I used to be a city bus driver, and I’d occasionally drive the articulated buses. And my inner child would play Sulu on the freeway going: Warp 1, Warp 2…. All the way to ten. This was before I began service and after my services ended. Had a blast driving the artics. Whenever they were turned around, the inside, to me, always resembled the corridors of The Enterprise. Memories.
I still can't stop laughing at the noise the poor Excelsior makes as her engines SCRAM in STIII. The look on her captain's face when he realises that they're actually /slowing to a stop/ as the computer insists that they're at full power is classic.
Agreed wholeheartedly. That moment and line to me is the best one ever in all Star Trek. To me, it shows the ultimate respect and admiration from Captain Sulu for his former Captain. The way George Takei delivered it was excellent. I am a retired LEO and worked for 1Chief and 1 Lt. whom I said, if either one of them said they were going to hell to kick the devils ass, I be the first in line to go with them. I can relate to Sulu’s comment .....
Yup... You nailed it. My favorite ten seconds of any star trek movie. Kirk always said, " When I die, I will die alone". Sulu wasn't gonna let that happen. Ship shaking like a dog shitting a rusty razor blade.. Everything at 110 %.. No hesitation on Sulu's part.. He'll get there in time, or lose everything trying. If, in your life, you have three people who will drop everything and bring a shovel ( you either know what that means, or you don't), you've done well and have had a major influence on those around you. That kind of respect and devotion can't be bought, it has to be earned over time. Sulu was bringing the shovel, and he wasn't going to be late, even if it came at his own expense.
Leonard Nimoy you were one of a kind and will always be Mr Spock.You were the best and will be sincerely missed by all us fans of Star Trek.Rest in peace.
Gosh never realized how much Kirk said "Go Sulu." It's right up there with "Fascinating", "He's dead Jim." , "Kirk to Enterprise .", "Haling Frequencies Open.", "I'm Given Her All She's Got." and "I'm a Doctor not a,".
Don't forget the "Beam me up, Scotty" variants. Although they never really said it exactly like that, it is probably the most memorable non-quote... And I'd add Picard's, "Make it so" and "Engage" on this list as well. And perhaps his "Tea, Earl Grey, hot" :P
The effects in those older movies look incredible, considering they were almost entirely practical and the older Star Trek movies were actually pretty low budget.
That’s not true. Star Trek: The Motion Picture went far over budget, and at nearly $45 million was among the most expensive films ever produced at that time. The later films weren’t nearly as expensive, but they were still big-budget movies for their day.
@@bryanpassifiume1185 Yeah, I read somewhere that TMP was, at the time of its release, actually one of the most expensive Movies ever produced. And a large percentage of this money went into the effects. The Model of the _Enterprise_ alone cost about 750k
As at least one person has said, TMP's final cost was about $45million USD in 1979. That would be close to $175 million today. Not the high end of big budget these days, but certainly not low budget. The age of the blockbuster starting in 1989 and each year audiences wanting more and more from their action movies, big action and sci-fi pew pew movies have seen their budgets explode in recent years.
True. $175M was huge in 1979, whereas the economics and expectations of today’s blockbusters demand and allow $175M to be fairly normal. Remember, back then there wasn’t the same global theatrical market and ancillary revenue streams (I.e., DVD/blu-Ray) as there is in the 21st Century. Star Trek II made about 17% of its box office internationally. Star Trek 2009 made 2x that percentage overseas, and Trek isn’t even a property that performs particularly well in foreign markets. A lot of big budget films make 1/2 their money or more in foreign markets nowadays.
Question?.....What, exactly does "Trans Warp Drive" capability mean?,......... What can a ship that is capable of "Trans Warp Drive" do, that a non- Trans Warp Drive capable ship not do?.....Was this ever explained in any detail at all in one of the Movies, or a TV episode? Anyone?..
Actually, what Scotty did was remove some key components from the transwarp drive computer, which he presented to Dr. McCoy "from one surgeon to another"---and as a result, the Excelsior creaked and groaned to a dead stop right at the space doors while the Enterprise went to Warp 8. The whole idea of transwarp was scrapped because the Excelsior couldn't do it!
Richard C. Hoating "Transwarp" seems to be a pretty broad term in the Star Trek universe. In the Excelsior's case, transwarp drive was supposed to allow the ship to instantly jump to a specified warp velocity without having to gradually accelerate through the lower numbers first (Warp 1, Warp 2, Warp 3, etc). That would mean the Excelsior could have easily caught up with the Enterprise mid-warp, or even arrive at Genesis before the Enterprise did. Excelsior's transwarp experiments apparently turned out to be more or less a dud because the ship was eventually fitted with a standard warp drive.
The movies always glossed over this. Even the term Warp Factor has changed in definition as new scales were created to avoid insanely large numbers for speed. These changes come largely from fans. It was not instantaneous. That would be transwarp beaming, something Scotty developed. The Excelsior was supposed be an experiment in Transwarp with the ultimate goal of TW 10. This would have been an infinite speed. This proved to be a failure. Voyager was the first success in the test of a TW10 drive installed on a shuttle testbed craft and piloted by Tom Paris. Voyager also had numerous encounters with Transwarp technology with the Borg.
As my father used to say every time the Enterprise went to warp, "Go bird, go!!". My father got me interested in Star Trek when i was a kid and i have never regretted it!
When Stephen Hawking guest starred on the episode "Descent", he was taken on a guided tour of the set. Pausing in front of the warp core set piece, he remarked: "I'm working on that."
The scene in Star Trek IV, where they warp around the sun and the Klingon ship stars violently rattling...I’m reminded of my soft top Jeep when I would drive on the freeway. For 19 years, that was my starship. 😓😓😓
I've enjoyed all Enterprise series and movies, but after all of these, for me nothing still does it like the first time the Enterprise goes to Warp in 'The Motion Picture'. Something about the graphics and way it was done still to me is the best breath taking visual to date.
Alas, he's a perfect martinet, they missed the opportunity to turn him into Admiral Styles, a madman with evil plans to "save the Federation" with some kind of war.
Technically when Styles said this, Kirk was still an admiral, which means that it was the other way around, that Kirk was put back to the captain's chair(rank) again
I resemble that remark ! 186,852miles per second is light-speed. +1 more is WARP 1, according to one of the discussions I heard sometime in the past. I don't remember which episode it was on, though, but it seems it was back in the 60's. (The way I remember, it's the same number as the depth of the deepest charted spot on our planet in the Mariana Trench. Of course that's in FEET.)
Yep, i was 17 whne the first ST movie came out. I was on the edge of my seat waiting for warp speed - which was why they dragged it out a bit. That level of special effect was brand new.
My favorite will always be Star Trek III leaving Space Dock. Kirk stealing his own ship back and getting the better of another captain never gets old. "...You'll never sit in the captain's chair again." Kirk: Warp Speed. Sulu: Aye Sir!
They evolved it some more in Into Darkness, where these yarn-like streaks show up behind the ship. And it looks like Beyond changes it into a sort of bubble effect. Great compilation!
Great job on these clips. It is very well put together and you kept a lot of tos Captain Kirk's best lines. "That away. ". "Everyone remember where we parked." I used to watch Star Trek with my dad every week night when it went into syndication. Did not see it in its first run, there was no cable in our area and DISHES had not been invented. The camaraderie between Kirk, Spock and McCoy was one of the best parts of Star Trek the original series. I never could get into the newer tv series or their movies that did not have the original cast. To me, and this is just my opinion , the original series and the movies with William Shatner, Leonard Nimoy, DeForest Kelley, James Doohan, Nichelle Nichols, Walter Koenig, and George Takei ARE Star Trek.
It’s interesting how in Star Trek II to V we see a lot of shots of the Enterprise fly TOWARDS the camera as it goes into warp, something not typically seen in the rest of the franchise.
Those movies had slightly less budget than most in the series. My guess is that effect was less expensive to composite over and over and make look convincing than the star bending effect of The Motion Picture and that one warp jump in Wrath of Khan
Spihk Heartbust!? Analyze & discuss effects for Bozeman Hotmail Recipient as result for Bozeman Hotmail Recipient & Mount Pleasant Server George standing near a Sign that includes the letters Com!
9:46 When the officer engages warp speed on the Enterprise E, there's a serious mis-step in art direction on the LCARS UI. We see heavily bevelled gold buttons that look like they were taken from a website in the Netscape era. I think the LCARS UI is hard to top from the Next Gen series for its simple lines and tones.
I became a full blooded “Trekkie” when I would sit and watch re-runs of the original series with my mother and father. The Chemistry from the original series between Kirk, Spock, and “Bones”, can’t be beat. Don’t forget Scotty, too! I alway get into the scientific side of it - either based on fact, or imagined. It was just the energy from the original series and the subsequent films - to me -that made them an awesome franchise. I admit, I didn’t get into Generations - despite its popularity, but I did get into o Voyager, because Captain Janeway had the same ballsiness that Kirk had. These warp scenes are wonderful at building tension and excitement.
Loved this. Never get tired of warp - I remember how awestruck I was when I went to see STTMP and they went into warp. And to finish this off with Spock/Leonard Nimoy's voice. Fantistic tribute. Thumbs up!
What is really unrealistic btw., as a. the Enterprise as the fastest ship in the fleet should have overrun the others and b. NOBODY can kill 6 ships, which have to come out of warp with shields up (as it was a distress signal that brought them to vulcan), in 30 seconds.
Sascha Sierk A ship from more than a century in the future using Borg technology could probably destroy MORE than 6 ships in that time. It is stated in the film that the Enterprise's shields were virtually useless against the Narada's weapons. Imagine what a single modern tank could do to 6 British Calvalry Corps riders in 30 seconds on an open field. Or what a WW2 battleship would do to a Spanish galleon. The only thing that finally destroyed the Narada was another 24th-century ship smashing directly into its heart with more red matter than it would take to destroy a thousand planets.
Tai, yes, the vessel of Nero is really high technology in comparison to the year 2259, but if I would be captain on board of a ship, even if they would be trainees, on a rescue mission without knowing what's up with the distress signal of vulcan, I would be really aware of enemies of any kind. And, the ships will warp out all at one... even if he destroys one ship... he cannot destroy all ships at once, he don't have so many phasers (otherwise he would have used them against the enterprise as well), so they could jump back into warp. It would be rough for the crew, but how bad educated must be the captains of star fleet, if all fall into the same trap without any other way doing then trying to fight against an unfightable enemy? Ok, perhabs they are so bad educated, as in Into Darkness, they didn't followed one of the simplest rules of leadership: If you are under attack, split your command staff, so that not one strike kill them all.
Sascha Sierk Dropping out of warp can be done nearly anywhere. Jumping back into it takes a little more time - you've got to see where you're going, for one thing. But barring that, lets consider just how advanced the Narada would be compared to the Starfleet ships it destroyed. Uhura intercepts a transmission stating that the Narada destroyed 47 Klingon Warbirds. Consider that for a moment. 47 Klingon vessels intended for battle - boom, all gone. The Narada's warheads seem to be able to break into multiple components and attack multiple targets simultaneously. They also seem to penetrate 23rd-century shielding like it isn't even there. Being a Romulan ship outfitted with Borg technology by the Tal Shiar, the Narada may also be more difficult to detect, especially by 23rd-century ships at warp. And don't forget that Borg technology was scary advanced, even in the 24th century's standards. So the difference in technology isn't a minor thing. The closest real-world equivalent I can think of would be a fleet of Viking ships being bombed by a squadron of supersonic stealth fighters. I don't care how good your fleet commander is; you can't see them coming, you can't block their shots and you can't shoot back.
But as we learned in the last 40 years, you can change course in Warp ;) You only need to account the first few steps, the rest navigation can be done on the warp. A really different concept to Hyperjumps, where you need to know the end of the jump at the beginning ;)
Kirk: "Bless you Scotty.....GO SULU!" By far, the best, most dramatic, with the most on the line.....warp speed command ever given in the Star Trek Universe.
In 1975 I drove my 1966 Dodge Polara with a 383 V8 from Philly to Miami to go to school. My license plate was WARP-9. The Dade County police loved to pull me over.
John Cunningham No, every captain is legally required to use his own special expression, just like no other ring announcer but Michael Buffer is allowed to say „let‘s get ready to rumble“. ;)
My fav warp f/x have always been the way they showed it in the first movie. All those blue light beams & especially the way the Enterprise disappears into the darkness & you see that bright flash of light with the loud "Snap!" was very cool & dramatic.
Tobias Chance I agree with Tobias... they should have kept it... it showed what an epic transition from normal space to warp space "actually means"... :)
Tobias Chance agreed the best part of that movie to me was the flyby of the enterprise while it was in spacedock. this will always be my enterprise though I guess I do like the interior look to the jjprise, the bridge and sick bay any way, but on the outside the original movie enterprise.
Tobias Chance Yep, when you break the light-barrier you're going to create a luminal flash like a sonic boom, and it's naturally going to DISAPPEAR from visible sight. Meanwhile from the ship's viewpoint, it will stay the same while only sensors will allow anything visible. That's why in TOS, whenever the Enterprise left a star-system, the viewscreens would show planets disappearing into the distance impossibly fast; i.e. it was just the sensors presenting a visible image, not an ordinary camera back there, which would naturally show nothing.
Sure, when they're at sub-light speeds, but when they're using their warp drive, they are actually bending space on another dimension they call 'subspace', allowing the ship to be transposed through normal space without crushing the entire ship in a split second.
CPRailRTC That's actually not true. Faster than light travel is now theoretically possible and in more than one way it's extremely similar to Star Trek warp theory.
Do you understand what inertia dampening is...? Yes I believe that speeds faster than what we think the speed of light is possible... inertia dampening would be like magic.
Sometmes Jones Of course I know what it is. I agree that if it were theoretically possible to move that fast in what we know as normal space, we would have to do it while inside some sort of inertial dampening field. But we wouldn't need to worry about inertia if we had warp drive. Warp drive is supposed to shift space around the vessel and bring it closer to a theoretical dimension of normal space commonly referred to as subspace. Note the L at the end of inertia. That's the correct way to spell it when using it as an adjective.
Same. Definitely one of the better elements of the recent Trek films. One particularly awesome scene that this video is missing is the Enterprise traveling within the warp bubble from Star Trek Beyond, which might honestly be my favorite shot in all of Trek. Shame that it only lasts for about a second or two.
Great video, very well done. I love that they tried to recreate what scientists actually think it would theoretically look like in the newest chapter of the franchise. P.S....Favorite scene: when Excelsior's wheels fall off. Happy 50th, Trek!
i enjoy how the main timeline everything from ship to warp has a 'elegant' vibe to it while the kelvin verse is more cutting edge and brutal on the senses. everything about the kelvin verse matches the way it came about, brutal :) oh and no ship screams like the enterprise when pushed beyond her limits lol :)
My fave will always be the Star Trek 2-6 rainbow warp 🌈. No flash. No slow motion stretch. It looked fun on TV but there's something elemental, almost mythical, about the Kirk movie warp effects.
Goldsmith fantastic, but also James Horner - especially on closing sequences and credits in ST2:TWOK, and Cliff Eidelman settings us up at the opening titles in ST6:TUC.
For me the best warp moment is in First Contact, when Zeph Cochrane flew the first warp capable engine designed and built by Earth. This ushered Earth into a new era when the warp signature was detected by a Romulan survey craft. I don't know how many times I watched it.
ElectroAfrican I find the first warp jump to be similar of that of Columbus. Sure, Columbus wasn't the perfect man, and he didn't for the people he found, but he ushered in a new era of history. Cochrane did the same, he didn't have the best attitude, but what he did changed the galaxy forever.
Actually it was a Vulcan craft. No biggie, Vulcans and Romulans are genetically identical. Romulans are not as spiritually or intellectually advanced as Vulcans, being instead more warlike like the Old Klingon Empire.
star trek is and always will be a classic the cast from all of the generations the technology special effects perfect this will never end it will only get better im a trekey and always will be so to all the cast directors producers writers technicians and creators thank you and "Live Long And Prosper"..........
@@mwrosanne Of course. One is about ' territory' as our species currently, or in the near future might interpreter it / implements' it. Plural. The the other, Star Trek, explores the idea of a future where even our conceived notions of our current understanding of everything both known and unknown to our being is simply another word or galaxy away. Given our nature, exploration seems to be hardwired . It's how I suppose some might consider the British to be the Cuckoo of humanity, in that it spreads its genetic material around other territories, without hanging around to pick up the date. So to speak.
I wish they could bring back the "Next Generation Cast" and do another movie. Maybe have Commander Riker be captain of his own ship.. and Captain Piccard be an Admiral of his own fleet.
+midos67 totally! they really didnt need to go back to Kirks days. They need DS9 movies and Voyager. how long are they going to keep Siski in the wormhole and it would be nice to see what Janeway and company are up to now. I really though that the movies followed suit of the series TOS got movies, TNG got movies but DS9 and Voy not one movie.
I think I you and I are the only ones who understand what you meant when you wrote this. You are right it is indeed rare use to look for it in Tos episode he hid it well.
Indeed. They hid it pretty good. Just like Carter in Hogans Heroes who always wore gloves for the fact that he wanted to hide that the actor wears a marriage ring because his character was single.
"There is no smoking while the seat belt sign is lit." "The white zone is for warping and un-warping passengers. There is no loitering in the red zone."
The Tunnel of Light effect is I believe accurate, but in that it is caused by the POV accelerating up to the full speed C, it would be random bits of light, the stars, which would lengthen and close into a complete tunnel of light, not a Symmetrical cone or tunnel of bits of light.
***** And that is called life my friend. I point out to all daily that Japan invented a water car in 2007, and then was hit by a tsnami that washed up on only one shore. Now no water car. Tesla also began building electric cars here in 2006. Today still so few Americans even know about it. My point is, if you love Star Trek, your going to have to kick some major ass in this timeline to get there. SEE the water car in my latest upload 'What is the MAsonTRIX?'. Maybe we can agree on what I just told you as real truth. Peace to you and yours. - Brian
ok, i'm an old softie... at 71, went through my teen years watching TOS, resisted TNG, railed at the change of music and the dumba$$ plot of the first movie, sweated through movies 1, 3, and 5, luxuriated in all the following movies and spinoffs... this compilation brings tears to the eyes and a swell to the breast... each Enterprise, DS9, Voyager, and the rest are all beautiful in their own ways and each brings a sense of nostalgia. Every one of the crew is like a beloved family member, and the loss of the men and women who brought those roles to life leaves a hole in the heart. But, I count my blessings to live in a time when their work and portrayals are preserved and available to view, review, and remember at the touch of a button. Roddenberry's vision and dream have come to life through more hours of video viewing than I can count, and the dream of a unified galaxy (or even a unified, peaceful planet under a BENEVOLENT governing body) lives on. Hope that such a thing can be achieved in my lifetime continues.
***** I agree, but I see the benefit of CGI too. When it was all models, we'd only see a new ship every few years. When CGI came around, that's when we finally got to see big fleets and major battles. Compare the battle of Wolf 359 to any battle from DS9
The hidden benefit of physical models is that after a lull of a few seasons or years they'd lose, sell, or break the model and have to make new one. So lots of "refits" haha.
I'm 48 and have been watching since boyhood, I can assure you that JJs fleet warp jump and departure from spacedock in his first movie, is easily on par if not better and more exilerating than any jump that's been done before, I still cant get enough of that entire segment, from the shuttles going up to the final pops. I was way more excited about the buildup to that movie then the latest star wars!
I always thought that JJ's interpretation of warp speed seemed a lot more natural. A huge force and sound activating all at once, not something where you can barely tell it happened.
It's a refreshingly forceful take on warp. Strangely enough, I love both that one as well as the original TMP super-streak. Both demonstrate the power of warp in their own ways.
I was kind of hoping you would have included the clip from ST6 when Sulu is in command of the excelsior and they are warping to save kirk; and when the helmsman says that the ship will fly apart if they go any faster, Sulu tells him "Then fly her apart!"
"Gentlemen, your work today has been outstanding; i intend to recommend you all for promotion, in whatever fleet we end up serving" never gets old
I loved that line❤
Well how many fleet's are there and their name's.
Quite a lot of them.
In whatever fleet we driving, we promise our own starfleet members who will never old, we reverse age as our Nordic neighbors.
Rest in Peace, James Doohan, Lenonard Nimoy, DeForrest Kelley and Anton Yelchin. We will never forget you!
and Miguel Ferrer!
how did dr.mccoy die? I loved that actor!! :(
@@rascheneallicock2804 Cancer IIRC
🖖🏼
@@rascheneallicock2804 He's dead Jim!
I used to be a city bus driver, and I’d occasionally drive the articulated buses. And my inner child would play Sulu on the freeway going: Warp 1, Warp 2…. All the way to ten. This was before I began service and after my services ended. Had a blast driving the artics. Whenever they were turned around, the inside, to me, always resembled the corridors of The Enterprise. Memories.
I still can't stop laughing at the noise the poor Excelsior makes as her engines SCRAM in STIII. The look on her captain's face when he realises that they're actually /slowing to a stop/ as the computer insists that they're at full power is classic.
+Ben Russell-Gough I can't help but wonder if someone tried to sneak in the Millennium Falcon hyperdrive failure sound in there...
A smashing tribute to bring it to a conclusion with the voice of the legend himself, our Spock!
Come on, you missed the best warp segment of all, from VI. Helmsan: "She'll fly apart." Captain Sulu: "FLY HER APART, THEN!!"
Agreed wholeheartedly. That moment and line to me is the best one ever in all Star Trek. To me, it shows the ultimate respect and admiration from Captain Sulu for his former Captain. The way George Takei delivered it was excellent. I am a retired LEO and worked for 1Chief and 1 Lt. whom I said, if either one of them said they were going to hell to kick the devils ass, I be the first in line to go with them. I can relate to Sulu’s comment .....
George was a better actor than people give him credit for
Yeaaaassss love it
Yup... You nailed it. My favorite ten seconds of any star trek movie. Kirk always said, " When I die, I will die alone". Sulu wasn't gonna let that happen. Ship shaking like a dog shitting a rusty razor blade.. Everything at 110 %.. No hesitation on Sulu's part.. He'll get there in time, or lose everything trying.
If, in your life, you have three people who will drop everything and bring a shovel ( you either know what that means, or you don't), you've done well and have had a major influence on those around you. That kind of respect and devotion can't be bought, it has to be earned over time.
Sulu was bringing the shovel, and he wasn't going to be late, even if it came at his own expense.
❤
Leonard Nimoy you were one of a kind and will always be Mr Spock.You were the best and will be sincerely missed by all us fans of Star Trek.Rest in peace.
Thay have really tried to emulate him in one way or another with different charactor traits, Data for one then Tuvok of course.
Gosh never realized how much Kirk said "Go Sulu." It's right up there with "Fascinating", "He's dead Jim." , "Kirk to Enterprise .", "Haling Frequencies Open.", "I'm Given Her All She's Got." and "I'm a Doctor not a,".
Don't forget the "Beam me up, Scotty" variants. Although they never really said it exactly like that, it is probably the most memorable non-quote...
And I'd add Picard's, "Make it so" and "Engage" on this list as well. And perhaps his "Tea, Earl Grey, hot" :P
Coffee, black
Maltz, jol yIchu !
Warp factor 2
If our first manned deep space starship isn't named Enterprise it'll be an insult to all of humanity
NASA actually drew up plans for one we don't have the tech for yet, and yes, named it Enterprise
Apparently, she's supposed to run on an Alcubierre drive.
@@wagnerpd5921 For racist like you, it will called trump craft. Happy?
@@batman_2004 ikr no one was talking about politics and he just felt like bringing Obama into it
@@captain_misaki The shaped like an inflated condom?
The effects in those older movies look incredible, considering they were almost entirely practical and the older Star Trek movies were actually pretty low budget.
That’s not true.
Star Trek: The Motion Picture went far over budget, and at nearly $45 million was among the most expensive films ever produced at that time.
The later films weren’t nearly as expensive, but they were still big-budget movies for their day.
@@bryanpassifiume1185 Yeah, I read somewhere that TMP was, at the time of its release, actually one of the most expensive Movies ever produced. And a large percentage of this money went into the effects. The Model of the _Enterprise_ alone cost about 750k
@@bryanpassifiume1185 they ended up reusing a lot of the footage in wrath of kahn from the motion picture.
As at least one person has said, TMP's final cost was about $45million USD in 1979. That would be close to $175 million today. Not the high end of big budget these days, but certainly not low budget. The age of the blockbuster starting in 1989 and each year audiences wanting more and more from their action movies, big action and sci-fi pew pew movies have seen their budgets explode in recent years.
True. $175M was huge in 1979, whereas the economics and expectations of today’s blockbusters demand and allow $175M to be fairly normal. Remember, back then there wasn’t the same global theatrical market and ancillary revenue streams (I.e., DVD/blu-Ray) as there is in the 21st Century.
Star Trek II made about 17% of its box office internationally. Star Trek 2009 made 2x that percentage overseas, and Trek isn’t even a property that performs particularly well in foreign markets. A lot of big budget films make 1/2 their money or more in foreign markets nowadays.
I like how Scotty stopped the Excelsior by stealing the spark plugs :)
Question?.....What, exactly does "Trans Warp Drive" capability mean?,......... What can a ship that is capable of "Trans Warp Drive" do, that a non- Trans Warp Drive capable ship not do?.....Was this ever explained in any detail at all in one of the Movies, or a TV episode? Anyone?..
Actually, what Scotty did was remove some key components from the transwarp drive computer, which he presented to Dr. McCoy "from one surgeon to another"---and as a result, the Excelsior creaked and groaned to a dead stop right at the space doors while the Enterprise went to Warp 8. The whole idea of transwarp was scrapped because the Excelsior couldn't do it!
ZITA CARNO That was funny! I liked the clunking sounds when the Transwarp didn't work.
Richard C. Hoating
"Transwarp" seems to be a pretty broad term in the Star Trek universe. In the Excelsior's case, transwarp drive was supposed to allow the ship to instantly jump to a specified warp velocity without having to gradually accelerate through the lower numbers first (Warp 1, Warp 2, Warp 3, etc). That would mean the Excelsior could have easily caught up with the Enterprise mid-warp, or even arrive at Genesis before the Enterprise did.
Excelsior's transwarp experiments apparently turned out to be more or less a dud because the ship was eventually fitted with a standard warp drive.
The movies always glossed over this. Even the term Warp Factor has changed in definition as new scales were created to avoid insanely large numbers for speed. These changes come largely from fans.
It was not instantaneous. That would be transwarp beaming, something Scotty developed.
The Excelsior was supposed be an experiment in Transwarp with the ultimate goal of TW 10. This would have been an infinite speed. This proved to be a failure. Voyager was the first success in the test of a TW10 drive installed on a shuttle testbed craft and piloted by Tom Paris. Voyager also had numerous encounters with Transwarp technology with the Borg.
As my father used to say every time the Enterprise went to warp, "Go bird, go!!". My father got me interested in Star Trek when i was a kid and i have never regretted it!
Last part with Vulcan imploding from the Red Matter and hearing Spock's voice, got tears. LLAP. The world misses you Leonard Nemoy
When Stephen Hawking guest starred on the episode "Descent", he was taken on a guided tour of the set. Pausing in front of the warp core set piece, he remarked: "I'm working on that."
The sound of the Excelsior breaking down like an old jalopy gets me every time.
It's warp speed you want when you order a pizza, , but impulse power you need when your in-laws are visiting
The scene in Star Trek IV, where they warp around the sun and the Klingon ship stars violently rattling...I’m reminded of my soft top Jeep when I would drive on the freeway. For 19 years, that was my starship. 😓😓😓
Hey! Did you ever get a bumper sticker, that said... "But my 'other' one has warp drive!"
Star Trek VI The Undiscovered Country
Helmsman: She'll fly apart sir.
Captain Sulu: Fly her apart then!
I've enjoyed all Enterprise series and movies, but after all of these, for me nothing still does it like the first time the Enterprise goes to Warp in 'The Motion Picture'. Something about the graphics and way it was done still to me is the best breath taking visual to date.
I remember so vividly that first failed attempt when they had an asteroid pulled in to warp speed with them!
Wish I could give you more likes :)
The sound the warp drive makes in the motion picture is astonishing.
Captain Styles: Kirk. If you do this, you'll never sit in the captain's chair again.
Kirk: Bite me.
And how wrong Styles was.
Alas, he's a perfect martinet, they missed the opportunity to turn him into Admiral Styles, a madman with evil plans to "save the Federation" with some kind of war.
3:36 that was in system (inside a gravity well) that's illegal
he did it anyway
kirk: "I've been unemployed before. Why back in the 70's Iived out of my shuttle...er, car...."
Technically when Styles said this, Kirk was still an admiral, which means that it was the other way around, that Kirk was put back to the captain's chair(rank) again
Oh my - the last seconds brings me to tears. Leonard, you are deeply missed 😢
"Transwarp at your command, sir."
"Execute."
Ah ah ah, you didn't say the magic word!
Um... Engage???
Ambarenya13 umm..Make it so?
Ambarenya13 Dennis Nedry......Jurassic Park lol
Ambarenya13 step on it
j luke Hypernova LOL!
gotta love the old ones when breaking the lightspeed-barrier still felt magical.
I resemble that remark !
186,852miles per second is light-speed. +1 more is WARP 1, according to one of the discussions I heard sometime in the past. I don't remember which episode it was on, though, but it seems it was back in the 60's. (The way I remember, it's the same number as the depth of the deepest charted spot on our planet in the Mariana Trench. Of course that's in FEET.)
@@general5104 ...feet? Really?
And ironically, you say that as if breaking the light speed barrier today in real life wouldn't be magical.
@@medexamtoolscom Dude... it's sStar Trek, not a documentary. I was talking about special effects and not physics.
Yep, i was 17 whne the first ST movie came out. I was on the edge of my seat waiting for warp speed - which was why they dragged it out a bit. That level of special effect was brand new.
The scene where Spock sacrificed himself got me when I first saw it
You have been and always will be my friend - Spock
I was nine when Star Trek premiered and it still holds the same fascination now that it did then! Thanks for posting this, it was awesome
The Federation changes uniform designs more than the NFL!
2 through 6 (and the opening act of Generations) used the same designs, it's just that in 3 and 4 the crew were mostly in civilian clothes.
You mean 'Star Fleet' changes uniforms more than the NFL!
But they don’t kneel!
Lol
AND HAIR CUTS LOL
My favorite will always be Star Trek III leaving Space Dock. Kirk stealing his own ship back and getting the better of another captain never gets old.
"...You'll never sit in the captain's chair again."
Kirk: Warp Speed.
Sulu: Aye Sir!
They evolved it some more in Into Darkness, where these yarn-like streaks show up behind the ship. And it looks like Beyond changes it into a sort of bubble effect. Great compilation!
Great job on these clips. It is very well put together and you kept a lot of tos Captain Kirk's best lines. "That away. ". "Everyone remember where we parked." I used to watch Star Trek with my dad every week night when it went into syndication. Did not see it in its first run, there was no cable in our area and DISHES had not been invented. The camaraderie between Kirk, Spock and McCoy was one of the best parts of Star Trek the original series. I never could get into the newer tv series or their movies that did not have the original cast. To me, and this is just my opinion , the original series and the movies with William Shatner, Leonard Nimoy, DeForest Kelley, James Doohan, Nichelle Nichols, Walter Koenig, and George Takei ARE Star Trek.
Enterprise A, a classic beauty. One fine ship. Been through everything and still ticking until the very end.
The best part is Leonard Nimoy at the end. He is so missed.
Captain of the Excelsior: "Kirk - if you do this you'll never sit in the captain's chair again."
Kirk: "Warp speed."
Kirk was a badass.
Did not even hestiate
It’s interesting how in Star Trek II to V we see a lot of shots of the Enterprise fly TOWARDS the camera as it goes into warp, something not typically seen in the rest of the franchise.
Those movies had slightly less budget than most in the series. My guess is that effect was less expensive to composite over and over and make look convincing than the star bending effect of The Motion Picture and that one warp jump in Wrath of Khan
The warp sequence at the end of TMP always makes me happy. Definitely my favorite. Thanks for posting!
Spihk Heartbust!? Analyze & discuss effects for Bozeman Hotmail Recipient as result for Bozeman Hotmail Recipient & Mount Pleasant Server George standing near a Sign that includes the letters Com!
9:46 When the officer engages warp speed on the Enterprise E, there's a serious mis-step in art direction on the LCARS UI. We see heavily bevelled gold buttons that look like they were taken from a website in the Netscape era. I think the LCARS UI is hard to top from the Next Gen series for its simple lines and tones.
I became a full blooded “Trekkie” when I would sit and watch re-runs of the original series with my mother and father. The Chemistry from the original series between Kirk, Spock, and “Bones”, can’t be beat. Don’t forget Scotty, too!
I alway get into the scientific side of it - either based on fact, or imagined. It was just the energy from the original series and the subsequent films - to me -that made them an awesome franchise.
I admit, I didn’t get into Generations - despite its popularity, but I did get into o Voyager, because Captain Janeway had the same ballsiness that Kirk had.
These warp scenes are wonderful at building tension and excitement.
Loved this. Never get tired of warp - I remember how awestruck I was when I went to see STTMP and they went into warp. And to finish this off with Spock/Leonard Nimoy's voice. Fantistic tribute. Thumbs up!
ya but, PLAID was really impressive
I very much like the warp effects from ST The Motion Picture, they have a great artistic quality.
The Enterprise A was by far the most beautiful starship.
It,s the ONLY starship ever
Man my favorite by far is Enterprise E. It has the long, flowing curves and clean lines.
RIP ... Leonard Nimoy
Amen.
Ronald M Harrison LIVE LONG AND PROSPER
@@terryderush7066
Peace & long life. 🖖
And DeForest Kelley and James Doohan. May all three rest in peace.
LIVE LONG AND PROSPER >... forever Mr Spock !!!
James Doohan landed at Normandy's and was shot six times (BY mistake) by another Canadian soldier.
I love how in Star Trek 2009 that one 30-second "parking brake" slip-up saved the Enterprise's ass.
What is really unrealistic btw., as a. the Enterprise as the fastest ship in the fleet should have overrun the others and b. NOBODY can kill 6 ships, which have to come out of warp with shields up (as it was a distress signal that brought them to vulcan), in 30 seconds.
Sascha Sierk A ship from more than a century in the future using Borg technology could probably destroy MORE than 6 ships in that time. It is stated in the film that the Enterprise's shields were virtually useless against the Narada's weapons.
Imagine what a single modern tank could do to 6 British Calvalry Corps riders in 30 seconds on an open field. Or what a WW2 battleship would do to a Spanish galleon.
The only thing that finally destroyed the Narada was another 24th-century ship smashing directly into its heart with more red matter than it would take to destroy a thousand planets.
Tai, yes, the vessel of Nero is really high technology in comparison to the year 2259, but if I would be captain on board of a ship, even if they would be trainees, on a rescue mission without knowing what's up with the distress signal of vulcan, I would be really aware of enemies of any kind. And, the ships will warp out all at one... even if he destroys one ship... he cannot destroy all ships at once, he don't have so many phasers (otherwise he would have used them against the enterprise as well), so they could jump back into warp. It would be rough for the crew, but how bad educated must be the captains of star fleet, if all fall into the same trap without any other way doing then trying to fight against an unfightable enemy?
Ok, perhabs they are so bad educated, as in Into Darkness, they didn't followed one of the simplest rules of leadership: If you are under attack, split your command staff, so that not one strike kill them all.
Sascha Sierk Dropping out of warp can be done nearly anywhere. Jumping back into it takes a little more time - you've got to see where you're going, for one thing.
But barring that, lets consider just how advanced the Narada would be compared to the Starfleet ships it destroyed.
Uhura intercepts a transmission stating that the Narada destroyed 47 Klingon Warbirds. Consider that for a moment. 47 Klingon vessels intended for battle - boom, all gone.
The Narada's warheads seem to be able to break into multiple components and attack multiple targets simultaneously. They also seem to penetrate 23rd-century shielding like it isn't even there.
Being a Romulan ship outfitted with Borg technology by the Tal Shiar, the Narada may also be more difficult to detect, especially by 23rd-century ships at warp. And don't forget that Borg technology was scary advanced, even in the 24th century's standards.
So the difference in technology isn't a minor thing. The closest real-world equivalent I can think of would be a fleet of Viking ships being bombed by a squadron of supersonic stealth fighters. I don't care how good your fleet commander is; you can't see them coming, you can't block their shots and you can't shoot back.
But as we learned in the last 40 years, you can change course in Warp ;) You only need to account the first few steps, the rest navigation can be done on the warp. A really different concept to Hyperjumps, where you need to know the end of the jump at the beginning ;)
Kirk: "Bless you Scotty.....GO SULU!"
By far, the best, most dramatic, with the most on the line.....warp speed command ever given in the Star Trek Universe.
"Engine room........... well done scotty........."
"Jim, I think you better get down here"
"Bones?"
"Better .........Hurry"
Gut wrenching.
@@rogerdorn38Absolutely
In 1975 I drove my 1966 Dodge Polara with a 383 V8 from Philly to Miami to go to school. My license plate was WARP-9. The Dade County police loved to pull me over.
seeing the enterprise go into warp speed was always something i loved seeing.
This was so far ahead of its time I could go on for days .Still #1 world wide as a series combining all various versions.And it's not even close .
The idea of slingshot when travelling this fast is ridiculous since it's more likely that the ship will slingshot the sun or the planet.
Also rest in peace; - Grace Lee Whitney. - She played the part of yeoman Rand, in the original Star Trek series
Nice. Warp's always been portrayed differently in trek even between the series and first movie, it's nice to see different interpretations of it all.
Missed the best quote of all time:
Scottie: “The crazy Vulcan won’t be satisfied until my control panel is a pile of molten lead.”
I really cant believe that the helmsman on the Excelsior could pass a Starfleet drug test.
Now I know why the transwarp on the Excelsior didn't work. That captain said 'Execute'. He should have said 'Engage'!!
John Cunningham No, every captain is legally required to use his own special expression, just like no other ring announcer but Michael Buffer is allowed to say „let‘s get ready to rumble“. ;)
@@magicmulder Ready at your command, Captain Buffer. "Let's get ready to warp driiiiiive."
@@scodybee Captain: "Engage!"
Ensign: "Sorry, captain, that is Captain Picard's trademark."
Captain: "To warp speed!"
Ensign: "Nope. Captain Takahashi of the Exultant."
Captain: "Uh... Release the warp hounds?"
Ensign: "Vice Admiral Burns."
Captain: "Uh... uh... Fire up the Jeffries tubes? ... Squirt some dilithium onto the warp core? ... Immanentize the FLT?"
Ensign: "Warp 1 engaged, Sir!"
@@magicmulder I can use Engage ensign. Captain Picard is not born yet.
This needed the Spaceballs "Ludicrous Speed" clip at the end for some comedy.
Ludicrous Speed Is the Gold Standard for parody.
What's the matter Coronal Sanders, chicken??
I thought the warp effect from the Motion Picture was the coolest one
I liked the Motion Picture but that particular special effect, I felt was weak
I liked the Warp Effect from TWOK a bit more. It was basically the same as the one from TMP, but the background was somewhat toned down.
Disco warp!
I always liked in ST 5 when the shuttle hits thrusters to get into the shuttle bay and chekov saying warp speed now and the near hit. He's good.
My fav warp f/x have always been the way they showed it in the first movie. All those blue light beams & especially the way the Enterprise disappears into the darkness & you see that bright flash of light with the loud "Snap!" was very cool & dramatic.
Tobias Chance I completely agree with you. Disco Warp was the best.
ari rottenberg Disco Warp? Haha. That's awesome.
Tobias Chance
I agree with Tobias... they should have kept it... it showed what an epic transition from normal space to warp space "actually means"... :)
Tobias Chance agreed the best part of that movie to me was the flyby of the enterprise while it was in spacedock. this will always be my enterprise though I guess I do like the interior look to the jjprise, the bridge and sick bay any way, but on the outside the original movie enterprise.
Tobias Chance Yep, when you break the light-barrier you're going to create a luminal flash like a sonic boom, and it's naturally going to DISAPPEAR from visible sight. Meanwhile from the ship's viewpoint, it will stay the same while only sensors will allow anything visible. That's why in TOS, whenever the Enterprise left a star-system, the viewscreens would show planets disappearing into the distance impossibly fast; i.e. it was just the sensors presenting a visible image, not an ordinary camera back there, which would naturally show nothing.
3:05 one of my favorite scenes in Star Trek. It's so simple, but it embodies such warmth and thrilling energy
A beautiful collection of special "Trek" moments, enjoyed it a lot---thanks for posting!
The magic of Start Trek is not Warp speed… it is the inertia dampening…
Sure, when they're at sub-light speeds, but when they're using their warp drive, they are actually bending space on another dimension they call 'subspace', allowing the ship to be transposed through normal space without crushing the entire ship in a split second.
CPRailRTC That's actually not true. Faster than light travel is now theoretically possible and in more than one way it's extremely similar to Star Trek warp theory.
Do you understand what inertia dampening is...? Yes I believe that speeds faster than what we think the speed of light is possible... inertia dampening would be like magic.
Sometmes Jones Of course I know what it is. I agree that if it were theoretically possible to move that fast in what we know as normal space, we would have to do it while inside some sort of inertial dampening field. But we wouldn't need to worry about inertia if we had warp drive. Warp drive is supposed to shift space around the vessel and bring it closer to a theoretical dimension of normal space commonly referred to as subspace. Note the L at the end of inertia. That's the correct way to spell it when using it as an adjective.
Yes any humans on that ship during acceleration to warp would be atomized goo
I particularly liked the "light booms" as the Federation ships left Earth orbit bound for Vulcan in 2009's Star Trek. A supremely cool effect!
Same. Definitely one of the better elements of the recent Trek films. One particularly awesome scene that this video is missing is the Enterprise traveling within the warp bubble from Star Trek Beyond, which might honestly be my favorite shot in all of Trek. Shame that it only lasts for about a second or two.
01:24 one of my favorite conversations in ST history.
Heading Sir,
Out there, that way..... 😎
I like the "The second star to the left"-one very much. XD
Great video, very well done. I love that they tried to recreate what scientists actually think it would theoretically look like in the newest chapter of the franchise. P.S....Favorite scene: when Excelsior's wheels fall off. Happy 50th, Trek!
"Mavericks going supersonic. Be there in 30 seconds" The more things change, the more they stay the same.
i enjoy how the main timeline everything from ship to warp has a 'elegant' vibe to it while the kelvin verse is more cutting edge and brutal on the senses. everything about the kelvin verse matches the way it came about, brutal :)
oh and no ship screams like the enterprise when pushed beyond her limits lol :)
Too bad this was made before Start Trek: Into Darkness. The warp on there was pretty fun to watch. Unstable and unsafe looking, but fun!
My fave will always be the Star Trek 2-6 rainbow warp 🌈. No flash. No slow motion stretch. It looked fun on TV but there's something elemental, almost mythical, about the Kirk movie warp effects.
I love when Spock is standing there watching the engines, which he helped to get running properly.
Man. Jerry Goldsmith scored the hell out of The Motion Picture.
...was he a referee?????
@@thegreatbamboozler4837 Hello. He was a film score composer.
Yep. There's a REASON why they returned to Goldsmith's theme when TNG was made, instead of Horner's.
The GOAT!
Goldsmith fantastic, but also James Horner - especially on closing sequences and credits in ST2:TWOK, and Cliff Eidelman settings us up at the opening titles in ST6:TUC.
0:10 - "Accelerating to warp one, sir"
"Well....double dumb ass on you!"
Absolutely love the one @10:00 I could watch that one all day.
8:04 You can hear how happy he is to actually say that phrase. And who wouldn't!
If faster than light speed is ever possible "warp drive" would be the only way to achieve it.
For me the best warp moment is in First Contact, when Zeph Cochrane flew the first warp capable engine designed and built by Earth. This ushered Earth into a new era when the warp signature was detected by a Romulan survey craft. I don't know how many times I watched it.
Vulcan survey craft, but yeah.
***** Yes, my bad. Vulcan.
ElectroAfrican I find the first warp jump to be similar of that of Columbus. Sure, Columbus wasn't the perfect man, and he didn't for the people he found, but he ushered in a new era of history. Cochrane did the same, he didn't have the best attitude, but what he did changed the galaxy forever.
GameSpace Columbus ? really Columbus ? how ironic that you use this guy for star trek
Actually it was a Vulcan craft. No biggie, Vulcans and Romulans are genetically identical. Romulans are not as spiritually or intellectually advanced as Vulcans, being instead more warlike like the Old Klingon Empire.
Always liked the 1979 Motion Picture warp effect.
QuorkEx Still my favorite effect to this day!
QuorkEx Disco Warp
They've gone to plaid!
Agreed, TMP warp was my favorite.
That was about the only thing good about the 1979 movie :P
star trek is and always will be a classic the cast from all of the generations the technology special effects perfect this will never end it will only get better im a trekey and always will be so to all the cast directors producers writers technicians and creators thank you and "Live Long And Prosper"..........
Star Wars could never compete with the beauty, eloquence, grace and intellect of Star Trek. Never ever.
They are incomparable
@@mwrosanne Of course. One is about ' territory' as our species currently, or in the near future might interpreter it / implements' it. Plural.
The the other, Star Trek, explores the idea of a future where even our conceived notions of our current understanding of everything both known and unknown to our being is simply another word or galaxy away.
Given our nature, exploration seems to be hardwired . It's how I suppose some might consider the British to be the Cuckoo of humanity, in that it spreads its genetic material around other territories, without hanging around to pick up the date. So to speak.
I wish they could bring back the "Next Generation Cast" and do another movie. Maybe have Commander Riker be captain of his own ship.. and Captain Piccard be an Admiral of his own fleet.
+midos67 totally! they really didnt need to go back to Kirks days. They need DS9 movies and Voyager. how long are they going to keep Siski in the wormhole and it would be nice to see what Janeway and company are up to now. I really though that the movies followed suit of the series TOS got movies, TNG got movies but DS9 and Voy not one movie.
I still feel the Next Generation cast deserves a proper send off movie.
"I put that a'way into the computer, sir. It's asking for an actual coordinate."
4:40 rare sight of James Doohan right hand. Real hero of war.
I think I you and I are the only ones who understand what you meant when you wrote this. You are right it is indeed rare use to look for it in Tos episode he hid it well.
@@chrismarks4277 Thank you for pointing that out to us. I did not know he lost a ........ in WW2.
One in the pink, two in the stink. She cannae take much more.
Indeed. They hid it pretty good.
Just like Carter in Hogans Heroes who always wore gloves for the fact that he wanted to hide that the actor wears a marriage ring because his character was single.
There is just no ship as beautiful as The USS Enterprise. No A, B or bloody C. 🤗🖖🏼
But I have to say the E is a beauty
"There is no smoking while the seat belt sign is lit."
"The white zone is for warping and un-warping passengers. There is no loitering in the red zone."
Good to see that in the 23rd Century, 1980's hair styles are back in fashion! :)
When Sulu is saying "warp 9.1, 9.2" etc... i really have a big emotion.
The top down and below shots of the Enterprise are my favorite, getting to see the ship from bow to stern is glorious.
The Tunnel of Light effect is I believe accurate, but in that it is caused by the POV accelerating up to the full speed C, it would be random bits of light, the stars, which would lengthen and close into a complete tunnel of light, not a Symmetrical cone or tunnel of bits of light.
The Constitution Class ship is a work of art. Other ships in the franchise don't come close to its beauty.
Each ship/station has their own charm.
She was the one, agreed.
***** That's a POS!!!
***** Opinions vary therefore one cannot be incorrect when using opinions.
***** And that is called life my friend. I point out to all daily that Japan invented a water car in 2007, and then was hit by a tsnami that washed up on only one shore. Now no water car. Tesla also began building electric cars here in 2006. Today still so few Americans even know about it. My point is, if you love Star Trek, your going to have to kick some major ass in this timeline to get there. SEE the water car in my latest upload 'What is the MAsonTRIX?'. Maybe we can agree on what I just told you as real truth. Peace to you and yours. - Brian
ok, i'm an old softie... at 71, went through my teen years watching TOS, resisted TNG, railed at the change of music and the dumba$$ plot of the first movie, sweated through movies 1, 3, and 5, luxuriated in all the following movies and spinoffs... this compilation brings tears to the eyes and a swell to the breast... each Enterprise, DS9, Voyager, and the rest are all beautiful in their own ways and each brings a sense of nostalgia. Every one of the crew is like a beloved family member, and the loss of the men and women who brought those roles to life leaves a hole in the heart. But, I count my blessings to live in a time when their work and portrayals are preserved and available to view, review, and remember at the touch of a button.
Roddenberry's vision and dream have come to life through more hours of video viewing than I can count, and the dream of a unified galaxy (or even a unified, peaceful planet under a BENEVOLENT governing body) lives on. Hope that such a thing can be achieved in my lifetime continues.
Man, watching this. Even back then during Star Trek I the studio models were amazing.
***** I agree, but I see the benefit of CGI too. When it was all models, we'd only see a new ship every few years. When CGI came around, that's when we finally got to see big fleets and major battles. Compare the battle of Wolf 359 to any battle from DS9
Yeah, but the set design and wardrobe was a disaster.
The hidden benefit of physical models is that after a lull of a few seasons or years they'd lose, sell, or break the model and have to make new one. So lots of "refits" haha.
🖖😎👍Very nicely greatly well done and very well executed in every detail way shape and format provided indeed 👌.
One of The Greatest Tribute Videos Ever Made, for Star Trek, Thank You!
Star Trek Beyond’s warp effect was by far the most beautiful and accurate I’ve seen. Can’t beat the nostalgia though
Indeed. It honestly might be my favorite scene from any Trek film/show.
Second Star to the right then onward til morning! Aye Captain!
Loved that line - made me cry :)
On man, that line made me cry ☺️
8 years later …
Love that sulu. Kirk can be such an ass. Loved all the Star Trek series and many of the movies 🍿
🎶 Let’s do the time warp again🎶
It is often said, that Hikaru Sulu's bumbling at the helm saved everyone from being attacked.
3:51 Hey, that's the guy who played Bob Morton in RoboCop!
"Whatever he's paying you, I'll double it..!" Bitches leave!
Miguel Ferrer (1955-2017)
I'd buy that for a dollar.
These movies really set your imagination on edge, all the warp speed and they never left the studio.
I'm 48 and have been watching since boyhood, I can assure you that JJs fleet warp jump and departure from spacedock in his first movie, is easily on par if not better and more exilerating than any jump that's been done before, I still cant get enough of that entire segment, from the shuttles going up to the final pops. I was way more excited about the buildup to that movie then the latest star wars!
I always thought that JJ's interpretation of warp speed seemed a lot more natural. A huge force and sound activating all at once, not something where you can barely tell it happened.
It's a refreshingly forceful take on warp. Strangely enough, I love both that one as well as the original TMP super-streak. Both demonstrate the power of warp in their own ways.
I’m not sure how I felt about ST Beyond, but the scene at the beginning with the stars rippling from the warp bubble was awesome
True Fans of,Classic Star Trek!
I was kind of hoping you would have included the clip from ST6 when Sulu is in command of the excelsior and they are warping to save kirk; and when the helmsman says that the ship will fly apart if they go any faster, Sulu tells him "Then fly her apart!"
That's the best one.