Star Trek V
Release
Date: June 9, 1989
The Final Frontier
The Trek film with a
triple breasted, cat lady, go-go dancer. I wonder who directed it?
This one gets picked on
a great deal, but I think it’s largest crimes come from the studio mandated
changes to give it the lightness and humor of the last film, while reducing the
budget, and the major offense of not using Nichelle Nichols’s own voice for the
singing scene.
What detractors of this
movie fail to notice is it represents the culmination of the Extra Galactic
Invasion story arc, whether I made it up or not.
All the various tests
and modifications on the Enterprise goaded the technology forward to the point
that the ship can pass through the barrier at the center of the galaxy.
All of the manipulations
of Spock have led him toward being more accepting of emotions in general, and
particularly of his brother’s viewpoints.
All of the societies
controlled have been conditioned to unquestioning, passive loyalty to a divine
figure.
Even the rock monsters,
deleted due to financial constraints, looked like Excalibans and faded in and
out of the surroundings in a similar fashion.
Besides it’s the only
excuse I can think of for Uhura and Scotty suddenly flirting. The Talosians, or
whoever, must have messed with their minds to keep her normally fantastic
intuition and observation from picking up problems with Spock and messing up
their plans.
They must have also altered the perceptions of the Big Three after their jail break to make it seem like they were trapped in an infinitely long turbolift shaft.
They must have also altered the perceptions of the Big Three after their jail break to make it seem like they were trapped in an infinitely long turbolift shaft.
Yes, decades of Star
Trek have led up to this one story, geared around the rescue of “God” – actually
the leader and most powerful of the non-corporeal beings from Andromeda- in
order to unleash him on a galaxy that has been populated with planets pre
“converted” to follow his will.
Or…y’know… It’s a film
with an overly goofy central premise that, while nowhere near as good as Trek’s
best, is still full of fantastic character moments for the crew we know and
love.
Some thoughts about
those moments and other things:
The Enterprise-A has the
same beepy sounds and photon torpedo noises as the original series. Yay! And Bill's daughter works there with him.
Sulu and Chekov are both
awesome and hysterical together. Again,
I lament them not playing First Officer and Captain on Star Trek: Excelsior.
“Plan B…for Barricade!”
He may be old, but there’s still no one better than Captain Kirk at pulling a
ridiculous, improvised plan out of his butt and making it work splendidly
because he trusts the abilities of his people.
The biggest risk to
“Plan B” is relying on yet another shuttle named “Galileo.” How many of those
things have to get blown up before they pick a new name?
Scotty was too busy
working to see God. He is totally an engineer.
The enemy races have an
interesting showing in this one. They
never state which Neutral Zone Nimbus three is in. With all three there, it means one of two
things:
Either:
1) The Klingon or
Romulan delegate had to cross the entire Federation to get to the meeting.
Or
2) The Tholians are
going to be ticked off…again.
David Warner is awesome, as always, as a Federation Ambassador who is as useless as is the norm for that post, not through the normal levels of pomposity, but to to entertainingly massive levels of apathy...at least until he meets a hot Romulan.
The Klingons are by no
means the best of breed, but their interaction is interesting. Due to Spock’s
prodding, General Korrd gives us old guys some hope by showing even though he’s
tired and mostly apathetic; he can still take command and get it done.
Klaa on the other hand,
is the Q’onoS poster child for “Young and Stupid.” Much like Kang, his first
officer, and chief advisor is also his lady. Unfortunately for poor Klaa, vastly
unlike Mara, Vixis is also Young and Stupid.
This is why he’s working as a courtroom translator in the next film.
The “We killed God”
reception with the Klingons goes swimmingly well.
Heck, Scotty introduces the only being in the galaxy that may know more
about alcohol than he does to Scotch Whisky.
The serving of Romulan Ale at this function paved the way for no one
worrying about when they meet Chancellor Gorkon. Whoops.
The real key antagonist,
who becomes a last minute ally, is Sybok.
Lawrence Luckenbill’s acting abilities add some gravity to a role with a
great deal of goofiness infused into it.
His delivery saves many scenes.
When Kirk learns of his
visions and calls Sybok mad, his reply, “Am I…we’ll see,” passes through multiple
emotions. He begins sounding like he
actually doesn’t know, and for a moment looks to be in agreement with the
Captain. His confidence in his quest
refills him by the end of the line. Not
bad for four words.
My theory is Sybok’s Gift
is an advanced form of the “psychics” we have on Earth today. He’s not actually pulling peoples deepest
pain to the surface. He’s using his
enhanced Vulcan telepathic abilities to perform a “cold reading” at a level the
charlatans on this planet could only dream of.
Then, based on carefully watching and reacting to the emotions he
generates, he takes a best guess at what the “secret pain” is.
The proof of this is his
total failure with Spock. He believed he knew his brother and didn’t take into
account how much Spock had progressed since leaving Vulcan. This led his guess to be completely wrong.
Sybok’s Gift serves as
yet another means to highlight the bond between the Big Three in this character
piece, as they are the only ones who see each other’s pain. Kirk made a big show of refusing to have his
pain removed…because that’s what he does.
Based on my above idea, plus the failed attempt at Spock and McCoy
snapping out of it, I think we did get to see the Captain’s hidden secret. His pain comes from the fear that he can’t
always save or help all of his crew, especially his closest friends. He was forced to watch them face their inner
darkness while unable to interfere.
Yes, the Big Three continue
to get the best moments. Once more,
Bones shows why he deserved the Katra as he is far more understanding of what
Spock is going through with Sybok than Kirk is.
Why they question the
leader of the Extra Galactic Invasion offers further insights to the Big Three:
Kirk doubts because it
wants to take his vessel.
Spock doubts because of
logically noticing it deflects questions rather than directly answering.
McCoy doubts because it
is cruel and not compassionate.
Dang, it burned Spock
clean through. He’s lucky his heart
isn’t where ours is…one more time.
Shatner gets a great
deal of (probably deserved) grief for scene stealing, but in HIS film, Sybok
and Spock are the ones that kill the villain and save the Captain.
The campfire scenes are
the heart and soul of the character study in this piece. People that want the
whole movie stricken from cannon (and Gene Roddenberry was in that group)
suggest that the whole thing was Kirk’s dream while camping. That means even the folks that want to erase
the whole film from Trek lore enjoyed those campfire scenes.
Spock lies about being
incapable of lying in this film showing how much he’s changed from a “standard
Vulcan.” I’m sure he was also lying about not knowing a children’s song, which
his mother, who read him Lewis Carroll, must have taught him. Never mind that
he’s an accomplished Earth historian and musician. He’s just screwing with
them.
The campfire book ends the film with important Big Three Moments.
The opening at the campfire, with the McCoy family bourbon and beans recipe, provided the first fart joke in Star Trek history.
The final scene at the campfire provides the Awesome Ending Line delivered by all of them, just three drunken buddies having fun together.
The opening at the campfire, with the McCoy family bourbon and beans recipe, provided the first fart joke in Star Trek history.
The final scene at the campfire provides the Awesome Ending Line delivered by all of them, just three drunken buddies having fun together.
“Row,
row, row your boat gently down the stream...
Merrily,
merrily, merrily, merrily,
Life
is but a dream.”
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4 comments:
The only good thing about this movie is that is added another layer of wonderment the first time I went to Yosemite valley.
There were some good character moments in there. Unfortunately there was a tendency to bury them under cheap gags, but they were there.
This film had its moments...
Thanx for reading and joining in. You are correct. While it didn't gel together as a whole as well as other Trek films, it did have a lot of great moments between the characters.
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