SinopseSTAR TREK MOTION PICTURE TRILOGY BD Prepare-se para embarcar numa aventura épica em 3 partes junto com a trpulação da lendária U.S.S. Enterprise enquanto arriscam suas vidas, a espaçonave e a liberdade para salvar o universo da destruição iminente. Mostrando 3 filmes, the Star Trek: Motion Picture Trilogy é uma história de heroísmo, amizade e senso do dever que vai eletrizar velhoe e novos fãs da série. Os filmes forma remasterizados digitalmente The Wrath of Khan foi restaurado em high definition com qualidade excelente e audio em 7.1 Dolby TrueHD. INCLUI: 1-STAR TREK II: THE WRATH OF KHAN ( A Ira de Khan) 2-STAR TREK III: THE SEARCH FOR SPOCK ( A Busca por Spock) 3-STAR TREK IV: THE VOYAGE HOME ( A Volta para Terra) MAIS DE 90 MINUTOS DE EXTRAS NUNCA ANTES VISTOS + 6 HORAS DE EXTRAS JÁ MOSTRADOS EM OUTROS LANÇAMENTO CONTEUDO INTERATIVO EXCLUSIVO EM BLU-RAY LIBRARY COMPUTER: permite mostrar informações do personagem, espaçonave e planetas que aparecem na tela. STAR TREK I.Q. (BD-LIVE): Teste seus conhecimentos de Star Trek I.Q. com jogos e desafios. 
Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan - 4.5/5 There are two audio commentaries available for listening: the original commentary from director Nicholas Meyer and a new commentary featuring Meyer and Manny Coto. Meyer repeats many anecdotes from one commentary to the other though Cotto does ask some probing questions to spur Meyer?s thoughts when the conversation begins to lag. The library computer is an interactive interface which can be turned on as the movie plays. It allows the viewer the option to select pop-up facts about dozens of aspects of the movie organized in the following groups: Culture, Science & Medicine, Starfleet OPS, Life Forms, Planets & Locations, People, Technology, Ships, and Miscellaneous. The interface also contains an index to all of the drop down facts so the viewer can choose ahead of time and read them instead of waiting to be prompted as the film plays. ?Captain?s Log? is a 27 ¼-minute summary of the issues facing the producers, the director, and the actors in deciding about the plot for the film featuring interviews with select important members of the cast and crew. It?s in 480p. ?Designing Khan? is a 24-minute 480p featurette featuring interviews with production designer Joe Jennings, costume designer Robert Fletcher, art director Lee Cole, and director Meyer all discussing their work to give the picture its specific look and tone. Original 1982 interviews with Shatner, Nimoy, Kelley, and Montalban are in 480i and run a total of 11 minutes. ?Where No Man Has Gone Before: The Visual Effects of Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan? goes into some depth with the model work and animation used on the picture. This 480p featurette runs 18 ¼ minutes. ?Star Trek Universe: The Novel Approach? features interviews with Greg Cox and Julia Ecklar who have written books based on the mythology established in the television series and the films. This 480p feature runs 29 minutes. ?James Horner: Composing Genius? is an interview with the film?s gifted composer lasting 9 ½ minutes in 1080p. ?A Tribute to Ricardo Montalban? spends 4 ¾ minutes with director Nicholas Meyer waxing rhapsodic on the classy, urbane actor in this brief feature presented in 1080p. ?Collecting Star Trek?s Movie Relics? is an 11-minute featurette hosted by collector Alec Peters who shows us some gems of his collection along with introducing is to other Trek collectors who show off some of their most prized possessions. It?s in 1080p. ?Starfleet Academy: Mystery Behind Ceti Alpha VI? features actress Sarah Backhouse in an on-going lecture on an aspect of the film some have found perplexing. This lasts 3 minutes in 1080p. There are 13 storyboards which the user may choose and step through. The theatrical trailer is in 1080p and lasts 2 ¼ minutes. BD-Live for the set (available on each disc) offers a series of trivia quizzes for viewers and the ability to compose and upload your own quizzes for others. 
Star Trek III: The Search for Spock - 4.5/5 There are two audio commentaries available for listening. The first and best edits together comments from director Leonard Nimoy, writer-producer Harve Bennett, cinematographer Charles Correll, and actress Robin Curtis (who played Saavik in the movie). The other features two men connected to other parts of the Trek television legacy but not connected to this film: Ronald Moore and Michael Taylor. The library computer is an interactive interface which can be turned on as the movie plays. It allows the viewer the option to select pop-up facts about dozens of aspects of the movie organized in the following groups: Culture, Science & Medicine, Starfleet OPS, Life Forms, Planets & Locations, People, Technology, Ships, and Miscellaneous. The interface also contains an index to all of the drop down facts so the viewer can choose ahead of time and read them instead of waiting to be prompted as the film plays. ?Captain?s Log? features director Nimoy recounting how he came to get the job and how he enjoyed his first feature film directorial assignment. Star William Shatner also has a few zingers to fire off at his old friend. This is in 480p and lasts 26 ¼ minutes. ?Terraforming and the Prime Directive? is an interesting interview with scientist David Brin describing the real possibilities of forming a new biosphere on Mars in this 26-minute segment presented in 480p. ?Industrial Light & Mahic: The Visual Effects of Star Trek? is a 13 ¾-minute summary of some of the effects work the famous company accomplished on four of the Trek films: II, III, IV, and VI. It?s in 1080p. ?Spock: The Early Years? allows actor Stephen Manley to introduce the actors who play Spock at different ages during the movie and recount some of his fondest memories of making the picture. It?s in 1080p and lasts 6 ¼ minutes. ?Space Docks and Birds of Prey? finds the film?s designers and props people discussing their work on the project. This 480p featurette runs 27 ¾ minutes. ?Speaking Klingon? gives some insider information on how the language for the aliens was developed based on previous Klingon conversation in earlier shows and films. This 480p feature runs 21 minutes. ?Klingon and Vulcan Costumes? looks at the wardrobe, make-up, and jewelry needed for various characters in the film. It runs 12 ¼ minutes in 480p. ?Star Trek and the Science Fiction Hall of Fame? has the curators of the museum in Seattle escorting writer-producer Harve Bennett around to show him the contents devoted to Star Trek. This lasts 17 minutes and is in 1080p. ?Starfleet Academy SCISEC Brief 003: Mystery Behind the Vulcan Katra Transfer? finds actress Sarah Backhouse once again explaining briefly an apparent anomaly in the portrayal of an alien in the film. It lasts 2 ¾ minutes in 1080p. There are two photo galleries which the viewer may step-through: behind-the-scenes production shots and movie stills. There are nine storyboards which the viewer may step through. The theatrical trailer runs 1 ¼ minutes in 1080p. BD-Live for the set (available on each disc) offers a series of trivia quizzes for viewers and the ability to compose and upload your own quizzes for others. 
Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home - 5/5 There are two audio commentaries from which to choose. William Shatner and Leonard Nimoy host an affable remembrance of making the film in their track while two men connected with the new Star Trek movie, Alex Kurtzman and Bob Orci, contribute a new commentary from a fan?s perspective. ?Future?s Past: A Look Back? is a 27 ½-minute discussion of how the plot for the film came about building on the stories from the previous two films. It?s in 480p. ?On Location? spends 7 ½ minutes talking about the thrill of shooting on location in San Francisco rather than within the confines of a studio. It?s in 480p. ?Dailies Deconstruction? shows multiple takes and multiple camera angles for the downtown San Francisco scene. It lasts 4 ¼ minutes in 480p. ?Below the Line: Sound Design? has the film?s sound editor discussing how he came up with the sounds needed for various scenes in the picture. This 480p featurette runs 11 ¾ minutes. ?Time Travel: The Art of Possible? finds a series of Ph.D?s discussing the physics and possibilities of time travel in an 11 ¾-minute feature. It?s in 480p. ?The Language of Whales? is a quick overview of the different types of whales and the mysterious sounds they make. This 480p short lasts 5 ¾ minutes. ?A Vulcan Primer? is a 480p primer on what we know about Vulcans based on information contained in the original series and the movies. It runs for 7 ¾ minutes. ?Pavel Chekov?s Screen Moments? is a 1080p visit with actor Walter Koenig basking in the extra attnetion his Chekov character received in this particular film. This lasts 6 minutes. ?The Three-Picture Saga? is a series of interviews with the writers of the three trilogy films discussing how the plots were written to tie each film to the next. This 1080p featurette runs 10 ¼ minutes. ?Star Trek for a Cause? finds two members of Greenpeace advocating their work in the preservation of the whale in a 5 ¾-minute feature in 1080p. ?Starfleet Academy: The Whale Probe? is another 1080p feature with actress Sarah Backhouse basically summarizing the plot of the film. It lasts 3 ¾ minutes. ?Kirk?s Women? features four actresses who have appeared on the Trek series as either love interests or involved in some way with Captain Kirk: Louise Sorel, Catherine Hicks, Celeste Yarnell, and Cathy Browne. This 480p series of interviews lasts 8 ¼ minutes. ?From Outer Space to the Ocean? is a 14 ¾-minute slight EPK featurette on the special effects used for the movie?s four main effects sequences: the whales, the dream sequence which used early CGI effects, the space probe, and the Bird of Prey. It?s in 480p. ?The Bird of Prey? discusses the concepts for the design and implementation of the space vehicle used in the film, both its look and sound. This 480p feature runs 2 ¾ minutes. Interviews from 1986 are individually held with William Shatner (14 ½ minutes), Leonard Nimoy (15 ¾ minutes), and DeForest Kelley (13 minutes). All three men play their cards close to their vests about the central problem in the film's plot not wanting to give away any surprises. ?Roddenberry Scrapbook? is a tribute to the creator of the original series by his son Eugene. This 480p feature runs 8 ¼ minutes. ?Featured Artist: Mark Lenard? is a tribute to the actor who played Spock?s father in the series and the films with his wife and two daughters contributing personal reminiscences about the actor and the man. It?s in 480p and lasts 12 ¾ minutes. A production gallery featurette is a montage of movie stills and behind the scenes production shots collected in a 480p 4-minute vignette. There are eight storyboards which the viewer may step through. The film?s theatrical trailer runs for 2 ½ minutes in 1080p. The library computer is an interactive interface which can be turned on as the movie plays. It allows the viewer the option to select pop-up facts about dozens of aspects of the movie organized in the following groups: Culture, Science & Medicine, Starfleet OPS, Life Forms, Planets & Locations, People, Technology, Ships, and Miscellaneous. The interface also contains an index to all of the drop down facts so the viewer can choose ahead of time and read them instead of waiting to be prompted as the film plays. BD-Live for the set (available on each disc) offers a series of trivia quizzes for viewers and the ability to compose and upload your own quizzes for others. Each of the films in the set contain a 1080p trailer for the new Star Trek movie and also for the new Blu-ray edition of season one of the series. 
| Dirigido por: | Varios- William Shatner, Leonar Nimoy, De Forest Kelley | | Elenco: | |
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