a5c7b9f00b After an explosion on their moon, the Klingons have an estimated 50 years before their ozone layer is completely depleted, and they all die. They have only one choice - to make peace with the Federation, which will mean an end to 70 years of conflict. Captain James T. Kirk and crew are called upon to help in the negotiations because of their experience with the Klingons. Peace talks don&#39;t quite proceed, and Kirk and McCoy are convicted of assassinating the Klingon High Chancellor, and imprisoned on Rura Penthe, a snowy hard-labor prison camp. Will they manage to escape? And will there ever be peace with the Klingons? After a lunar cataclysm brings the Klingons to their knees, the foreign concept of peace with the Federation may be finally within reach. After 70 years of hostility, the Federation and the Klingon Empire prepare for a peace summit. Ironically, Captain James T. Kirk has been assignedthe first emissary to broker that peace. However, the prospect of intergalactic glasnost with sworn enemies is an alarming one. When the Klingon flagship is attacked and the USS Enterprise is held accountable, the dogs are war are unleashed again,both worlds brace for what may be their final, deadly encounter. Yes, in this series I did not care all that much for the first, third, or the fifth Star Trek movies. I did like the second, the fourth and this onethey just seemed to be very well done movies. This one is good in that it had a rather good story, nice action sequences, and some good humorwell especially the scenes involving the Klingons coming on board for dinner. Well something happens in this movie causing Kirk and Bones getting imprisoned on this prison planet and this was done well before the &quot;Chronicles Of Riddick&quot; and the planet of Crematorian or whatever the heck it was called. There are some good scenes here too that are funnywell. It all culminates with a rather good fight in space and a nice last second rescue. In the end this movie is notgoodWrath of Kahn, but it is a nice addition to the Star Trek series and a rather nice send off for the old crew. The next film would feature a few of the old crew, but it would mainly focus on the cast of the Next Generation crew. At times this one seemed like a television episode, but for the most part it was more grandiose than part three and five which were complete duds and had a lot more action than part four which was funny and entertaining, but had really nothing in the way of action. Good movie and entertaining they should have had this guy direct all the Star Treck movies. Ok, I am a Star Trek, andsuch I probably watch the shows and movies a little bit closer than your average viewer. Maybe I watched &#39;The Undiscovered Country&#39; a little to closely because I came up with a whole bunch of errors that might just interest you. I AM NOT giving away any of the story here, but if you don&#39;t want to know anything that happens in the film, maybe you&#39;d better exit out now. Here goes:<br/><br/>1). The First Officer of the Excelsior says &quot;I have an energy wave at 204 mark 6 port sir! When we see the Excelsior however, the energy wave hits her on her starboard side.<br/><br/>2). Why is Janice Rand already on her feet while Sulu is still clawing his way along the floor of the Bridge to his chair after the energy wave hit?<br/><br/>3). Why didn&#39;t the Excelsior&#39;s sensors detect the explosion on Praxis? The first hint of trouble came when Sulu&#39;s coffee cup fell on the floor!<br/><br/>4). Just after the Enterprise has left Space Dock we see Kirk in his quarters putting his bags away. Suddenly, Valeris arrives and informs him that they are almost at the rendezvous. How long does it take Kirk to put his bags away?!<br/><br/>5). When Kirk is wrestling with Martia (in Kirk disguise) they roll on the snow towards McCoy&#39;s feet, but in the next shot they roll straight over McCoy&#39;s chest.<br/><br/>6). When the Enterprise meets Gorkon&#39;s ship and Kirk invites him and his crew to dinner, we see Chekov at his usual seat next to Valeris. But then, after Kirk leaves, Chekov has some how jumped to Kirk&#39;s chair when he says &quot;Guess who&#39;s coming to dinner&quot;.<br/><br/>7). When Gorkon&#39;s ship is hit by a photon torpedo (seemingly from Enterprise) we see the Enterprise&#39;s Bridge with at least half a dozen people suddenly rushing to their seats. Where did all these people come from? Were they all just standing around at the centre of the Bridge waiting for something to happen?<br/><br/>8). At Kirk and McCoy&#39;s trial a Klingon witness says that &quot;After the first shot we lost our gravitational field. I found myself weightless…&quot; Actually, it was after the second photon torpedo that the Klingon ship lost its gravity.<br/><br/>9). Just after Chang&#39;s ship cloaks upon arrival at Khitomer we see Kirk pacing around the Bridge, awaiting the inevitable battle. The clock above the viewscreen shows that it is 0:4:37:06. However, when he wanders past Uhura&#39;s station her clock reads 0:4:35:31. <br/><br/>10). When Gorkon&#39;s ship is damaged by the torpedos that seem to come from Enterprise, we hear Chekov say, &quot;She&#39;s still lisitng.&quot; The clock above the viewscreen shows 0:1:38:49. But when Chang appears on the viewscreen the clock shows 0:1:29:16.<br/><br/>11). In the end credits, Uhura is listedUhuru.<br/><br/>Apart from all that, the film is still highly entertaining and a worthy conclusion to the original crew&#39;s adventures together. Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country is one of the finest installments in the saga. [6 Dec. 1991, p.5] The assassination of Chancellor Gorkon (<a href="/name/nm0001831/">David Warner</a>) of the Klingon High Council, while on his way to Earth on a peace mission to seek aid for the dying Klingon planet, is blamed on Captain James T Kirk (<a href="/name/nm0000638/">William Shatner</a>) and Dr Leonard McCoy (<a href="/name/nm0001420/">DeForest Kelley</a>). Consequently, they are sentenced to life on Rura Penthe, a gulag (penal colony) on a frozen asteroid. Knowing that he never gave an order for the Enterprise to fire on Gorkon&#39;s ship, Kirk effects his and McCoy&#39;s escape in order to prove that the Enterprise is innocent and to prevent another assassination attempt upon the new Klingon peace ambassador, Azetbur (<a href="/name/nm0221554/">Rosanna DeSoto</a>), daughter of Chancellor Gorkon. All but one of the main crew members of the USS Enterprise return. Besides Captain Kirk and Dr McCoy, there is Captain Spock (<a href="/name/nm0000559/">Leonard Nimoy</a>) (now a special envoy), chief engineer Montgomery &quot;Scotty&quot; Scott (<a href="/name/nm0001150/">James Doohan</a>), communications officer Lt Uhura (<a href="/name/nm0629667/">Nichelle Nichols</a>), Pavel Chekov (<a href="/name/nm0000479/">Walter Koenig</a>), and Hikaru Sulu (<a href="/name/nm0001786/">George Takei</a>), now captain of the USS Excelsior. Janice Rand (<a href="/name/nm0926298/">Grace Lee Whitney</a>) puts in an appearancea communications officer under Sulu&#39;s command. Only Christine Chapel (<a href="/name/nm0000854/">Majel Barrett</a>) is missing. Spock&#39;s father Sarek (<a href="/name/nm0501697/">Mark Lenard</a>) reappearsa Vulcan ambassador. Kirk&#39;s son David (<a href="/name/nm0125190/">Merritt Butrick</a>) (who died in The Search for Spock) returns, but only in name and picture. This film also introduces <a href="/name/nm0000373/">Michael Dorn</a>an unnamed Klingon defense attorney. Dorn went on to play Worf in movies involving the crew of future Enterprise Captain Jean-Luc Picard (<a href="/name/nm0001772/">Patrick Stewart</a>). In the year 2293 A.D. (6 years after the events in the previous movie) An explosion on Praxis, the moon that provides the Klingon Empire with most of their energy, results in their planet, Kronos, having an estimated 50 years before the ozone layer is completely depleted. In his report to Starfleet Command on Earth, Spock also says that the explosion of Praxis has caused a deadly pollution of Kronos&#39; ozone layer. Consequently, the Klingons want to make peace with the Federation in order to ask for aid, since most of their monetary economy has been tied up in their massive military expenditures. If negotiations go well for the Klingons, then they&#39;d be allowed to settle in Federation territory after they&#39;d evacuated Kronos. Kirk was on a diplomatic mission, and a fight between the two ships could have sparked an inter-galactic war. Kirk probably felt that surrendering was the best option to keep the peace talks on track, while buying time to resolve the mystery. There are several possibilities. One possibility is that Martia (<a href="/name/nm0408081/">Iman</a>)Kirk still has Martia&#39;s eyes (watch closely during the fight scene and also note the eyes of the Kirk on the right versus the real Kirk on the left). Second, because the real Kirk called him an idiot. Kirk has a long and infamous reputation for standing up to authority figures, though he probably hasn&#39;t insulted many of themopenlyhe would a brutish Klingon. The warden, knowing of Kirk&#39;s general demeanor throughout Federation history (Kirk is not only famous in the Federation but also throughout the galaxy, certainly within Klingon society) and his hatred for their race, instantly deduced that the Kirk to the left was the real one. Another possibility is that Martia being a shape shifter and likely a fact known to the Warden, didn&#39;t have shackles,made clear by the overhead shot immediately after the vaporizing. The Warden was instructed to kill all witnesses and set the conditions for Martia to assist in the charade under the false pretense of a full pardon. Shooting Martia first was the logical choice, assuring that the truth would never come to light. US President Richard Nixon (in office from 1969 to 1974) was known for his firm anti-communist politics. When Communist states China and the Soviet Union broke up their alliance in the 1960s, Nixon perceived thisa perfect opportunity to gain an advantage in the Cold War against the Soviets by improving relations with China. The visit was controversial, because China was at that time considered to be an enemy state. Paradoxically, this made President Nixon the appropriate person to visit Communist China, because he was clearly an antagonist to their government. Had it been a more moderate politician, then this person could have been blamed for having too much sympathy for the Chinese, or of not serving the United States&#39; best interest in negotiations. Spock alludes to this fact, because Kirk is the most famous Klingon adversary in the Federation, so they know that he will not let the Klingons off the hook easily during negotiations. They can safely send him to eliminate all suspicions of fraternizing with an enemy. It is also another reference to the Cold War, of which there are many in this film. Spock is jokingly attributing the phrase to his own Vulcan cultureāa running joke throughout the movie with different characters. For instance, Chancellor Gorkon claimed Shakespeare must be read in its &quot;original Klingon,&quot; Chekov claims that Cinderella is a &quot;Russian epic,&quot; and Spock also refers to Sherlock Holmesan ancestor. The Enterprise speeds toward Camp Khitomer where the peace conference has already begun. The Klingon warship, piloted by Commander Chang (), begins to fire on the Enterprise but, because the prototype Bird of Prey is able to fire while remaining cloaked, the Enterprise is unable to accurately return fire…until Spock and Uhura get the idea to use the equipment they are carrying for detecting gaseous anomalies to detect the emissions from the Bird of Prey&#39;s &quot;tailpipe.&quot; With the Excelsior helping to distract the Bird of Prey, Spock and McCoy modify a torpedo to carry the equipment, which homes in on the Bird of Prey&#39;s exhaust and reveals its position long enough for the Enterprise and the Excelsior to destroy it. Meanwhile on Khitomer, a sniper (who is actually Colonel West disguiseda Klingon) is seen assembling his rifle and aiming it at the Federation president (<a href="/name/nm0001748/">Kurtwood Smith</a>). Crews from the Enterprise and the Excelsior beam down just in time to stop the sniper, Kirk knocking the President to the floor and Scotty shooting the sniper. When Azelbur asks what is going on, Kirk explains, &quot;Your father called the future &#39;the undiscovered country&#39;. People can be very frightened of change.&quot; Azelbur replies, &quot;You have restored my father&#39;s faith,&quot; to which Kirk adds, &quot;…and you have restored my son&#39;s…&quot; After a round of applause, the Starfleet crews return to their respective ships, and Kirk thanks Sulu for his aid. Uhura announces that she&#39;s just received orders from Starfleet Command telling the Enterprise to return to spacedock to be decommissioned. As the look of disbelief passes across everyone&#39;s faces, Spock says, &quot;If I were human, I would tell them, Go to hell.&quot; When Chekov asks for their course heading, Kirk replies, &quot;Second star to the right and straight on &#39;til morning.&quot; Kirk then enters into the log that this is &quot;the final cruise of the Starship Enterprise under my command&quot; and that a new crew will take over the Enterprise and continue &quot;to boldly go where no man…no one…has gone before.&quot; The Enterprise then goes to warp and disappears. As the credits begin to roll, the signatures of each of the main crew members of the Enterprise appear one-by-one. Yes. Star TrekVI: The Undiscovered Country, a novelization of the movie by American science fiction writer J.M. Dillard (pen name for Jeanne Kalogridis), was released in 1992. So far, there are 13. Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country was preceded by <a href="/title/tt0079945/">Star Trek: The Motion Picture (1979)</a> (1979), <a href="/title/tt0084726/">Star Trek: The Wrath of Khan (1982)</a> (1982), <a href="/title/tt0088170/">Star Trek III: The Search for Spock (1984)</a> (1984), <a href="/title/tt0092007/">Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home (1986)</a> (1986), and <a href="/title/tt0098382/">Star Trek V: The Final Frontier (1989)</a> (1989), all of which feature the original series crew and the Enterprise captained by James T Kirk. <a href="/title/tt0111280/">Star Trek: Generations (1994)</a> (1994) begins with Kirk, Scotty and Chekov aboard the new Enterprise B before jumping to the timeline of <a href="/title/tt0092455/">Star Trek: The Next Generation (1987)</a> (1987-1994) where Kirk unites with Captain Jean-Luc Picard (<a href="/name/nm0001772/">Patrick Stewart</a>) who commands the Enterprise D. The other Star Trek movies featuring Picardcaptain include: <a href="/title/tt0117731/">Star Trek: First Contact (1996)</a> (1996), <a href="/title/tt0120844/">Star Trek: Insurrection (1998)</a> (1998), and <a href="/title/tt0253754/">Star Trek: Nemesis (2002)</a> (2002). <a href="/title/tt0796366/">Star Trek (2009)</a> (2009), <a href="/title/tt1408101/">Star Trek: Into Darkness (2013)</a> (2013) and <a href="/title/tt2660888/">Star Trek: Beyond (2016)</a> (2016) harken to an alternate reality which began when the circumstances of Kirk&#39;s birth changed. The network TV versions not included there are three main versions available. First of all, there&#39;s the old theatrical version. Later on, an extended version was created that features several new scenes, e.g. Federation President&#39;s office scene. 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