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The first home media release of "The Neutral Zone" was on VHS cassette on May 26, 1993, in the United States and Canada. [20] The episode was later included on the Star Trek: The Next Generation season one DVD boxed set, released in March 2002, [21] and was released as part of the season one Blu-ray set on July 24, 2012. [22]
Star Trek: The Next Generation first-season cast photo. Six of the main actors appeared in all seven seasons and all four movies. Star Trek: The Next Generation is an American science fiction television series that debuted in broadcast syndication on September 28, 1987. [1]
Star Trek creator Gene Roddenberry (pictured in 1976) was hired by Paramount to create a new television series set in the same universe. As production was underway on the film Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home, Paramount executives began to work on ideas to bring Star Trek back to television, [1] hiring writer/producer Greg Strangis to develop some proposals. [2]
Star Trek: The Next Generation is an American science fiction television series which aired in syndication from September 1987 through to May 1994. It is the second live-action series of the Star Trek franchise and comprises a total of 176 (DVD and original broadcast) or 178 (syndicated) episodes over 7 seasons.
This was the second time that a pair of The Next Generation episodes received a cinematic release to promote the release of a Blu-ray season box set. [40] This episode was released in the "Q Continuum" collection of LaserDisc. [41] The collection was released on July 30, 1997 and was published by Paramount Home Video; it retailed for 100 USD. [41]
He played several characters in Star Trek: The Next Generation (Star Trek: TNG), starting in the first season. He has the distinction of two firsts on Star Trek: TNG, playing the first Romulan, Commander Tebok, in the 1988 episode "The Neutral Zone", and the first Cardassian (in any Star Trek series), Gul Macet, in the 1991 episode, "The Wounded".
The episode was released with Star Trek: The Next Generation season three DVD box set, released in the United States on July 2, 2002. [3] This had 26 episodes of Season 3 on seven discs, with a Dolby Digital 5.1 audio track. [3] It was released in high-definition Blu-ray in the United States on April 30, 2013. [4]
"Angel One" is the fourteenth episode of the first season of the American science fiction television series Star Trek: The Next Generation. It was first broadcast on January 25, 1988, in the United States in broadcast syndication.