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Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home
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Directed by Leonard Nimoy
Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home (1986) concludes the story arc begun with Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan (1982) and continued in Star Trek III: The Search for Spock (1984), but on a wholly new, different, and upbeat note. As the movie opens, months have elapsed since the events in Star Trek III; Admiral Kirk (William Shatner), McCoy (DeForest Kelley), Scott (James Doohan), Sulu (George Takei), Uhura (Nichelle Nichols), and Chekhov (Walter Koenig) are marooned in self-imposed exile on Vulcan, along with the resurrected and regenerated Spock (Leonard Nimoy, who also directed). While Spock tries to sort out the Vulcan and human halves of his resurrected psyche, the others prepare to return to Earth to face a brace of charges by the Klingon Empire and Star Fleet over events on Genesis. Taking off in their commandeered, jerry-rigged Klingon ship, they head to Earth, not knowing that a new crisis could destroy their home world -- a huge, immensely powerful alien probe has entered the galaxy and established a position near Earth, disabling every vehicle and installation in its path with its energy and communication output, and has ionized the entire atmosphere and started vaporizing the oceans, leaving the planet only hours to survive. Spock determines that the probe is sending out signals to another intelligent terrestrial life form, humpbacked whales, which no longer exist. Using the gravity slingshot time-warp effect (established early in the original series) to travel back into Earth's 20th century, Kirk and company land in 1980s San Francisco to try and bring humpbacked whales to the 23rd century, to respond to the probe. Thus starts a surprisingly breezy, light-hearted, yet serious odyssey through the past (comparable to the best work of the original series), as the crew learns to deal with exact-change buses, angry drivers, punk-rock enthusiasts and other elements of '80s life, and Kirk tries to persuade a scientist (Catherine Hicks) of his good intentions for two whales in captivity. The screenplay, co-authored by Steve Meerson, Peter Krikes, Nicholas Meyer, and Harve Bennett (from a story by Nimoy and Bennett), is the cleverest and most sophisticated of all the Star Trek movie screenplays, recalling some of the elements of Meyer's earlier time-travel movie Time After Time and also anticipating the feel and tone of the series Star Trek: The Next Generation (which would be on the air not quite a year later). Nimoy's direction offers a combination of brisk pacing and a deep love of the characters and the actors, as well as a serious appreciation of the humorous aspects of the script, and Shatner gives his best performance of any of the movies. ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide
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JJ79JJ79 Movie Review: STAR TREK: IV: TH ...
by JJ79 in JJ79 Blog
hasn't rated it.
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"The fourth big screen installment in the Star Trek saga may be the most commercially popular of the series, but, like the previous film, can't break away from the time period in which it was made. The result? A light-hearted, "save the whales" message just tangentially taking place in the Trek universe.En route back to Earth from Vulcan, Admiral James T. Kirk (William Shatner) and the crew of the for " [More]
The_MOWThe_MOW A fun "Trek" in time
by The_MOW in The_MOW Blog
liked it.
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"It has been a few months since members of the late "Starship Enterprise" had gone to the "Genesis Planet" to bring the reanimated body of "Spock" (Leonard Nimoy, who also directed the film) back to "Vulcan" so it could be reunited to its' "katra", the "Vulcan" living spirit. Now they are refurbishing the captured "Klingon" vessel so the crew can face charges brought against them after they went to the restricted planet despite being ordered not to go. Meanwhile, in another part of " [More]
SpoutBlogSpoutBlog 10 Films That Saved Their Franc ...
by SpoutBlog in SpoutBlog on spout.com
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"Though the third Fast a " [More]
RisseladaRisselada Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home
by Risselada in Risselada Blog
liked it.
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"Star Trek IV: The Voyage HomeI've been watching the Star Trek films sequentially and for the first time. I think I feel as though each one gets better and better. Not that I feel this one is anywhere close to a masterpiece, but it's nice that they were able to have a little bit of fun with it.In the commentary they say that Harve Bennett wrote the scenes where the crew are in their own time " [More]
rjspraguerjsprague Re:The Problem with Time Travel
by rjsprague in sci-fi
"[quote user="Dr_Gor"] You haven't seen a lot of Star Trek , have you Ryan. I don't remember the title but there was an episode of the ORIGINAL series starring a VERY young Joan Collins (mmmmm...) where Kirk and the boys discover an old guy on some obscure planet who calls himself "The Timekeeper" or something like that. This guy has a portal-like device, that is about the size of a doorway in your home, that is much like the Stargate " [More]
Dr_GorDr_Gor Re:The Problem with Time Travel
by Dr_Gor in sci-fi
"[quote user="rjsprague"] [quote user="Dr_Gor"] [quote user="rjsprague"] I've recently been watching Heroes, which resulted in some poor sci-fi trivia, and something, actually many things, bother me about the series. One of the biggest issues is time travel. I feel like the ability to travel in time is too common, and that it is often very poorly explained because explaining it is too complex, but understanding the ramifications of allowing such a device to exist in fil " [More]
SkyPilotSkyPilot Re:Screams in the Movie Theater
by SkyPilot in HORROR MOVIES 101
"Ha! But seriously, whales floating in space gives me the creeps. Was that a motif in a comic book, maybe a Nintendo Power exclusive serial about Star Fox? The reference is rattling ar " [More]
RisseladaRisselada Re:Screams in the Movie Theater
by Risselada in HORROR MOVIES 101
"[quote user="SkyPilot"]As for me, I think I'm more frightened of whales than sharks. I know this isn't rational, that whales might even protect me from a shark, but ever since I was little boy I've been terrified of whales, especially the sperm whale and the blue whale. Did any of you guys collect Zoobooks? I still have the whale one, and some of those illustrations give me the chills every time I look at them. I've been known to let loose a littl " [More]
RisseladaRisselada Re:Re:Re:Re:Re: best star trek ...
by Risselada in sci-fi
"[quote user="TheWorkingDead"]That' ;s true, to a point. Television no longer needs to revert to the status quo every week. Look at Lost, or Heroes, or hell, even The Next Generation(they killed Tasha Yar in the first season) or DS9(which changed monumentally throughout it's seven year run). I know this is now and that was then, but by the time the movies came around, I just felt they should have decided to ramp things up. It just wont ever not feel like a cheap shot that they killed Spo " [More]
All Movie Guide Logo
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
liked it.
Who would have thought the best Star Trek movie would be the one with the sense of humor? Taking a 180-degree turn from Star Trek III, the series' most dour entry, director Leonard Nimoy utilized the natural comic chemistry of the long-time ensemble and crafted one of the funniest films of 1986. Never mind the destruction of the Enterprise and the death of Kirk's son, the most recent events in the chronology. Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home finds the crew traveling back to 20th century San Francisco to procure a pair of a humpback whales, in order to appease a 23rd century probe sucking the planet dry in its failed attempt to communicate with the extinct whales. It's a relief to see the film setting aside Klingons as the source of dramatic tension, instead opting for such obstacles as having to use 20th century materials to build an aquarium that'll withstand a time warp. William Shatner finally looks carefree and comfortable as Kirk, and is downright delightful in his romantic bantering with cute marine biologist Gillian (Catherine Hicks). As Bones, the wry DeForest Kelley has always been a comic natural, and Nimoy (Spock) is perfect as the ultimate fish-out-of-water, peppering his speech with "colorful metaphors" to try to fit in. In fact, the whole cast shows a facility for comedy not previously seen. Combine that with a tightly focused and genuinely exciting plot, as well as an unobtrusive environmental message, and the result is a film that stretches far beyond the bounds of science fiction. ~ Derek Armstrong, All Movie Guide
 

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