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Badmovies.org Forum  |  Movies  |  Bad Movies  |  The Star Trek movies... « previous next »
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Author Topic: The Star Trek movies...  (Read 7780 times)
AndyC
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« Reply #15 on: April 18, 2005, 12:58:40 PM »

Scott wrote:
> I'm amazed at how many people didn't like FINAL FRONTIER.

I didn't mind it myself. It was bad, sure, and kind of ridiculous in places, but it was fun. I really liked the Klingons in this one, and loved the way they were introduced by using the old Pioneer probe for target practice. And I agree, Kirk talking back to "God" was fun, and reminiscent of the old series. I'd take this movie over Nemesis or Insurrection any day.

It also has a special place in that I went to see it on the evening of my last day of high school. A buddy and I went to the local drive-in, as we used to do regularly in the summer before it became a housing development. Guns and Roses were very popular at the time, and I can still remember when we were introduced to Paradise City, we both looked at each other and started singing "take me down to the Paradise City, where the grass is green and the girls are pretty." Ah, memories.

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trekgeezer
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« Reply #16 on: April 18, 2005, 03:13:03 PM »

Yes Eirik and Dave, they needed a hip young guy with long hair like Davey so the made him a Russian. If you will notice the for first few episodes he appeared in Chekov wore a really Beatle wig. They were actually looking for someone to fill in for Sulu who was off making the Green Berets with John Wayne.

Scott and Andy C, true worshippers of the Holy Bloated One know that The Final Frontier is actually the #4 reason Kirk is the best Enterprise Captain.

"4. Kirk traveled through the Great Barrier, met God, and wasn't even impressed."

You can check out the other 114 reasons at The First Church of Shatnerology

Flangepart - My favorite part of Generations was Jean-Luc getting his ass kicked by Soran, then later he brings back the ham-fisted Kirk who proceeds to pound Soran's ass so bad he runs away from him.

The Kirk death scene was pretty crappy even after they reshot it. When they showed the original version to test audiences they got an earful about it. In the original Soran just shoots him in the back when he is going across the bridge.

Relics- I really didn't like the way Geordi dissed Scotty. The guy would have been a living legend, especially after the unique way he kept himself alive for 75 years.

The TNG producers never seemed to want to pay any homage to TOS, even though the original crew would have been some of the biggest legends in the Federation.

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And you thought Trek isn't cool.
AndyC
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« Reply #17 on: April 18, 2005, 06:22:18 PM »

trek_geezer wrote:
> Relics- I really didn't like the way Geordi dissed Scotty. The
> guy would have been a living legend, especially after the
> unique way he kept himself alive for 75 years.

Yeah, that was one thing I didn't like about that episode. It seemed out of character the way everybody treated Scotty. They ignored him and treated him like a nuisance, because it was what the story demanded. They were never that rude to anyone else, no matter how busy they were, and this guy is one of their heroes. And Scotty behaved like a twit himself at times, just to give them some justification. Really badly handled by the writers.

The other thing I didn't like was that they wasted probably one of the best story ideas, a frigging Dyson sphere, as a mere backdrop for a story about something else. That idea could have made a two or three part episode. Heck, it's big enough to build a movie around, but nooo, they just used it as a plot device to account for Scotty's disappearance, and provide some danger so he could be useful. Scotty's guest appearance was a big deal, don't get me wrong, but they could have created that situation with something a lot less spectacular. Big discovery like that, and we saw nothing of it, learned nothing about it, nobody even seemed especially excited about it, and they buggered off at the end of the episode and never mentioned it again.

Again, what the hell were the writers thinking? You can imagine them thinking "It's a relic and Scotty's a relic. It was once great, but now its time is passed. Cool."

But this would be one of the greatest discoveries of all time. It would have far-reaching effects, and would capture the attention of the entire Federation. It also offers virtually unlimited story possibilities. They wouldn't even need to stop at one episode. They could keep going back for new adventures, maybe once a season. But these people used it as a gimmick.

There were things I liked about the episode, the appearance of the old bridge being one of them, but overall, it was one of the most badly botched TNG episodes.



Post Edited (04-18-05 18:32)
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trekgeezer
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« Reply #18 on: April 18, 2005, 07:21:46 PM »

This could have been a two-parter just on the Scotty story. Did you notice how Troi treated him at the end? They were not in a single scene together before that one, except the sequence that got cut. There was a scene where Picard sent her to see Scotty and they evidently had a talk.

This episode is bad for the ST universe continuity, because they don't explain where Kirk is. We know McCoy is still alive and Spock is on Romulus. Then they make Generations and Scotty knows that Kirk is dead, so why didn't he remember in the 24th century?

I hate to admit it but I own the novelization of this episode. They did expand the story about the sphere. If I remember correctly they beamed Riker and an away team down to a building close to where the door they came through was. I don't remember much else about it.

I actually have a couple of big boxes full of Star Trek novels. Some of them are pretty good and some are pretty close to terrible. At the time I bought most of them I was going through some health problems and they were an easy read.

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Flangepart
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« Reply #19 on: April 19, 2005, 10:37:51 AM »

Good points, Trek and AndyC.
I did find the dissing of Scotty weird. Its the Mirical Worker! If a gun maker could talk to John Browning, who had a natural engeneering genius, they would be floored. And an Architect meeting Frank Lloyd Wright...come on!
Even though the Technical details changed, the storys of how he kept the Enterprise going would be taught at StarFleet Academy Starship Engeneering.
Ya know....its more proof of the ego thing when someone writes in another writers universe. They Have to make "Their" mark on things....
I tells ya...it is to weep...

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ulthar
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« Reply #20 on: April 19, 2005, 12:42:09 PM »

Flangepart wrote:

> Even though the Technical details changed, the storys of how he
> kept the Enterprise going would be taught at StarFleet Academy
> Starship Engeneering.
>

This reminds me of a question/observation about "Trek" that I have often pondered.  I get the impression that the Enterprise and crew (ToS) were really the only ones of the original mission to actually complete their "5 year mission."  I mean, if all the starships were getting into the same kinds of scrapes, there could not have been a lot to survive.  And sometimes, they survived by the skin of their teeth, or Kirk's balls, or Spocks logic, or Scotty's...well, you get the idea.  

In other words, how many other crews would have had just this right combination of expertise/luck across the board?  TNG borrowed heavily on this, as well (how many tight spot survivals were the result happening to have DATA on board?).  

Maybe the Enterprise was not the ONLY one to survive, but they certainly were top dogs when it came to real exploration experience.  So yes, it is my most humble opinion that any member of that crew, ESPECIALLY Mr. Scott, would have been nothing shy of legend at SFA, and probably held higher than that.

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Mr Hockstatter
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« Reply #21 on: April 19, 2005, 02:18:45 PM »

I can understand why Geordi was so peeved at Scotty.  Keep in mind he's never had a girlfriend (even Data gets more trim than Geordi), he lives on a ship where all they serve is synthahol, and as if that's not enough he's got Wesley running around all day every day.  And then there's Picard always ordering him to run the engines up 500% past their safety limit, it's not like the explosion is going to kill us up here on the bridge.  You guys in engineering, well...

I'd probably take a phaser rifle rifle and go on a rampage if I was that guy.

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« Reply #22 on: April 19, 2005, 05:18:10 PM »

I must be in the majority when I say that the first Star Trek movie is my favourite.  I loved the concept and was enthralled by that movie, although the first time I saw it was when it came on TV.  Star Wars was around the same time and had I seen it then, the contrast would have been too great, to Star Trek's detriment.  I even watched the first movie last year and still thought it was great.  I have comic books from that time that have the 'Star Trek - The Motion Picture' ads on the back.  Oooh, fun days...

I've hardly watched the other ones, and the only memorable one for me was 'The Wrath of Khan' (or 'Con', as Kirk pronounced it).  I saw that one in the cinema, and the memory of those weird brain-controlling worms entering the ears of those men still gives me the willies.

Did anyone notice that this really hot blonde lady who turned up from time to time in the original Trek series came back as a doctor in one of the later series or spin-offs?

And there was a gay porn actor who had a bit-part as an ensign in Next Gen.  Don't know where I heard that from!

Ulthar: "Saved by the skin of Kirk's balls."  Going to have to remember that one.  :D

~Archivist~
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trekgeezer
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« Reply #23 on: April 19, 2005, 05:54:35 PM »

As far as the blonde, which  one?

Majel Barrett, who was a brunette in the first pilot (The Cage) and played the first officer. At the time she was Gene Roddenberry's girlfriend.  When NBC called The Cage too cerebral and ordered a second pilot (Where No Man Has Gone Before), they told him to lose the guy with pointed ears and the woman first officer (who by the way only went by Number One).  He kept Spock and then brought Majel back as the blonde Nurse Chapel (who had a crush on Spock).

In the first 13 episodes there was a yeoman named Janice Rand (played by Grace Lee Whitney). She was blonde and had a big beehive hairdo. She was canned for drinking on the job. She had lots of substance abuse problems and ended up living in a car on a Safeway parking lot in LA. I think having little parts in the movies probably helped her turn her life around.

Does anybody have any doubts left about my geekiness?



Post Edited (04-20-05 06:52)
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Ash
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« Reply #24 on: April 19, 2005, 07:27:33 PM »

Archivist wrote:
"Did anyone notice that this really hot blonde lady who turned up from time to time in the original Trek series came back as a doctor in one of the later series or spin-offs?"


Diana Muldar who played Dr. Pulaski in TNG Season 2 was in a couple of the old TOS episodes.
She was quite a dish back in the 60's!





Post Edited (04-19-05 20:02)
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Mr Hockstatter
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« Reply #25 on: April 19, 2005, 09:30:21 PM »

I had such a crush on Yeoman Rand.
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Archivist
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« Reply #26 on: April 20, 2005, 08:39:11 PM »

Yes, Dr. Pulaski.  She was indeed quite a dish in the 60's.  Time was not that kind to her, though.
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Theef
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« Reply #27 on: April 21, 2005, 11:30:45 AM »

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