar presence vs. the Klingons’ aggressive approach, Jerry Goldsmith does some terrific work.  Yet, the track is hardly a must-have.  Well-performed by Erich Kunzel & the Cincinnati Pops Orchestra, it’s at least a nostalgic component of the Symphonic Star Trek album.   

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                          6 Stars

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STAR TREK: DEEP SPACE NINE TV THEME {Cover} (by Erich Kunzel & The Cincinnati Pops Orchestra: Symphonic Star Trek)

SUMMARY:                                 RUNNING TIME: 2:00 Min.

Covering composer Dennis McCarthy’s TV theme, conductor Erich Kunzel & The Cincinnati Pops Orchestra include it as the eighth track on their 1996 Symphonic Star Trek instrumental album.

REVIEW:

It’s virtually identical to the original.  If McCarthy’s version isn’t available, then this cover is the next best thing for any sci-fi playlist.

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:               9 Stars

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STAR TREK IV: THE VOYAGE HOME (MAIN TITLE) {Cover} (by Erich Kunzel & The Cincinnati Pops Orchestra: Symphonic Star Trek)

SUMMARY:                                        RUNNING TIME: 2:44 Min.

Composer-conductor Leonard Rosenman scored 1986’s Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home.  This instrumental theme is prominently heard narrating the movie’s opening and closing credits.  In 1996, Erich Kunzel & the Cincinnati Pops Orchestra performed this track for its Symphonic Star Trek cover album.   

REVIEW:

It’s an ideal cover of Rosenman’s theme.  For Star Trek enthusiasts, it’s likely the best option out there if the actual soundtrack isn’t available for purchase. 

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                      7 Stars

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STAR TREK: THE NEXT GENERATION TV THEME {Cover} (by Erich Kunzel & The Cincinnati Pops Orchestra: Symphonic Star Trek)

SUMMARY:                                      RUNNING TIME: 1:43 Min.

Covering composer Jerry Goldsmith’s 1987-1994 TV theme, it’s the second track for conductor Erich Kunzel & The Cincinnati Pops Orchestra on their 1996 Symphonic Star Trek instrumental album.

REVIEW:

This perfectly-executed cover is recommended, not for only long-time Star Trek fans, but for any sci-fi playlist.   

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                        8 Stars

Note: Goldsmith’s original version, for instance, appears on 1996’s Television’s Greatest Hits, Vol. 7: Cable Ready album.  It was  released in CD and cassette formats.

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STAR TREK: THE MOTION PICTURE (MAIN TITLE) {Cover} (by Erich Kunzel & The Cincinnati Pops Orchestra: Symphonic Star Trek)

SUMMARY:                                         RUNNING TIME: 3:51 Min.

Composed and conducted by Jerry Goldsmith for 1979’s Star Trek: The Motion Picture, this instrumental celebrated Star Trek’s long-awaited film debut.  Versions of Goldsmith’s 1979 theme have regularly appeared on compilation projects over the years.  Among them is this cover by The Cincinnati Pops Orchestra for its 1996’s Symphonic Star Trek album.   

REVIEW:

Impressively, this cover is a virtual replica of Goldsmith’s work. Suffering from an excessive sense of majesty (including its initial electronica twist), this theme tries too hard to live up to Star Trek: TMP’s would-be epic tone.  Unsurprisingly, the tune sounds outdated some four decades later. 

One also can’t help comparing Goldsmith’s work to John Williams’ iconic Star Wars theme, not to mention  James Horner’s nautical-flavored Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan themes.  In either instance, Goldsmith’s grandiose instrumental would surely lose out, though it possessed an unique sound for that time.  That is … until Goldsmith twice plundered TMP: first, in 1987, as Star Trek: The Next Generation’s TV theme, and then, regrettably, for 1989’s Star Trek V: The Final Frontier.  Of Goldsmith’s ‘three’ versions, The Next Generation frankly holds up best. 

Even so, along with the movie’s equally overblown FX, Goldsmith’s anthem is among the few enjoyable elements arising from Star Trek: TMP.  Admirably executed by Erich Kunzel & the Cincinnati Pops Orchestra, this particular cover is a nostalgic keepsake for any Star Trek fan’s playlist. 

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                          6 Stars

Note: There’s a rendition of Goldsmith’s Star Trek: The Next Generation tune on this same album.

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STAR TREK III : THE SEARCH FOR SPOCK (MAIN TITLE) {Cover} (by Erich Kunzel & The Cincinnati Pops Orchestra: Symphonic Star Trek)

SUMMARY:                                RUNNING TIME: 6:09 Min.

As Track # 25, Erich Kunzel & The Cincinnati Pops Orchestra revisit James Horner’s theme for their 1996 Symphonic Star Trek instrumental album.

REVIEW:

It’s a virtual replica of the original 1984 theme.  The drawback is Horner’s own unimaginative recycling.  Though Star Trek III’s primary theme is still good, too often it sounds like a lukewarm suite left over from his Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan score.  Including elements of Alexander Courage’s signature Trek theme, this track offers some welcome nostalgia for Trekkers.    

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                        6½ Stars

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STAR TREK VI: THE UNDISCOVERED COUNTRY (END TITLE) {Cover} (by Erich Kunzel & The Cincinnati Pops Orchestra: Symphonic Star Trek)

SUMMARY:                          RUNNING TIME: 4:54 Min.

In 1991, composer-conductor Cliff Eidelman scored Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country, including this closing credits theme.  In 1996, Erich Kunzel & the Cincinnati Pops Orchestra covered this track for the Symphonic Star Trek instrumental album.   

REVIEW:

Overshadowed by earlier Star Trek themes by James Horner and Jerry Goldsmith, this Star Trek VI finale deserves a chance at re-discovery (pardon the expression).  Perfectly recapturing Cliff Eidelman’s mix of intergalactic suspense with a sinister edge and the right tinge of wistfulness, the cover performance by the Cincinnati Pops Orchestra is a gem.  This theme is certainly recommended for Star Trek fans and sci-fi playlist enthusiasts.   

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                    7½ Stars

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STAR TREK V: THE FINAL FRONTIER – A BUSY MAN {Cover} (by Erich Kunzel & The Cincinnati Pops Orchestra: Symphonic Star Trek)

SUMMARY:                          RUNNING TIME: 4:14 Min.

Returning ten years after scoring 1979’s Star Trek: The Motion Picture, composer-conductor Jerry Goldsmith would provide the same services for Star Trek V: The Final Frontier.  This 1989 instrumental is a contemplative theme, as Captain James T. Kirk (William Shatner), Spock (Leonard Nimoy), Dr. Leonard McCoy (DeForest Kelley), and Spock’s half-brother, Sybok (Laurence Luckinbill) visit an isolated desert world to meet an unknown entity claiming to be ‘God.’  In 1996, Erich Kunzel & the Cincinnati Pops Orchestra included a cover of “A Busy Man” for the Symphonic Star Trek instrumental album.   

REVIEW:

Emanating a mostly subdued sense of curiosity, this low-key track might be hard to place, even by those who have seen Star Trek V: The Final Frontier.  There isn’t anything too exciting or even compelling about “A Busy Man,” in spite of Jerry Goldsmith’s classy work.  Still, this Lawrence of Arabia-like track may still prove appealing to instrumental enthusiasts, as Erich Kunzel & The Cincinnati Pops Orchestra execute a perfect replica of Goldsmith’s theme.     

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                 6½ Stars