6.5
When an unidentified alien destroys three powerful Klingon cruisers, Captain James T. Kirk returns to the newly transformed U.S.S. Enterprise to take command.
William Shatner
Admiral James T. Kirk
Leonard Nimoy
Mr. Spock
DeForest Kelley
Dr. Leonard 'Bones' McCoy
James Doohan
Cmdr. Montgomery 'Scotty' Scott
George Takei
Lt. Cmdr. Hikaru Sulu
Walter Koenig
Lt. Pavel Chekov
Nichelle Nichols
Lt. Cmdr. Uhura
Stephen Collins
Captain William Decker
Persis Khambatta
Lt. Ilia / The Probe
Majel Barrett
Dr. Christine Chapel
Grace Lee Whitney
CPO Janice Rand
Mark Lenard
Klingon Captain
Billy Van Zandt
Alien Boy
Roger Aaron Brown
Epsilon Technician
Gary Faga
Airlock Technician
Franklyn Seales
Crew Member
Joel Kramer
Klingon Crewman
David Gautreaux
Cmdr. Branch
John Gowans
Assistant to Rand
Howard Itzkowitz
Cargo Deck Ensign
Jon Rashad Kamal
Lt. Cmdr. Sonak
Marcy Lafferty
Chief DiFalco
Michele Povill
Lieutenant
Jeri McBride
Technician
Terrence O'Connor
Chief Ross
Michael Rougas
Lt. Cleary
Susan O'Sullivan
Woman
Ralph Brannen
Crew Member
Ralph Byers
Crew Member
Paula Crist
Crew Member
Iva Lane
Crew Member
Momo Yashima
Crew Member
Jimmie Booth
Klingon Crewman
Dave Moordigian
Klingon Crewman
Tom Morga
Klingon Crewman
Tony Rocco
Klingon Crewman
Joel Schultz
Klingon Crewman
Craig Thomas
Klingon Crewman
Edna Glover
Vulcan Master
Norman Stuart
Vulcan Master
Paul Weber
Vulcan Master
Joshua Gallegos
Security Officer
Lisa Chess
Yeoman
Leslie C. Howard
Yeoman
Sayra Hummel
Technical Assistant
Junero Jennings
Technical Assistant
Christopher Doohan
Extra (uncredited)
Director
Robert Wise
Original Series Creator
Gene Roddenberry
Screenplay
Harold Livingston
Story
Alan Dean Foster
September 1, 2019
9
***Stands Alone in the Feature Film Series***
A colossal, mysterious space cloud called V'ger travels across the galaxy and threatens Earth, annihilating interlopers along the way ; the origins of V'ger are revealed at the end.
"Star Trek: The Motion Picture" (1979) addresses some of the deepest questions of life: Is this all there is? Why are we here? Does love exist since it cannot be proved via pure logic? Who is the Creator? The core message is the intrinsic need to seek one's Creator and reconcile in order to attain a (necessary) higher level of consciousness. Those found the film boring simply failed to penetrate beyond the surface.
Like the Star Trek episodes "The Corbomite Maneuver" and "Metamorphosis," “The Motion Picture" (TMP) is a mature, cerebral sci-fi story with very little action. Most kids and young adults won't like it or grasp it. It's depth is evidenced by the emotional wallop experienced when Spock grasps Kirk's hand in Sickbay, truly revealing emotion despite his conflicting desire to attain a consciousness of pure logic; or later when Spock weeps for V'ger and comments on its personal dilemma, which perfectly coincides with Spock's own search for fulfillment: "As I was when I came aboard, so is V'ger now: empty, incomplete and searching. Logic and knowledge are not enough... Each of us at some time in our lives turns to someone — a father, a brother, a God — and asks, 'Why am I here?' 'What was I meant to be?' V'ger hopes to touch its creator to find its answers."
Another powerful sequence is a crewman's self-sacrificial fusion with V'ger so that it may evolve to the next level of awareness (seemingly self-sacrificial, that is).
My conclusion on the film runs parallel to Roger Ebert's comments: "My inclination, as I slid down in my seat and the stereo sound surrounded me, was to relax and let the movie give me a good time. I did and it did." In other words, just accept the film as is, and you WILL be entertained ; put on a pot of coffee (you're gonna need it, lol), kick back and relish the movie magic.
Let me add that TMP was one of the most expensive films of its time, but it did well at the box office and thus made a decent profit, a testimony to how hungry the public was for Star Trek after ten long years (since the cancellation of the original TV series in '69). In fact, aside from "Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home" (1986), TMP is still the most profitable of all the Star Trek feature films with the whole original cast (Making FOUR TIMES its expense worldwide); it therefore can't very well be the cinematic turd that many critics claim. Also, consider the fact that TMP made more at the box office than the acclaimed films "Alien" and "Apocalypse Now," both released the same year.
I should add that, although this film is an "Grade A" picture as far as epic, awe-inspiring pieces of cinematic art go, I understand why some would grade it lower. In such cases I suggest making the necessary psychological adjustments and watching it again as it is more along the lines of "The Cage" than "The Doomsday Machine.”
TMP is the sole Star Trek film that aspires to and attains a level of cinematic awe along the lines of "2001: A Space Odyssey." Actually, TMP is leagues better IMHO. "2001" lacks characters to care about; it's also cold and overly artsy, with way too many unnecessarily boring sequences. TMP, by contrast, has heart. Not to mention an interesting story that delves into the deepest of all universal questions.
Say what you will, but "The Motion Picture" towers alone, utterly unique in the feature film series — a profoundly spiritual TRIUMPH.
The movie runs 2 hours, 12 minutes.
GRADE: A
Status:
Released
Original Language:
English
Budget:
$45,000,000.00
Revenue:
$139,346,243.00