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Star Trek: The Original Motion Picture Collection

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Arrives Monday, Jun 9
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Description

All six original STAR TREK big-screen adventures come to 4K UHD in one must- have collection. Starring the original series cast, including William Shatner, Leonard Nimoy, DeForest Kelley, George Takei, Nichelle Nichols, Walter Koenig, and James Doohan, all have been remastered with HDR-10 and Dolby Vision for optimum picture quality from their original film elements. This new collection includes STAR TREK: THE MOTION PICTURE—THE DIRECTOR’S EDITION, in addition to the original theatrical cut, as well as the Director’s Cut of STAR TREK II: THE WRATH OF KHAN and STAR TREK VI: THE UNDISCOVERED COUNTRY. Packed with hours of special features, it is an essential STAR TREK collection for fans and beyond!

Genre: Sci-Fi, Action


Format: 4K


Contributor: William Shatner, Leonard Nimoy


Language: English


Runtime: 685 minutes


MPAA rating ‏ : ‎ PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)


Package Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 6.89 x 5.39 x 2.01 inches; 1.08 Pounds


Media Format ‏ : ‎ 4K


Run time ‏ : ‎ 685 minutes


Release date ‏ : ‎ September 6, 2022


Actors ‏ : ‎ Leonard Nimoy, William Shatner


Dubbed: ‏ ‎ French, Portuguese, Spanish


Studio ‏ : ‎ PARAMOUNT


Country of Origin ‏ : ‎ USA


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Top Amazon Reviews


  • Hubbie is Star Trek fan
We bought used. All the discs play just fine. Nice set! The used set is a very good value.
Reviewed in the United States on November 24, 2024 by Connie E. Reeves

  • Star Trek Original Motion Picture Collection (7Discs)(Blu-ray)
REGION FREE Disc 1: Star Trek The Motion Picture (Theatrical Edition) 1979, 132 min. Video: 1080p High Definition 16:9 Widescreen 2.35:1 Audio: English 7.1 Dolby TrueHD, French 2.0 Dolby Digital, Spanish Mono Subtitles: English, English SDH, French, Spanish, Portuguese Extras: Audio Commentary by Michael & Denise Okuda, Judith & Garfield Reeves-Stevens and Daren Dochterman, Library Computer, The Longest Trek: Writing The Motion Picture (11 min. HD), Special Star Trek Reunion (10 min. HD), Starfleet Academy SciSec Brief 001: Mystery Behind V'Ger (4 min.)(HD), Deleted scenes (8 min.), Storyboards, Trailers & TV spots, BD-Live Disc 2: Star Trek II The Wrath Of Khan (Theatrical Edition) 1982, 113 min. Video: 1080p High Definition 16:9 Widescreen 2.35:1 Audio: English 7.1 Dolby TrueHD, French 2.0 Dolby Digital, Spanish Mono Subtitles: English, English SDH, French, Spanish, Portuguese Extras: Audio Commentary by Director Nicholas Meyer, Audio Commentary by Director Nicholas Meyer & Producer Manny Coto Library Computer, Captain's Log (27 min.), Designing Khan (24 min.), Original Interviews with William Shatner, Leonard Nimoy, DeForest Kelley, and Ricardo Montalban (11 min.), "Where No Man Has Gone Before" The Visual Effects of Star Trek II The Wrath of Khan (18 min.), James Horner: Composing Genesis (10 min. HD), Collecting Star Trek's Movie Relics (11 min. HD), A Novel Approach (29 min.), Starfleet Academy SciSec Brief 002: Mystery Behind Ceti Alpha VI (3 min. HD), Storyboards, Farewell: A Tribute to Ricardo Montalban (5 min. HD), Theatrical Trailer, BD-Live Disc 3: Star Trek III The Search For Spock (Theatrical Edition) 1984, 105 min. Video: 1080p High Definition 16:9 Widescreen 2.35:1 Audio: English 7.1 Dolby TrueHD, French 2.0 Dolby Digital, Spanish Mono Subtitles: English, English SDH, French, Spanish, Portuguese Extras: Audio Commentary by Director Leonard Nimoy, Writer/Producer Harve Bennett, Director of Photography Charles Correll, and Actress Robin Curtis Audio Commentary by Ronald D. Moore and Michael Taylor, Library Computer, Captain's Log (26 min.), Terraforming the Prime Directive (26 min.), Industrial Light & Magic: The Visual Effects of 'Star Trek' (14 min. HD), Spock: The Early Years (6 min. HD), Space Docks and Birds of Prey (28 min.), Speaking Klingon (21 min.), Klingon & Vulcan Costumes (12 min.), Star Trek and the Science Fiction Museum and Hall of Fame (17 min. HD), Starfleet Academy SciSec Brief 003: Mystery Behind the Vulcan Katra Transfer (3 min. HD),Photo Gallery, Storyboards, Theatrical Trailer, BD-Live Disc 4: Star Trek IV The Voyage Home (Theatrical Edition) 1986, 119 min. Video: 1080p High Definition 16:9 Widescreen 2.35:1 Audio: English 7.1 Dolby TrueHD, French 2.0 Dolby Digital, Spanish Mono Subtitles: English, English SDH, French, Spanish, Portuguese Extras: Audio Commentary by William Shatner & Leonard Nimoy, Audio Commentary by Roberto Orci & Alex Kurtzman, Library Computer interface, Future's Past: A Look Back (28 min.), On Location (7 min.), Dailies Deconstruction (4 min.), Below-the-Line: Sound Design (12 min.), Pavel Chekov's Screen Moments (6 min. HD), Time Travel: The Art of the Impossible (11 min.), The Language of Whales (6 min.), A Vulcan Primer (8 min.), Kirk's Women (8 min.), Star Trek: Three Picture Saga (10 min. HD), Star Trek For a Cause (6 min. HD), Starfleet Academy SciSec Brief 004: The Whale Probe (4 min. HD), From Outer Space to the Ocean (15 min.), The Bird of Prey (3 min.), Original Interviews: William Shatner (15 min), Leonard Nimoy (16 min.) & DeForest Kelley (13 min.), Roddenbery Scrapbook (8 min.), Featured Artist: Mark Leonard (13 min.), Production Gallery (4 min.), Storyboards galleries, Theatrical trailer, BD-Live Disc 5: Star Trek V The Final Frontier (Theatrical Edition) 1989, 107 min. Audio: English 7.1 Dolby TrueHD, French 2.0 Dolby Digital, Spanish Mono Subtitles: English, English SDH, French, Spanish, Portuguese Extras: Audio Commentary by William Shatner & Liz Shatner, Audio Commentary by Michael & Denise Okuda, Garfield & Judy Reeves-Stevens, and Daren Dochterman, Library Computer, Harve Bennett's Pitch to Sales Team (2 min.), The Journey: A Behind-the-Scenes Documentary (29 min.), Make-up Tests (10 min.), Pre-Visualization Models (2 min.), Rockman in the Raw (6 min.), Star Trek V Press Conference (14 min.), Herman Zimmerman: A Tribute (19 min.) Original Interview: William Shatner (15 min.), Cosmic Thoughts (13 min.), That Klingon Couple (13 min.), A Green Future? (9 min.), Star Trek Honors NASA (10 min. HD), Hollywood Walk of Fame: James Doohan (3 min. HD), Starfleet Academy SciSec Brief 005: Nimbus III (3 min. HD), Deleted scenes (4 min.), Production Gallery (4 min.), Storyboards, Theatrical trailers & TV spots, BD-Live Disc 6: Star Trek VI The Undiscovered Country (Theatrical Edition) 1991, 110 min. Audio: English 7.1 Dolby TrueHD, French 2.0 Dolby Digital, Spanish Mono Subtitles: English, English SDH, French, Spanish, Portuguese Extras: Audio Commentary by Director Nicholas Meyer & Screenwriter Denny Martin Flinn, Audio Commentary by Larry Nemecek & Ira Steven Behr, Library Computer, The Perils of Peacemaking (27 min.), It Started With a Story (10 min.), Prejudice (5 min.), Director Nicholas Meyer (6 min.), Shakespeare and General Chang (6 min.), Bring it to Life (23 min), Farewell & Goodbye (7 min.), Conversations With Nicholas Meyer (10 min.), Klingons: Conjuring the Legend (21 min.), Federation Operatives (5 min.), Penny's Toy Box (6 min.), Together Again (5 min.), Tom Morga: Alien Stuntman (5 min. HD), To Be or Not To Be: Klingons and Shakespeare (23 min. HD), Starfleet Academy SciSec Brief 006: Praxis (3 min. HD), DeForest Kelley: A Tribute (13 min.), Original Interviews: William Shatner (5 min), Leonard Nimoy (6 min), DeForest Kelley (5 min.), James Doohan (6 min.), Nichelle Nichols (6 min), George Takei (5 min), Walter Koenig (6 min) & Iman (5 min), Production Gallery (3 min), Storyboards, Trailers, 1991 Convention Presentation by Nicholas Meyer (5 min.), BD-Live Disc 7: Star Trek The Captain's Summit 2009, 71 min. Audio: English 2.0 Dolby Digital Subtitles: English, French, Spanish, Portuguese ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on June 24, 2013 by Karde9

  • TOS lovers or people just beginning their journey
I am an ardent fan of Star Trek, The Original Series & enjoy watching these movies every so often. I feel that STTOS & movies show that the future can be more inclusive than the world seems right now. A good watch when present-day situations get me down.
Reviewed in the United States on October 13, 2024 by BARBARA A BUCKLEY

  • Great series
Loved having all these films
Reviewed in the United States on October 30, 2024 by Henry Antoine

  • GREAT RE-MIX IN 4K
BUT WATCHED ALL 6 MOVIES. GOT TO LAST MOVIE SKIPPED, AMAZON BACKED PRODUCT 100% THANKS AMAZON
Reviewed in the United States on October 16, 2024 by Michael L. Tutela

  • A good value proposition despite some significant flaws (from an OWNER)
I had pre-ordered this item, and then saw some early reviews around the web stating that the video quality wasn't up to snuff. I canceled my order, and put the discs on my Netflix queue instead to evaluate them before purchase. Well, I re-ordered the set. Let me tell you why. The Films: The Trek films, to my mind, are a very good capstone to the Original Series Trek characters' stories. In them, we are presented with a very good "trilogy" of sorts, ST2-4, and a few other films that retain the thematic elements of the others whilst enjoying varying quality of story. The Motion Picture (ST1) is unfairly maligned in my eyes. It very ably presents a story of characters re-uniting after a hiatus, with all the varying emotional consequences of that separation. Grafted to this is a relatively high-concept science fiction tale of an artificial intelligence seeking its creator. If this film had been cut by 20 minutes (very long effects sequences which seem a deliberate paean to Kubrick's "2001"), people would be hailing it as a masterpiece. ST2: The Wrath of Khan is, of course, the public's pick as the greatest Trek film. It's hard to argue. A good villain, a deep emotional core, a slam-bang space battle, and some great performances make this a film that doesn't really misfire. ST3: The Search For Spock is the middle act of a "trilogy", and really works in my opinion. It has a lot of action, a good dose of humor, and a lot of heart. ST4: The Voyage Home is unbridled fun from start to finish. Lighter in tone than the preceding two films, it still captures the emotional core of the story, and brings the trilogy to a satisfying conclusion. ST5: The Final Frontier is the black sheep of the family. It introduces an unfortunate "retcon" character, does some unrealistic things in its quest to reach the "center of the galaxy," and posits an unsatisfying sci-fi story about "finding god." The characterizations are still generally good, though, and there are plenty of charming moments for fans. ST6: The Undiscovered Country is a return to form of sorts, but I think would not be regarded as highly if it had not followed ST5. A cold-war allegory, it has some good action, but suffers from some silly sequences in the middle (a prison planet and a murder mystery spring to mind). It does have Captain Sulu, though, which is hard to dislike. The Blu-Ray: Well, first I'll list the negatives: We are not presented with the "directors editions" from the last DVD box set. Thus we miss some new effects shots from ST1, one very good bit of back story from ST2, and a few negligible cuts from the rest of the films (mainly 6). Digital Noise Reduction has been applied to at least the final 4 films - and the results are not always positive. Grain has been reduced from the films with negative results - some very fine detail (such as fine facial wrinkles) is scrubbed away also. It probably will not be noticeable on displays under 40 inches - and I imagine it would be quite noticeable on front projection screens above 80 inches. I personally noticed it in spots on my 50" display, especially on Star Trek 4. ST4 comes off by far the worst, with many faces looking waxy - and other scenes being artificially pumped up by edge enhancement to compensate (check out Kirk and Spock walking by the boat dock before Gillian picks them up). I would say ST4 and ST6 suffer the most by the out of control noise reduction. You can really see it when smoke is in a scene - check out the scene in ST6 when Kirk smokes a cigar. As the smoke wafts in front of his face, you can see pores and lines under the eyes that are absent in the very next shot sans smoke. It's that extra little layer of detail we could have had, and it's missing. The double dip conundrum: we are certain to be presented with a new set, although I will go on record betting it won't be before Xmas 2010, if even that soon. Paramount will be putting out the Abrams film this year, Seasons 2-3 of TOS this year, and the TNG movies probably next year. Surely there will be a complete box set at some point, incorporating the "directors edition" footage, but I would guess that this will not be released until the 2nd Abrams film hits theaters. It seems to takes upwards of a year to re-transfer and restore a film, the Directors footage has to be re-shot in 1080p, and logically, Paramount would not cannibalize their current retail SKUs by so quickly re-releasing them. So I would guess 2012 would be the soonest we'd see the "directors editions" with new, hopefully less DNR'ed transfers. All right, now the good news: These films have never looked this good. NEVER. ST1 is revelatory - there are colors I've never seen, and DNR is not obtrusive at all - fine detail seems quite evident. ST2, which apparently had the latest transfer, does not suffer from excessive DNR. ST3-6 are the films that have the most aggressive noise reduction, but it is only noticeable in select scenes (I am watching on a 50" 1080p display). For the most part, detail is quite strong (especially for movies shot in the 1980s), color depth blows away the DVDs (you really should compare them - prepare to be dazzled), and sound quality is excellent. The worst looking of these films look as good as the best cable TV HD. The best of them (1 and 2) are competitive with some of the better Blu-Rays on the market now. Just to correct some misinformation from previous reviews, all the films are presented in 1080p. None of them are 1080i, or anything less. Also, all of the films are truly high definition. They are not some sort of pseudo-HD, as one particularly egregious review has claimed. So it's hit or miss in terms of A/V, but light years ahead of the DVDs. The biggest gains are in color - the DVDs are positively muddy by comparison. ST 1, 2, and 5 generally look pretty good detail-wise. The other films suffer from waxy faces - they have strong mid-range detail (like cloth textures or scenery), but weak fine detail (like facial wrinkles). It is aggravating, because the films look so good in general, that the little details are washed away. Extras are VERY strong. Each film gets new commentaries, and most retain a second commentary as well. MANY new documentaries supplement the older ones which are retained for this set (I would estimate about 100 minutes per film combining old and new content). "Library Computer" offers interactive text data while you watch the films. BD Live functions include the ability to create and take fan quizzes with your remote and internet connection. The one giant new inclusion, "The Captains Summit," is presented on its own disc in full HD quality. This is a 70 minute round table, hosted by Whoopie (Guinan) Goldberg, featuring actors William Shatner, Leonard Nimoy, Patrick Stewart(Picard) and Jonathan Frakes (Riker). Wow! It is oddly titled, and I wish that they had included Kate Mulgrew (Janeway), Scott Bakula (Archer), and Avery Brooks (Sisko). The interview was a bit directionless at times, with Goldberg failing to keep her guests on track. Nonetheless, the actors are generally funny and at times engaging and insightful, and true fans will eat this up. Atypically for CBS/Paramount, the packaging for this set is very nice. A cardboard box with a plastic slipcover holds the Blu-Ray cases, which are all of the "slim" variety. Thus, the set takes up the space of only about 3 regular Blu-Ray cases, despite having seven discs. Separate cases, though, allow you to lend out one disc, and there is never any fumbling around with the elaborate multi-disc cases that often comprise these sets. ****** In summary, it comes down to a value proposition. At Amazon's reduced price, you're getting the theatrical cuts of the films, better than they've ever looked, for $11.65 apiece. I know I've paid more for films I care about a lot less. There probably won't be superior presentations of them for at least 3 years. So for a serious Trekkie, the math is simple. This is a purchase. For a general sci-fi fan with an HD setup, it's a maybe. If you're the type who's willing to buy "Chronicles of Riddick" for $20 just to have something HD to watch with spaceships and explosions, it's hard to see the argument against this set. If you're a new Trek fan who wants to dive in, this value is hard to beat. If you don't care much about Trek, this might be a pass, since intimate knowledge and interest for the characters really helps your enjoyment of the films. The haters need to calm down. No, this is not a perfect set. But at this price, it is still a very strong value. The missing material is not really integral to enjoying the films (unlike the LOTR set without the Extended Edition material - now THAT is a significant loss). If you want to see the films for the next 3 or 4 years at their best, this is the set to get. Otherwise, you're stuck with the dull, muddy DVD transfers for at least that long. When it comes time for the double-dip in 2012, the only ones that will probably warrant a re-purchase are 1 and 2, since they gained the most from the "Directors Edition" material. I would have rated this 3 stars had it been significantly more expensive, or had significantly fewer extras. But for $11-$13 (depending on the set's price) per movie, I'm willing to take the plunge, come what may. I think this set is a worthwhile purchase at either price point, and I would have placed the order at 79.99 as well. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on May 17, 2009 by Matthew T. Weflen

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Reviewed in the United States on October 23, 2024 by Gus Galan

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