Star Trek – The Animated Series (1973/Paramount DVD)
Picture: C+ Sound: C+ Extras: B Episodes: B
Just in
time for as full-blown wave of Filmation series arrive on DVD from the
now-defunct BCI Eclipse label, Paramount had finally remastered and issued both
seasons of Star Trek – The Animated
Series from 1973 – 1974 including some extras a while ago and the results remain
terrific. Previously issued on VHS and
even a brief-lived 12” LaserDisc box set with no extras, it ironically becomes
the final spin-off series from the original 1960s show to make it on DVD and
turns out to be truly the best of all of them.
Just as
the franchise was about to slowly make the biggest comeback in pop culture
history, NBC, Paramount and Gene Roddenberry were about to convince Filmation
to create an animated continuation of the original Star Trek. Like Paramount
convincing a reluctant Fleischer Studios to produce an animated Superman, Filmation did not initially
want the challenge of reviving the show, but it would turn out to be one of
their greatest critical triumphs.
To begin
with, Filmation was in peak form as Hanna Barbera’s chief rival. Also, the company had their tight creative
crew in tact. Their animation was slowly
getting better and they were still using an exceptional color palette. This was good because the show needed to be
faithful to the colors of the original series.
The actors who played all the major roles were all signed to continue
voicing their characters for this version.
The writing would expand the Trek Universe and enable worlds and ideas
to be created that the live action show could never afford.
The
episodes that just about completed the famed “five-year mission” are as
follows:
Season 1
(1973-1974)
1 Beyond the Farthest Star
2 Yesteryear
3 One of Our Planets is Missing
4 The Lorelei Signal
5 More Tribbles, More Troubles
6 The Survivor
7 The Infinite Vulcan
8 The Magicks of Megas-tu
9 Once Upon a Planet
10 Mudd's Passion
11 The Terratin Incident
12 The Time Trap
13 The Ambergris Element
14 The Slaver Weapon
15 The Eye of the Beholder
16 The Jihad
Season 2 (1974)
17 The Pirates of Orion
18 Bem
19 The Practical Joker
20 Albatross
21 How Sharper Than a Serpent's Tooth
22 The Counter-Clock Incident
The
teleplays are top-rate, faithful to the original show, offering the kind of
interesting and challenging science and philosophical arguments sorely missing
from the franchise since the fourth feature film went broad and spinoff shows
were stuck in the over-technologization of Holodeck and melodrama of soapy
space opera void of science and depth that has caused the franchise to
implode. J.J. Abrams needs to really pay
attention to this particular show if his revival is to succeed.
As for
these episodes, word is that Mr. Roddenberry was not always happy about them
and was not comfortable with their status in the Trek “canon” or the like, but
the product that has been produced since his departure is so far from the
original shows that any idea of “canon” has gone out the window and referencing
dozens of previous TV episodes or feature films does not count. The original heart and soul that made Trek
great to begin with is here in full force, something that will be a shock to
real fans as well as those who have not seen the show for decades.
The real
argument here would be about length of these shows versus the original series
and its spin-offs, all of which fit an hour-long timeslot. This series was meant for a half-hour slot
and what is interesting is how the writers were able to fit so many ideas in
that time without compromising what makes the show work. That means dumping melodrama, overacting and
cutting down “impossible to get out of situations” between commercials. It is not unlike comparing the fourth
hour-long season shows of the original Rod Serling Twilight Zone with the other of its five seasons composed of
half-hour shows.
By 1975,
this show may have wrapped up, but the original show was becoming a huge hit in
syndication, and the Mego Toy Company began licensing the series in what turned
out to be a huge hit in toy stores across the country and eventually
worldwide. Trek was on the upswing and with the arrival of a feature film in
1979 (after a very promising one by Philip Kaufmann was cancelled just before Star Wars arrived) permanently cemented
the permanent return of Trek once and for all.
Without Star Trek: The Animated
Series, however, none of this would have happened.
The 1.33
X 1 image is just a tad softer than expected, but the prints and any clean up
is terrific, the episodes usually very colorful (via the original lab work by
Technicolor) and looks better than it ever did the way Fox’s restorations of Return To The Planet Of The Apes now
do. However, these are very watchable
and a nice color demo for any HD playback.
Dolby Digital 5.1 and 2.0 Mono mixes are offered, but the Mono is
actually cleaner, clearer and the preferred playback. For the record, you can tell the 5.1 just
thinly spreads out the mono, but the music and sound effects for this animated
series exist in richer versions and a much better 5.1 upgrade could have been
created if those stems had been used.
For DTS, Paramount needs to get their hands on the Trek sound effects CD GNP Crescendo Records issued in 1988 with 69
tracks, including four specifically from the animated show. The recent James Bond upgrades proves once
again that older material can sound great if given the proper upgrade.
Originally
void of extras in its 12” LaserDisc version, this nicely packaged DVD set (a
nice snapcase like the three seasons of the original show) include audio commentary
on select episodes, text commentary on select episodes that is made of full
color blocks and not just alternate subtitles, Drawn To The Final Frontier: The Making Of Star Trek: The Animated Series, What's The Star Trek
Connection?, storyboard gallery and show history. The result was the most serious non-Superhero
action show since Jonny Quest. You can read more about the original
live-action Trek series and other mature animated series that followed at the
following links:
STAR TREK
– THE ORIGINAL SERIES DVD
http://www.fulvuedrive-in.com/review/1680/Star+Trek+-+The+Original+Series
Blu-ray
Season One
http://www.fulvuedrive-in.com/review/8530/Star+Trek+%E2%80%93+The+Origin
FLASH
GORDON (1979)
http://www.fulvuedrive-in.com/review/4104/Flash+Gordon+–+The+Complete+Ser
RETURN TO
THE PLANET OF THE APES (1975)
http://www.fulvuedrive-in.com/review/4477/Return+To+The+Planet+Of+The+Apes
Now, if
only Warner would issue Hanna Barbera’s Valley
Of The Dinosaurs, a complete portrait of these animated classics would be
available on DVD. In the meantime, never
underestimate Star Trek: The Animated Series. Now that it is out on DVD, its reputation is
about to make a comeback. Hope Blu-ray
is next.
- Nicholas Sheffo