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Trekking With Tim, Day Six: Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country
Editor Tim Ryan bids adieu to the original cast, who go out in fine form.
by Tim Ryan | April 30, 2009
Discuss Article



Day Six: Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country

Now this is more like it. Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country finds the series back on firm ground. Visually, this is the best Trek movie I've seen so far, and it's probably the most accessible. It's also a thoughtful political fable and a surprisingly involving murder mystery: the Cuban Missile Crisis as a whodunit.

As the movie opens, the Klingon Empire is in deep trouble due to an economic and ecological disaster (an explosion on the moon Praxis, a fuel depot) and an inability to maintain its many space stations and military outposts (gee, sound like any superpowers you know?). Now in a position of weakness, the Klingons agree to make peace with the Federation of Planets. However, Spock volunteers Kirk to lead a mission to escort the Klingon diplomats to Earth, a move that doesn't please the captain; he's never gotten over the death of his son at the hands of the Klingons. There are other objectors as well, most vocally Admiral Cartwright (Brock Peters), who feels the Federation should let the Klingons go extinct.

Though apprehensive, for the sake of potential galactic peace Kirk agrees to rendezvous with the Klingon ambassadors. They include Chancellor Gorkon (David Warner, who was a Federation hostage in The Final Frontier), his daughter Azetbur (Rosanna DeSoto), and General Chang (Christopher Plummer), who immediately arouses Kirk's suspicions. The parties agree to sit down to dinner, but the meeting is mutually hostile; the Enterprise crew is appalled by the Klingons' table manners, and the Klingons suspect the Federation looks down on them. Still, there is some common ground; all agree in principle to work toward peace, and that Shakespeare wrote some compelling plays. (Best line in the movie, courtesy of Gorkon: "You have not experienced Shakespeare until you have read him in the original Klingon.")

After dinner, things quickly go south. Once the Klingons are aboard their ship, they are hit by multiple torpedoes that appear to be coming from the Enterprise. Impossible, insists Scotty; the Enterprise's torpedoes are all accounted for. In the meantime, two figures in Federation space suits beam aboard the Klingon vessel, which has lost its onboard gravity, and start blasting everyone in sight, most notably Gorkon (zero gravity Klingon blood kind of resembles the effects in The Lawnmower Man, but it's cool nonetheless). In a show of solidarity, Kirk and Bones beam aboard to try to help save anyone they can, but Gorkon dies in Bones' care, and the two are arrested for the attack.

This creates a diplomatic nightmare for the Federation, which wants to rescue Kirk and Bones but don't want to risk antagonizing the Klingons. Azetbur, now the Klingon chancellor, plays hardball with the Federation, insisting that someone be held accountable for her father's death and that the peace talks be held somewhere other than Earth. After a show trial (with Chang as a prosecuting attorney), Kirk and Bones are sentenced to life on the frigid gulag planet of Rura Penthe. There, they form an alliance with the shapeshifter Martia (Iman, who exudes the hard-bitten cynicism of a classic femme fatale; why didn't she get more roles after this?) who offers them a way out. But what is she hiding?

That's a question that can be asked throughout The Undiscovered Country. Back on the Enterprise, Spock continues the investigation into the identity of the killers. One of the ship's new charges, Valeris (a pre-cougar Kim Cattrall) appears to be in line to succeed Spock as chief science officer. But, in addition to being a goody-two-shoes, she has a strange air, even for a Vulcan. Back on Rura Penthe, Martia helps spring Kirk and Bones from the joint. After a long trek through the barren landscape, they finally make it to a point outside Klingon control, where they can be beamed up. (I have to tip my hat to the production designers and the tech folks for a job well done; Rura Penthe feels so desolate, and so cold, that I got the shivers). However, Martia has tipped off prison authorities to their whereabouts in hopes of getting an early release, and she intends to make their deaths look like an accident. In one of the movie's (and the franchise's) most surreal sequences, she morphs into Kirk's form, and a Kirk-on-Kirk battle ensues before she's blasted in the confusion. Thankfully, Spock has been tracking our heroes, and promptly beams them aboard the Enterprise.

The plot thickens. Two assassins suspected in the Klingon massacre are critically wounded aboard the ship, but Kirk and Spock suspect they're merely fall guys. So they set a trap, holding them in the sickbay and waiting until the assailant returns to make sure they're dead. (Spoiler alert!) It's Valeris! It turns out that she's part of a conspiracy to continue the instability of the galaxy, one that also includes Chang, Cartwright, and a Romulan ambassador. This information is gleaned by Spock in one of the movie's best (and most cringe-inducing) scenes, in which he forces a mind meld with Valeris (that's gotta hurt). In addition, the torpedoes were fired by a prototype Bird of Prey that can shoot while cloaked -- a breakthrough in interstellar warfare.

What makes these conspiratorial machinations intriguing is the motivations behind them. For Valeris, it's an attempt to save the Federation; for Cartwright, it's an act of self-preservation; and for Chang, it's a way of making chaos reign. In each case, there's an urge to maintain the status quo, rather than deal with an uncertain future.

The crew hurdles through space in order to impede a plot on the Federation president's life. Sulu (now the captain of the USS Excelsior) tells them the location of the peace conference, which has been shrouded in secrecy. However, Chang is waiting in his cloaked Bird of Prey, and blasts away at the Enterprise with abandon. Bones and Scotty rig a torpedo to act as a tracer and, discovering Chang's location, blast him out of the sky. (I'll admit I got a charge when Kirk shouted "Fire!" with every ounce of Shatnerian gusto in his body.)

At the peace conference, the Enterprise crew reveals the plot on the president's life moments before it's to happen (this scene is copped almost shot-for-shot from the climax of The Manchurian Candidate). By thwarting the assassination, Azetbur is grateful to Kirk for continuing her father's legacy, and Kirk says his son's has been carried on as well.

As I've said before, The Undiscovered Country is the best-looking movie in the series (so far): the special effects are top-notch, the cinematography is often sweeping, and the sets, especially the Enterprise, have never looked more sleek or crisp. It provides the most-three dimensional portrait of the Klingons yet; through the context of the Cold War, their warlike nature (and bruised pride) becomes understandable, even tragic. And the supporting cast is excellent; if previous Treks featured uneven bit players, here virtually everyone is excellent.

An air of poignancy hangs over The Undiscovered Country, not simply because it's the last feature with the original cast. Before the opening credits, there's a dedication: "For Gene Roddenberry." The series creator died a little over a month before The Undiscovered Country's release, and if his involvement in the films varied after The Motion Picture, the worlds he created remain seminal to the sci-fi genre to this day.

I have to say I'm sad to see my friends ride off into the sunset. Next up: Star Trek: Generations. Will I be as taken with Jean-Luc Picard, Data, and the rest of the gang? Only time will tell.

Stardates:

  • Day One: Star Trek: The Motion Picture (1979)
  • Day Two: Star Trek: The Wrath of Khan (1982)
  • Day Three: Star Trek III: The Search for Spock (1984)
  • Day Four: Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home (1986)
  • Day Five: Star Trek V: The Final Frontier (1989)
  • Day Six: Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country (1991)
  • Day Seven: Star Trek: Generations (1994)
  • Day Eight: Star Trek: First Contact (1996)
  • Day Nine: Star Trek: Insurrection (1998)
  • Day Ten: Star Trek: Nemesis (2002)
  • Day Eleven: Star Trek (2009)
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Comments (1-20 of 37 posts) | Reply
ARTaylor
ARTaylor writes:
on Apr 30 2009 05:47 PM

Simply put I love every single moment in this movie. Everything is so well done. Hands down the best of the series.

Though I heard that Roddenberry did not like many aspects of it and wanted it stripped from canon like much of V. But sadly he died the day after he saw it and couldn't say anything about the changes he wanted. So who knows how it would have turned out had he gotten his way before his death.

I'm interested to hear your take on Generations. I love the movie but I know many Trekkies hate it. I think it's mostly because (OMG SPOYLERZ) Kirk dies in it. I'm interested to know what a non-Trekkie thinks of it.


(Reply to this)
Tyrant
Tyrant writes:
on Apr 30 2009 05:58 PM

You probably won't be taken with Picard and his crew until First Contact, though I did love Generations as well. First Contact is just the better movie for the TNG guys, and I guarantee you'll love that one.

Great read, this is my favorite of the Shatner/crew Star Treks.


(Reply to this)
damvbat
damvbat writes:
on Apr 30 2009 06:06 PM

This is a very fine movie one of the best, after wrath of khan that is.

(Reply to this)
3263827
3263827 writes:
on Apr 30 2009 06:18 PM

VI is so very very good I never understood why it didn't make more money nor why Paramount didn't keep banging out Trek's with the original cast. Hard for me to believe they couldn't come up with any more stories. I like TNG as much as anyone, but why the rush to take it from the little screen to the big screen? Oh, well. No use in crying over spilled milk.

I still can't make up my mind though if I like VI better than II. If the production values were better on Khan it wouldn't be close, but The Undiscovered Country looks great and the story quality is close to Khan. In fact, I'd say that the Trek-verse looks better in VI than it does in any of the Next Generation movies that follow.

Original cast ranking:

The Wrath of Khan/The Undiscovered Country (tie)
The Voyage Home
The Search for Spock
The Final Frontier/The Motion Picture (tie)



(Reply to this)
niall1
niall1 writes:
on Apr 30 2009 06:29 PM

this is one of the most solid efforts in the series and it'll be very interesting to see what you think of generations..

but the undiscovered country is awesome, not as good as the voyage home or first contact and it doesn't have the charm of khan, but it's definitely a very good entry and christopher plummer makes a great villain..


(Reply to this)
Jen Yamato
Jen Yamato writes:
on Apr 30 2009 06:31 PM

Great write-up of one of the better Trek films. Undiscovered Country has some of my favorite moments - Spock mind-raping Valeris, for one -- and it's a well-paced mystery thriller.

But the title in particular is also interesting to analyze - "The Undiscovered Country," from Hamlet's "to be or not to be" speech - as far as how it applies to many of the film's characters. RT editor Alex Vo and I geeked out for 5 minutes today pondering the meaning of "undiscovered country" and why they'd use the Shakespearean citation as the film's title, and yet not address it explicitly in the movie. Here's what we came up with:

The Undiscovered Country = the future, the unknown nature of which some of us are so afraid that we will do anything to hang on to our imperfect present.

Here, this applies to Kirk, Valeris, Cartwright (basically all of the conspirators), all of whom have to choose to adhere to (or violate) laws for the greater good. Valeris acts out of fear because she thinks Klingon assimilation will do harm to the Federation. Even Sulu chooses to violate Federation orders to help Kirk.

Things like this really elevate what might otherwise just be a twisty space thriller to another level. I love Star Trek.



(Reply to this)
Binh Ngo
Binh Ngo writes:
on Apr 30 2009 07:10 PM

Didn't you know that Shakespeare is the Klingon's favorite author?

(Reply to this)
Binh Ngo
Binh Ngo writes:
on Apr 30 2009 07:11 PM

In reply to this comment (#2445670)
...Or, um, so I've heard. It's not like I would know anything about this.

(Reply to this)
Accursed A.
Accursed A. writes:
on Apr 30 2009 07:29 PM

Definitely the best Trek movie next to Kahn. I love the darker edge. I love the Shakespearean quotes and themes. This movie is like a good play on the big screen with a big budget. What a great swan song for the original crew. The very end reminds me of the end of Indiana Jones The Last Crusade, as we watch them go off into the sunset(too bad Spielberg and Lucas couldn't have left it that way).

I'll continue my comments on the scores. This is my favorite score next to Kahn. It's so much different than any Trek score before or after. Cliff Eidelman outdid himself and overachieved(what has he really done since?). There's an air of impending doom in every scene and I feel the music(other than the proverbial Star Trek theme) is a dark original masterpiece.


(Reply to this)
Accursed A.
Accursed A. writes:
on Apr 30 2009 07:30 PM

Oops, forgot to put my rating. 9.5/10

(Reply to this)
scifimark
scifimark writes:
on Apr 30 2009 07:55 PM

In reply to this comment (#2445607)
umm jen they mentioned it in kirks "yes i saved the universe speech at the end and he said the undiscovered country is the future

(Reply to this)
Looselycult
Looselycult writes:
on Apr 30 2009 08:28 PM

Just picked this one up for trade used the other day. I used to love it when I was younger and so I was expecting to be disappointed. I wasn't, it is still great and still second best in the series next to KKHHHHHHAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAANN!

(Reply to this)
greg b.
greg b. writes:
on Apr 30 2009 08:44 PM

My favorite, even over Wrath Of Khan. I've watched it time and time again, and even thought the mystery is gone out of the plot I still love it. The cast at it's best. Although I couldn't help but wonder what happened to the Scotty/Uhura love affair that was established in Star Trek V?

(Reply to this)
Stewart H.
Stewart H. writes:
on Apr 30 2009 08:52 PM

It's one of the better stories - but I can't stand that scene in the Kitchen! 1st - why is there a kitchen? 2nd Why is anyone firing a phaser at what looked like mash potato, let a lone a Vulcan, when EVERYONE should know it would set of an alarm 3rd Why does Uhura get to the kitchen BEFORE the security guards? It's just wrong - also - the end space battle is a little weak 'It's gotta have a tail pipe!" - but all in all, one of the better Treks. I'd put it a joint 3rd next to First Contact, and Behind Khan(1st) and IV (2nd).



(Reply to this)
Sputnik99
Sputnik99 writes:
on Apr 30 2009 09:02 PM

This is a great Trek movie. It has great action, a great story and a great mystery weapon. The reason I can't say it beats Khan is because Khan has something else: nostalgia. Vengeance from someone the fans remember is the best way to build suspense.

And the battle in the Mutara Nebula is better, too. I don't like "sitting duck" battles.


(Reply to this)
Solonik -.
Solonik -. writes:
on Apr 30 2009 09:17 PM

This is the first Star Trek movie I saw. It is a really good movie on its own, regardless of the franchise.

(Reply to this)
ledawg1138
ledawg1138 writes:
on Apr 30 2009 09:17 PM

A great entry. 9/10. The fourth best. I love Christopher Plummer as General Chang, the one eyed Klingon. Great film. Relevant film.

(Reply to this)
scott r.
scott r. writes:
on Apr 30 2009 10:01 PM

k peeps i'm gonna break w/ everyone, but here's teh deal: st: twok is not the best film in the series. granted it has scene chewing galore by both the shat and ricardo, but its nothing more then a revenge tale. honestly the best movie in MHO is st: tmp!

why? granted there is that scene where the shat goes after spock and you can totally see the sound stage that he's on (possibly one of teh biggest editing errors ever! and mad magazine did a great spoof back in the day about the "alert" warning that played throughout) but...in terms of cannon this most closely follows the "big questions" that permeate the ideal of original series (until the 3rd seasons but then caught up again in st: tng).

what's it all about? it about finding who created us all...literally "god", to be sure a question pondered in that **** fest V (sorry shat, but its's true and don't give me any of that writers strike bull****)...but conceived in a more surreal and satisfying package.

boring you say? did you think the same of 2001 and blade runner? st: tmp is a true sci-fi exploration that demands close attention and contemplation.

and the sound track...derivative? aping 2001 you may say? hell no! its prolly one of the more experimental sound tracks out there!

and what about the theory that the odd films suck? st: tsfs was a great film. again you had the shat experiencing loss for his hubris, not in only in the loss of his ship , but also his son. the fact that he took the loss of his ship (his one supposed true love) so stoically compared to the raw emotion of losing his son displays much about his character. plus the film had both john larroquette and christopher lloyd as klingons!!!!!

k rant over for now, but still thought that st: tuc was stilted and too transparent.


(Reply to this)
ostrigal o.
ostrigal o. writes:
on Apr 30 2009 10:07 PM

David Warner played a Cardassian as well in TNG, and wasn't it Rene Auberjonis (sp) who played the presidential would-be assassin? Anyone notice how many of the assorted Federation muckity-mucks also played judges on L.A. Law? Don't get me started on Trek trivia... must resist!

I have to say it again, 'Target that explosion and fire.' Awesome line... just loved how the camera zoomed in on Sulu as he delivered it.

...and I really enjoyed the easter egg... Michael Dorn playing his own grandfather 'Worf' as the court appointed defender.

I can't really compare this with Khan... they're both Trek movies, but they're very different movies. UC is a political murder mystery that plays host to the galaxy. Khan is intimate, more emotional with a death in the family. To understand Kahn is to understand 'Space Seed'. To understand UC is to understand the entire canon.


(Reply to this)
Trufire
Trufire writes:
on Apr 30 2009 10:56 PM

Another 10/10 movie for me. Fantastic acting with great effects (albeit for the time but still pretty impressive today) along with a super plot makes it for an exciting film for pretty much anyone to watch.

As the crew rides off into the sunset, a small tear falls down my cheek.* :-P


(Reply to this)
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