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 Star Trek Phase II The Lost Series

This outstanding and surprisingly thick tome tracks the progress of the
attempt to revive the original Star Trek series in the 1970s which eventually
mutated into something we now call Star Trek: The Motion Picture.

Judith and Garfield Reeves-Stevens, the authors who brought us 1994's
wonderful Making of Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, have truly outdone
themselves with this book, which follows the inception, development and
pre-production of the second Star Trek series which never was, as well as the
studio decisions which caused its metamorphosis into the first of many feature
films. The book stops short of following Star
Trek's evolution to the big screen, though the authors drop a hint that they
might be working on such a volume. I'll be among the first to buy it if they
should do so, based on their work here.
The books owes its size to the reprinting of several important documents
related to Star Trek II, including the original writers' bible featuring the
characters of Science Officer Xon, First Officer Will Decker, and Lieutenant
Ilia, as well as story breakdowns and the entire original script for the
extended-length pilot episode, In Thy Image, which transmuted into the first Trek film, as well as the Star
Trek II version of Jon Povill and Jaron Summers' The Child, which was
also hastily recycled in the form of Next
Generation's belated second-season premiere after 1988's lengthy Writer's
Guild strike. Though more casual fans may skip over these scripts and story
treatments, I can't stress enough what fascinating reading they make.
Another treat is the photo insert, which reprints numrous screen tests of
sets and costumes, including the incongruous sight of Persis Khambatta in one of
the original show's colorful short skirt uniforms, and other similarly-clad
extras on the familiar movie-era Enterprise sets. The original engineering set
lacked safety rails, and the "warp core" looked a bit silly with huge
bulbous components bulging out of it. The Enterprise's original concept was
only slightly updated, and the Star Trek II TV Enterprise would have been a
hybrid between the sleek movie Enterprise and the strictly non-aerodynamic ship
of the original series.
The authors make the potentially controversial statement in the epilogue that
if Star Trek II had aired even so much as one season of episodes, that we would
not now be watching reruns of Next Generation, or new episodes of Deep Space Nine or Voyager, because it would almost certainly have
failed again, dimming the prospects for the theatrical movies which were
responsible for Trek's TV rebirth in the late 80s. This is an insightful and
truthful assessment which is surprising, even though the Pocket books about the
making of the various Trek series have never skimped on opinions. Though
fascinating, it is understandable when the Reeves-Stevens declare that Star
Trek II's greatest gift to the franchise is that it remained on paper.
Reviewed by Earl Green
theLogBook.com editor/webmaster


- Year: 1997
- Author: Judith and Garfield Reeves-Stevens
- Genre: Non-fiction - behind-the-scenes
- Length: 360 pages
- Publisher: Pocket
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