Star Trek V: The Final Frontier (1989)
Review by Doc Ezra
Film:
DVD:

Written by David Loughery
Directed by William Shatner
Starring William Shatner, Leonard Nimoy, DeForest Kelley, James Doohan, Walter Koenig, Nichelle Nichols, George Takei and David Warner

Features:

Released by: Paramount
Region: 1
Rating: PG
Anamorphic: Yes

My Advice: Star Trek completists will need it, all others can pass.

After a quest to save the whales in Star Trek IV, many were amazed to see an even weaker (and weirder) plot concept in The Final Frontier. Kirk, Spock, and McCoy (Shatner, Nimoy and Kelley) have their vacation to El Capitan interrupted when a psycho Vulcan (Laurence Luckinbill) hijacks the Enterprise to go on a quest to find God. Yes, really. Cooked up by Shatner (with help from Harve Bennett), the tale is at the very least out of keeping with Roddenberry's steadfastly atheist universe and at worst impossibly lame and goofy. Regarded by many as the worst Trek film (at least until the release of Nemesis, the film is poorly conceived and badly paced throughout, mixing healthy doses of pop psychology with hokey oversimplifications of humanity's quest for the divine.

While it's tempting to lay the blame at the feet of Shatner, who basically made a bid to direct this installment after having seen Nimoy's success with earlier flicks. There may well have been a touch of Hollywood ego in the mix, and an attempt not to be upstaged by one of his "supporting cast." Unfortunately, too many other people went along for this ride to put it all on James Tiberius. Harve Bennett could have stopped this mess at any point, but enthusiastically followed Shatner over the cliff. Likewise, screenwriter Loughery was a nearly untested talent to be given the scripting reins on such a storied and valuable franchise, and doesn't seem to have been able to correct the excesses of the story's concept (or he simply got over-ruled as the "new guy" in the franchise).

Despite the story flaws, the performances are as solid as ever from the crew of the Federation's most famous starship. The soft spot in the acting comes from Luckinbill, who overplays his part from beginning to end as the psychotic Sybok, which takes a fairly silly character and elevates it to the realm of tragically stupid, pushing the whole "driven demagogue" angle 'til it breaks under the strain. George Murdock as the gibberingly insane God at the end of the universe doesn't help matters much, either.

The only real saving grace here is the bonus disc, which is loaded with good content, as all the Star Trek special editions have been. In fairness, the features here are a bit weaker than some of the previous installments, several of which featured discussions with NASA scientists about the issues addressed by the film. This may simply be because Paramount couldn't find any credible religious experts willing to talk about a film that portrays the Creator of the Universe as a petulant child that can be destroyed by a couple of well-placed phaser blasts and proton torpedoes. There are still some solid features here, and taken as a whole along with the commentary track, viewers fascinated by how this train wreck happened can piece together the whole sordid story.

Trek completists will want to add this one to their collection, but more casual fans should probably just stay away entirely. If you happen to be an afficianado of bad sci-fi, this makes a solid rental if only for the special features' "anatomy of a bad movie" lesson. Given later releases in the franchise, you'll shudder to think that it actually got worse than this installment.



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