Release Date: Jan 27, 2004 Region: 1 Runtime: 113 mins Studio: Paramount Pictures Audio:
ENGLISH: Dolby Digital 5.1 [CC] ENGLISH: Dolby Digital Surround [CC] FRENCH: Dolby Digital Surround
Video:
Widescreen 1.85:1 Color (Anamorphic)
Subtitles: English Packaging: Custom Case Rating: PG Features:
Disc 1: Audio Commentary by Star Trek VI Director Nicholas Meyer and Screenwriter Denny Martin Flinn Text Commentary by Michael & Denise Okuda, Co-Authors of The Star Trek Encyclopedia Motion Menus Scene Selection Disc 2:Movie Making:Six Stories from Star Trek VI (Six Featurettes) The Star Trek Universe:Conversations with Nicholas MeyerKlingons: Conjuring the LegendFederation OperativesPenny's Toy BoxTogether Again Art Imitates Life:The Perils of Peacemaking A Farewell:DeForest Kelley: A TributeOriginal Cast & Crew Interviews Promotional Material:Theatrical Trailers1991 Convention Presentation by Nicholas Meyer Archives:Production GalleryStoryboards
Star Trek V left us nowhere to go but up, and with the return of Wrath of Khan director Nicholas Meyer, this sixth instalment restored the movie series to its classic blend of space opera, intelligent plotting and engaging interaction of stalwart heroes and menacing villains. Borrowing its subtitle (and several lines of dialogue) from Shakespeare, the movie finds Admiral Kirk (William Shatner) and his fellow Enterprise crew members on a diplomatic mission to negotiate peace with the revered Klingon Chancellor Gorkon (David Warner). When the high-ranking Klingon and several officers are ruthlessly murdered, blame is placed on Kirk and crew. The subsequent investigation, which sees Spock taking on the mantle of Sherlock Holmes, uncovers an assassination plot masterminded by the nefarious Klingon General Chang (Christopher Plummer) in an effort to disrupt a historic peace summit. As this political plot unfolds, Star Trek VI takes on a sharp-edged tone, with Kirk and Spock confronting their opposing views of diplomacy and testing their bonds of loyalty when a Vulcan officer is revealed to be a traitor. With a dramatic depth befitting what was to be the final movie mission of the original Enterprise crew, this film took the veteran cast out in respectably high style, with the torch being passed to the crew of Star Trek: The Next Generation in the following movie, Star Trek: Generations. --Jeff Shannon, Amazon.com