"Admiral, we have found the nuclear wessel. And Admiral...it's the Enterprise!" - Walter Koenig
In Star Trek II, the Enterprise crew confronted Khan at a great expense. In Star Trek III,
they confronted Klingons in a frantic bid to bring back Spock, at great
expense. So naturally, in the fourth film of the classic Trek saga, with the Enterprise
crew hanging around planet Vulcan in a captured Klingon Bird of Prey,
they had to find their way back home. This film turns the voyage home
into an adventure all on its own.
The film starts off pretty straight-faced, immediately tossing the Federation and Earth into peril to prompt the Enterprise crew to deal with it. The crew's solution - to travel back and time and
save the whales - proves to be utterly ridiculous, but the film plays
with so much tongue-in-cheek humor that it becomes a comedy classic.
There are a few visually impressive moments, as the Klingon Bird of Prey
skirts along Earth's oceans, but most of the fun in this film is the
lighthearted fish-out-of-water comedy. What could be more hilarious than
watching 24th century space explorers slumming around 20th century San
Francisco, struggling against a seemingly-primitive society to solve
high-tech problems? Some of the funniest and most endearing jokes
include seeing Chekov roaming with with his Russian accent, asking where
the "nuclear wessels" are. It's always a blast to watch Spock trying to
get the hang of cursing, and ultimately using his nerve pinch on an
annoying punk. And one of my favorite scenes is Scotty visiting an
industrial plant, trying to use a 20th century computer by speaking to
it.
The comedy makes the film entertaining throughout, but there's still
enough problems and peril to make it roll evenly and effectively. It's a
little derivative, but still a well-structured plot with quality
characters. The film gets a little pushy with the whole "save the
whales" theme, but it fits in the light and fluffy context of the
overall picture.
The film looks good, with solid photography and editing. Acting is still great from the classic Trek
cast: William Shatner, Leonard Nimoy, DeForest Kelley, and the rest get
even amounts of screen time to express their tongue-in-cheek humor with
phenomenal results. Writing is quite witty. This production has some
fine-looking sets, props, costumes, locales, and special effects. Music
is really boisterous and happy-sounding, but strangely catchy.
4.5/5 (Entertainment: Very Good | Story: Good | Film: Very Good)
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