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List Price: $69.98 Our Price: $59.99 You Save: $9.99 (14%) Availability: In stock soon. Order now to get in line. First come, first served. Category: DVD See more DVD releases
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Movie Reviews of Star Trek The Original Series - The Complete First SeasonMovie Review: I love this collection... Summary: 5 StarsI love this series collection. The playback has been clean as well as the audio. I've been eagerly anticipating its arrival and am not disappointed.
Movie Review: Great Fun Summary: 5 StarsI bought this for a Christmas Present for my daughter, she actually asked for it! I'm sure she will love it! Its Captain Kirk, after all!
Movie Review: Star Trek, Great. (Packaging, Impractical.) Summary: 4 StarsI grew up with reruns of the original series, in the 1970's and 1980's. It was terrific television. My fondness for this show grew as I got older when I could appreciate the writing and the characters even better. This series was something special. It raised questions and issues that other shows wouldn't even dream of doing. It had moral fiber and decent principles. It explored philosophy, horror, comedy, and psychology. Not since The Twilight Zone had their been a comparable television production.
This program is one of the most popular and beloved in American television, so I assumed the dvd sets would be worth getting, naturally. After all, the fans are legion and the show has been, and still is, immensely loved by millions. It is so wonderful to have access to these episodes at my leisure. I don't need to bother anymore with the edited/butchered reruns on cable, with its endless commercials, and stupid pop-ups at the bottom of the screen. That is a sweet, beautiful thing.
One drawback: the case and packaging of these sets is a bit ridiculous. Some people will probably like it because it seems fun. But to me the packages look as though they were only designed to look appealing while sitting on the shelves at BestBuy or Walmart. At one's home, they lose their appeal immediately. First there is the silly outer plastic 'shell', revealing a paper sleeve which covers the inner 'book' case. It's all a bit too much. Sometimes simpler is better.
Now, I do understand that thousands of these sets had to be manufactured, and economics is an issue. But surely a dvd show that's this beloved (and this expensive considering the suggested retail pricing) was worthy of better, more sturdy packaging. The flimsy, clear plastic disc holders will not last long; unless handled with extremely meticulous care they will fall apart like pages from a book with crumbling binding.
The rounded, brightly colored case (which looks cool at first) is highly impractical and really a bit stupid when you consider it. Paramount should have done better by Star Trek.
Also, (it's not crucial in the least but) a "Play All" feature would have been nice on each disc. Sometimes it's nice to have the entire disc play automatically.
The episode guide has the smallest print you could ask for.
I have no other issues with the dvd's. Image is fine for me. Menus are cute, as I expected.
This show is a piece of television history and a big chunk of nostalgia from my youth. Hence the four stars. But the box and disc holders just don't satisfy me. A small issue but I just thought I would mention it.
Movie Review: Season One - High Quality Summary: 4 StarsThere are more erudite and expertise opinions in the other reviews about the detail of each of the episodes in Season One. Suffice it to say, I bought this set for my wife, a long-time trekkie, and we have all (including 2 x teenage sons, who had not seen these - being Voyager/Next Generation fans) thoroughly enjoyed the episodes. Great re-mastering (quite astonishing video quality actually considering the age of the episodes), 5.1 sound, and well put together. And at the current Amazon price, an absolute bargain. Highly recommended.
Movie Review: Still the best Trek series - let the voyages begin again! Summary: 5 StarsAfter having watched Enterprise (Season 4) and The Next Generation (Season 5 - their best season), I have reached one inescapable conculsion. The Original Five-Year Mission, helmed by Captain James T. Kirk, is by far the best. The first season is full of gems, the worst of which is better than the best 1st-season show in ST:TNG. The Original Series takes a lot of heat: deadline issues created William Shatner's stilted delivery ("It bought me time to remember the next line!") and budget issues led to some very cheesy (even for the late '60s) effects. But the stories themselves, and the interaction between the Big Three of Kirk, Spock, and McCoy raised the level of the show to levels seldom achieved before or since. One might question the need to release these shows on DVD - after all, they seem to be on in syndication constantly! But the clarity and completeness of the shows, not to mention the lack of advertisements (they run 10 minutes longer than a conventional hour-long drama, and are often trimmed in syndication), is reason enough for me to pick up this set.
These shows have a timeless quality, because the writing is often a metaphor for the human condition in general. Often written by the top science fiction (and in the case of Robert Bloch, horror) writers of the day, the actors are given a wide range of emotions and interactions: with the regular cast, with the guest stars, even with blocks of latex masquarading as aliens and robots. The actors have been panned in later years as being hams - especially Shatner - but such an opinion does not bear close scrutiny when watching these shows. These are actors at the top of their games (especially when compared other performances of the '60s). Interestingly, these shows are presented in order of broadcast (not in order of production, as they are always shown in syndication). This leads to some bizarre anachronisms in the early episodes. Sulu, for example, has three positions (helmsman, botanist, and physicist), and Uhura's costume changes back and forth between yellow and red several times (and occasionally a black belt appears for no apparent reason). That said, it's amazing how fast the cast and writers come together - by the time of The Naked Time - the 4th show broadcast - the main characters are fully developed. This didn't really take place in TNG until Season 3!
Instead of listing the episodes in order, as other episode lists do, I've decided to arrange them by importance/enjoyability. The episodes of Season 1 are (order of broadcast in parentheses:
Super-Fantastic Episodes:
Where No Man Has Gone Before (3) - The second pilot develops some real tension between the crew members as Kirk must act to save his crew at the expense of his best friend.
The Naked Time (4) - a virus causes members of the crew to lose all inhibitions, so we learn that Spock finds it difficult to hide his emotions, that Kirk finds the Enterprise to be a substitute for a real woman, etc.
Balance of Terror (14) - The Romulans have a new weapon and a new cloaking device, which they are testing on the Federation's outposts. Kirk and the Romulan engage in a battle akin to a destroyer-submarine conflict in WWII.
The Devil in the Dark (25) - Kirk must find and destroy a creature that is killing miners on a very valuable mining colony.
The City on the Edge of Forever (28) - Often voted the Best episode of the series. McCoy mistakingly changes history when an accident sends him through the time portal called the Guardian of Forever. Kirk and Spock follow him back to the 1930s to try to repair the damage. Guest stars a young Joan Collins.
Very Good Episodes:
What are Little Girls Made Of? (7) - A showcase for Majel Barret as Nurse Chapel, in which she and Kirk are pitted against her ex-fiance as he tries to force his idea of utopia onto the human race.
The Menagerie (11 & 12) - the only 2-parter in TOS, using footage from the Cage pilot. Spock hijacks the Enterprise and kidnaps his former captain. During the court martial, we find out why in flashbacks.
The Galileo 7 (16) - Spock, McCoy, Scotty, and a few others crash-land on a planet in the middle of a nebula. A great story marred only slightly by the seemingly artificial attacks of McCoy and others on Spock's leadership.
Arena (18) - Kirk and an enemy captain are forced into single combat by Superbeings into whose space their battle strays. One of the few ideas the Next Generation series did better (in "Darmok"), but this is still a very good episode.
Space Seed (22) - the first part of what turned out to be a 4-part arc (this show, plus films 2, 3, and 4). Ricardo Montalban guest-stars as the genetically enhanced Khan, exiled from Earth, who tries to take over the Enterprise to reinvoke his rule on humanity.
Errand of Mercy (25) - the first appearance of Klingons, as the Enterprise and the Klingon war fleet battle for control of a strategic planet. The natives of the planet seem strangely indifferent to their plight, however....
Episodes to which I am fairly indifferent, but enjoy when I see them:
The Man Trap (1) - the first episode, suffers from poor development of the Salt Vampire monster, although there is a nice debate about the morality of committing xenocide even to save oneself.
The Enemy Within (5) - covers much the same arc as "Naked Time" but only Kirk is involved, as he is split into an intellectual half and an emotional half.
Mudd's Women (6) - Harry Mudd, interstellar con artist, is transporting women using an illegal drug to make them irresistable to men.
Dagger of the Mind (9) - Kirk is taken hostage by an insane doctor in a mental hospital, who is illegally using a machine to wipe out the minds of his inmates.
The Corbomite Maneuver (10) - the Enterprise is caught in a standoff with another ship while exploring a new region of space. Notable as an early example of Kirk talking his way out of trouble instead of shooting his way out.
Shore Leave (15) - A neat idea but not a very credible delivery. The Enterprise comes across a planet where thoughts become reality, sometimes to deadly effect.
The Squire of Gothos (17) - One of the first Superbeings encountered by the Enterprise.
Tomorrow is Yesterday (19) - An encounter with a black hole throws the Enterprise back in time, where they inadvertantly change the past. They must correct the error before they can return to their own time.
Court Martial (20) - Quite enjoyable for the most part, if contrived. The ending spoils it somewhat - surely there is an easier way to prove Kirk's innocence than evacuating the entire ship?
Return of the Archons (21) - Notable as the first instance of Kirk talking a computer to death.
A Taste of Armageddon (23) - A pair of planets is engaged in a sanitised, 800-year-old war, and the Enterprise is listed as a casualty, and is expected to voluntarily destroy itself. Kirk intervenes to put an end to the society that allows the war to continue.
This Side of Paradise (24) - A spore infection causes the entire crew of the Enterprise to choose a utopian sloth over a life of progress that contains danger and struggle.
Operation: Annihilate! (29) - A madness-inducing parasitic organism threatens to spread through the galaxy, destroying humanity, unless Kirk can stop it.
Episodes I wouldn't watch if they happened to be on in syndication:
Charlie X (2) - only "The Changling" is a worse TOS show.
Miri (8) - again, much of the same material (the tension between Kirk and Rand) is covered in "Naked Time", and the rest isn't really that interesting.
The Conscience of the King (13) - an ambitious Shakespearean episode that just doesn't come together for me. Kirk and Lt. Reilly are the last two living witnesses of a massacre when they were children. Kirk suspects a Shakespearean actor is the man who ordered the massacre, but can't act without proof.
The Alternative Factor (27) - A madman and his alternate-universe doppleganger battle between two universes, when a meeting in one universe of the two of them would spell its complete destruction.
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