'Star Trek 4' to be directed by a woman for the first time
April 27, 2018
S.J. Clarkson will reportedly become the first woman to direct a Star Trek movie. As Trekkies meet in Dortmund for an international convention headlined by William Shatner, here's the latest news from the Enterprise.
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The next sequel of the "Star Trek" saga could be directed for the first time by a woman, according to Thursday's reports by entertainment trade magazines The Hollywood Reporter and Variety.
Production company Paramount is in talks with S.J. Clarkson to direct the fourth installment in the rebooted film series starring Chris Pine and Zachary Quinto.
Clarkson directed episodes from TV series including "Dexter," "Bates Motel" and "Orange is the New Black," as well as the Marvel-based series "Jessica Jones" and "The Defenders."
The cult science fiction series was launched in the US on September 8, 1966. On Star Trek Day, revisit the story of the show.
Image: picture alliance/dpa
From the moon to the entire universe
The Starship Enterprise got off to a rather bumpy start in the US, when it first launched on September 8, 1966. This changed with the growing interest in the Apollo program and the successful lunar landing in 1969. Suddenly, people felt closer to space and science fiction was hip. With more and more TV channels featuring the series, Star Trek was first shown in Germany in 1972.
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The first Enterprise
The original version of the ship which flew through the endless expanses of space carried the label "U.S.S. Enterprise NCC-1701." The show's canon says it was built in the year 2245 and commanded by Captain Kirk from 2264 until 2269. Kirk eventually had to destroy it, to keep it from being used by enemies. Later models can separate the "saucer" section from the hull in an emergency.
Image: picture alliance/dpa
Beam me up, Scotty
When Scotty is in the transporter room and is moving the oversized sliders, the beamers give off a high-pitched squeal and the bodies of the crew split into molecules to be transported to alien planets. If all goes well, travelers eventually return to the ship in their original form, like above.
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Multicultural workplace
The original show managed to overcome all racial and gender boundaries in the 1960s America. Characters from Scotland, Russia and Japan work together on the bridge with Americans. Two women are also part of the team. One of them — Lt. Uhura played by African American actress Nichelle Nichols — serves as a Starfleet officer. She became the first Black woman with such a strong role.
In 1976, NASA engineers named the prototype of their space shuttle "Enterprise." Of course, on the day of the big press event, the entire crew was present — except one individual. Who could that be?
Image: NASA/gemeinfrei
Spock is a legend
Meet the iconic half-human, half-Vulcan Spock. He is the first officer aboard the Enterprise and Captain James T. Kirk's right-hand man. His favorite word is "fascinating." The Vulcan salute (pictured) is still a fun party trick — not everyone can do it. The actor Leonard Nimoy, who passed away in 2015, never managed to get away from his role as Mr. Spock.
Image: picture-alliance/CBS/Landov
Back to the past
In 1984, "Star Trek IV - The Voyage Home" was hugely successful and the first real hit movie in the Star Trek series. The Enterprise arrives from the future back in the middle of the 1980s. The now somewhat dated crew makes fun of itself. Scotty tries to talk to a computer mouse, and Spock hides his ears with bandana and dresses up as a hippie on drugs.
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The Next Generation
In 1987, the Enterprise saga got a fresh start. "Star Trek: The Next Generation" is set a good 100 years later than the first one. The team of Captain Jean-Luc Picard (left) boasts aliens of its own, including the Klingon Worf and the ship psychologist Troi from the planet Betazed. The friendly android Data (right) became the show's breakout character.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/ UIP
'nuqneH - qapla': Exchanging pleasantries in Klingon
"Klingon" was invented in 1984 by linguist Marc Okrand. It is a speakable and writable language that was created for warlike Klingons from the planet Kronos and, accordingly, sounds harsh. Shakespeare plays have been translated into Klingon, and DW once even created a version of our website in Worf's mother tongue. Some Trekkies still make the effort of learning it.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/UIP
Humor transcends universes
Star Trek has inspired countless parodies in the US but also in Germany. German actor and filmmaker Michael "Bully" Herbig spoofed the show in his movie "(T)Raumschiff Surprise" ("Dreamship/Starship Surprise") where he portrayed Mr. Spuck (which translates as Mr. Spit). The movie revolves around a crew of a space cab and features references to the "Star Wars" universe as well.
Image: imago/United Archives
No end in sight
In July 2016, the feature film "Star Trek - Beyond" was released in cinemas. In it, Kirk, Spock & Co. are played by young actors and the blockbuster boasts cutting-edge special effects. And the Enterprise is still preparing for new missions into uncharted territory. In April 2021, Paramount Pictures announced an official release date for the next Star Trek movie: on June 9, 2023.
Image: picture alliance/AP Photo/Paramount/K. French
The future is female
The Netflix series "Star Trek: Discovery" features Michelle Yeoh (left) as Captain Philippa Georgiou, and Sonequa Martin-Green as First Officer Michael Burnham (right). Star Trek has always been a pioneer in diversity, casting Asian and African American actors and actresses in leading roles. The first Star Trek female captain was Kathryn Janeway in "Star Trek: Voyager" (1995-2001).
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/J.Thijs
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Actor Chris Pine will be back in the role of Kirk. According to Variety, time travel will allow his character to meet his father, played by Chris Hemsworth, who had already appeared in the 2009 "Star Trek." Zachary Quinto is also set to return as Spock.
Paramount is also preparing another project in the blockbuster series, to be directed by Quentin Tarantino and produced by J.J. Abrams, which is said to be set in another timeline and would be released after "Star Trek 4."
The latest news from the film industry is bound to be discussed by Trekkies at Destination Star Trek, Europe's official convention for fans of the series and the films, which is held this year at the Messe Westfallenhallen in Dortmund from April 27 to 29.
This year's event will celebrate the 25th anniversary of the "Star Trek: Deep Space Nine" series, which premiered in 1993 and ran until 1999.
Along with several actors from the 90s series, the convention will welcome several other stars from the Star Trek universe.
An absolute cultural icon is also among confirmed guests: the man who portrayed the first Captain Kirk, William Shatner.