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The Final Affront Here., 7 September 2009
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Author:
dunmore_ego from Los Angeles, California
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
Shatner directs!
Oh, what a marvelous disaster! From Shatner's book, Star Trek Movie
Memories, we read about Shatner's grandiloquent vision for the greatest
TREK adventure of all - the search for God Itself! The Final Frontier!
We learn of the hordes of barbarians at the gate, of the ten Rock Men
finale; of the sweeping alien farscapes and cerebral pondering on the
existence of God... and then we run aground on the studio complaints,
crews being late, loss of light, story changes, budget constrictions,
time delays, the middle-background whining of Gene Roddenberry and how
hard it is to direct and - we end up with: STAR TREK V: THE FINAL
FRONTIER. A marvelous disaster.
A Vulcan named Sybok pirates the Enterprise in a misguided quest for
Sha Ka Ree - the abode of God, which is apparently somewhere in the
middle of the galaxy, a vantage point from which (we surmise) all
prayers and oblations can be heard and dealt with in timely fashion.
Sybok hypnotizes Kirk's crew to go along for his ride by healing their
inner demons - an easy task with the extras known as Cast Regulars,
Sulu, Uhura and Chekov (Takei, Nichols and Koenig); not so easy when it
comes to Scotty (James Doohan, skulking about the bilges of the
reconditioned, malfunctioning Enterprise NCC-1701-A) and The New Three
Stooges, Moe Kirk, Larry Spock and Curly "Bones" McCoy (Shatner, Nimoy
and Kelley).
I'll say one thing for Shatner (who also co-wrote with Harve Bennett
and David Loughery): he intimately knows which TREK characters work and
how to work them, as Kirk, Spock and Bones are holding hands in almost
every scene.
As with all STAR TREKs, the humorous and impassioned scenes involving
The Three are tempered by the ridiculous - Uhura getting the attention
of some desert dwellers by doing a nude feather dance (which is not
only embarrassing, considering she thinks to tempt them with her
70-year-old, wrinkly ta-tas, it's kinda icky as well), or another
cantina sequence (after the failed attempt in TREK III), where they
once again display their utter inferiority to STAR WARS.
A disturbing scene shows McCoy euthanizing his father on his deathbed,
Sybok coaxing the memory from McCoy to absolve his pain with catharsis;
Spock is shown his birth and subsequent spurning by his father as being
"too human." These scenes are the heart of darkness Shatner was aiming
for.
Unfortunately, couched within STAR TREK, before too long we are bound
to slam into something idiotic, such as Sybok giving an uneducated
monologue to justify his quest, "People thought the world was flat -
but Columbus proved it wasn't!" (shows how much he knows about Earth
history - Columbus was establishing a trade route, not proving the
Earth's sphericity); "People thought the sound barrier couldn't be
broken - it was!" (and this time, when he could cite the man who
actually attempted and succeeded in that singular quest, Sybok doesn't
- Chuck Yeager, you Vulcan C-Student!).
For every dramatic hammer (like Kirk affirming, "I know who I am! I
don't need to confront my pain!") there is a nail in the coffin (like
Kirk fighting a three-breasted cat-lady...).
The hammer: With the Enterprise, Sybok intends to breach The Great
Barrier - a wall of special effects that no one can pass through alive.
The nail: Apparently, all it takes to breach the Great Barrier
safely... is to fly through it.
The hammer: The most authentic Klingons yet in the series pursue Kirk
for the glory of killing him, chok-tha-ing quite fluently in what was
established as actual Klingon dialect, created by linguist Marc Okrand.
The nail: Uh, why do you need a PERISCOPE on a space ship? Spock gets
to nerve pinch a horse, Chekov gets to sit in the Captain's seat;
Shatner's real life daughter is on-board as an Ensign and she's as bad
an actor as the rest of the extras; Uhura and Scotty are an item - but
if I wanted to see something that weird, I'd watch the cantina sequence
at Mos Eisley.
After numerous annoying plot holes and cinematic deficiencies, Sybok
and The Three shuttle down to the planet of Sha Ka Ree to meet God. And
we get the perfunctory evil alien with laser beams shooting out of his
eyes.
The final scene is a funny, touching moment as Kirk is overjoyed to see
Spock on-board a Bird of Prey and is about to hug him, when Spock
interjects, "Please, Captain, not in front of the Klingons."
Many argue that STAR TREK movies must be judged in the time period they
were made - an apologist remark usually pertaining to the low budget
efx that every TREK up to V is victim of. But that is not why the TREK
movies are such phenomenal space junk. We can live with dated effects;
what drives us insane are the egregious non-performances from every
single supporting cast member and absolutely illogical and unscientific
plot points, bad editing, poor direction, a general sloppiness and an
overwhelming plastic dynamic.
The final frontier will be when STAR TREK steps out from behind Gene
Roddenberry's skirts to proclaim it is part of our universe, to join
the movie-making community on equal grounds, to boldly go where every
other filmmaker has gone before - film school.
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