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Malayalam Movie Download Star Trek

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Malayalam Movie Download Star Trek


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A 1960's sci-fi action adventure series set in the 23rd century based around the crew of the USS Enterprise, representing the United Federation of Planets (including earth) on a five-year mission in outer space to explore new worlds, seek new life and new civilizations, and to boldly go where no one has gone before. The Enterprise is commanded by handsome and brash Captain James Tiberius "Jim" Kirk. Kirk's two best friends are Commander Spock (last name unpronounceable to humans) the ship's half-human/half-Vulcan Science Officer and First/Executive Officer (i.e. second-in-command) from the planet Vulcan, and Chief Medical Officer, Dr. Leonard H. "Bones" McCoy. They along with a crew of approximately 430, including helmsman Lieutenant Hikaru Kato Sulu, navigator Ensign Pavel Andreievich Chekov, Officer Lieutenant Nyota Uhura, and chief engineer Lieutenant Commander Christopher Jorgensen "Scotty" Scott -- confront strange alien races, friendly and hostile alike, as they explore unknown worlds. the Enterprise battles aliens, megalomaniac computers, time paradoxes, psychotic murderers, and even Khan. The series is known for looking at then (1960's) hot topics such as Sex, War, God, Religion, Politics and Racism and other things that make up the human condition through a lens of the future. The 80 episode TV series which was produced from 1966 to 1969 has now cult characters and has fans all over the world. Captain James T. Kirk and the crew of the Starship Enterprise explore the galaxy and defend the United Federation of Planets. Here I am, thirty and something years later, watching again this classical cult TV series, now on DVD. In the 70's, I felt in love for "Star Trek" in network television, becoming a great fan of this series. Later, with VHS and cable TV, I taped all the episodes. Along the last years, I bought some episodes on DVD, released in USA. And now, I have just bought the three seasons on Brazilian DVD.

I have just finished watching the First Season, and I was amazingly excited watching again (how many times? I can not even guess…) the journeys of the USS Enterprise, commanded by her powerful Captain James T. Kirk (William Shatner, a horrible actor that shines in this role) and his number one, the bright Lt. Commander Spock (Leonard Nimoy). Together with the sentimental Lt. Cmdr. Leonard H. 'Bones' McCoy, M.D (DeForest Kelley), the command of the starship has strength, brain and feelings, as if they were a perfect man. They boldly go with the millions of worldwide viewers where no man has gone before.

The First Season on DVD has eight DVDs, with twenty nine episodes and the following Extra: "The Birth of a Timeless Legacy" ("O Nascimento de um Legado Histórico"); "Life Beyond Trek: William Shatner" ("A Vida Depois de Jornada: William Shatner"); "To Boldly Go – Season One" ("Audaciosamente Indo – Ano Um"); "Kiss 'n' Tell: Romance in the 23rd Century" ("Beijar e Falar: O Amor no Século 23"). My favorite episode of this season is "The Menagerie – Parts I and II", with the eternal Captain Christopher Pike. My vote is ten.

Title (Brazil): "Jornada nas Estrelas" ("Star Trek") WITH 'STAR TREK' CREATOR GENE RODDENBERRY How One Man's Vision of the Future Shaped Ours

"We've heard from many teachers that they used episodes of 'Star Trek' and concepts of 'Star Trek' in their science classrooms in order to engage the students." ―Patrick Stewart (Star, "Star Trek: The Next Generation")

GENE RODDENBERRY, who died of a heart attack at age 70 on Oct. 24, 1991, and whose ashes are now whirling around in space, lived to see his "Star Trek" creation become a cult over the course of a quarter of a century. It was a surprise, especially after the original TV series was bounced around from Thursdays to Fridays to Tuesdays over three short years before being ignominiously canceled by NBC. "Mr. Terrific: and "Iron Horse" were just two of the series to place ahead of "Star Trek" in the 1966-67 season, the show's first on television and its best year during that inaugural network run. But by November of 1982, when I spoke to Roddenberry, "Star Trek" was already cemented in the science fiction firmament, playing endlessly in reruns on TV (there were 79 original episodes), television spinoffs and various versions on the big screen. By then, to mix a science fiction metaphor, the force was already with Roddenberry before Hollywood began beaming down the likes of "Star Wars," "Close Encounters of the Third Kind" and "E.T.: The Extra-Terrestrial." Roddenberry was a man who came to fame the hard way. A native of El Paso, Texas, he dropped out of college, where he had transferred from pre-law to engineering, to enlist in the Army Air Corps during World War II. He was sent to Guadalcanal, where he flew B-17s in 89 missions and sorties. He began writing while in the South Pacific. After the war, he went to Pan Am as a commercial pilot, then abandoned that to become a Los Angeles police officer. "I wasn't like (cop-turned- author) Joe Wambaugh," Roddenberry told me. "Joe was a career cop. I got in because I wanted to be a writer, and get to know about life." After selling a script to the early-TV cop show, "Dragnet," he launched full-time into TV writing, eventually becoming head writer for the early TV "adult Western" "Have Gun, Will Travel." He went on to create "The Lieutenant" TV series (ironically starring Gary Lockwood, who would go on to greater fame in "2001: A Space Odyssey"), then "Star Trek." "If I were making the 'Star Trek' series again," he confided, "I'd like to get into what's happening into orbital space, and the amazing technology. Oh, I might touch on some social issues, I don't know. These are different times. The 'Star Trek' series was the first to really come out against the Vietnam War -- did you know that? What sets it apart from other science fiction shows, I think, and what appeals to people, is that we focused on the united brotherhood of living beings -- tolerance. That's a powerful statement. And we didn't deal with anti-heroes -- we went for the old-fashioned kind. And we weren't like 'Battlestar Gallactica,' which always has to do with a fighting future. People don't want to hear that." Roddenberry didn't consider himself a science fiction writer. His ideas stemmed from then-current issues framed in a positive way. "I don't have a scientific mind," he said. "Some people have good pitch. I just grew up with a certain ability to see how things might be going and make good guesses as to where they would end, that's all. That's what I would try to do again." He paid the price on that original 'Star Trek." "Those were 12-hour days, six days a week," he sighed. "I had children growing up I couldn't give the proper time to, time that they deserved. There were three divorces among people at our office at the studio, and there wasn't one of us who didn't, at one time or another, wind up in the hospital for exhaustion." In November 1991, shortly after Roddenberry died, I spoke with William Shatner, "Star Trek's" first Capt. James T. Kirk. By then, of course, "Star Trek" had taken off as a solid cult classic. "I never watch the old series," Shatner admitted. "It's like looking at old pictures of yourself, you know what I mean? I just don't like to do it." "TOS" is an abbreviation for "The Original Series". It is used by fans to diffferentiate between this series and any of the spin-off series. The other series are The Animated Series (TAS), The Next Generation (TNG), Deep Space Nine (DS9), Voyager (VOY), Enterprise (ENT) and Discovery (DSC). The original shooting model of the U.S.S. Enterprise measures 11 feet long, 5 feet wide, and 32 inches tall (3.4 x 1.5 x 0.8 metres), weighing in at about 200 pounds (90 kg). It is currently on display at the gift shop of the Smithsonian Institution, in Washington, D.C. The model of the U.S.S. Enterprise was designed by Walter M. "Matt" Jeffries. Nearly all Federation ships featured throughout "Star Trek" are based on this model. The crawl spaces on ships were named "Jeffries Tubes" in his honor. Desilu was a production company owned by Desi Arnaz and Lucille Ball. By the time "Star Trek" and "Mission: Impossible (1966)" went into production in 1966, Ms. Ball was the sole owner of the studio. A year later, Paramount bought out Desilu, but Desilu was allowed to continue using their name as long as their shows were in production.

Not every episode ends with Desilu. From "The Immunity Syndrome" through the end of the series, episodes end with the Paramount logo. A black and white print of "The Cage" was screened by Gene Roddenberry in September, 1966 on the "World Science Fiction Convention" along with "Where No Man Has Gone Before."

In the 1980s a half black-and-white half color print was made available on VHS tape edited together from "The Menagerie" and a black and white print of "The Cage".

An original, full-color negative was found in the Paramount archives in 1988 (some fans speculate that they simply colorized the black-and-white print, but it seems unlikely). This print - and the full pilot itself - first aired in the United States as part of a special during the strike-shortened second season of "Star Trek: The Next Generation (1987)," in October 1988. The first scheduled airing of the episode in the U.S. was on the Sci-Fi Channel in 1998.

The reason why some fans think that the color version was colorized is that they don't realize that the camera negative was silent. So what they did was to print the negative, and synch it with the soundtrack to the half black and white version (hence the quality of the sound changing like it had in the previous release). Season 1: Thursdays, 8:30 - 9:30pm. Season 2: Fridays, 8:30 - 9:30pm. Season 3: Fridays, 10:00 - 11:00pm. All times are Eastern/Pacific. (NBC aired 12 or 13 third season episodes during the summer of 1969 on Tuesdays at 7:30 - 8:30, replacing "The Jerry Lewis Show," a variety show. Most of them were third season repeats, but "Turnabout Intruder" had its first run in that time slot, on June 3, 1969.) No. "Star Trek" had no predetermined ending point. (Captain Kirk makes reference to a "five-year mission" in the introduction, but the show was not intended to stop after five seasons either.)

"Star Trek" was nearly canceled during both the first and second seasons. A very creative and aggressive letter-writing campaign to NBC was enough to save the series for a third season.

But the show was now scheduled in the Friday night 10-11 "suicide" slot. The slot was particularly bad for "Star Trek," whose typical fan would be going out on Friday night. (VCRs, of course, were not around in the late 60s.) After the third season, "Star Trek" was finally canceled.

Roddenberry promised that he would return to Producer status which he held in the first two pilots and the first nine regular episodes, if NBC puts the show to a decent, 7:30PM timeslot. However when NBC put Trek into the "suicide" slot of 10PM Fridays, he stepped off and had very little control over the series during the third season. According to William Shatner's book "Star Trek Memories," the campaign originated when Bjo and John Trimble approached Gene Roddenberry, and they asked him for ideas on how to reach other fans of the show (The Internet did not exist in those days, so it had to be letters, phone calls, and face-to-face contact). As a token for their efforts, Bjo Trimble had a walk-on role in Star Trek: The Motion Picture (1979) (1979). Fans of the show to this day regard the couple as the ones who saved "Star Trek." Though science-fiction conventions had been around long before "Star Trek" entered the scene (Gene Roddenberry premiered two episodes at a sci-fi convention), the first convention devoted to "Star Trek" took place in New York City, in 1972. Both were made up on the set by Leonard Nimoy. In the script of "The Enemy Within" Spock disabled the duplicate Kirk by pistol whipping him. Nimoy felt that it would be too "savage" and unsuitable for such a logical individual as Spock. He asked the director if he could improvise his own idea. He said yes, and Nimoy choreographed the now-famous neck pinch with Shatner for the episode. a5c7b9f00b

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