Monday, July 17, 2006

The Final Frontier


A long-overlooked chapter of the “Star Trek” saga is finally making its way to DVD.

Paramount Home Entertainment will release all 22 episodes of Star Trek: The Animated Series in a $35 four-disc set Nov. 21, making it the last “Star Trek” property to receive an official DVD release.

The series originally ran for two seasons on NBC from 1973 to 1974, and featured the stars of the 1966-69 series providing the voices for their well-known characters, including William Shatner and Capt. James T. Kirk and Leonard Nimoy as Spock.

“It was the first time the cast was together after the first show ended,” said producer Lou Scheimer. “The first reading was like a reunion.”

It almost didn’t happen. “Star Trek” creator Gene Roddenberry’s relationship with Paramount had been strained following NBC’s cancellation of the live-action series.

Enter Scheimer, co-founder of Filmation Associates, who got in touch with Roddenberry through a mutual friend.

“I suggested we do a Saturday morning show. He said he’d love to do it,” Scheimer said. “He was involved in ‘ongoing negotiations’ with Paramount and they weren’t really talking much. The animated show brought them back together.”

As a result, renewed fan interest in “Star Trek” sparked the franchise’s revival with Star Trek: The Motion Picture in 1979, and subsequently four more television series and nine more films.

“It revitalized ‘Star Trek,’” Scheimer said. “It showed there was value in it.”

Ironically, the animated show is not considered part of the overall “Star Trek” storyline, at the behest of Roddenberry.

Many of the episodes were written by Roddenberry and the original series writers, and the show won a daytime Emmy in 1975 for Outstanding Children’s Series.

“Why we got the Emmy for a kids show, I don’t know,” Scheimer said. “It wasn’t really a kids show. It was designed to be the same kind of show as the nighttime show, with the same type of messages.”

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

YESSS!!!

I love this! Octo and I have discussed this; the shows are based on a bunch of scripts that were intended for the fourth season of TOS. That's why there's a second tribbles episode and a third Mudd episode, written by the original authors. Plus D. C. Fontana's time portal flashback story in which Spock meets the boy Spock (which is the only part of TAS considered canon).

They had all the original actors and all the original writers. So it's Trek (especially given that miserable production values were the norm of Trek until 1979).

The animation is so rudimentary that you have to do a lot of "filling in" mentally, but, again, Star Trek makes us do that all the time.

I repeat: YESSS!!!

JPX said...

I have these on bootleg and they're terrific! You actually forget that you're not watching TOS. That Spock story you refer to is great! I thought the Mudd story was also considered canon? I also love the animation - it's that same style as the 60s Amazing Spider-Man show, which is also a lot of fun.

Malnurtured Snay said...

I have, I think, never seen so much as an episode of TAS -- or if I did, it was so long ago I don't remember. TVShowsonDVD.com has the actual box art up now -- I'm excited about this release!

Octopunk said...

Whenever I saw this as a kid, I always saw THE SAME EPISODE. It had kid Spock running into a weird nest of snaky, stag beetly things.

Later, I would experience the same phenomenon with Mork and Mindy. That is, I saw the same episode my first and second time ever seeing the show. And it was the one where Mork runs into that weird nest of snaky things.

Malevolent

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