Star Trek The Next Generation - The Complete Seasons 1-7
Product Details
* Actors: LeVar Burton, Gates McFadden
* Directors: LeVar Burton, Gates McFadden, Gabrielle Beaumont, Robert Becker, Timothy Bond
* Format: Box set, Color, Anamorphic
* Language: English (Dolby Digital 2.0 Surround), English (Dolby Digital 5.1)
* Subtitles: English
*Number of discs: 48
After Star Wars and the successful big-screen Star Trek adventures,
it's perhaps not so surprising that Gene Roddenberry managed to convince
purse string-wielding studio heads in the 1980s that a Next Generation
would be both possible and profitable. But the political climate had
changed considerably since the 1960s, the Cold War had wound down, and
we were now living in the Age of Greed. To be successful a second time,
Star Trek had to change too.
A writer's guide was composed with which
to sell and define where the Trek universe was in the 24th Century. The
United Federation of Planets was a more appealing ideology to an
America keen to see where the Reagan/Gorbachev faceoff was taking them.
Starfleet's meritocratic philosophy had always embraced all races and
species. Now Earth's utopian history, featuring the abolishment of
poverty, was brandished prominently and proudly. The new Enterprise, NCC
1701-D, was no longer a ship of war but an exploration vessel carrying
families. The ethical and ethnical flagship also carried a former enemy
(the Klingon Worf, played by Michael Dorn), and its Chief Engineer
(Geordi LaForge) was blind and black. From every politically correct
viewpoint, Paramount executives thought the future looked just swell!
Roddenberry's
feminism now contrasted a pilot episode featuring ship's Counsellor
Troi (Marina Sirtis) in a mini-skirt with her ongoing inner strengths
and also those of Dr. Crusher (Gates McFadden) and the short-lived Tasha
Yar (Denise Crosby). The arrival of Whoopi Goldberg in season 2 as
mystic barkeep Guinan is a great example of the good the original Trek
did for racial groups--Goldberg has stated that she was inspired to
become an actress in large part through seeing Nichelle Nichols' Uhura.
Her credibility as an actress helped enormously alongside the strong
central performances of Patrick Stewart (Captain Picard), Jonathan
Frakes (First Officer Will Riker), and Brent Spiner (Data) in defining
another wholly believable environment once again populated with
well-defined characters. Star Trek, it turned out, did not depend for
its success on any single group of actors.
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