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Star Trek

  • TV Series
  • 1966–1969
  • TV-PG
  • 50m
IMDb RATING
8.4/10
97K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
266
25
Star Trek (1966)
Star Trek: The Cloud Minders
Play trailer1:40
27 Videos
99+ Photos
Sci-Fi EpicSpace Sci-FiActionAdventureDramaSci-Fi

In the 23rd Century, Captain James T. Kirk and the crew of the U.S.S. Enterprise explore the galaxy and defend the United Federation of Planets.In the 23rd Century, Captain James T. Kirk and the crew of the U.S.S. Enterprise explore the galaxy and defend the United Federation of Planets.In the 23rd Century, Captain James T. Kirk and the crew of the U.S.S. Enterprise explore the galaxy and defend the United Federation of Planets.

  • Creator
    • Gene Roddenberry
  • Stars
    • William Shatner
    • Leonard Nimoy
    • DeForest Kelley
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    8.4/10
    97K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    266
    25
    • Creator
      • Gene Roddenberry
    • Stars
      • William Shatner
      • Leonard Nimoy
      • DeForest Kelley
    • 284User reviews
    • 124Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Won 1 Primetime Emmy
      • 16 wins & 32 nominations total

    Episodes80

    Browse episodes
    TopTop-rated

    Videos27

    Star Trek | Retrospective
    Clip 2:37
    Star Trek | Retrospective
    Lucille Ball's Lasting Legacy & Her Biopic Details
    Clip 4:15
    Lucille Ball's Lasting Legacy & Her Biopic Details
    Lucille Ball's Lasting Legacy & Her Biopic Details
    Clip 4:15
    Lucille Ball's Lasting Legacy & Her Biopic Details
    "Star Trek: Discovery" Season 3 Explained
    Clip 3:34
    "Star Trek: Discovery" Season 3 Explained
    The Best of Star Trek: The Original Series
    Clip 1:11
    The Best of Star Trek: The Original Series
    The Best of Star Trek: The Original Series
    Clip 1:21
    The Best of Star Trek: The Original Series
    The Best of Star Trek: The Original Series
    Clip 1:02
    The Best of Star Trek: The Original Series

    Photos2051

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    Top cast99+

    Edit
    William Shatner
    William Shatner
    • Captain James T. Kirk…
    • 1966–1969
    Leonard Nimoy
    Leonard Nimoy
    • Mr. Spock…
    • 1966–1969
    DeForest Kelley
    DeForest Kelley
    • Dr. McCoy
    • 1966–1969
    Nichelle Nichols
    Nichelle Nichols
    • Uhura
    • 1966–1969
    James Doohan
    James Doohan
    • Scott…
    • 1966–1969
    Eddie Paskey
    Eddie Paskey
    • Lieutenant Leslie…
    • 1966–1968
    George Takei
    George Takei
    • Sulu
    • 1966–1969
    Walter Koenig
    Walter Koenig
    • Chekov
    • 1967–1969
    Majel Barrett
    Majel Barrett
    • Nurse Chapel…
    • 1966–1969
    John Winston
    John Winston
    • Lt. Kyle…
    • 1967–1969
    Paul Baxley
    • Ensign Freeman…
    • 1966–1968
    Jay D. Jones
    Jay D. Jones
    • Engineer…
    • 1967–1969
    David L. Ross
    David L. Ross
    • Galloway…
    • 1966–1969
    Grace Lee Whitney
    Grace Lee Whitney
    • Yeoman Rand…
    • 1966
    Sean Morgan
    • Brenner…
    • 1966–1968
    Bart La Rue
    Bart La Rue
    • Announcer…
    • 1967–1969
    Barbara Babcock
    Barbara Babcock
    • Beta 5 Computer…
    • 1967–1969
    Dick Geary
    • Security Guard…
    • 1968–1969
    • Creator
      • Gene Roddenberry
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews284

    8.496.9K
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    Featured reviews

    mack3175

    THE ONE THAT STARTED IT ALL.

    This show changed the way we looked at science fiction forever. Before there was The Next Generation, Deep Space Nine, Voyager, and the prequel Enterprise. There was Captain James T. Kirk and crew on the Starship Enterprise. Exploring new worlds and new life. Traveling through time and space. Leonard Nimoy is great has Mr. Spock, the half human/half alien science officer and second in command. Deforest Kelly is also great Has Dr. Leonard Bones Mccoy, our favorite whiney Doctor, who came out with favorite sayings like "He's dead Jim" and "I'm a Doctor not a brick layer". The special effects may have seemed hoaky at times. But the show was still great in it's day. Gene Roddenberry was a genuis when he created this show. The show was well acted by everyone . So Star Trek fans live long and prosper.
    10DKosty123

    Dumpster Diving @ Desilu Produced The Props

    This show made all of it's principles into cause celebrities & in fact did the same for it's producers & almost everyone involved with it. This was one of the last series produced by Desilu studios it's first season. Then Desilu was sold to Paramont in order for Lucy & Ricky to separate their business interests after the divorce. Oh, but what a way to end their partnership.

    This original series & it's films & syndicated sequels have produced more money for Paramont than any other franchise. William Shatner became so famous for his role in this, that he went to to advertise Promise Margerine, do TJ HOOKER (a Cop series) in the 1970's for ABC. Then he kept working on other stuff until now he has managed to become a TV regular again on Boston Legal.

    Lenoard Nimoy(Spock) went on to do several other projects including hosting the syndicated series "In Search of". All the others came back for the movies as well. The big thing that made this series so popular was the plot lines which especially in the first seasons were so imaginative. These were from creator Gene Roddenbury who had learned his craft in the unusual Western series hit Have Gun, Will travel.

    Roddenbury made morality a major strength in plotting these original episodes. He tapped some talented science fiction writers as well for ideas. This was really his wagon train to the stars. This original series has a couple of fine veteran Western folks behind the camera with Gene L. Coons & Fred Friedberger who worked on action series like The Wild Wild West. The resemblance of Kirks fight scenes in Star Trek to the Wild Wild West are no coincidence.

    Towards the end, as NBC kept cutting the budget, the show suffered too, but by then, NBC still had not realized what they had & killed off the series. Thank goodness for re-runs, then video & now DVDs to keep this original going. The guest list for this series was small, but it had some excellent guest stars including William Windom, Roger C. Carmel, Michael Dunn (Dr Lovelass on Wild Wild West), Ricardo Montoban, & others (Most did guest shots on West too). It is one of the rare Science Fiction series to combine serious themes & comedy successfully & really be inventive. After all, to me it seems like these guys invented the cell phone style of communication in the 1960's. European Scientists are still experimenting to see if beaming people up can be done. What a legacy this series has left all of us.
    10roghache

    Best science fiction series ever, notable for character interactions

    In our household we are all Trekkies, so the ongoing adventures of the Federation Star Ship Enterprise constantly enthrall us. My husband will stubbornly watch only TOS, while my teenage son feels nostalgic about TOS, but secretly prefers Voyager. As for myself, while I find some of the Next Generation plots compelling and enjoy the dangerous drama of Voyager stranded in the Delta Quadrant, there's nothing quite like the characters from TOS. The series has an innocence about it unmatched in the later ones. My compliments to the late Gene Roddenberry, Star Trek's creator.

    Captain James T. Kirk is the audacious, impulsive, and womanizing Enterprise commander. In almost every episode he has some gorgeous new love interest, seldom exhibiting much restraint! Kirk frequently engages in physical hand to hand combat with his opponents, torn shirt & sweat being common. Yet he does manage to come up with some bold and brilliant moves such as his legendary ruse, the Corbomite Manouever. Perhaps his primary task is serving as referee between the constantly sparring First Officer Spock and ship's doctor, Bones McCoy.

    The heart of the series is Mr. Spock, the half Vulcan First Officer and ship's Science Officer. Actually however, Spock would maintain that he is the HEAD of the series, since he prides himself on his unfailing logic and lack of emotion. The inner conflict between his logic driven paternal Vulcan half and his emotional maternal human half form an ongoing theme. Spock possesses two useful Vulcan abilities, the neck pinch and the mind meld. The most engaging character interaction is between the logic motivated Spock versus the highly emotional ship's physician, Dr. Leonard (Bones) McCoy, who is basically a country doctor in space, a humanitarian leery of all this newfangled gadgetry. McCoy is famous in the Trek world for his expression, 'I'm a doctor, not a ----' (many phrases have been used here).

    Chief Engineer Montgomery Scott is a hot tempered Scotsman with a fondness for his native country's whiskey. Scotty constantly bemoans that he 'cannae change the laws of physics' all the while working assorted engineering miracles with the warp core and anti matter this or that. As for Communications Officer Uhura, she is most notable for her regular phrase, 'Hailing frequencies open, Sir.'

    To be sure, some of the episodes have less than brilliant plots, notably Spock's Brain, though the character interactions always compensate for any inadequacies. However, some ideas were masterful, including The Enterprise Incident, The Menagerie, and City on the Edge of Forever. The series took on issues of overpopulation (The Mark of Gideon), social class disparity (The Cloud Minders, with its clever cloud city, Stratos), and racism (Let That Be Your Last Battlefield), which involves laughable hatred between two races, one black on the left side & white on the right, the other race vice versa. I personally enjoyed The Naked Time (Nurse Chappel admits her love for Spock), A Taste of Armageddon (computer war), This Side of Paradise (Spock frolics), and Is There in Truth No Beauty? (the Medusan ambassador's incredible ugliness causes madness in the hapless onlooker). However, my absolute favourite is unquestionably the absurd Amok Time, with Spock's ridiculous pon farr mating strife.

    The Enterprise crew consists of a racially diverse group, with its black Communications Officer Uhura and Oriental helmsman Sulu. The ship's navigator, Chekov, is Russian...quite a revolutionary idea for that Cold War era. The cast are perfect in their roles, including William Shatner (Kirk), Leonard Nimoy (Spock), and all the others. Special tribute to the late Deforest Kelly (McCoy) and James Doohan (Scotty), who are sadly missed.

    This is the series that gave us such technologies as the transporter, tricorder, and cloaking device...high tech weaponry including phasers and photon torpedoes...futuristic games like three dimensional chess...miracle drugs such as cordrazine...and gourmet delicacies like Saurian brandy & Romulan ale. Some of the gadgetry gave a sneak preview of such later real life technology as computer floppy discs.

    In addition to the highly logical Vulcans, Star Trek gave us glimpses of such alien species as the honour driven Klingons and the sneaky Romulans (the Federation's two primary enemies), also the xenophobic Tholians, the reptilian Gorn, and many others. It treated us to the endearing rock like, silicon based Horta and the cute & fuzzy but all too prolific Tribbles (which caused no end of Trouble). And it acquainted us with such planets as Sarpeidon, Eminiar & Vendikar.

    In the episode Metamorphosis, we were all introduced to the heroic Zephram Cochrane who invented the warp drive way back in 2063. In constant demand is the dilithium vital to the warp engine's functioning. Star Trek also acquainted us with the United Federation of Planets, Starfleet & Starfleet Academy, and the Federation's much vaunted strict rule called the Prime Directive, which is frequently mentioned but universally ignored!

    Star Trek is simply an incredibly fun and entertaining science fiction series, though it was hardly appreciated back in the 1960's when it originally aired. Fortunately, it lives on today in re runs, giving Trekkies the ongoing excitement of regularly 'boldly going where no man has gone before'. Live long and prosper, everyone!
    whitikau

    The magic was in the interaction between the characters.

    I have loved Star Trek since I first watched it as a child. However, the series which followed - Star Trek: TNG, Star Trek: Voyager, Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, and Star Trek: Enterprise - although generally still entertaining, seem to me to have left out the element which made the original series so special. Namely, the interaction between the characters, particularly Spock, Jim, and Bones.

    So well written, and generally well acted.

    With Bones (Dr Leonard H McCoy) being the opposite to Spock in terms of personality, so that the two of them always found something to argue about. Jim (Captain James T Kirk) in the middle, as a referee, displaying faults and strengths taken from both extremes. Extremes in the sense of McCoy being a very caring, compassionate, yet also highly emotional character. Representative of humanity, perhaps. Spock, the dry, cold, logical, emotionless Vulcan. Jim "a man of deep feelings", as Spock once said, yet also no stranger to thorough analysis of whatever situation the crew found themselves in. Bones seeking always to heal, to return everybody he met (whether friend or foe, human or otherwise) to as close to perfect health as possible. Frustrated by the fact that he (Bones) could not fully understand, for example, Spock's Vulcan anatomy. All three of them the closest friends. All three displaying unwavering loyalty toward each other - even though Spock would have found the suggestion of his displaying such a human quality to be insulting.

    The dynamics involved, the interaction, led to brilliant moments of humour. A science fiction programme to be not only enjoyed for the imaginative stories and the themes, but also for the humour, for the humanity.

    Which is not to suggest that the other characters were in any way second rate. Scotty's loyalty and his supreme confidence in his engineering abilities, Chekov's almost adolescent playfulness and humour, Sulu's loyalty, honour, and physical prowess, Uhura's dedication to duty and femininity in a masculine world, all added important and welcome elements to what I still consider to be the best science fiction television series ever.

    The special effects were often laughable, the sets cheap and often reused, but the humanity, the character interaction, the stories, imagination, the brilliant writing... all added up to something very special indeed.
    10macbug

    Low tech high quality Sci Fi

    One must remember that Star Trek was made as a for profit network TV. The amount of money and total lack of any computer aided special effects. Was the norm, it a call for innovation, creativity, thinking outside the box, in fact they did not even have a box. So remember 10 years before Star Wars, Ten years before the the first Apple Computer, during the Civil Rights movement, during the peak of the Viet Nam War, Before man had set foot on the surface of the moon, a man name Roddenberry had a vision to " Go where no man went before". Exploring social issues, with appearances by some of the days leading actors, and actresses. Star Trek in a way is a time warp of the mid 1960's. The styles and culture are mixed in series. Indian mysticism, invaded the series just like the white album. I believe the most diverse cast and characters in the history of TV. The one high tech aspect of the show is and was it was filmed in color when few people owned color TV's. Live long and prosper.

    Stellar Photos From the "Star Trek" TV Universe

    Stellar Photos From the "Star Trek" TV Universe

    We've rounded up some of our favorite photos from across the "Star Trek" TV universe. Take a look at memorable moments from red carpet premieres and classic episodes.
    See the gallery
    Nichelle Nichols and Sonequa Martin-Green at an event for Star Trek: Discovery (2017)
    Photos

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Shortly after the cancellation of the series due to low ratings, the staff of the marketing department of NBC confronted the network executives and berated them for canceling this show, which had been one of their most profitable series without anyone realizing it. They explained that although the show was never higher than number fifty-two in the general ratings, when running the numbers though the replacement of the Nielsen rating system, its audience profile had the largest concentration of viewers of ages 18 to 45. In other words, not only did the show have the most sought-after demographic that television advertisers hunger for, it was also one of the most successful series the network had ever aired, and did even better in reruns. This was more than ample justification to contact Gene Roddenberry with a request to revitalize the show. Unfortunately, this turned out impossible, as Paramount had just cleared out their warehouses of most of the sets and props, and rebuilding them would cost around $750,000, so instead, the studio greenlit Star Trek: The Animated Series (1973). Although Roddenberry wasn't really interested in doing an animated show, he agreed, in the hope that the show would be successful enough to revive the original series (which it unfortunately didn't).
    • Goofs
      The deck locations for Kirk's Quarters, Sickbay and Transporter Room vary (usually between decks 4-7) throughout the series.
    • Quotes

      Dr. McCoy: "He's dead, Jim."

    • Crazy credits
      On some episodes, the closing credits show a still that is actually from the Star Trek blooper reel. It is a close-up of stunt man Bill Blackburn who played an android in Return to Tomorrow (1968), removing his latex make up. In the reel, He is shown taking it off, while an off-screen voice says "You wanted show business, you got it!"
    • Alternate versions
      In 2006, CBS went back to the archives and created HD prints of every episode of the show. In addition to the new video transfer, they re-did all of the model shots and some matte paintings using CGI effects, and re-recorded the original theme song to clean it up. These "Enhanced" versions of the episodes aired on syndication and have been released on DVD and Blu-Ray.
    • Connections
      Edited into Ben 10: Secrets (2006)
    • Soundtracks
      Star Trek
      Music by Alexander Courage

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    FAQ36

    • How many seasons does Star Trek have?Powered by Alexa
    • How do they maintain Gravity on the the U.S.S. Enterprise ? .
    • All aliens on all planets speak the English language?
    • What does "TOS" mean?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 8, 1966 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official sites
      • Facebook
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    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Star Trek: The Original Series
    • Filming locations
      • Culver Studios - 9336 W. Washington Blvd., Culver City, California, USA(first season)
    • Production companies
      • Desilu Productions
      • Norway Corporation
      • Paramount Television
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      50 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 4:3

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