The Enterprise boldly going where no man had gone before.
Star Trek collectively refers to six
science fiction television series spanning 726 episodes, ten
motion pictures, and hundreds of novels, video games, and other works of
fiction all set within the same
fictional universe created by
Gene Roddenberry in the early- to mid-
1960s.
It depicts an optimistic future in which humankind has overcome sickness,
racism,
poverty,
intolerance, and warfare on Earth; the central characters explore the galaxy, finding new worlds and meeting new civilizations, while helping to spread
peace and understanding.
Star Trek is one of the most popular names in the history of science fiction entertainment, and one of the most popular franchises in television history.
Television series
Star Trek originated as a television series in 1966 There have been five
live action Star Trek series and an
animated series, altogether comprising (as of
May 2005) a total of 725 individual aired
episodes (not including the original unaired
pilot) and thirty
seasons worth of television.
Star Trek (1966-1969)
The USS Enterprise NCC-1701
Star Trek debuted on
NBC on
September 8, 1966.
Created by
Gene Roddenberry and starring
William Shatner,
Leonard Nimoy and
DeForest Kelley,
James Doohan,
George Takei,
Nichelle Nichols,
Walter Koenig it told the tale of the crew of the
starship Enterprise from the
United Federation of Planets and their adventures "to boldly go
where no man has gone before".
Initially, it was not successful; ratings were low and advertising revenue was lackluster.
However, when threats of cancellation loomed in the show's second season, the show's devoted
fanbase conducted an unprecedented campaign, convincing NBC to produce a third season.
The last episode aired on
June 3, 1969.
The series subsequently became phenomenally popular in syndication.
To distinguish this first series from the sequels which followed, it has in recent years become known as
Star Trek: The Original Series, abbreviated as
ST:TOS or
TOS.
Star Trek (1973-1974)
The USS Enterprise NCC-1701 in animated form
The series was aired under the name
Star Trek, but it has become widely known as
Star Trek: The Animated Series (or abbreviated as
ST:TAS or
TAS).
It was produced by
Filmation and ran for two seasons with a total of twenty-two half-hour episodes.
It featured most of the original cast performing the voices for their characters.
While the freedom of animation afforded large alien landscapes and exotic lifeforms, budget constraints were a major concern and animation quality was poor.
A few episodes are especially notable due to contributions from well-known science fiction authors.
The series is not considered to be
canon, which has caused controversy among some fans. However, the episode "Yesteryear" is considered a partial exception concerning the events depicted in Spock's youth. In addition, elements of the animated series have worked their way into canon, such as Kirk's middle name, "Tiberius," first revealed in TAS and made official in
Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country.
Star Trek: Enterprise has also incorporated several TAS concepts into canon.
Star Trek: Phase II (1978; unproduced)
Star Trek: Phase II was set to air in 1978 as the flagship series of a proposed Paramount television network, and 12 episode scripts were written before production was due to begin. This series would have put most of the original crew back aboard the
Enterprise for a second five-year mission, save for Spock as Leonard Nimoy did not agree to return; a full-blooded Vulcan named Xon was planned as a replacement, although it was still hoped that Nimoy would make guest appearances. Sets were constructed and several minutes of test footage were filmed. However, partly due to the popularity of the recently-released
Star Wars, Paramount decided to make a
Star Trek film instead of a weekly television series. The first script formed the basis of
Star Trek: The Motion Picture, while two others were eventually adapted as episodes of
Star Trek: The Next Generation.
Star Trek: The Next Generation (1987-1994)
The USS Enterprise NCC-1701-D
Star Trek: The Next Generation (also known, colloquially, as The Next Generation,
ST:TNG or
TNG) is set nearly a century later and features a new starship (also named
Enterprise) and a new crew.
It premiered on
September 28, 1987 with the two-hour pilot episode "
Encounter at Farpoint" and ran for seven seasons, ending with the final two-part episode "
All Good Things..." on
May 29, 1994.
The show gained a considerable following during its initial run.
Even during its initial run, the show was produced solely for syndication.
Star Trek: The Next Generation was the highest rated of all the Star Trek series, and was the number one syndicated show during the last few years of its original run. Many fans, both casual and "hard-core" often treat The Next Generation as a kind of Golden Age of Star Trek, primarily because of its relatively widespread acceptance and viewer base (as opposed to later series).
Star Trek: Deep Space Nine (1993-1999)
Space station Deep Space Nine (DS9)
Star Trek: Deep Space Nine (''ST:DS9'' or
DS9) ran for seven seasons.
It introduced
Avery Brooks as Commander (and later in the series, Captain)
Benjamin Sisko, the first African-American in the commanding role of a
Star Trek series.
It chronicles the events surrounding the space station
Deep Space Nine.
In the first episode, the crew discovers the presence of a nearby stable
wormhole which provides immediate travel to and from the distant Gamma Quadrant.
This immediately makes the station an important tactical asset, as well as a vital center of commerce with the largely-unexplored area of space.
Deep Space Nine sheds some of the utopian themes that embodied the previous versions of
Star Trek, and focuses more on war, religion, political compromise, and other modern issues.
Due to its generally darker theme, many fans of the generally light
Next Generation failed to return as an audience.
This was the first
Trek series to be established without any direct input from Gene Roddenberry.
Star Trek: Voyager (1995-2001)
USS Voyager NCC-74656
Star Trek: Voyager (also known as
ST:VOY,
ST:VGR or
VOY) was produced for seven seasons, and is the only
Star Trek series to have had a female captain as a lead character.
The series follows the adventures of the
USS Voyager and her crew, joined by
Maquis resistance fighters, who have all become stranded in the Delta Quadrant, seventy-five thousand
light-years from
Earth.
Unless they can find a shortcut, it will take them seventy-five years to return to known space. The finale of the show showed that the starship had in fact made it back to Earth. Captain Janeway, played by the series star, Kate Mulgrew, made a brief cameo appearance in the Star Trek feature Nemesis. Although
Voyagers ratings were initially solid, they fell dramatically as the show progressed. It was during this shows run, that the modern "Berman bashing" among some Star Trek fans began to hit its strong stride, coinciding with the growth in popularity of online discussion forums.
Star Trek: Enterprise (2001-2005)
Enterprise NX-01
Star Trek: Enterprise (named simply
Enterprise during its first two seasons, and abbreviated as
ST:ENT or
ENT) is a
prequel to the other
Star Trek series.
The pilot episode, "
Broken Bow", takes place ten years before the founding of the
Federation, about halfway between the events shown in the movie
Star Trek: First Contact and the original
Star Trek series.
This series depicts the exploration of space by the crew of the Earthship
Enterprise, a new
NX class starship that is able to go farther and faster than any humans had previously gone.
It presents situations not entirely unfamiliar to
Star Trek fans, but which allow its characters to face them unencumbered by the experience and rules which have built up over the following years of
Trek history.
Ratings for
Enterprise were never particularly strong, and - like the original series - fan support during its second and third seasons helped keep it on the air, but ultimately the series was cancelled after four seasons.
Motion pictures
The
Enterprise as depicted in films 1-6.
The USS Enterprise NCC-1701-E, from films 8-10
A total of ten
Star Trek movies have to date been produced by
Paramount Pictures.
A common urban myth among fans is that the even-numbered
Star Trek films are superior to the odd-numbered
Star Trek films. This rule of thumb is most easily applicable to the first few films:
Star Trek II and
IV are usually at or near the top of the fan favorites, while
I and
V are usually at the bottom (though
I has since received quite a bit of positive reevaluation in the wake of an acclaimed "Director's Edition" revision released on DVD).
Some believe that an exception to the "even number" rule is
Nemesis, the tenth film, which had the lowest box office proceeds of all ten films and is one of the most criticially derided films of the series, although it sold well when released on
DVD in 2003.
As of March 2005, work has begun on a script as a possible basis for an as-yet untitled
Star Trek XI. Although American releases of the films were no longer numbered following the sixth film, European releases continued numbering the films.
An uncertain future for the franchise
Predictions of the demise of
Star Trek are nothing new. As early as 1993-1994, when
Star Trek: Deep Space Nine failed to generate the high ratings of its predecessor, magazines such as
Entertainment Weekly predicted the end of the franchise. The near-cancellation of
Star Trek: Voyager in the mid-
1990s led to more such predictions.
Enterprise was widely reported in the media to be on the verge of cancellation after each of its first three seasons.
However, due to the cancellation of
Enterprise and the poor showing of the 2002 film
Nemesis, executive producer
Rick Berman has stated that Paramount intends to rest the franchise (film and television) for at least three years.
Many Trek fans want Berman and the other executive producer
Brannon Braga to be replaced.
Babylon 5 creator
J. Michael Straczynski, former
Star Trek writer
Ronald D. Moore, and current
Enterprise executive producer
Manny Coto have been suggested as possible replacements. In an ironic twist to the fan-based efforts to bring back Trek in the
1960s and
1970s, there are groups of fans who feel that the concept has run its course and who are actively seeking the end of
Star Trek.
Reruns of
The Next Generation and
Deep Space Nine are aired regularly on
Spike TV in the United States, while
TOS,
TNG,
DS9 and
Voyager air daily in Canada on
Space: The Imagination Station, which has also purchased
Enterprise for daily rebroadcasts starting in the fall of 2005.
Cast members and fans have suggested that even if there are no further
Star Trek series or movies, the franchise may continue in
television movies, mini-series, specials, and other forms of media.
Future sequels to the original series
There is some desire among fans to bring back the character of Captain Kirk, as played by
William Shatner, to give him a more dignified end than that shown in
Star Trek: Generations.
George Takei and fans have made frequent attempts to convince the studio to create a series based on
Captain Sulu's voyages on the
Excelsior, but, despite support from fans, it has enjoyed little success. Sulu and the Excelsior originally appeared in the film
Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country as well as in an episode of
Star Trek: Voyager ("Flashback") but this did not lead to a new series. Sulu later appeared in the video game
Star Trek: Shattered Universe set in the
Mirror, Mirror alternate universe.
Future sequels to The Next Generation
Next Generation stars
Marina Sirtis,
Patrick Stewart, and
Jonathan Frakes have suggested that no more
TNG films will be produced;
Brent Spiner is also no longer interested in reprising the character of Data. However, Spiner portrayed
Arik Soong, an ancestor of the creator of his character Data, in
Enterprise's fourth season, and both Sirtis and Frakes reprise their
TNG roles for the
Enterprise finale. Spiner reprises his role as Data in a speaking, off-screen part in the finale.
Continuation of Enterprise
In
November 2004, Paramount announced that it would be offering the first four seasons of
Enterprise, which aired its final episode on
May 13, 2005, in
television syndication as well as on
DVD in 2005. The first season DVDs were released in United States on May 3rd, 2005.
There is some consensus among Star Trek fans that the fourth and final season of
Enterprise was far superior and more "Trek-like" to the previous three seasons, and that continuation of the program under the new writing style would have stood a chance of acquiring better ratings during a fifth season.
A campaign by
Enterprise fans was mounted to have the show aired on the
Sci-Fi Channel, which was rumored to be interested in the show (although
TV Guide reported otherwise). Berman, however, stated that Paramount is not interested in shopping the show around to other networks.
One campaign, Trek United, attempted to raise funds to finance a fifth season, raising pledges and cash donations of more than $3.1 million (U.S.) but its proposal which would have seen a fifth season jointly produced by Paramount along with Canadian and British production houses, was rejected by the studio. It has been reported that the decision to cancel
Enterprise after its fourth season may have been made by Paramount as early as the 2002-2003 season, while lead actor
Scott Bakula has gone on record as stating that management changes at Paramount in 2003-2004 left the
Star Trek franchise without strong support at the studio. In April 2005, he claimed that up until 2003-2004 Paramount had actually intended for the cast of
Enterprise to become the focus for the next
Star Trek film.
http://www.scifi.com/scifiwire2005/index.php?category=0&id=30849
New feature film
Rick Berman revealed in 2003 that preliminary work had begun on an eleventh
Star Trek feature film. Rumors circulated that this film would be a prequel, perhaps titled
Starfleet Academy or
Starfleet Command, involving
Spock, Captain
Kirk, and Dr. McCoy played by new actors. Other rumors suggested the film would take place between the events of
Enterprise and
TOS, perhaps involving the Romulan War and featuring a new cast. However, rumors of such a
prequel have circulated several times during the
1990s without result.
In late 2004, Paramount indicated that no plans were in place for a new film, and it was reported that the studio had rejected Berman's idea of a film featuring a new cast and crew, indicating that it preferred a film featuring familiar faces.
In late February 2005, Berman told
Variety that pre-production of an eleventh
Star Trek film was underway and that screenwriter
Erik Jendresen, producer Jordan Kerner, and former Paramount Television president Kerry McCluggage were attached to the project.
http://www.trektoday.com/news/230205_01.shtml Berman said the film would focus on new characters, rather than any from previous series, and would take place in a time period before the original
Star Trek (as
Enterprise did before it). Jendresen has since confirmed such reports. However, it is still uncertain whether Jendresen's script will be approved by Paramount executives; in January 2005 it was reported by some websites that the studio had rejected a similar proposal, though Berman denied this.
http://www.trektoday.com/news/180105_01.shtml
In a May 2005 interview for the UK
Star Trek Magazine, Berman stated that he does not expect
Trek XI, if it is actually produced, to be released for several years.
http://trekweb.com/articles/2005/05/27/4297698c2c344.shtml
Video games
In 1998,
Viacom entered into an agreement with
Activision to produce
Star Trek video games. Many games were released under this agreement, but in 2003, Activision filed a lawsuit against Viacom stating that they were not holding up to their end of the bargain because the
Star Trek franchise was not as valuable as it once was. Activision cancelled the contract and sought compensation for losses. In March 2005, an agreement was reached and all lawsuits were dropped, but the other terms have been deemed confidential
http://investor.activision.com/ReleaseDetail.cfm?ReleaseID=157785
In 2004,
Perpetual Entertainment announced plans for an
MMORPG based in the
Star Trek universe. This will be the first game of this type to be based on
Star Trek. Currently, the game is tentatively titled
Star Trek Online and is expected to be set roughly ten years after the events of
Nemesis.
Novels
Pocket Books, current publishers of officially licensed fiction based upon all the series (as well as numerous original
Trek series of its own), plans to continue publishing original novels for the foreseeable future.
However, soon after
Enterprise was cancelled, the company
announced that it was halving the number of
Star Trek novels it would be publishing, down to only one mass-market paperback per month, plus several trade paperbacks and hardcovers throughout the year.
Although book line editors stressed that the decision to reduce the number of books was made a year earlier and was not related to popularity/ratings problems within the franchise, the announcement was seen by some as another indication that the
Star Trek franchise is on the wane.
Despite this, however, the company maintains that it has ambitious plans for the line, including (in May 2005) the confirmation that an
Enterprise Relaunch series of novels is in the planning stages.
http://www.trektoday.com/news/180505_01.shtml
Other storylines
Although books, comic books, video games, and other material based on
Star Trek are generally considered "non-
canon", there are several which deserve mentioning, including a number of fan-made productions set within the Star Trek universe have been created for distribution over the Internet. None of these projects are licensed by Paramount, however the studio has reportedly loosened its stance on allowing them. See
Star Trek, other storylines for more detailed information about these productions.
See also
References
Star Trek may be the most documented entertainment franchise in history. Here are a few of the major reference works related to the production and influence of the franchise.
- The Making of Star Trek by Gene Roddenberry and Stephen E. Whitfield (Ballantine Books, 1968)
- Inside Star Trek: The Real Story by Herbert F. Solow and Robert H. Justman (Pocket Books, 1996)
- Star Trek Memories by William Shatner and Chris Kreski (HarperCollins, 1993)
- City on the Edge of Forever by Harlan Ellison (White Wolf Publishing, 1996)
- The World of Star Trek by David Gerrold (Ballantine Books, 1973; revised edition, Bluejay Books, 1984)
- Star Trek Lives! by Jacqueline Lichtenberg, Sondra Marshak, and Joan Winston (Bantam Books, 1975)
- On the Good Ship Enterprise: My 15 Years with Star Trek by Bjo Trimble (Donning Starblaze, 1983)
- The Making of the Trek Conventions by Joan Winston (Doubleday Books/Playboy Press, 1977)
- Future Perfect: How Star Trek Conquered Planet Earth by Jeff Greenwald (Viking Press, 1998)
- Get a Life! by William Shatner and Chris Kreski (Pocket Books, 1999)
- A Star Trek Catalog edited by Gerry Turnbull (Grosset & Dunlap, 1979)
- The Physics of Star Trek by Lawrence M. Krauss (Basic Books, 1995)
- I'm Working on That: A Trek from Science Fiction to Science Fact by William Shatner and Chip Walter (Pocket Books, 2002)
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