Showing posts with label William Shatner. Show all posts
Showing posts with label William Shatner. Show all posts

Monday, 8 May 2023

Star Trek: The Motion Picture

 Year:  1979

Director:  Robert Wise

Screenplay:  Harold Livingston, from a story by Alan Dean Foster, based on Star Trek created by Gene Roddenberry

Starring:  William Shatner, Leonard Nimoy, DeForest Kelley, Stephen Collins, Persis Khambatta, James Doohan, Nichelle Nichols, George Takei, Walter Koenig

Running Time:  132 minutes

Genre:  Science-fiction


When a mysterious alien cloud possessed of powerful destructive capabilities is detected on a course heading directly for Earth, Admiral James T. Kirk (Shatner) is put in charge of the newly overhauled USS Enterprise, and reunites his old crew to investigate and stop the cloud's path of destruction by any means necessary.

When the original television series of Star Trek ended in 1969 after three seasons and 79 episodes, it looked like it would be one more cancelled TV show that would exist for evermore in the fuzzy afterlife of repeats.  However, as the 1970s progressed, Star Trek became a major success in syndication, as well as attracting increasing numbers of devoted fans.  A 14 episode Saturday morning cartoon version was broadcast in the mid '70s, but Paramount Studios were becoming interested in a new live-action Star Trek.  In the late '70s Paramount announced plans for a new cable TV  network, to be imaginatively named The Paramount Network, and the flagship programme on launch night would be Star Trek: Phase II, which would feature some of the original cast alongside new characters.  Pre-production was already well advanced on Star Trek: Phase II, scripts had been written, sets had been built, parts had been cast, costumes designed and some special effects footage had already been shot, when Paramount pulled the plug on The Paramount Network, and Star Trek: Phase II was cancelled.  Rather than waste the considerable amount of money and time that had been spent on the new Star Trek, Paramount decided to remount what would have been the pilot episode of Star Trek: Phase II as a stand-alone feature film.  The script was rewritten and veteran director Robert Wise was hired to helm the project.  The resulting film boasts some very impressive special effects, but is hindered by a slow pace, and a drab feeling to the whole thing, from the colourlessness of the Enterprise interiors, to the new uniforms which all seem to be in varying shades of light blue, white and beige.  There is also the pretentiousness and po-faced philosophising which hampered Star Trek at its worse, with very little of the action and humour of the TV series at its best.  Many of the returning actors have little more than cameo roles, and the two new additions Stephen Collins as Kirk's rival for the Enterprise, Captain Decker, and Persis Khambatta at the alien Deltan Ilia, never really get the chance to make much of an impression.  Despite the plot being a race against time to save the earth, there is very little dynamism, and the story essentially calls for the actors to do little more than react to what they see on monitor screens.  It's clear that what the producers were going for was a serious cerebral science-fiction epic along the lines of 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968), but that is the wrong approach for Star Trek.  The film does have its good points though.  The opening sequence, where the alien cloud encounters three Klingon spaceships is exciting, the special effects are still impressive even after all this time, and there are moments when that create a genuine sense of wonder.  Also the climax, with its clear sexual metaphor is quite daring.  


William Shatner, DeForest Kelley and Leonard Nimoy in Star Trek: The Motion Picture
  

Tuesday, 20 July 2010

The Intruder


Year: 1962
Director: Roger Corman
Screenplay: Charles Beaumont, based on his novel.
Starring: William Shatner, Frank Maxwell, Jeanne Cooper, Beverly Lunsford, Robert Emhardt, Charles Beaumont
Running Time: 84 minutes
Genre: Drama, social issue



Summary: A young man named Adam Cramer (Shatner) arrives in the small town of Caxton in the southern United States on the eve of the schools finally becoming desegregated. Using his superficial charm, the racist Cramer soon begins to stir up the town's simmering racial tensions with increasingly violent results.

Opinions: This often overlooked film was shot on a budget of $80,000 and still managed to lose money on it's initial release. It was re-released under a variety of different titles such as Shame and I Hate Your Guts! in the US, and was re-titled The Stranger for it's British release. At the time Roger Corman was known primarily for his string of low-budget horror and science-fiction "B" movies, and writer Charles Beaumont, who appears in the film as the high school principal, was known mainly as a writer of horror and science-fiction and was one of the key writers on the original series of The Twilight Zone (1959-1964). This fine film, although very much of it's time, is a vital reminder of a comparatively recent time, and of attuitudes and situations that still exist today. William Shatner, who is of course most famous as Captain Kirk on Star Trek (1966-1969) is often unfairly dismissed as a hammy "B"-grade, but here he turns in a powerful performance as the horrific Adam Cramer, all slick surface charm but underneath bullying, bigoted coward. Cramer is certainly a villain of the first order with absolutely no redeeming features at all. However, perhaps most disturbing is the blatant prejudices of the townspeople themselves. It certainly doesn't take much for them to get riled up. Corman's direction is customarily effective and makes good use of the stark, black and white images. The movie was shot on location in towns in south east Missouri although, apparently the film-makers were run out of a few towns by local people who objected to the film's subject matter. It is a tough and intense drama and still genuinely shocking even by today's standards.
This film is Corman and Shatner at their best and is a powerful and still relevant piece of work and is well worth your time checking out.