STAR TREK THE ORIGINAL – Series 1 to 3: The Complete Lim. Collectors Ed.

17
Jan/10
0

Product Description
___ THIS DVD WILL NOT PLAY ON STANDARD REGION CODE 1 USA DVD PLAYERS. THIS IS AN EUROPEAN IMPORT DVD IN REGION CODE 2. YOU NEED A REGION CODE FREE DVD PLAYER TO WATCH THIS IN THE USA, CANADA, AUSTRALIA ETC. MORE INFO ON: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DVD_region_code ___ SOUNDTRACK: English, French, German ___ SUBTITLES: English, French, German, Dutch ___ SUMMARY: Exclusive DVD Boxset is limited to just 2,000 individually numbered copies** “Space…The Final Frontier. These are the voyages of the Starship, Enterprise. Its 5-year mission: to explore strange new worlds, to seek out new life and new civilizations, to boldly go where no man has gone before!” Created by Gene Roddenberry, follow the adventures of the crew of the starship U.S.S. Enterprise. This is the complete season one, two and three of the original series.

STAR TREK THE ORIGINAL – Series 1 to 3: The Complete Lim. Collectors Ed.

Star Trek – The Original Series: Volume 7

7
Jan/10
0

Star Trek – The Original Series: Volume 7

Star Trek: The Original Series Volume 22, Episodes 43 & 44

6
Jan/10
0

Star Trek: The Original Series Volume 22, Episodes 43 & 44

Star Trek: The Original Series Volume 14, Episodes 27 & 28

5
Jan/10
0

Star Trek: The Original Series Volume 14, Episodes 27 & 28

Star Trek the Original Series Vol 6

24
Dec/09
0

Star Trek the Original Series Vol 6

Star Trek: The Original Series Volume 17, Episodes 33 & 34

23
Dec/09
0

Star Trek: The Original Series Volume 17, Episodes 33 & 34

Star Trek – The Original Series, Vol. 3, Episodes 6 & 7: The Man Trap/ The Naked Time

19
Dec/09
5

Amazon.com
Volume 3 in this terrific DVD library of original Star Trek programs includes “The Man Trap,” the first broadcast episode of the Gene Roddenberry series. Though it was not the first story produced for the show, the process was still new enough that contracted writers were obliged to fill in various blanks, develop some of the key characters, and smoothly introduce some of the Trek technology we’ve come to take for granted. Writer George Clayton Johnson conceived a story in which an old flame of Dr. McCoy’s (DeForest Kelley), a woman named Dr. Nancy Carter (Jeanny Bealy), is in need of medical supplies on a planet where she and her husband (Alfred Ryder) are the only humans. “Nancy,” however, turns out to be a shape-shifting creature that sucks the salt from the bodies of humanoids. Once it’s loose aboard the Enterprise, the “salt vampire” can look like anyone in its pursuit of nourishment.

With McCoy having such a pivotal part in the narrative, Johnson worked with the series’ story editor and episode director (Marc Daniels) on fleshing out his underdeveloped character. There were other issues to think about: this premiere show introduced the Enterprise’s transporter technology as well as Star Trek’s realistic take on scary extraterrestrials. Everyone involved survived the episode, and while it played only to a meager television audience, Trek was off and running for three-plus decades.

Also on this DVD is episode 4, “The Naked Time,” in which an alien disease that strips inhibitions from individuals affects the Enterprise crew. Sulu (George Takei) frees the swashbuckler in his soul, Kirk (William Shatner) battles his demons, and a young lieutenant, Riley (Bruce Hyde), serenades the entire starship and steers her toward certain doom. Still early in the proceedings, this episode introduced a psychological aspect that would become a cornerstone for the storytelling on all four Trek series. –Tom Keogh

Star Trek – The Original Series, Vol. 3, Episodes 6 & 7: The Man Trap/ The Naked Time

Star Trek – The Original Series, Vol. 3, Episodes 6 & 7: The Man Trap/ The Naked Time

15
Dec/09
5

Amazon.com
Volume 3 in this terrific DVD library of original Star Trek programs includes “The Man Trap,” the first broadcast episode of the Gene Roddenberry series. Though it was not the first story produced for the show, the process was still new enough that contracted writers were obliged to fill in various blanks, develop some of the key characters, and smoothly introduce some of the Trek technology we’ve come to take for granted. Writer George Clayton Johnson conceived a story in which an old flame of Dr. McCoy’s (DeForest Kelley), a woman named Dr. Nancy Carter (Jeanny Bealy), is in need of medical supplies on a planet where she and her husband (Alfred Ryder) are the only humans. “Nancy,” however, turns out to be a shape-shifting creature that sucks the salt from the bodies of humanoids. Once it’s loose aboard the Enterprise, the “salt vampire” can look like anyone in its pursuit of nourishment.

With McCoy having such a pivotal part in the narrative, Johnson worked with the series’ story editor and episode director (Marc Daniels) on fleshing out his underdeveloped character. There were other issues to think about: this premiere show introduced the Enterprise’s transporter technology as well as Star Trek’s realistic take on scary extraterrestrials. Everyone involved survived the episode, and while it played only to a meager television audience, Trek was off and running for three-plus decades.

Also on this DVD is episode 4, “The Naked Time,” in which an alien disease that strips inhibitions from individuals affects the Enterprise crew. Sulu (George Takei) frees the swashbuckler in his soul, Kirk (William Shatner) battles his demons, and a young lieutenant, Riley (Bruce Hyde), serenades the entire starship and steers her toward certain doom. Still early in the proceedings, this episode introduced a psychological aspect that would become a cornerstone for the storytelling on all four Trek series. –Tom Keogh

Star Trek – The Original Series, Vol. 3, Episodes 6 & 7: The Man Trap/ The Naked Time

Star Trek – The Original Series, Vol. 5, Episodes 10 & 11: What Are Little Girls Made Of?/ Dagger of the Mind

11
Dec/09
5

Description
“What are Little Girls Made Of?” Ep. 10 – Kirk and company are horrified to learn that famed scientist, Dr. Roger Korby has developed the ultimate android in hopes of populating the universe with them. “Dagger of the Mind,” Ep. 11 – Kirk must beam down to a penal colony after a doctor escapes to the U.S.S. Enterprise, hinting at the horrors commited against the colony’s patients.Amazon.com
Volume 5 from the DVD collection of original Star Trek programs includes “What Are Little Girls Made Of?” Written by Robert Bloch (author of the novel Psycho, the basis of Hitchcock’s film), the episode finds Captain Kirk (William Shatner) and nurse Christine Chapel (Majel Barrett) beaming down to planet Exo III, where Christine is to be reunited with her fiancé, Dr. Roger Korby (Michael Strong). The meeting is less than joyful, however, when it becomes clear that Korby has been developing androids that he intends to spread throughout the galaxy–using the Enterprise as his delivery vehicle. This was certainly the first significant performance for Majel Barrett in the Trek family; longtime fans know she went on to play Lwaxana Troi on The Next Generation (and Mrs. Gene Roddenberry in real life). An entertaining episode all around, with the notion of an android Kirk somehow amusing. (Maybe it was the android who sang on that notorious Shatner album.) Fans of ’60s TV will also enjoy the performance of Ted Cassidy (the original Lurch from TV’s The Addams Family) as the giant android, Ruk.

Also on this DVD is “Dagger of the Mind,” another mad-doctor drama. This time, Kirk delivers supplies to a penal colony on Tantalus V, where he meets the renowned Dr. Tristan Adams. Adams has been working on the development of a neural neutralizer to control and manipulate dangerous patients. When Kirk threatens to expose him as a dangerous megalomaniac, Adams uses the technology on the unfortunate captain. This tense piece set in a madhouse atmosphere makes for a riveting episode, with a few unhinged performances adding to the fun.–Tom Keogh

Star Trek – The Original Series, Vol. 5, Episodes 10 & 11: What Are Little Girls Made Of?/ Dagger of the Mind

Star Trek – The Original Series, Vol. 5, Episodes 10 & 11: What Are Little Girls Made Of?/ Dagger of the Mind

10
Dec/09
5

Description
“What are Little Girls Made Of?” Ep. 10 – Kirk and company are horrified to learn that famed scientist, Dr. Roger Korby has developed the ultimate android in hopes of populating the universe with them. “Dagger of the Mind,” Ep. 11 – Kirk must beam down to a penal colony after a doctor escapes to the U.S.S. Enterprise, hinting at the horrors commited against the colony’s patients.Amazon.com
Volume 5 from the DVD collection of original Star Trek programs includes “What Are Little Girls Made Of?” Written by Robert Bloch (author of the novel Psycho, the basis of Hitchcock’s film), the episode finds Captain Kirk (William Shatner) and nurse Christine Chapel (Majel Barrett) beaming down to planet Exo III, where Christine is to be reunited with her fiancé, Dr. Roger Korby (Michael Strong). The meeting is less than joyful, however, when it becomes clear that Korby has been developing androids that he intends to spread throughout the galaxy–using the Enterprise as his delivery vehicle. This was certainly the first significant performance for Majel Barrett in the Trek family; longtime fans know she went on to play Lwaxana Troi on The Next Generation (and Mrs. Gene Roddenberry in real life). An entertaining episode all around, with the notion of an android Kirk somehow amusing. (Maybe it was the android who sang on that notorious Shatner album.) Fans of ’60s TV will also enjoy the performance of Ted Cassidy (the original Lurch from TV’s The Addams Family) as the giant android, Ruk.

Also on this DVD is “Dagger of the Mind,” another mad-doctor drama. This time, Kirk delivers supplies to a penal colony on Tantalus V, where he meets the renowned Dr. Tristan Adams. Adams has been working on the development of a neural neutralizer to control and manipulate dangerous patients. When Kirk threatens to expose him as a dangerous megalomaniac, Adams uses the technology on the unfortunate captain. This tense piece set in a madhouse atmosphere makes for a riveting episode, with a few unhinged performances adding to the fun.–Tom Keogh

Star Trek – The Original Series, Vol. 5, Episodes 10 & 11: What Are Little Girls Made Of?/ Dagger of the Mind