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Review
STAR TREK III: THE SEARCH FOR SPOCK
Rating:  
USA. 1984.
Director Leonard Nimoy, Screenplay/Producer Harve Bennett, Story Harve Bennett & Leonard Nimoy, Photography Charles Correll, Music James Horner, Visual Effects Industrial Light and Magic (Supervisor Ken Ralston), Model Supervisor Steve Gawley, Special Effects Bob Dawson, Makeup Effects The Burman Studio, Art Direction John E. Chilberg II. Production Company Paramount.
Cast:
William Shatner (Admiral James T. Kirk), DeForest Kelley (Dr Leonard McCoy), James Doohan (Mr Scott), George Takei (Sulu), Walter Koenig (Chekov), Nichelle Nichols (Uhura), Christopher Lloyd (Commander Kruge), Robin Curtis (Saavik), Merritt Buttrick (David Marcus), Mark Lenard (Sarek), Leonard Nimoy (Spock)
Plot: Following Spocks death on the Genesis planet, the Enterprise returns to space-dock. But there Kirk is contacted by Spocks father Sarek who tells him that Spock is not dead but that he transferred his soul into the mind of Dr McCoy just before he died, something that has ended the desperately confused McCoy in the psych ward. Defying Starfleet orders, Kirk and his command crew break McCoy out, steal the Enterprise and set out to retrieve Spocks body from the Genesis planet so that his soul might be reunited. But the rescue is complicated by the Klingons who want the secret of Genesis, while the planet itself in the process of disintegration due to instabilities in the Genesis device.
The Search for Spock was the third of the Star Trek films and comes as a disappointment. In the previous entry Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan (1982), the series had taken the radical step of killing off the series most popular and fascinating character, the emotionless and coolly logical half-human, half-alien Spock. It was a move that had fans up in arms even before the film opened. With The Search for Spock, Leonard Nimoy takes the opportunity of his characters on-screen absence to step into the directors chair. Nimoy had directed episodes of various tv series such as Mission: Impossible (1966-73) and The Powers of Matthew Starr (1982-3) but The Search for Spock became his feature film debut. And once there he does quite a reasonable job, demonstrating a good eye for dramatic set-up.
The Search for Spock is a comfortable, easy film. Its clearly pitched at the Star Trek fans. The regulars slip back into their roles effortlessly and Nimoys new wrinkle is to allow each to come on with their own particular scene like a comedy ensemble. It proves amusing, although only Nichelle Nichols gives any performance worth sitting up and paying attention to in one fine scene pulling a phaser on a cocky junior officer. And William Shatner, the king of over-actors, at least gets the opportunity to conduct the role of Kirk with some extra depths. This and the previous film may be some of the best acting that Shatner has ever done.
But for all that The Search for Spock also disappoints. It is too comfortable, pitched too easily at the fans. And indeed he legacy of Leonard Nimoys creative influence was to turn the Star Trek film series into a vehicle controlled by the regular cast from the tv series but once having done so the series settled into a far too easy middle-age that became more about the actors showing up and never advancing beyond their character parts, while any sense of galactic adventuring and exploration of ideas that the original series had represented were allowed to fall by the wayside. This is surely indicative in this films plot and even title having killed off Spock in the previous film was there any real doubt that Spock, the series most popular character, would not come back here? You cant slam the film for not playing to fan appeal in this regard, but you can criticize it for the shabbily unimaginative way in which it does so. You cant help but think that the original series and any of the modern Star Trek tv incarnations would have used the opportunity to delve into questions of the soul, of reincarnation. But the film leadenly ignores any of these and proceeds to its intended path of reviving the character in the most pedestrian and conceptually unengaging way possible. It is certainly light, entertaining fun and Nimoy has a deft hand with the comedy and dramatic action but as anything other than a film intended for its fan audience, it lacks.
The other Star Trek films are: Star Trek The Motion Picture (1979), Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan (1982), The Voyage Home: Star Trek IV (1986), Star Trek V: The Final Frontier (1989) and Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country (1991). Star Trek: Generations (1994), Star Trek: First Contact (1996), Star Trek: Insurrection (1998) and Star Trek: Nemesis (2002) are films spun off from Star Trek: The Next Generation. Star Trek (2009) was a reboot of the classic series, recasting it with younger faces and telling an origin story. The other Star Trek tv series are Star Trek: The Next Generation (1987-94), Star Trek: Deep Space Nine (1992-9), Star Trek: Voyager (1995-2001) and Enterprise (2001-5). Last updated: Wednesday, 13 May 2009
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