The show's interest in Earth history and mythologies enriches its own stab at immortality.
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Rumor has it that Paramount people refer to "Star Trek" as "The Franchise". It's rather appropriate that "Star Trek" doesn't even have to be known by its own name given that it has resulted in five TV series, ten movies, lucrative merchandising, a theme attraction at the Las Vegas Hilton, and a pop culture phenomenon. However, at one point in time, "Star Trek" looked like it was bound to be remembered as an interesting failure.
During the mid-1960s, Gene Roddenberry, a war-time pilot and one-time policeman, pitched an idea to Paramount about a western set in space. Roddenberry and Co. needed two tries at making a pilot episode before Paramount greenlighted "Star Trek" and sold the exhibition rights to NBC. The show lasted three years and was canceled due to lackluster ratings. What saved "Star Trek" from extinction was syndication, as fans and newbies alike powered "Star Trek" re-runs to unprecedented ratings among syndicated shows. Fan-started conventions indicated that people were willing to spend their own money in order to celebrate a series that they loved. Therefore, Paramount and Roddenberry went to work on "Star Trek: Phase II", a series that eventually became "Star Trek: The Motion Picture" (Robert Wise, 1979). It took ten years after the end of "Star Trek: The Original Series" before another "Star Trek" program was seen by the public, but the franchise has been going strong since then. In fact, there have been times when two shows were on the air simultaneously, and there have been times when a movie appeared in theatres while there was a show on TV.
Paramount originally released "Star Trek: The Original Series" on forty individual DVDs with two episodes each. A low MSRP of $14.95 meant that you could get each DVD for about $10.00, but that still meant that you would pay about $400.00 for Seasons 1, 2, and 3. Now, after releasing "The Next Generation", "Deep Space Nine", and several seasons of "Voyager" in complete-season box sets, Paramount is re-releasing "The Original Series" in box sets, too. Each set will cost about $100.00, so the final cost of buying the box sets is about $300.00.
The new "Star Trek: The Original Series" Season 2 box basically offers everything that the previous single-disc releases of the show did. The box sets of "The Original Series" also include featurettes that were not seen on the individual DVDs. Therefore, the box sets are better values than the individual discs, though it's really up to you if you want to make the "upgrade" if you already have the forty DVDs. Me? I have to admit that it's nice getting "The Original Series" in box sets like the other TV shows in the franchise.
Disc 1: "Amok Time", "Who Mourns for Adonais?", "The Changeling", "Mirror, Mirror".
Disc 2: "The Apple", "The Doomsday Machine", "Catspaw", "I, Mudd".
Disc 3: "Metamorphosis", "Journey to Babel", "Friday's Child", "The Deadly Years".
Disc 4: "Obsession", "Wolf in the Fold", "The Trouble With Tribbles", "The Gamesters of Triskelion".
Disc 5: "A Piece of the Action", "The Immunity Syndrome", "A Private Little War", "Return to Tomorrow".
Disc 6: "Patterns of Force", "By Any Other Name", "The Omega Glory", "The Ultimate Computer".
Disc 7: "Bread and Circuses", "Assignment: Earth".
In "Star Trek: The Original Series", which began in 1966 and ended in 1969, Captain James Tiberius Kirk (William Shatner) commands the Enterprise, a starship exploring the galaxy. Spock (Leonard Nimoy) is Kirk's half-Vulcan/half-human second-in-command. (Vulcans are a people who devote their lives to living with pure logic.) Leonard "Bones" McCoy (DeForest Kelley, a regular in TV westerns) is the cantankerous doctor who's always protesting that he's a doctor and not something else ("I'm a doctor, not an engineer!"). Rounding out the cast are James Doohan as Chief Engineer Montgomery "Scotty" Scott, George Takei as Hikaru Sulu, and Nichelle Nichols as communications officer Nyota Uhura. Grace Lee Whitney played Yeoman Janice Rand for a year, and Walter Koenig joined the cast as Ensign Pavel Chekov in Year Two.
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