Friday, April 7, 2023

Star Trek - The Original Series!



Let me say right now, that I like nearly all that has been produced (that I've seen) associated with the Trek series over the decades. But for me, the original series both on screen and in print overshadows all other versions in spite of their many virtues.

 
Star Trek was once upon a time, a distant beacon in a science fiction universe very sparsely populated. It flickered briefly on television, then went out. But fans persisted and it revived in cartoon form and in print until finally thanks to the success of Star Wars it was given a new lease and capitalized mightily. The movies followed, then a gaggle of new variations, each with virtues and flaws, but somehow none was able to capture that nutty magic the first version had tapped into. They'd get close, but they'd always fall short.


James Blish is one of the great science fiction writers but these days he's mostly known I suspect for his work on Star Trek as he diligently adapted the television series episodes to short story form. In those ancient pre-VHS, pre-DVD days such items were treasures, hard copy renditions of images all too ephemeral. Blish locked it down. You can find all of these at the Internet Archive. Check out this link.


Blish even created if not the first Star Trek original novel, then arguably the most famous with Spock Must Die!. And again, thanks to the Internet Archive you can read this novel at this link. 


The first Star Trek novel is the Whitman juvenile Mission to Horatius by Mack Reynolds. It's a fun sweet little yarn. Follow this link to get a look for yourself . 


There is also this delightful collection of Star Trek trading cards from Topps. A weird remnant of years gone by, these cards were just one way to connect physically with a favorite show. 

And then there was Gold Key which adapted the series into comic book form with varying degrees of success. But certainly they found that the comic book fans did abide and the series ran through most of the 70's, pretty much until Gold Key itself succumbed. Star Trek would go on to be published in comic book form by Marvel, DC, and many others, but those Gold Key stories have a naive charm modern renditions cannot possess.  I read a bunch of these vintage gems relatively recently in Checker's reprint series.






And then there's this. I found eleven of the twelve Star Trek  Fotonovels at my new favorite store Half-Price Books some few months ago. They are in remarkably fine shape and I think with all this "Star Trekkery" in the air, it might be a good weekend to break them out and give them a thorough reading. Of course I'll go see the new movie of course, eventually, but right now the true Trek calls.


Sadly I'm missing the final volume adapting "Amok Time", one of the great episodes.


I might even break out the old Star Fleet Technical Manuel I have around here somewhere to properly hone my mind for a session of classic Trek.




And I've just added the three massive tomes above to my Star Trek cache. I'll be reading on these long after this month has passed. 

Go boldly friends!

 NOTE: This is a Dojo Revised Classic Post. 

Rip Off

10 comments:

  1. I loved the original Star Trek TV show. It was a weekend tradition for my family to settle down and watch it when it first aired in Scotkand/UK in the late 1960s early 70s and to talk about it next day at school . A great show and great memories. Like yourself I've enjoyed all the ST spin off TV shows I have seem ( I've not watched them all) ditto the films. ST had a successful UK comic strip that ean for years in TV21 and the Valiant weekly comics.

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    1. Star Trek achieved success other franchises can only dream about. The show was a rare entry in sci-fi and tapped an audience eager to see something new and engaging and even challenging. The way NBC continually attempted to thwart its success is amazing and painfully shortsighted.

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  2. I've got the first three series in the containers you show and may one day buy the animated series, though it never impressed me much if I'm honest.

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    1. I just started watching the cartoon again and I have to disagree. It's got the voices and the stories are solid. The large cast makes it easy for the animators to leap from face to face and use the same images over without a strong sense of repetition.

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    2. Well, bear in mind that I last saw the animated show in the '70s, and though it was good to hear the voices of the original cast, I don't remember any stories at all, unlike the live-action series. So my memories of it are far from memorable, though it's always possible I'd revise my opinion of it slightly, were I to see it again.

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  3. The Gold Key comics weren't available in the UK (or where I lived anyway) but some of the Gold Key Star Trek comic strips were printed in hardback annuals (in the UK an annual is a hardback book traditionally given as a Christmas present) and I had several Star Trek annuals in the '70s.

    Happy Easter to you Rip/Dean and to all the Dojo readers!

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    1. Happy Easter back at you. I've seen reprints of those Star Trek stories that were in the annuals, I think. They looked pretty good.

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  4. I was as excited every week for this show as any other in those days. Where Lost in Space was a little goofy, Trek was serious stuff, along with its sometimes Serling-esque episodes.

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    1. I've grown to like the goofier aspects of Lost in Space, things that made me wince back in the day. Likewise I am able to see how excellent Star Trek was in comparison.

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  5. Oh, yeah. It's still entertaining as all get out. I do remember that Dr. Smith was more sinister in the first show or two (the pilot?), then he went "goofball". A show fit for the 60's!

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