Star Trek: The Original Series – Season Two
Sep/095
Product Description
Movie DVDAmazon.com
The most famous episode in franchise history, “The Trouble with Tribbles,” is one of the highlights of the second season of Star Trek: The Original Series. A deserved classic, the humorous story centers on an ever-expanding mass of furry creatures that memorably rain themselves down on top of Captain Kirk (William Shatner) and into the middle of a Federation-Klingon showdown. It inspired one of the most memorable episodes in the spin-off series Deep Space Nine, “Trial and Tribble-ations.” Also in the second season, the Vulcan culture of Mr. Spock (Leonard Nimoy) is fleshed out in “Amok Time” (in which Spock is faced with the possibility of killing his captain and friend) and “Journey to Babel” (introducing Spock’s father, played by Mark Sarek, in what would turn out to be a long-recurring role). A new character, navigator Pavel Chekov (Walter Koenig), was introduced; his Monkees haircut was intended to appeal to the younger audience, but he was also a Russian, which at the height of the cold war reflected Gene Roddenberry’s optimistic vision of a more enlightened future. Other social-commentary opportunities presented themselves in “The Omega Glory,” “The Doomsday Machine,” and “Assignment: Earth,” the last also one of those periodic opportunities to scrimp on the budget by time-traveling to an earlier version of Earth. Another example was “A Piece of the Action,” a comic episode set in the Roaring Twenties and memorable for, among other things, Kirk’s teaching a made-up card game called Fizzbin. In other significant episodes, “I, Mudd” saw the return of the bounder from season 1, “The Changeling” was the original inspiration for the first Trek feature film a decade later, “Wolf in the Fold” (penned by the author of Psycho) provides an example of the series’ great writing, and “Mirror, Mirror” introduced the concept of the parallel universe inhabited by vicious, amoral counterparts of the regular crew, another theme later borrowed (more than once, and to good emotional effect) by DS9.
On the DVD
The remastered episodes are the highlight of the 2008 second-season release; like in season one, the reworked visual effects might irk purists but are an improvement overall, and some of the space exteriors are very exciting. It’s not in high definition, however; season one was released in 2007 on two-sided combination HD DVD and standard DVD discs, which are now obsolete. Season two mimics the packaging, but is only standard-definition DVD, not Blu-ray. The picture, while obviously not high-definition quality, is still much improved over the 2004 DVD release. Special features here mostly mirror that 2004 set: 80 minutes of featurettes (”To Boldly Go” season recap, ” Kirk, Spock & Bones: The Great Trio,” “Star Trek’s Divine Diva,” “Designing the Final Frontier,” and “Writer’s Notebook: D.C. Fontana”), though missing from this set are the text commentaries on two episodes, the Red Shirt Logs, the production art, and the photo gallery. There are two new featurettes: “Star Trek’s Favorite Moments,” in which cast members of later Trek franchises and fans recall certain episodes, and “Billy Blackburn’s Treasure Chest, part 2,” in which a Trek extra tells stories and shows some of his on-set home movies. And because season 2 includes “The Trouble with Tribbles,” the set includes two bonus episodes: “More Tribbles, More Troubles” from the Animated Series and “Trials and Tribble-ations” from Deep Space Nine. Conveniently, all three Tribble-centric episodes are on the same disc, and include the bonus features from the earlier DVD releases (the commentary by writer David Gerrold on “More Troubles” and the two featurettes–”Uniting Two Legends” and “An Historic Endeavor”–from “Tribble-ations”). The bonus episodes were not remastered, and you can tell the difference when comparing the original Tribble episode on this set with the grainier footage that was used in the DS9 episode. A minor annoyance is that the discs are one-sided but appear to be two-sided, as if they had been designed for combo HD DVD again before a late change. That means the info on the disc is restricted to a ring around the middle, rather than a full label that could have listed the episodes on each disc; as is, they’re only listed on the glossy “collector’s data cards.” And once again, the plastic shell is clunky and the disc spindles are way too tight. All in all, it’s a nice package, especially if one doesn’t already have the other Tribble episodes, but it feels like it’s floating in a standard-definition limbo, stuck in the transition between HD DVD and Blu-ray. –David Horiuchi
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3:27 am on September 25th, 2009
well im still waiting till they decide on what format they going to use.
im not wasting my money.
im hopeing for blue ray but who knows…
im just glad i did not get stuck with bata tapes like a lot of others did when that format war was going.
remember that bata vs vhs?
i was lucky and guess right.
but this time not sure so ill wait.
but it looks like blue ray just may get it.
i hope the format war is over soon.
Rating: 5 / 5
3:36 am on September 25th, 2009
There should have been a Blju-Ray of this is the studio had any respect for the fans, who hugely overpaid for the fiasco first season on HD-DVD. PLEASE teach the studio a lesson and DON’T BUY this until a Blu-Ray version gets issued – as it should have been simultaneously with this.
Rating: 1 / 5
5:11 am on September 25th, 2009
What a joke, This is the third release of the original series on standard definition DVD. How many times can they milk us??? For those of us Idiots that went out and Bought the HD version of the first season to now realease the second and one would assume third seasons just on standard without the high def is just adding Insult to Injury. WHY? As combos they still could play on either player? Not only will i not get this standard def set. at a ridiculous $63 i wont be buying in on Blu Ray either even though i have a player. The HD Version had picture in picture commentary on a few episodes along with a host of other features and whenever and HD is loaded with features if you check the Blu Ray versions its almost always just the movie or a cut down version of special features, why?? i thought blu ray held more and was better? Either way dont buy this. Im sure they will release this set on about 8 more formats in the next ten years in an effort to milk the public endlessly.
Rating: 1 / 5
8:00 am on September 25th, 2009
Having already bought the DVD season sets as they came out (also having bought most of the original two-ep DVDs), and saving my favorite remastered eps on my DVR, I am waiting this time for Blu-ray.
Count me among those disturbed that CBS/Paramount isn’t offering Blu-ray in this and the scheduled third season release — it feels like gouging the fans, and I am not going along. You know they will release this in Blu-ray, it’s just a question of when, and it will be sooner than later.
Although I like the new effects (as a die-hard fan since about ‘70) and have enjoyed the quality of the remastered live-action footage, it’s not enough to make me buy another standard-def second season just for them.
My one-star rating is based on five stars for the series, minus four stars for not being on Blu-ray.
Rating: 1 / 5
10:46 am on September 25th, 2009
The discs themselves are in great condition. The box however was broken so doesn’t work as expected.
Rating: 5 / 5