Today is Star Trek's 58th birthday. So Happy Star Trek Day. 🎂🖖🥰
@CourtReacts-zm9yv
26 күн бұрын
Oh wow! That's awesome! Happy Star Trek Day! 🖖
@brandonbullington
5 күн бұрын
@@CourtReacts-zm9yv this is why I’m a Star Trek geek. Happy Star Trek Day! 🖖
@hippusmaximus9319
26 күн бұрын
RIP Captain Styles - James B. Sikking (March 5, 1934 - July 13, 2024) aged 90.
@jamesbrown4092
26 күн бұрын
That's sad. I didn't know he passed.
@AlphaLimaXray
17 күн бұрын
Aw, that is sad. I grew up watching him on Hill Street Blues. RIP.
@ddiamondr1
26 күн бұрын
The lady who stood when the Enterprise docked was Janice Rand.
@thomasnieswandt8805
21 күн бұрын
Well technically not.... Its every Trekkies headcanon, that she is, however the credits lists her as "unnamed cafeteria woman"
@Semaj4747
20 күн бұрын
Yeah, but it is. She shakes her head as " there they go again." When looking at the damage.
@ddiamondr1
20 күн бұрын
@@thomasnieswandt8805 that’s just a producer’s choice. A rude producer. Doesn’t change the fact it was Grace Lee Whitney.
@silkwesir1444
20 күн бұрын
@@Semaj4747 Hmm but then it's weird that Sarek is still alive in this one, I thought he was blown up by V'ger in the first movie...
@Semaj4747
20 күн бұрын
@@silkwesir1444 whereas mark Leonard played a Klingon on tmp and Serek in III. Heck he played romulan commander too. You can make the argument this is Rand bc of her reactions to the damage and she is waiting for the Enterprise. And she shows up in IV still working on Earth Was the dude was she sitting with her hubby?
@incogneato790
26 күн бұрын
Kirk blowing up the Enterprise was the most jaw-dropping moment I ever experienced when watching a movie. What Kirk and Bones said watching it from the surface was perfect.
@chriscma1
20 күн бұрын
Agreed, but I wish Kirk could have said, "Goodbye old friend."
@itubeutubewealltube1
26 күн бұрын
remember, Kirk witnessed Spock steal the enterprise twenty years earlier to save his Captains life.... (christopher pike) thats how Kirk always knew spock would do the same for him.
@logandarklighter
26 күн бұрын
I never made that connection! That's awesome!
@SBatts-vn1bd
25 күн бұрын
Fascinating!
@scottredding7357
26 күн бұрын
“Zero zero zero (Shatner pause) Destruct (Shatner pause) Zero.”
@sergioaccioly5219
26 күн бұрын
While not ST II, this movie gets better and better each time I watch it. A big selling point is that it showcasers how good these people are at their jobs. They outsmarted Starfleet without a hitch, turned a Klingon ambush on their head and when circunstances beyond their control left them at the mercy of their enemies (again), they turned their tables effortlessly, even while going through heartache like no other.
@miller-joel
26 күн бұрын
There's one epic scene after another.
@Darkphoenix007A
26 күн бұрын
Here's an Easter Egg for you: Phil Morris (Trainee Foster at the 2:33 mark) has Star Trek cred flowing through his blood. Both he and his sister were in TOS (Miri), and he starred in DS9 as a Klingon warrior and Jem Hadar soldier, and starred in VOY as an astronaut who was declared missing from a Mars expedition.
@logandarklighter
26 күн бұрын
Wow! That's better cred than even Ron Howard's brother! (Balok)
@emilmlodnicki3835
23 күн бұрын
Jacky Chiles!
@chriscma1
20 күн бұрын
Phil also auditioned for the role of Ben Sisko on DS9, but was considered too young at the time.
@Countfoscolikesmice
26 күн бұрын
R.I.P. Merritt Butrick
@BedsitBob
26 күн бұрын
And Bibi Besch.
@rccraig7580
26 күн бұрын
@@BedsitBob Her daughter Samantha Mathis is also an actress. She was in Broken Arrow with John Travolta and Cristain Slater.
@karter95
19 күн бұрын
@@BedsitBob. Bibi is in one of my favorite episodes of Night Court she played a mom who wanted her daughter to marry a rich man. She played along side John Laroquette who is Maltz in this movie. He would later cosplay Maltz in the new Night Court
@jonathandonley3299
17 күн бұрын
I tears me up to think he was only 24 when he made this movie and he would die only five years later. So sad.
@tigqc
25 күн бұрын
"Jim. Your name is Jim." I'm not crying, you're crying.
@SBatts-vn1bd
26 күн бұрын
Sarek was grieving like a father here. The way he snapped at Kirk over Spock's last moments was interesting. I almost wish there was a deleted scene where Starfleet informs Spock's parents of his death in the last movie.
@Muck006
25 күн бұрын
Like a HUMAN ... full of EMOTION.
@logandarklighter
25 күн бұрын
Sarek : "Forgive me... My logic is... uncertain where my son is concerned."
@aliceharper707
15 күн бұрын
@@logandarklighterI'm certain that years of being married to Amanda had an effect on him.
@BedsitBob
26 күн бұрын
That lady with the red hair, looking out of the window at spacedock, as they arrive, is (formerly Yeoman) Janice Rand.
@VegetaLF7
26 күн бұрын
The power of fantastic writing and cinematography on full display here. A scene that on paper is just the equivalent of backing out of the garage is elevated to being one of the most tense, most exciting sequences in the franchise with the theft of the Enterprise here
@Dystopia1111
23 күн бұрын
"It's his revenge for all those arguments he lost." Every line for DeForrest Kelly is well-written, true to character, and perfectly delivered.
@fftunes
26 күн бұрын
Back then i didn't know Christopher Lloyd played the klingon captain Kruge, but now i can not unsee it 😂
@miller-joel
26 күн бұрын
Lloyd is as good as he can be, but he's too well known for his wacky comedic roles. It's hard to take him seriously as a ruthless Klingon, not for his role here, but for that association.
@BedsitBob
26 күн бұрын
Great Scott. 😊
@Peaceforall20111
26 күн бұрын
I didn’t know who Lloyd was either and I can imagine if I did it would affect how well I could imagine the character. For the wacky roles Lloyd played he played a REALLY GOOD Klingon for early trek - I think his portrayal still hold up to what we expect from Klingons all the way through voyager
@bluebird3281
26 күн бұрын
As good as he was, even as a little kid in the theater when he spoke English it was Rev. Jim from "Taxi".
@Peaceforall20111
26 күн бұрын
@@bluebird3281 I can imagine thst was soooo distracting; sorry u didn’t get to experience him untainted by another role ; sorry my fellow Trekkie
@SG-js2qn
26 күн бұрын
FWIW, the ship destroyed at Genesis early in the movie, the Grissom, might have been named after an astronaut who lost his life in an accident with the Apollo 1 space mission. I think the protomatter of this film might have been an inspiration for the protomolecule in "The Expanse."
@SBatts-vn1bd
22 күн бұрын
Virgil I. Grissom. You are spot on!
@dngillikin
26 күн бұрын
It amuses me that the sound of Spock's screams were provided by Frank Welker, the decades-long voice of Fred from Scooby-Doo.
@radwolf76
26 күн бұрын
It is impossible to reduce Frank Welker to any one role, he is one of the most prolific voice actors out there. In fact prior to the MCU putting Samuel L. Jackson and Stan Lee in every summer blockbuster, if you were to take every Hollywood actor and rank them by the box office totals of anything they ever had a credit in, Welker was at the top of the list.
@hippusmaximus9319
26 күн бұрын
How about other fun voice trivia: Leonard Nimoy as the voice of the Excelsior elevator/turbolift. "Level please. Thank you." In the 1986 film "The Transformers: The Movie" Frank Welker was the voice of Megatron. When Galvatron was created, Leonard Nimoy voiced him. In the TV series post-film, Frank Welker took over as the voice of Galvatron.
@SJHFoto
26 күн бұрын
Megatron screams? Hehe!
@BrotherDerrick3X
25 күн бұрын
Frank Welker is the reigning king of the voice actors. He took that spot after Mel Blanc passed away.
@radwolf76
24 күн бұрын
@@BrotherDerrick3X Frank is King, but Jim Cummings has to be close behind. Jim is the reason why playing 6 Degrees of Kevin Bacon with the handicap of "only animated films" is not a handicap at all.
@davepowers3194
26 күн бұрын
In answer to the self-destruct requiring Spock’s code, it just requires the Captain and two senior officers
@maestro80smusic93
26 күн бұрын
The cadet who wanted a hero's welcome at the beginning of the film played the lawyer Jackie Chiles on Seinfeld and the Martian Manhunter on Smallville
@jamess885
26 күн бұрын
The klingon killed his lover because she saw the data about the genesis device. She was supposed to retreive it only, not look at it. During their conversation she disclosed that she looked at it. He said that was unfortunate, and she understood that meant she had to die, and she accepted it.
@Vance1982
26 күн бұрын
In the novel it was revealed that his lover had been from a disgraced House and so she had deliberately viewed the Genesis information so that Kruge would have *had* to kill her by (to Klingons) honorable method thereby redeeming her House.
@Faroutamazingadventures
26 күн бұрын
The reason why they killed of Spock in the second film was because at the beginning of filming the Wrath Of Khan Leonard Nemoy said that he didn’t want to play Spock anymore and also he didn’t think the Star Trek movie franchise would be successful. When Wrath Of Khan was released and it was a huge box office hit and went far beyond better than the first film. So Leonard Nemoy agreed to continue as Spock!
@logandarklighter
26 күн бұрын
He actually was lured to come back and reprise the role on the PROMISE of a good death scene. Partially because he thought Star Trek had run it's course. Partially because he (along with MOST other people involved) had gone through HELL during the production of Star Trek: The Motion Picture. But - he was actually having such a FUN time doing THIS film that about midway through, he began to wonder if he'd made a serious mistake! He talked about it with the producer Harve Bennet, and Bennet "tossed in" that scene with the Spock/McCoy mindmeld "Just in case". If ever a franchise was SAVED by the foresight of ONE MAN... Oi! Harve Bennet should get a damned MEDAL for thinking on his feet!
@SuperDave1426
26 күн бұрын
Good reaction! To answer a sort-of question you had in the video - Saavik bowing her head with her eyes closed during the ritual at the end was not her being respectful. She was doing what every other Vulcan was doing with their head bowed and eyes closed - lending her telepathic energies to the task of the rejoining being conducted by the high priestess. Remember that Vulcans do have a limited telepathic ability (and it doesn't always require touch contact). 👍
@christopheryochum3602
25 күн бұрын
Appreciated your comment when you first saw Space Dock. In those days, there was no CGI. That entire thing was a model, as was the interior. Filming the Enterprise and other ships within it just showed the genius of the technical people who used film tricks to make it all real. CGI allows you to do things you can't do with models, but I've always felt models look more real. Could be because they are.
@Dmarcoot
26 күн бұрын
this is my favorite trek movie. highly underrated and rule of odd numbered movies being not good is trash
@CourtReacts-zm9yv
26 күн бұрын
This is exactly my reasoning for watching everything and forming my own opinions.
@christopherferrarelli2262
26 күн бұрын
27:11 - 27:15 I remember seeing the trailer for Star Trek III on television; and when they showed the scene where the Enterprise was destroyed, the narrator says “Join us on this; the final voyage of the Starship Enterprise.” I was 13 when I saw this and I was in shock. I couldn’t believe what they were going to do.
@logandarklighter
26 күн бұрын
Some jackwagon in the promotion department - seemingly of ALL studios in the 80s - felt the INTENSE need to SPOIL EVERY. SINGLE. LAST. BLOODY. FILM. Back in the 80s - I learned to come LATE to the theater so as to AVOID the trailers!!
@SJHFoto
26 күн бұрын
I didn't cry when Spock died back then, but when I saw this one in the movies, I did (when the NCC-1701 melts off the saucer section)
@logandarklighter
26 күн бұрын
33:25 "Is Saavik okay? Or is she showing respect?" The Vulcan lady in charge of the ceremony said they would use all their powers. Saavik is PART of that - she's providing telepathic assistance, same as all the other Vulcans present. The expression you see on her face is her in concentration.
@SJHFoto
26 күн бұрын
I always thought the Vulcans were praying
@silkwesir1444
20 күн бұрын
@@SJHFoto Well, in a sense, except it's a real psychic ability, not just wishful thinking.
@SJHFoto
20 күн бұрын
@@silkwesir1444 "Wishful thinking"?
@Rick-c5s
26 күн бұрын
I've often thought of that beautifully touching scene of Kirk watching the Enterprise burning in the atmosphere as an inspiration for my own life when I needed to let go of something dear to me in order to move forward in life... Loved your reaction, thank you! ❤
@FloridaMugwump
26 күн бұрын
I had forgotten that Christopher Lloyd was a Klingon.
@mkang8782
26 күн бұрын
And John Laroquette (arguably best known for "Night Court"), portrayed Malz, the only one of Krug's crew to survive.
@Faroutfactandfiction
26 күн бұрын
As much as I’m a big Star Wars fan, it would NEVER compare to my love and my fan favorite for Star Trek! 😊
@MongooseTales
26 күн бұрын
"She is an educated and classy lady." Couldn't have said it better!
@Bar-Lord
26 күн бұрын
This was my entry point to the franchise back in the early 90s. I was young enough that I didn’t understand that TV could cross over into film, so I had no clue there was a TV show before this. When I understood I had many hours more of episodes to watch, my mind exploded with excitement. This film gets a lot of crap when I don’t think it should. For me, it taught me what the best of friendship could, and should, be. That last conversation between Kirk and Sarek is the heart of the film.
@Peaceforall20111
26 күн бұрын
This film is a lot of people’s first entry into trek…. I had a Trekkie parent so I was watching trek all my life but I’m this movie and the voyage home were always in the vhs player. I think the scenes that take place on the ships are all great “Star Trek” from the return to space dock, stealing the enterprise, to fighting the Klingons with no crew. I’m not entirely sure why people have such an issue with this movie
@Elerad
26 күн бұрын
I love Mark Lenard in this and... well... in everything. The man had such incredible gravitas. You just felt this power that moved with him -- a quality that is simply impossible to replicate, as attempts to recast the role have proven. His death was a great, great loss.
@toddjh
26 күн бұрын
Yeah, it's incredible to me that Sarek only has something like two hours of total screen time across the original series, the movies, and his Next Generation episodes, but he's completely unforgettable.
@Dystopia1111
23 күн бұрын
Also memorable parts as the Romulan commander in the original series episode 'Balance of Terror' and the Klingon commander seen at the beginning of ST:TMP..
@aliceharper707
15 күн бұрын
I got to meet him once in person and he he was just incredible.
@ChannelReuploads9451
26 күн бұрын
The scene in the transporter room with Uhura and the ensign and she beams Kirk to the Enterprise, and the film cuts to the crew on the Enterprise, in the book, it explains that Uhura beams to the Vulkan Embassy, and claims Asylum, and goes to Vulkan with Sarek.
@logandarklighter
26 күн бұрын
Yup. It's in the novelization. Which I HIGHLY Recommend! The Novelizations of all 6 of the films make each one even richer on viewing again! They are absolute masterpieces! 👍 In fact - most Star Trek books from the 1980s are either insanely good - or at the very least - insanely FUN! And I simply MUST recommend one by John M. Ford called "How Much for Just the Planet". As you might guess from the title, it's a full blown COMEDY. And when you begin to understand from where Ford is drawing the majority of his comedic references from, you'll either groan at the PUNishment. Or laugh your butt off! Possibly BOTH! 🤣
@tulinfirenze1990
25 күн бұрын
@@logandarklighter Agreed. Vonda McIntyre did an AMAZING job fleshing out the characters and stories.
@chriscma1
20 күн бұрын
Those Uhura scenes should have been filmed. Exciting stuff for our favorite Communications officer.
@driptrat
26 күн бұрын
This is my favorite Film in the series. You had a lovely reaction to it. "If I hadn't tried, the cost would have been my soul." Favorite line in the series X)
@IntergalacticDustBunny
26 күн бұрын
I read somewhere that the Writers originally wanted to call the film "Star Trek: Genesis" but the studio overrode that and said it had to be called "The Search for Spock". Because they had gotten so many angry letters over Spock's Death that they were scared people wouldn't see the film unless they knew for sure Spock was coming back.
@CourtReacts-zm9yv
26 күн бұрын
I probably would have sent one of those letters myself 😂
@miller-joel
26 күн бұрын
They should have called it Star Trek iii: Don't Worry, Spock is Back.
@CourtReacts-zm9yv
26 күн бұрын
@@miller-joel 😂
@firefly24601
26 күн бұрын
In an interview about the movie, either Nimoy or Shatner said, "Look, the name of the movie is Search for Spock. If we turned to the camera at the end and said 'Sorry, we didn't find him" they'd throw rocks at the screen."
@miller-joel
26 күн бұрын
@@firefly24601 In the old days, they gave a damn about the audience.
@rexmundi2986
26 күн бұрын
Great reaction. I think this movie is very underrated. A couple of dodgy visual elements aside, this is a banger of a story. And Christopher Lloyd as the Klingon was perfect. Up next, Voyage Home, youre in for a treat.
@MichaelJohnson-vi6eh
26 күн бұрын
He made Klingon sound like a language instead of just nonsense.
@luminiferous1960
26 күн бұрын
@@MichaelJohnson-vi6eh Linguist Marc Okrand, who specialized in Native American languages and who had been hired to overdub the Vulcan dialog in TWoK, took the random sounds that James Doohan had invented for Klingon in TMP and developed a full vocabulary and grammar for the Klingon language that was used in TSfS and TNG. That's why Klingon sounds like a language in this movie instead of just nonsense as it actually was previously. Okrand wrote 3 books about Klingon: The Klingon Dictionary (first published 1985, revised enlarged edition 1992), The Klingon Way (1996), and Klingon for the Galactic Traveler (1997). He also authored two audio courses: Conversational Klingon (1992) and Power Klingon (1993). Okrand co-authored the libretto of an opera in the Klingon language entitled ’u’, which means universe or universal in English. The story of ʼuʼ is based on the epic legend of "Kahless the Unforgettable." The opera debuted at The Hague in September 2010. Note that the opera's title ’u’ has three letters-- ’ u ’ -- , not one letter between single quotation marks. The apostrophe is a letter in the canonical transcription of Klingon orthography, denoting a glottal stop.
@IronmanLIIII0
26 күн бұрын
A bit of movie trivia, unfortunately, Merrit Butrick the actor that played David passed away just a few years later (5) after shooting this movie. As far as Klingons are concerned, honor, glory and devotion to the empire is most important. Commander Kruge's girlfriend died with honor while doing her duty to the empire according to Klingon standards.
@miller-joel
26 күн бұрын
5 years later. He was on TNG, too.
@dngillikin
26 күн бұрын
Nope. Merritt Butrick died on March 17, 1989, almost five years after the release if this movie on June 1, 1984.
@IronmanLIIII0
26 күн бұрын
@@dngillikin I corrected it, thanks.
@Echo4Bravo
25 күн бұрын
My favorite part. Saavik "David is dead." So Vulcan. Emotionless. Brilliant Star Trek.
@aliceharper707
15 күн бұрын
20:35 Oh but you could tell she was fighting back the emotion as being half romulan. And she had a thing for David. She choked back the tears and put on her Vulcan voice. I didn't like Robin Curtis as Saavik as well as I liked Kirstie Alley but she did a passable job.
@jamesbrown4092
25 күн бұрын
Some trivia I've read about the filming of the destruction of the Enterprise... The shot of the saucer burning was done by creating a styrofoam model and filming it at a slow frame rate while dripping acetone on it to dissolve holes in it. This was superimposed over footage of burning steel wool to create the effect of the internal structure burning. The big cloud of debris when the saucer exploded was done by filling the model with talcum powder. Practical effects people are quite an ingenious lot.
@Pondimus_Maximus
26 күн бұрын
This movie’s biggest crime, beyond Chekov’s civilian clothes, was not taking Uhura with them! She loved Spock as much as any of the bridge crew, and Enterprise was her home, just the same. It breaks the heart! To this day, I think that was the biggest mistake in the original movie series.
@logandarklighter
26 күн бұрын
At least she got a GREAT scene out of it! Sulu - once again, was relegated almost to the background.
@ArienRiley
26 күн бұрын
She was hardly in any of the movies or series compared to the rest of the cast.
@SBatts-vn1bd
25 күн бұрын
Someone answered this before, if memory serves that it had to do with the novel for the movie. Which I never read to verify. Uhura deleted the co-ordinates from the transporter log after she beamed Kirk and the other to the Enterprise and as the communications officer, she was working closely in league with Sarek in providing important communications to Kirk or maybe as M5 puts it "not essential personnel"
@chriscma1
20 күн бұрын
Get a copy of the novelization. Uhura had quite the adventure after beaming Kirk and Co. to the Enterprise.
@Phantassm
26 күн бұрын
31:57 I always loved that hug that Kirk gives Uhura.
@tulinfirenze1990
26 күн бұрын
Me too. At this point the crew are just so close.
@daveherres3374
11 күн бұрын
The Spock eyebrow raise at the end caused a huge applause in the theatre at the time.
@Serai3
26 күн бұрын
That moment in ST:II where Spock touches McCoy's face and says "Remember" was not intended as a transference of his spirit. It was really just a throwaway. When they were filming the scene, Nicholas Meyer told Leonard Nimoy to do that. When Nimoy asked why, Meyer said basically, "eh, I dunno, I just have a feeling we'll be glad we had it." There were no plans at all even to have a third film, let alone any ideas about Spock coming back. His death scene was supposed to be the final hurrah both for him and the series. (That was true of every single one of these movies. It's why they had to keep rebuilding all the sets; the studio kept tearing them down after each film.) When Meyer was writing the script, he called up Nimoy, who had put the character behind him after the debacle of the first film, and asked him, "How would you like to have a beautiful death scene?" When he heard what was proposed, he enthusiastically agree, thinking it would be a wonderful way to close out that part of his career. Little did he know he was really opening it up to a lifetime of engagement with Spock!
@miller-joel
26 күн бұрын
I dunno, Meyer HATED that they brought Spock back.
@logandarklighter
26 күн бұрын
This story is correct on most details. But it wasn't Nicholas Meyer who "threw in" the scene with Spock and McCoy in ST:II - it was Harve Bennett - the producer. As stated, Meyer thought bringing Spock back cheapened his death. But what he initially failed to realize was that Spock's resurrection was PAID DEARLY FOR. If he had been brought back with no consequence, then yes - that would be cheap. But David's death - the destruction of the Enterprise herself - which was almost as much a character as Spock! - those sacrifices made the return of Spock feel EARNED.
@Serai3
26 күн бұрын
@@logandarklighter Dam, yes. You're right, it was Harve. Thanks for the correction!
@JANDERSO5554
26 күн бұрын
@30:44 This actor (John Laroquette) played Dan Fielding in the original Night Court.
@Dystopia1111
23 күн бұрын
And won a pile of awards for it. Absolutely the funniest character on TV in the mid/late 80s.
@RobXHEphotosPs37.29
26 күн бұрын
Also of of note was Uhura's bad-ass scene, taking care or "Mr. Adventure". Enjoyed your reaction Courtney!
@CourtReacts-zm9yv
26 күн бұрын
Loved that scene so much! Thanks for watching!
@yjwrangler7819
26 күн бұрын
When Scotty hands McCoy them bits from the Excelsior you get a good look at the fact that James Doohan only had three fingers on his right hand. He lost one in war.
@porflepopnecker4376
9 күн бұрын
For me, the moment right after Sulu says "We have cleared space doors", and the Enterprise backs out of space dock just as James Horner's fanfare music hits its powerful peak, is one of the most thrilling scenes in all of Star Trek. It's the last glorious launch of the Grand Old Lady.
@saxonkrautz
23 күн бұрын
Love the serene facial expression in the thumbnail. That of a trekie having Spok returned. Made me very happy to see. This film also pays off a premise set up in TOS. When Kirk explains to Spok what love means to him, and everything he would risk and sacrifice in the name of love. Kirk does all of this for his friend in this film. As he says, to do otherwise would cost him his soul.
@jamesdamiano8894
26 күн бұрын
You’re gonna love the next one The Voyage Home. Lighthearted and a little of humor. Doc Brown as a Klingon was something else.
@SJHFoto
26 күн бұрын
I agree, but remember, this came out before BTTF, so he wasn't known as Doc Brown. He was "Jim" from Taxi
@jamesdamiano8894
26 күн бұрын
@@SJHFoto I know that but she probably only knew him as Doc. It was also intended for today’s people who for the most part are probably too young to know that.
@xSanttu203
26 күн бұрын
Earlier today I discovered this channel and watched the Wrath of Khan reaction. What are the chances I immediately also get to see your reaction to this! I'm loving the reactions! 😄
@CourtReacts-zm9yv
26 күн бұрын
Welcome! I upload Star Trek videos every Sunday 😊
@synaesthesia2010
26 күн бұрын
it might have been sad to see it go, but you have to admit, for 1984, those were some pretty damn good special effects
@ryansyler8847
23 күн бұрын
"She is an educated and classy lady." Probably the best description I've ever heard anyone give of the grand ol' gal that is USS Enterprise.
@timmooney7528
26 күн бұрын
The Klingon language was created by Mark Okrand, a linguist known for his work with Native American languages. He is responsible for creating Klingon Dictionary.
@LesterManley-s9n
26 күн бұрын
But James Doohan developed the Klingon langue first in Star Trek:TMP(1979)😊
@LesterManley-s9n
26 күн бұрын
The callback to Spectre of the Gun with the self-destruct code....total badass. Shows this new enterprise was still mostly 'our' Enterprise.
@radwolf76
26 күн бұрын
@@LesterManley-s9n James Doohan made up words that sounded alien. Marc Okrand took those few made up words that were strung together in TMP, and built it out into a full language with a dictionary's worth of vocabulary and a full unique grammatical structure that brought it into being a conlang (constructed language), comparable to Tolkien's Elvish or the real world's Esperanto.
@paulsander5433
26 күн бұрын
Yes, true! Jimmy Doohan invented the Klingon language for "The Motion Picture". There are only a few words spoken in the first minutes of the movie. They hired the linguist for "The Wrath of Khan" to overdub the Vulcan dialog. The way it started was that the actors had spoken their lines in English, then he had them overdub lines using different sounds that use similar movements of the mouth. For example, the letters "L" and "N" look the same if you read lips, as do "M" and "B" and "P" and similarly the vowels pronounced like "ah" and "aw". The Vulcan language arose from that kind of transliteration. He invented the Klingon dictionary and grammar after that for "The Search for Spock" and "The Next Generation". Then he published his works. Remember Kate Bush, who wrote the song "Running Up That Hill (A Deal With God)"? It holds the record for longest time between release (1985) and rising to #1 in the charts (2022). More recently she released an album and song named "50 Words for Snow", and #42 is: "peDtaH'ej chiS qo' " The liner notes have the following credit: "Intergalactic thanks to Marc Okrand: Linguist, scholar, & creator of the Klingon language - qatiho' " Fellow Trek fan and writer/actor/comedian Stephen Fry did the vocals for this song. He has some great stuff about his relationship with Trek on KZitem.
@luminiferous1960
26 күн бұрын
The linguist's first name is spelled with a "c" not a "k" so it is Marc Okrand.
@SixshotRevan
26 күн бұрын
5:43 Due to my bad knees, I now refer to every flight of stairs I see as Mount Selaya.
@mngentry
14 күн бұрын
Well then clearly everytime to attempt to them, you "choose the danger" like McCoy.
@SixshotRevan
14 күн бұрын
@@mngentry Indeed I do.
@mngentry
14 күн бұрын
@@SixshotRevan 🖖😉
@mattkevlarlarock5469
26 күн бұрын
I envy you in that you get to watch 2 and 3 back to back. We had to wait years after Spock's death to see him again.
@SJHFoto
26 күн бұрын
I don't remember having much discussion between movies about this. But I DO remember the epic ideas my friends and I had for "Revenge of the Jedi" after Empire Strikes Back came out! One friend made his own story in a comic book he drew and wrote! I digitised it and still have it (we were kids, so it's not the greatest, but he really had a creative idea)
@BedsitBob
26 күн бұрын
It was originally intended that Spock would die and remain dead, because Leonard Nimoy wanted to leave. However, when it was shown to test audiences, the outcry was so massive, they asked him to stay, and part of the deal was agreeing to him directing the next two movies. Having got him to agree to stay, they had to figure out a way to bring Spock back, so they re-shot the scene in engineering, adding the "Remember" bit.
@logandarklighter
26 күн бұрын
That was not a reshot scene. Trust me - I was THERE viewing the original film on release. THAT part was there from the beginning! It was Harve Bennet, the producer (Not Nicholas Meyer) who ordered that scene be shot. Partially because he felt like the movie was going to do very well and that this might NOT be the final movie. But also because - although Leonard Nimoy had been convinced to come back because he thought it would be the LAST time he'd have to play Spock - that he had such a positive experience making this film (as opposed to ST:TMP - which infamously went through Development Hell) that he changed his mind halfway through filming and was starting to wonder if he'd made a mistake in pushing for Spock's death. So Harve Bennet "threw it in" to leave a back door to bringing Spock back - "Just in case". When Meyer saw that scene when the movie was released he was NOT happy. But in later years made his peace with it. And had a hand in Star Trek III, IV and famously came back to write and direct The Undiscovered Country.
@shuboy05
26 күн бұрын
@@logandarklighter I just wanted to add that the "Remember" scene was so last minute that it doesn't even appear in the Wrath of Khan novelization!
@logandarklighter
26 күн бұрын
@@shuboy05 Indeed. This sort of thing is common with movies that undergo late revisions. The novelization has to be in bookstores ( or I guess, now, available for download) by the expected release date of the film, if not slightly before. Sometimes films can’t DECIDE on an ending until very late and the novelist has to improvise!
@shuboy05
25 күн бұрын
@@logandarklighter Which has changed recently. The Star Wars Sequel Trilogy all got their novels released several months after the movie to prevent spoilers. Which is funny because I still remember the days you could get a major movie spoiled just by going to the bookstore to get the novelization before the movie was out.
@Capohanf1
26 күн бұрын
Note the rug underlayment in the Turbo Lift Wall at 2:45! And it was SOOO funny when Chris Lloyd first appeared on screen. He played the drugged Taxi Cab Driver in the TV show "Taxi" and hearing him speak Klingon in the same foggy headed voice that he would says his Taxi catch phrase, "Oky Doky!" brought the entire theater to laughter!
@tofersiefken
26 күн бұрын
Looking forward to the next one, it is known as the most "fun" Star Trek movie, and seeing it in theaters at the time was a blast!
@chrpike1
26 күн бұрын
Happy Star Trek Day, Court! Live long and prosper. 🖖😊
@CourtReacts-zm9yv
26 күн бұрын
Happy Star Trek Day! Live Long and Prosper 🖖
@AztecHusBone
8 күн бұрын
"All the varieties of land and weather known to Earth within a few hours' walk." Sounds like my hometown San Diego
@joemaxwell3902
25 күн бұрын
Court describing the Enterprise as an educated and classy lady 🥰🥰🥰
@brianhagen8244
4 күн бұрын
Trivia note here: during the scene where McCoy is in the bar trying to charter a space flight, the song playing in the background is titled "I Remember You", an old jazz classic!
@tdrewman
26 күн бұрын
Happy Star Trek Day ! 58 years of the Trek Universe. So many everyday devices we use that the engineers were inspired by Star Trek.
@skypatrol716
19 күн бұрын
Jane Wyatt who plays Spocks mother in the original Star Trek series and films was also the mom in the 1950's television series 'Father Knows Best'
@richardmark9161
26 күн бұрын
One of the very last film roles for the great Dame Judith Anderson as the Vulcan High Priestess. One of her first truly great film roles was Mrs. Danvers in the 1940 Alfred Hitchcock classic REBECCA. Highly recommended.
@melenatorr
19 күн бұрын
The impressive Vulcan priestess is none other than classically trained, acclaimed stage actress Judith Anderson. In rare movie appearances, she scared the living daylights out of previous generations as Mrs. Danvers in "Rebecca" and showed other colors in "Laura" and "Cat on A Hot Tin Roof". She, is, however, probably most famous for her onstage performance as "Medea", which my mom saw and never forgot.
@michaelvincent4280
26 күн бұрын
Been doing ST all day long. Family since 1966. And friends and mentors to a 13 year old boy. Still makes me smile.
@billallen1307
26 күн бұрын
An entire movie to bring Spock back to life. Now onward. 4 is worth the wait.
@TimSmith-uc4pk
26 күн бұрын
R.I.P. James B. Sikking
@chadsheldon6470
19 күн бұрын
Courtney, you are a breath of fresh air. You appreciate movies for the story and their characters. Thank you for giving Star Trek a chance. I know we would be friends if we knew each other. I look forward to more of your reactions. ❤
@AlpineWoods
26 күн бұрын
This was the first Star Trek movie I saw when I was a little kid, and it made me into a Trekkie at a very young age.
@alanbayles1218
20 күн бұрын
I can remember seeing this when it came out at the cinema. All I can remember after the film finished, walking out, numb, traumatised over the destruction of the Enterprise 😥
@LesterManley-s9n
26 күн бұрын
Yes, Sept 8, 1966 Star Trek premiered with The Man Trap. LLAP
@brandonbullington
5 күн бұрын
You know, when my dad saw this the first time in the cinema, what got him so upset was the part where they blow up the Enterprise. He learned to like it better since he’s watched that movie often.
@travisboyle285
26 күн бұрын
I really love this movie. The McCoy and Spock scene at the end always gets me. One line of dialogue that was incorrect in the movie was that the Enterprise was 40 years old by this time not 20 years old.
@aliceharper707
15 күн бұрын
Fun fact!: And the TV show scarecrow and Mrs. King, we had several Star Trek actors. Robin Curtis was in one episode, Bibi Besch was in an episode, Robert picardo was in an episode. I'm trying to think of any other Star Trek actors. There were probably more but I can't off the top of my head. Think of any others but it's always been fun to watch scarecrow and Mrs. King and pick those actors out and see them and have fun with it.
@danielceo4694
26 күн бұрын
Happy Star Trek Day! Yes, that's right 55 years ago, Star Trek premiered on NBC in 1966 on this date! I was sooo looking forward to this reaction. I kept checking my notifications for when this video would come up. I've been loving your Trek journey but this movie is very near and dear to my heart and here's why: this was the first Star Trek film I ever saw in a movie theater! I was 7 years old, and I had seen reruns of pretty much every episode of the original series. When my parents saw how much I loved the show (which was as much as I love Star Wars), they rented the first two movies. And the local UHF channel 50 used to show the first two Trek films every Thanksgiving, after the parades were done. And once I had seen Wrath Of Khan, it wasn't too long before ST3 was announced on the news. Now, you could imagine my sheer joy when I saw the news and, with Spock being my favorite character ever, I was even more excited when they also announced that Leonard Nimoy directed the movie! I still remember going to the old Wayside Theater in Ann Arbor, I remember what the theater looked like, I remember the popcorn. For me and my family, this was one of the biggest movies to see that summer--and, boy, was the summer of '84 filled with great movies to see! Gremlins, Ghostbusters, The Last Starfighter, Indiana Jones and the Temple Of Doom, Karate Kid! And, now, the next Star Trek movie!?!!? Yes, please! I loved it, was not disappointed. What you said during your comments was exactly how I felt watching this film. Exactly! Loved seeing Christopher Lloyd as the Klingon Commander Kruge! What happened to David was sad, but I later realized that the whole David Marcus-Genesis destruction was the Frankensteinian myth writ large in Trek lore. As to why the Klingons killed Valkris, well, the Genesis information was so top secret even the Klingons knew that unauthorized people couldn't view it. As to why Kruge has to kill that mutated microbial-worm thing, you'll eventually find out that the Klingons always feel the need to prove their honor in just about any situation. But Spock's back. And wasn't that just the most heart-warming return you've ever seen? I'm sure you're going to enjoy Star Trek 4: The Voyage Home! Some things to keep in mind before you get into it: 1. The movie provides resolution to The Genesis Trilogy; 2. Kirk & crew will be traveling in Christopher Lloyd's vehicle; and 3. It is an '80s comedy! I hope this provides tantalizing clues and not any spoilers. Love your reactions! Live long and prosper!
@rmccombs66
26 күн бұрын
It was 58 Years ago. I was born in April 1966 so I should know how many years have passed since 1966.
@danielceo4694
26 күн бұрын
Ah, yes! My apologies! That's right, 58 years ago. Thank you!
@ChrisS-no3ft
26 күн бұрын
Hey Court! Awesome as usual! The opening recap is basically (for those who might not have seen it or forgot it has been 2 years after all) is a “last time on Star Trek…” kind of thing. And fir folks like yourself who are new, the recaps and reminders are a bit of context or exposition because this journey is very spiritual and philosophical in nature, so it helps the audience.
@charlesr63
26 күн бұрын
You were so emotional at the end of Khan 🥺 but yes Spock’s death was shocking 😱
@kingdave31
26 күн бұрын
I was 6 when this came out and it was the first Star Trek movie I ever saw. I was aware that Spock had died in Star Trek II but when we got to the theater and I saw the movie poster that featured a huge picture of Spock's face I figured he was probably going to be OK.
@SJHFoto
26 күн бұрын
I actually thought it might be a "greatest hits" of Spock's life as the crew searches for meaning (I guess I took the title too literally back then)
@FredtheDorfDorfman1985
22 күн бұрын
The reason Genesis revived Spock, and not David, is because when they sent Spock to the planet, the Genesis wave was still in effect. By the time David died, the Genesis wave was gone, and the planet was now destroying itself from the side effects of the protomatter that spoiled the experiment. There’s an inaccuracy in Star Trek II and III. In ST: II, Lt. Saavik orders them to take Enterprise out of maintenance dock at one quarter impulse power, which then shows a reuse of the ST: TMP leaving dock scene at maneuvering thruster speed, and the impulse vents are dark because impulse drive is not activated until they were well clear of the dock. In ST: III, Kirk orders one quarter impulse drive to back Enterprise out of spacedock, even though they’re moving at thruster speed, which is the only propulsion safe to use in docking facilities, because it’s slow, around 100-500 kph. One quarter impulse power would have given them only a few seconds before they hit the space doors. Regulations for maneuvering in and out of a dock is nothing faster than maneuvering thrusters. Even if you’re stealing a ship, thrusters are the only safe propulsion system for operating in a dock. In a later movie, Kirk orders a straight out launch from spacedock at one quarter impulse, and a junior officer quotes the regulation, which gets silenced and they do it anyway. Pluming the inside of the dock with impulse exhaust plasma is dangerous for the systems of smaller craft like travel pods, and Kirk would have been reprimanded for it, as well as for unsafe speed in a docking facility, no matter how famous you are. Also, they left out one detail. To keep Starfleet security from beaming onboard and preventing Kirk from stealing Enterprise, they would have had to raise Enterprise’s shields while leaving spacedock. They might have discovered a problem with the shields then, not be surprised with it during the Klingon attack. And, there’s no reason for the spacedock controllers to not be present at their duty stations during the theft, even if it was night shift, someone would always be on duty.
@JedWhitten
26 күн бұрын
Spock didn't know Genesis would bring his body back to life. He was just passing on his katra as Vulcans normally do before death. This refusion with the body is only possible if the body is somehow brought back to life without the katra, and "has not been done since ages past".
@IntergalacticDustBunny
26 күн бұрын
Some fun facts about this film: The bad guys in this film were originally going to be the Romulans, but it was dropped early on because it was feared that audiences who hadn't seen the TOS episodes would confuse them for Vulcans. When they switched the baddies to Klingons, the Bird of Prey ship was already designed so they simply called it the "Klingon Bird of Prey" even though the underside of it's wings has the feathering like the Romulan ship, as it was supposed to be the Modern version of the ship seen in the TOS episode "The Balance of Terror". Originally the Klingons were not supposed to have cloaking technology, but that was retconned for this film. Kirstie Alley did not want to play Saavik again after ST:II because she was one of the main characters in the Sitcom "Cheers", so when they asked her to reprise the role she asked for an obscene amount of money knowing they'd turn it down. They cast Robin Curtis, and a lot of fans didn't like her "replacing" a fan favorite character, and she was given a hard time for it. She did a few more acting gigs after Star Trek, but she quit acting and started a new career selling real estate. Personally, I think she played a better Vulcan than Kirstie Alley, Saavik was supposed to be half Romulan but that was never mentioned in the films, so I can only assume the idea was dropped.
@gallendugall8913
26 күн бұрын
So... this one... was supposed to be about the Romulans, not the Klingons, but Nimoy felt Klingons were more popular so the script was... not rewritten - the names were swapped. Thus the brutal totalitarian Klingons of TOS were erased and the nonsensical "Honor! Duty! Honor!" Klingons were born. This version of the Klingons was so insanely popular it spawned two decades of every sci-fi show having to have a "warrior" species in it.
@airmaildolphin7013
19 күн бұрын
16:02 One of my favorite pieces of music. So victorious and inspiring!
@benjauron5873
26 күн бұрын
The story behind the Bird of Prey is a story of frustration and executive meddling. The script required that the antagonists have a cloaked starship, so Plan A was to make the antagonists Romulans, as Romulans are the race associated with cloaked ships. So the Bird of Prey was designed to be a _Romulan_ vessel, carrying on their ornithological motifs. It was even painted green, which is the color most associated with Romulans. However, the studio executives said they wanted the villains to be Klingons instead because Klingons made better big-screen villains, what with their dash and swagger that Romulans lacked. So Plan B was to open with Captain Kruge and his crew _stealing_ the Romulan Bird of Prey from a Romulan stardock, and it was going to be a very theatrical high-action set piece that really established Kruge as a legit bad-ass and a worthy adversary to Kirk. But the studio execs said no way, that scene would be far too expensive to shoot. So Plan C was to just make the Bird of Prey a fully Klingon-designed ship, even though the Klingons have no avian themes in any of their nationalistic iconography nor ever used the color green in any way. It was still a great movie, and _Klingon_ Birds of Prey still play a major role in future Trek movies and series, but, quite frankly, I think we the fans were robbed by making the Bird of Prey a Klingon rather than a Romulan design. Logically, it just makes sense for a ship that's painted green and looks like a giant bird to be a Romulan ship and not a Klingon one.
@TimSmith-uc4pk
26 күн бұрын
The last Klingon is John Laroquette. He was in the movie stripes and is currently on the new Night Court sitcom.
@aliceharper707
15 күн бұрын
Just remember that all of these effects were practical. This was before CGI.
@williamjones6031
25 күн бұрын
1. Leonard Nimoy was happy when Spock was killed off because he was tired of playing that character and agreed to bring him back on the condition that he Direct this movie. 2. It's great seeing Christopher Lloyd play a heavy. 3. I will go to my grave that "The Wrath of Khan" is the best of all of the Star Trek movies.
@redpillfreedom6692
18 күн бұрын
The reason for the recap at the beginning is because home video wasn't as widely available in the 1980s as today, so recaps were necessary to remind the audience of crucial details.
@Alexandrashepiro
26 күн бұрын
Happy Star Trek Day!!! Yup..saw this in theaters back in '84...I still remember the Audible Gasp from the room when The Enterprise blew! It was a huge WTF MOMENT! Krudge is One of Christopher Lloyd's 4 Greatest Roles... (Reverend Jim from Taxi, Doc Brown, and Judge Doom from Roger Rabbit) being the other Three!) rip David/Merritt Butrick John Larroquette who plays the Lone Klingon Survivor "Maltz" , is best known for his Emmy winning role as Dan Fielding on "Night Court".
@pedroervert
23 күн бұрын
I adore the music. Especially the stealing enterprise scene. Lloyd is great.
@mattx449
26 күн бұрын
This one was not considered very good when released, but honestly it’s grown on me over the years.
@royroblox
26 күн бұрын
Definitely equal for rewatchability / enjoyment as ST2 for me
@benjauron5873
26 күн бұрын
Remember the captured Bird of Prey's cloaking device. That becomes important later... _much_ later...
@Alexandrashepiro
26 күн бұрын
I can't wait to see your reaction to Star Trek IV!!
@lexiburrows8127
26 күн бұрын
I can't wait for VI.
@BarronK-kb8td
26 күн бұрын
Maltz the only Klingon to live is played by John larroquette from Night Court!
@mngentry
14 күн бұрын
And in the revival of the show, he dresses up as a Klingon, make-up and all, in one episode.
@BarronK-kb8td
13 күн бұрын
@@mngentry Awesome!
@BarronK-kb8td
26 күн бұрын
Star Trek 4 will blow you away! My favorites movies go 2,4,6,1,3,5!
@rccraig7580
26 күн бұрын
Gotta love the high-quality surveillance/security feeds in engineering. Just think if that system had been damaged Kirk may have taken longer to find out what happened to McCoy or its possible, he would have never discovered what truly happened to McCoy before Spock death.
@jonadabtheunsightly
23 күн бұрын
IN the previous movie, we never actually saw the mind meld happen. The camera cut away right before he did it.
@tomiwilliams4273
25 күн бұрын
I cried when Spock died in Wrath of Khan in the theater. . .
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