The Commercial Appeal

Party like it’s 2299: Star Trek is 50!

- By Andrew A. Smith The Magazine Bundle: The Humble Comics Bundle:

Tribune Content Agency

2016 is the 50th anniversar­y of Star Trek! And Paramount is celebratin­g like it’s 2299.

“Star Trek Beyond,” the third movie in the J.J. Abrams’ reboot, is currently in theaters. It may or may not be the last in this series, but both Chris Pine (Captain Kirk) and Zachary Quinto (Mr. Spock) are signed for a fourth movie, should one materializ­e, according to the Hollywood Reporter. Chris Hemsworth also has said he’s set to reprise his role as George Kirk, Captain Kirk’s father, in a possible sequel.

There’s been some mild controvers­y, in that it’s been leaked that Mr. Sulu (John Cho) will be portrayed as gay in “Beyond.” That hardly seems surprising to me; one of the central themes of the show is tolerance — as startrek.com says, Star Trek “envisioned a world where technology and science improve the human condition and where peace and unity transcend conflict and separation.” Ergo, gay people should exist in Star Trek’s 23rd century, and further, that fact should be utterly unremarkab­le.

What drove this controvers­y, though, is that George Takei, the actor who played Mr. Sulu originally — and who is himself gay — disapprove­d publicly. He felt like the Sulu he played wasn’t gay, so the character should remain straight.

Far be it from me to argue with Mr. Takei. So we’re agreed: The Hikaru Sulu that Takei played wasn’t gay. But this is a different Lt. Sulu, one from — literally — a parallel universe. A universe where, it should be noted, Mr. Spock is knocking boots with Lt. Uhuru, something Leonard Nimoy’s Spock would never have done (without a whole lotta Pon Farr goin’ on).

All of which may be moot, because the next Trek on the screen is a new TV series, scheduled for January 2017. It will feature entirely new characters, and will be executive produced by Alex Kurtzman, who was involved in producing and/or writing “Star Trek” (2009) and “Star Trek into Darkness” (2013).

But there’s a catch, one befitting the Ferengi more than Earthmen. CBS is going to air only the premiere episode on network television. After that it will only be available on CBS All Access, which CBS describes as its “digital subscripti­on video on demand and live streaming service.”

Allow me to apply the universal translator: It’s going to cost money to see the new Star Trek series. CBS All Access costs $5.99 per month.

Now, CBS All Access does have all the previous Star Trek series available also, as well as thousands of episodes from CBS’ current and past seasons, and the local CBS station live. If that’s worth six bucks a month to you, then make it so.

Before that was Comic-Con Internatio­nal: San Diego (July 21-24), which had more Star Trek panels than you can shake a phaser at.

The main one was titled “Star Trek: Celebratin­g 50 Years,” and starred William Shatner (the original Captain Kirk), Scott Bakula (Captain Archer on “Enterprise”), Michael Dorn (Lt. Worf on “Next Generation” and “Deep Space Nine”), Jeri Ryan (Seven of Nine on “Voyager”) and Brent Spiner (Lt. Data on “Next Generation”). Other Trek programmin­g included NASA astronauts, astrophysi­cists and engineers on how the TV show has influenced real space exploratio­n; Smithsonia­n experts on working Trek technology, a preview of the Smithsonia­n’s Enterprise exhibit and clips from the upcoming “Building Star Trek” documentar­y; and, of course, strange new worlds of makeup, thanks to MAC Cosmetics.

There was plenty more; go to startrek.com/article/star-trek50-comic-con-details-revealed for the whole lineup.

Meanwhile, there are two Trek-related Humble Bundles:

Star Trek, presented by Titan Comics. Various prices brings varying amounts of “Star Trek” magazine and special issues, all originally published in the U.K. Star Trek presented by IDW. IDW Publishing is the current holder of the franchise, and has been publishing Trek comics since 2007. So the bundle had lots of options.

Yes, they are already over. But all that material is still available in collection­s, as well as tons of other Trek material from the publishers who’ve boldly gone where virtually every publisher has gone before.

AMONG THE HIGHLIGHTS

The first six issues of the first “Star Trek” series (Gold Key, 1967-79) were written by a guy who’d never seen the show and drawn by artists in Italy working from stills. They had absolutely no idea what the show was about. The Enterprise would land on planets on its tail, like a 1950s rocket ship, and a hot-headed Mr. Spock was as devilish as his appearance. Virtually everybody’s uniforms were the wrong color, and the artists didn’t have a still of James Doohan — so Scotty was entirely made up.

Paramount restricted the first Marvel Comics series (the publisher has had the franchise twice) to just the concepts introduced in “Star Trek: The Motion Picture” (1979). So no Romulans, or Andorians, or Tellarites, or even the Squire of Gothos! The crew wore those awful beige uniforms for the entire boring series, which only lasted (mercifully) 18 issues.

Various Trek comics have been set in school (“Star Trek Academy”), on Captain Christophe­r Pike’s Enterprise (“Star Trek: Early Voyages”) and in writer Peter David’s spinoff series of books (“Star Trek: New Frontier”).

When Marvel published Star Trek a second time, the crew met the X-Men. When DC published Star Trek, they met the Legion of Super-Heroes. At IDW they’ve teamed up with Green Lantern; had a crossover with Ghostbuste­rs, G.I. Joe and Transforme­rs; and even visited the Planet of the Apes (“Star Trek: The Primate Directive”).

IDW still has the franchise, but its ongoing series about the rebooted crew is coming to an end next month, likely anticipati­ng changes in the status quo from “Star Trek Beyond.” Meanwhile, legendary writer/ artist John Byrne is still creating new adventures of the 1960s crew by photoshopp­ing film frames from the original show (“New Visions”) and a new six-issue anthology series beginning in September (“Star Trek: Waypoint”) will include stories from every iteration of the show, from “Enterprise” to “Voyager.”

So happy birthday, Star Trek. Live long and prosper!

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