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[7] Thomas Glorieux of Maintitles wrote "Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country is rightly called the best non Horner / Goldsmith score for a Star Trek motion picture." [ 9 ] Craig Lysy of Movie Music UK wrote "Eidelman correctly interprets the film’s dark narrative, perfectly attenuates his music to the film’s imagery and demonstrates ...
The Undiscovered Country was released on VHS and in widescreen and full screen formats on Laserdisc in June 1992; [78] the release added a few minutes of new footage to the film. [79] Because of a trend in supermarket video sales and rentals, Paramount offered rebates for the home video release of The Undiscovered Country through boxes of ...
He was a member of the Peninsula Players summer theater program during the 1962 season. [ 12 ] In 1968, Auberjonois landed a role on Broadway , and appeared in three plays that season: as Fool to Lee J. Cobb 's King Lear (the longest running production of the play in Broadway history), as Ned in A Cry of Players (which played in repertory with ...
Sheppard appeared in several episodes of different series of Star Trek, notably The Next Generation ' s "The Schizoid Man" and Voyager ' s "Bliss".In the feature film Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country, his role was the warden of a Klingon gulag and in the 2009 reboot Star Trek, he played a member of the Vulcan High Council, but was uncredited. [6]
The Undiscovered Country (1991) Generations (1994) [prologue] "Flashback" (1996) [flashback taking place within The Undiscovered Country] 2298–2364 The Lost Era novels 2324 1292.4 Star Trek: Section 31 (2025) 2333–2355 10000–32999 Stargazer novels 2354–2381 31000–58999 New Frontier novels 2364 41000–41999
In 2019, the Edmonton Journal ranked this as having one of the top ten Spock character moments, pointing out the presentation of Spock with Spock's line "Indeed you have found him", references to Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country, and advancing the narrative between Spock and Sarek that began with the original series episode "Journey to ...
This episode was released with "Basics, Part II" on VHS in the United Kingdom, on one cassette, Star Trek: Voyager 3.1 - Basics, Part II/Flashback. [12] "Flashback" was released on DVD on July 6, 2004, as part of Star Trek Voyager: Complete Third Season, with Dolby 5.1 surround audio. [13] [14]
Rura Penthe is the name of a fictional penal colony in the following works: . A penal colony island in the 1954 Disney film 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea; A Klingon penal planetoid in the Star Trek universe, featured in: