So . . . what about these
movies, anyway?
The Trek film franchise has
often been described as "uneven." Many followers of the series will cite
the theory of the infamous "odd-numbered curse," which holds that the even-numbered
films are generally better than the odd-numbered ones. Overall, I tend
to agree with that assessment, but that isn't the point -- I find that
it’s important to scrutinize the film series as a whole, considering larger
sweeping trends in terms of the evolution of characters and the franchise.
The passage of time
The trend was set from the
very beginning with Star Trek: The Motion Picture. Before
the plot was even fully underway, we saw that the filmmakers had made a
key decision that would bring a new slant to the Trek proceedings:
In real life, 10 years had passed since TOS went off the air, and
a similar amount of time had also passed in Starfleet.
The Enterprise crew we knew
had, to some degree, broken up; key characters had basically moved on to
other things. Kirk had been kicked upstairs, Spock had returned to Vulcan,
Bones looked mighty different with that beard, and the Enterprise had a
new (if temporary) captain. By reuniting the major players onscreen as
a function of the story, ST:TMP played like a reunion picture both
on and off the screen.
That’s a path that the filmmakers
didn’t have to choose, but they did, and I’m glad they did. They broke
Star
Trek out of the episodic format it had maintained during its three-season
TV run and proved that although Trek was back, it was not looking
back — it was moving forward.
The Wrath of Khan took
things even a step further. Early in the film Kirk is moping about his
birthday, and in a funny scene we see that Bones’ birthday gift to him
is a pair of reading glasses. Kirk’s reaction is priceless exactly because
it’s such a wonderfully simple human touch. As the characters grow older,
we find ourselves growing closer to them. Their vulnerabilities, perhaps
even more so than their strengths, are what continue to entertain us.
In fact, it’s the overall
ebb and flow of the first four Trek films -- particularly II,
III, and IV -- that make them stand out as a true film series.
We had some major events that would have consequences down the road, the
key event of course being Spock’s death in Trek II. It’s a pretty
big deal when a major character can die at the end of a film and we’re
left in doubt between films as to whether that character will return.
At its core, The Wrath
of Khan — steeped in a lore of creationist sci-fi (via the Genesis
Project) — was about mortality. Kirk said he had never really faced death
until he lost Spock, and a case can be made that nor did the audience ever
really realize the mortality of Star Trek and its characters until
that moment.
Trek III flowed
directly from Trek II and reunited Spock with the rest of the family,
but only after Kirk and his crew stole the Enterprise and risked their
careers. Kirk himself had to make still more sacrifices, losing his son
and being forced to destroy the Enterprise. The fourth film, similarly,
followed logically from the third. Yes, it headed in a new direction of
hip self-awareness (and highlighted a comic tone that many, myself included,
found successful), but the previous films' darker emphasis on consequences
still lingered.
In short, the first four
films pushed the original cast in new directions and to new heights --
no longer simply episodic, but epic as well. The filmmakers were telling
four separate stories, but they were all on the same wavelength and collectively
conveyed the passage of time.
Of course, we then got toStar
Trek V: The Final Frontier, a problematic film on just about every
level. Aside from being a lousy movie, Trek V returned the series
to a sense of episodic routine. All the changes to the crew were erased
(something that admittedly was hard to avoid in a film series of this length),
and the story lost its epic edge.
Shameless forays into comedy
seemed dictated more by calculated attempts to follow in the footsteps
of Trek IV’s box-office success than in telling a real story. Unfortunate
indeed.
Click
ahead for Epsicokhan on The Next Generation of Trek films
~
The next generation of
movies
In 1991, Kirk’s final voiceover
log as captain of the Enterprise in Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered
Country passed the torch to the crew of The
Next Generation. Star Trek VI retired the original crew
with dignity and affection, and in the details of its story of diplomacy
it revealed the beginning of the end of hostilities between the Klingons
and the Federation -- from the TNG perspective, already a part of
the Trekkian history books.
In 1994, literally within
days of wrapping production on the TV series, the cast and crew of TNG
were stepping into movie roles for Star Trek: Generations,
the seventh film in the series, which wisely chose to abandon the series’
numbering system.
Generations was not
a great movie -- it was maybe not even that good a movie -- but
in terms of trying to keep the series changing while passing the torch
in a more literal way via time travel (assuming the final line of Undiscovered
Country was too subtle), it did some things adequately.
It provided Kirk a heroic
death scene (perhaps even two depending on your point of view) and assured
that any future of the film franchise would belong exclusively to the TNG
cast. Big events like the destruction of the Enterprise-D and Data’s
adventures with his emotion chip seemed to raise the stakes out of television
and into cinema.
Theoretically, Generations
could have been the catalyst for a new Trek movie era that would
see our crew moving into new roles and struggling with the issues of aging.
(Indeed, Picard’s dilemma in Generations revolved around his awareness
of mortality, but it was unfortunately lost in the film’s shuffle of elements.)
It’s probably asking a lot that we give the crew new things to do; after
all, it’s hard to juggle so many characters -- let alone send them in new
directions -- while also trying to tell a coherent story in less than two
hours. Still, I think it could’ve been possible.
Instead we got First
Contact, which was one of the best in the series but nevertheless
chose to maintain the "status quo" format. The success of First Contact
lay in its ability to render Trek as good science fiction, but more
importantly, it permitted itself to explore Trek’s own legends and
lore by placing its characters in the middle of one of the Federation’s
most important historic events.
Perhaps the lesson to be
learned is that maybe the characters don’t have to grow if the movies
can tell good stories that understand the nature of Star Trek.
The beginning of the end
Then again, maybe that’s
not the case. If Star Trek: Insurrection proved anything
two years ago, it’s that the TNG film series has not been able to
convey a larger epic sense the way Treks II, III, IV, and VI
managed. Insurrection was as inconsequential as an average TV episode
and displayed the characters spinning their wheels.
We’re left with the fact
that the actors are aging, but the characters are not. At some point, probably
a long time ago, we realized that Riker has held the rank of commander
for well over a decade. Data was supplied his longed-for emotions in Generations,
but that storyline has been all but abandoned, regressing his character
back to a time predating his role in the movies.
The cast seems frozen in
time, while time itself is running out. The TNG film series looks
to be approaching its final stage. Plans for a tenth
Trek film, targeted for late 2001, are now under active discussion.
It’s an almost certain beginning of the end. Patrick Stewart and Brent
Spiner have become extremely expensive, and both say the next feature will
be their last.
After that, will the movie
franchise as we know it be retired? It’s hard to say, but it’s definitely
a possibility, especially with the franchise at a crossroads in terms of
direction and its somewhat fragmented popularity. What began in 1979 could
very well see its end within the next 16 months.
It's probably a good thing
for the filmmakers to know.
It seems that everyone takes
the Trek movies for granted these days, operating under the assumption
that a sequel automatically comes every two or three years. It might be
this very assumption that has given the TNG movies their unrealistic
sense of onscreen immortality and their inability to move forward.
Erasing that assumption could
lead to exciting things -- the film series, if it is ending, needs to go
out on a note of finality. These characters need to move on. After all,
we in the audience will be moving on ourselves.
Jamahl
Epsicokhan is a Web site developer for a mid-sized daily newspaper
in the Midwest. He also publishes the Internet review site Star Trek:
Hypertext.