Will the ‘Star Trek’ curse strike again?
Odd-numbered films in the franchise tend to be quite awful
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There’s a well-known curse in the “Star Trek” universe that simply promises every other movie comes up a winner. Even-numbered films are heralded as action-packed fan favorites, while odd-numbered efforts go down as cringe-worthy failures.
But, then again, the curse could just be the stuff of overblown fan lore. Aren’t there any exceptions to the revolving rule? With the potentially unlucky 11th installment of the film franchise due to hit theatres Friday, that’s the multimillion-dollar opening-weekend question.
A curse is born
‘Star Trek: The Motion Picture’
One viewing of the U.S.S. Enterprise’s maiden theatrical launch is enough to explain why otherwise logical “Trek” fans might cling to a curse theory. There has to be some supernatural force responsible for turning what was such a highly anticipated sci-fi reunion into a long, “conversations in space” yawn-fest.
The silver screen versions of the characters fans knew and loved hardly looked like themselves after trading in their primary colored uniforms of old for matching baby blue yoga sweats. The getups were almost fitting, given all the mellowed out anti-action revolving around a decommissioned space probe, rather than, oh, say, an actual baddie.
Verdict: Cursed.
‘Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan’
Big screen prospects brightened when old-school “Trek” villain Khan Noonien Singh returned to unleash some well-fostered vengeance on his exile-imposing nemesis Captain Kirk. As expected, Kirk and the gang were in fine form when they had a real enemy in their sites (and real uniforms on their backs).
The death of Spock, the destruction of a race, and the rise and fall of an intellectual evil brought all the action and anticipation the first film lacked.
Verdict: The even-numbered winner that proved the rule.
‘Star Trek III: The Search for Spock’
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Over the course of the film, fans watched ‘lil Spock slowly returned to his familiar form, the Enterprise completely scuttled, a case of stunt casting gone wrong (in the form of Christopher “Reverand Jim” Lloyd as Klingon Commander Kruge), and Kirk’s only son killed. OK, given the annoyance that was David Marcus, that last bit worked.
Verdict: Cursed.
The search for exceptions to the rule
‘Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home”
At first glance, “The Voyage Home” packed all the hallmarks of a stinker. From Spock’s choice of a loose-fitting terrycloth dress, to the crew’s simplistic “save the whales” mission, right down to Chekov’s search for “nuclear wessels,” the curse was ripe for breaking.
That is until it all came together for a somewhat exciting and genuinely funny adventure. It’s no “Wrath of Khan,” but it’s possibly to best example of entertaining crew camaraderie in the entire series.
Verdict: Even better than expected.
“Star Trek V: The Final Frontier’
Is it possible for a film to be doubly cursed? Seems so, as “The Final Frontier” easily boasts the unofficial dishonor of worst “Star Trek” movie (or “Star Trek” anything else) to date.
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As for everyone else, they just needed to find their dignity. Scotty, the best engineer in the fleet, suddenly couldn’t flip a light switch to save his life. And while Uhura effectively distracted some heavies with a burlesque number, let’s just say the past-her-prime striptease distracted for all the wrong reasons.
Verdict: Cursed X2!
‘Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country’
The Klingons finally returned to their best bad form and gave Kirk, McCoy and even Sulu a worthy adversary in “The Undiscovered County.” General Chang, a dialed-down Khan-esque villain with a bolt-on eye patch, struck fear in the hearts of good guys and put the bumpy-headed masses back on the map.
In some ways “The Undiscovered Country” didn’t feel like the typical “Trek” adventure and was all the better for it. The restrained action framed an intriguing procedural crime twist, and all in all, it played as much-improved effort for fans who feared another “The Final Frontier.”
Verdict: Even numbers equal success.
It all falls apart
‘Star Trek: Generations’
James T. Kirk and Jean-Luc Picard — together at last. That was the main attraction in “Generations” and frankly, that unlikely pairing made it worth the watch. Unfortunately, the sometimes clunky film failed to meet its full potential (What? No Spock and Data meet up?), but it served its purpose in bridging the gap from old “Trek” to the then-new “Trek.”
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Verdict: Film number 7’s so-so finish leaves cracks in the curse.
‘Star Trek: First contact’
Borg on the big screen! What’s not to love? The cyber-bullies went back in time and the crew of the Enterprise-E followed along for a chance to witness the creation of warp technology, humanity’s first contact with the great beyond, and of course, to beat the odds by beating back the Borg.
Verdict: Back to business as usual with this even-numbered victor.
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