Star Trek: The Motion Picture - The Director's Edition

Star Trek: The Motion Picture - The Director's Edition (1979)

 
0.0
 
3.7 (2)
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Jeremy Gallen
Updated October 12, 2025
Star Trek: The Motion Picture - The Director's Edition

Movie Info

Movie Genres
Year Released
Directed by
MPAA Rating
PG
Runtime
136 mins
Release date
December 7, 1979
Budget (In USD)
$44 million
Revenue (In USD)
$139 million
Where to Watch this Movie

Movie Overview | Star Trek: The Motion Picture - The Director's Edition (1979)

Admiral James T. Kirk retakes command of the USS Enterprise to intercept an alien spacecraft of enormous power close to Earth.

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User reviews

2 reviews
Overall rating
 
3.7
Entertainment Factor
 
3.5(2)
Story
 
3.5(2)
Actors Performance
 
4.0(2)
Cinematography
 
3.0(2)
Sound Track
 
4.5(2)
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Star Trek: The Motion Picture – The Director’s Edition: A 4K Restoration That Finally
Overall rating
 
4.4
Entertainment Factor
 
5.0
Story
 
5.0
Actors Performance
 
4.0
Cinematography
 
3.0
Sound Track
 
5.0
After decades of anticipation, Star Trek: The Motion Picture – The Director’s Edition (1979) has finally received the restoration it always deserved. Streaming now in 4K Ultra HD and available on Blu-ray and Paramount Plus, this version brings Gene Roddenberry’s ambitious science-fiction classic back to life with stunning clarity and emotional depth. 

The original Star Trek: The Motion Picture was released in 1979 as the franchise’s first feature film, uniting Captain Kirk, Spock, and the crew of the USS Enterprise in a story that leaned more toward philosophy than phasers. But rushed post-production left the film unfinished and uneven. The Director’s Edition, overseen by Robert Wise and completed with modern technology, corrects that history. 

But all of a sudden, the new 4K transfer is breathtaking. Every frame of the Star Trek The Motion Picture 4K restoration has been carefully color-graded to highlight the grandeur of Douglas Trumbull’s visual effects. The deep-space sequences finally feel immersive, with star fields that stretch endlessly and the refitted Enterprise gleaming like never before. For fans searching Star Trek in 4K or Star Trek motion picture stream, this is the definitive way to experience it. 

What truly stands out in The Director’s Edition is pacing. The original’s slower rhythm, often criticized as dull, now feels deliberate and hypnotic. The extended sequences serve a purpose, to let you feel the awe of discovery. Robert Wise, best known for The Sound of Music and West Side Story, clearly intended this to be a meditative space epic, not just another adventure film. Performances remain grounded in humanity. William Shatner’s Captain Kirk is older, restless, and uncertain of his command. Leonard Nimoy’s Spock delivers one of his most introspective portrayals, wrestling between logic and emotion. The Star Trek Director’s Cut also enhances Jerry Goldsmith’s iconic score, whose orchestral sweep has never sounded richer in 4K remastering. 

Terms like Star Trek The Motion Picture Director’s Cut, Star Trek The Motion Picture The Director’s Edition, and Star Trek Movie Collection 4K are trending because fans are rediscovering this classic through modern streaming platforms. Whether you watch it on Paramount Plus or pick up the Star Trek Blu-ray collection, this edition redefines the visual standard for all classic science-fiction remasters. 

Of course, Star Trek: The Motion Picture – The Director’s Edition still carries traces of its 1970s pacing, and some viewers may find it slow compared to today’s action-heavy sci-fi. But that’s also its beauty, it asks for patience and rewards you with scale and introspection. It’s not about explosions; it’s about exploration. 

Verdict:
This Star Trek Director’s Cut transforms a flawed but visionary film into a cinematic experience worthy of its legacy. The 4K restoration adds depth, warmth, and precision, making this a must-watch for both lifelong Trekkies and new fans exploring the Star Trek movie collection

Rating: 4.5 out of 5, A visually stunning, thematically rich masterpiece that finally fulfills Gene Roddenberry’s dream. 
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The Slow-Motion Picture
Overall rating
 
3.0
Entertainment Factor
 
2.0
Story
 
2.0
Actors Performance
 
4.0
Cinematography
 
3.0
Sound Track
 
4.0
I maybe became aware of Gene Roddenberry's Star Trek franchise when I was around six years old but really didn't indulge into it when I was well into my adulthood, and I'll admit that even then I was more of a Star Wars junkie, although I'll acknowledge that many areas of both franchises are largely a matter of taste. The Original Series was well ahead of its time when it debuted during the late 1960s, though its three seasons were fairly troubled productions, with the series ending prematurely without a definite conclusion. An animated series would follow, which again ended without an ending episode that wrapped things up plot-wise.

Years after their cancellation, Paramount proposed a sequel series called Phase II, which actually had several episodes written, although it was ultimately scrapped and begun to be retooled into a feature film to ride on the success of the original Star Wars. Director Robert Wise headed Star Trek: The Motion Picture, which had a fairly troubled production, especially with a huge time crunch, to the point where the film prints were still wet when loaded onto the camera reels at the movie's premiere in 1979. Star Trek: The Motion Picture - The Director's Edition would release decades later in the next millennium; does the film still hold up today?

The debut Star Trek film opens with a sequence of beautiful orchestral music with moving stars that lasts several minutes in the style of classic epic films like Ben-Hur, before the classic 1970s-80s Paramount logo, but is really unnecessary and needlessly pads out a film that has been rightfully nicknamed "The Slow-Motion Picture," among others. The main title theme is the dumbly-named but nonetheless awesome "Life Is a Dream" by composer Jerry Goldsmith, which would ultimately serve as the main motif for The Next Generation. The soundtrack is easily still to date one of the high points of the movie.

In the twenty-third century, the Starfleet station Epsilon Nine detects an alien entity, ultimately named V'Ger, that threatens to engulf Earth, having destroyed three Klingon warships and the station itself on its way. On Earth, James T. Kirk, promoted to Admiral, visits his former vessel, the starship Enterprise, undergoing a major refit, and eventually taking command to the chagrin of its commanding officer, William Decker, with the iconic vessel being the closest within interception range of V'Ger. However, the refurbished Enterprise still has issues to the point where it kills two officers attempting to board via teleportation.

The resident Vulcan Spock ultimately rejoins the new Enterprise crew, along with his friendly rival, the snarky doctor Leonard "Bones" McCoy, Chekov, Scotty, Uhura, and Sulu. The film spends most of the time traveling through V'Ger, with tons of technical ship and scientific jargon peppering the dialogue that's far more porn for scientists than anything else, along with some weirdness in the sound effects like a repeated digitized "boing" and things like Ilia's "possession" by the entity. It's ultimately up to Spock to suit himself up and attempt to communicate with V'Ger, revealing its various mysteries and backstory, with tons of trippiness in the process.

Robert Wise's ultimate intent was to make The Motion Picture a spiritual successor to 2001: A Space Odyssey, and while he definitely did an excellent job in that regard, the film has otherwise aged horribly, especially regarding the visual effects, which really make it clash today with the far-superior technology of Next Generation-and-beyond Star Trek media. The film further needlessly feels prolonged and could have very easily been half an hour or so shorter given the drawn-out sequences like Kirk and Scotty circling the refitted Enterprise and the various scenes of delving through V'Ger.

Overall, it's not a "bad" movie, but is still very far from bucket-list, unless you're really interested in the history of the Star Trek franchise.

The Good

+Excellent soundtrack.
+Great acting.
+The mystery of what V'Ger is.
+Can feel trippy.

The Bad

-Could have easily been half an hour or so shorter.
-Has aged horribly.
-Too much technical jargon in dialogue.
-Oddness like Ilia's "possession."
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