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What Does The Different Color Uniforms On Star Trek Next Generation Mean?





Paramount Pictures | 1989-1990 | Flavor 3 | 1181 min | Rated Boob tube-PG | Apr 30, 2013

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Codec: MPEG-4 AVC (16.80 Mbps)
Resolution: 1080p
Aspect ratio: i.33:ane
Original aspect ratio: one.33:1

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English language: DTS-HD Principal Audio 7.1 (48kHz, 24-bit)
English: Dolby Digital ii.0 (192kbps)
High german: Dolby Digital 2.0
Spanish: Dolby Digital 2.0
French: Dolby Digital 2.0
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English: DTS-Hd Master Audio 7.1 (48kHz, 24-bit)
English language: Dolby Digital 2.0 (192kbps)
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Spanish: Dolby Digital ii.0
French: Dolby Digital ii.0
Italian: Dolby Digital ii.0
Japanese: Dolby Digital 2.0
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English, French, German, Italian, Japanese, Spanish, Danish, Dutch, Finnish, Norwegian, Swedish

English language, French, German, Italian, Japanese, Castilian, Danish, Dutch, Finnish, Norwegian, Swedish (less)


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Blu-ray Disc
Half dozen-disc fix (6 BD-50)

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Slipcover in original pressing

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Star Trek: The Next Generation, Season 3

 (Boob tube) (1989-1990)

Star Expedition: The Next Generation, Season iii Blu-ray delivers stunning video and audio in this exceptional Blu-ray release

Space... The concluding borderland... These are the voyages of the Starship Enterprise. Its continuing mission: To explore foreign new worlds... To seek out new life and new civilisations... To boldly go where no i has gone before!

For more than about Star Trek: The Next Generation, Flavour 3 and the Star Trek: The Next Generation, Season 3 Blu-ray release, run across Star Expedition: The Next Generation, Flavor 3 Blu-ray Review published past Martin Liebman on April 27, 2013 where this Blu-ray release scored 4.5 out of five.

Directors: Cliff Bole

, Les Landau, Winrich Kolbe, Rob Bowman, Robert Scheerer, Robert Wiemer
Writers: Gene Roddenberry, Tracy Torm�, Ronald D. Moore, Brannon Braga, Ren� Echevarria, Hans Beimler
Starring: Patrick Stewart, Jonathan Frakes, Brent Spiner, Michael Dorn, Gates McFadden, Marina Sirtis
Producers: Gene Roddenberry, Rick Berman, Ronald D. Moore, Brannon Braga, D.C. Fontana

» Run into full cast & crew

Star Trek: The Next Generation, Season 3 Blu-ray Review


"Trek" has never been better.

Reviewed by Martin Liebman, April 27, 2013

Let's make sure history never forgets the name 'Enterprise.'

New uniforms, new writers, the return of an old friend, a guest appearance by some other, and some of the finest hours of television ever to air -- under the Star Trek banner or not -- all shape season three of The Next Generation into, arguably, the best of the most countless hours of Star Expedition Voyages through the years, in all its numerous variants and on both the large and, primarily, pocket-sized screens. Season three sees the maturation of The Adjacent Generation, the absolute fulfillment of its hope that was certainly hinted at -- and usually more -- in seasons i and two just brought to unmistakable completion here. The deep cast chemistry; the total realization of the potential for the dynamic character roster; and the perfect alloy of fascinating exploration, intense action, intimate character study, and the many threads that weave together the heart and soul of Science Fiction -- the deeply personal in look at humanity through the forwards-thinking outward prism of a possible future and even through the eyes of alien races -- all give shape to what is arguably the virtually impressive flavour Star Expedition has ever known beyond what is now five unique crews and, counting the animated adventures of Kirk and company, twenty-9 years of boldly going through the final frontier on the small screen, now completely remastered and replicated for the loftier definition era.


The dazzler shot never gets erstwhile...especially in loftier definition.

Flavour three overflows with quality episodes, including several classics -- "Yesterday'southward Enterprise," "The Offspring," and "Best of Both Worlds, Part 1" -- that take largely come up to define The Adjacent Generation, reaching down into the series' emotional core, its 1000 sense of adventure, its slick activity, its absorbing plot lines, and the largely faultless character roster and cast. The season is aided a great bargain by the departure of the strong Dr. Polaski and the return of the more fluid and approachable Beverly Crusher, a doctor who may lack the personality of McCoy, the intrigue of Bashir, the novelty and fantastic development of the holographic doctor, and the charm of Phlox only who adds a counter dynamic to Picard and a unique combination of outward gentleness and inward toughness that even Troi cannot bring to the serial. Otherwise, the main bandage remains the same -- as it will for the duration until the introduction of the quasi-regular Ensign Ro -- though some characters fail to find the exact aforementioned level of nuanced development and broader inclusion every bit principal cogs in the majority of the stories, LaForge in detail and even as he settles into his role as transport's engineer. Season three runs with the idea of developing the bridge coiffure into something of a family unit unit while at the same time fulfilling the greater promise of the broader Trek universe that'due south more than thoroughly explored in the season and the series. By the stop of season iii, the Adjacent Generation crew breaks free from the shadow of the original series and charts its own path due largely to that unique Roddenberry ability to put together a graphic symbol roster that's diverse yet capable of coming together in a futurity where such closeness is expected only as well in a present fourth dimension that offers hope for a better tomorrow. None of the subsequent three series found quite the same level of dynamic cast togetherness as The Next Generation - - Deep Space Nine came close, and that's with ii TNG regulars in leading roles -- and information technology'due south that very real sense of family unit that makes The Next Generation the pinnacle of Star Expedition.

Season three works through classic Science Fiction and Star Trek themes with a balance, flair, ingenuity, and purpose quite unlike whatever other show and precious few seasons. Information technology's more than just activity, instead sharing largely thoughtful tales that explore humanity, inhumanity, and everything in between in episodes like "The Ensigns of Control," "The Offspring," "Hollow Pursuits," "Sarek," and "The All-time of Both Worlds." These, and other, episodes work through moral dilemmas and personal crises, yielding deep and absorbing emotional content that explores non only life in the future but life in the hither-and-now through the prism of futurity events, interactions, and technologies. Even the virtually action-oriented episodes, like "Yesterday'southward Enterprise" that feel wonderfully cinematic and bigger than the medium, explore the role of faith and gut feelings not as separate entities merely rather elements that can work in tandem for the purpose of noble pursuits, taking a take chances through sacrifice of people and, really, an unabridged noesis of life for the mere possibility of the greater good. The season explores human interaction, understanding, friendship, purpose, and the place of fantasy and escapism both in and from the real earth in the wonderful "Hollow Pursuits." It examines death and how unlike people, cultures, even species deal with it in "The Bonding." It explores humanity through the absence thereof in the emotionally powerful "The Offspring." Information technology delves deeply into loss, doubt, fear, purpose, and principle in "The Best of Both Worlds, Part i." Season three is a true powerhouse of television, a flavor that reaches farther than most any other in terms of bringing so many qualities into the fold. It develops its characters, expands its universe, and captures the attention, imagination, and allegiance of its audience similar few shows -- let alone individual seasons -- before or after it. This is perfect idiot box, and even with a few less-than-stellar episodes included, it'due south the pinnacle of Star Trek and episodic entertainment.

Season iii highlight episodes include:

  • The Ensigns of Control: A 10-Forward concert is interrupted when Picard is called to the bridge. The Enterprise has been thrust into a dangerous situation with a mysterious alien race known as the Sheliak, a race with whom the Federation has a lengthy, detailed treaty. The Sheliak, a species with no regard for homo life, are about to colonize an inhospitable-to-humans earth under treaty guidelines, only a man colony has defied the odds -- and the planet'south mortiferous hyperonic radiations -- and established a colony there, heretofore unbeknownst to either the Federation or the Sheliak. Information, immune to the furnishings of the radiation, is sent to the planet to inform the colonists of the state of affairs and organize their evacuation. He finds a stubborn people, led by a man named Gosheven, that refuses to abandon all they, and their forefathers, have built. While Data -- with the help of a sympathetic colonist named Ard'rian -- works to observe a way to convince colonists of the demand to evacuate, Picard and the Enterprise crew frantically search for a way to remove the colonists in fourth dimension -- transporters are useless because of the radiation, and shuttlecraft are too tedious -- or discover an out clause in the treaty to buy them that time without resorting to hostilities confronting a determined foe.
  • The Survivors: The Enterprise responds to a distress telephone call from Delta-Rana IV. They find a devastated planet with no life form readings but for two that announced to be living undisturbed in the midst of the chaotic devastation effectually them. Riker, Dr. Crusher, Worf, Information, and Geordi beam down to the world where they observe an elderly couple, Kevin and Rishon Uxbridge. When Data plays with a small music box in the Uxbridge home, Advisor Troi, yet on the Enterprise, feels the music in her caput. It deeply moves her, troubles her; she cannot go the melody out of her heed and a nuisance becomes an incapacitating illness. Presently, another vessel appears from hiding, 5 times the Enterprise's mass and much more heavily armed. Afterward the Enterprise is run off past the more powerful vessel, Picard begins to piece together the puzzle of how information technology seems a single couple lives on a decimated world, protected by the very vessel that theory suggests destroyed the residuum of the planet.
  • The Bonding: While on a routine away mission, an Enterprise team is caught in the blast radius of an old booby trap from a long-forgotten war. Unfortunately, the ship'southward archeologist, Marla Aster, is killed when the explosive detonates. She is survived by a twelve-yr-old son, Jeremy. His male parent is besides deceased, and his only surviving relatives are an aunt and uncle back on Globe. Death is "a part of life in Starfleet," Riker says, merely it becomes obvious very quickly that expiry isn't simply another process of life for the living. While Captain Picard and Counselor Troi effort to console Jeremy, Worf comes to believe it is his duty -- his correct -- to perform a Klingon bonding anniversary, known as R'usstai, with young Jeremy, merely a surprise visitor threatens to tear autonomously Jeremy'due south frail life for skilful.
  • The Enemy: Riker, Geordi, and Worf beam downwards to the environmentally hostile world known as Galorndon Cadre, a planet within the Federation boundaries. At that place, they notice wreckage with Romulan markings. Worf makes some other discovery: a surviving Romulan. Meanwhile, Geordi falls through a hole and becomes separated from the team. Worf, Riker, and the Romulan survivor beam back aboard the Enterprise. Conditions don't let a rescue party, leaving Geordi stranded, at to the lowest degree temporarily, on the planet. While the Enterprise crew attempts to figure out why the Romulans were on the world and how to rescue its stranded colleague, Geordi is left below to survive with the help of an unlikely companion. At the same time, Worf is forced to confront a personal moral crisis head-on.
  • The Defector: Data and Picard's Holodeck lesson in Shakespearean acting is interrupted when the bridge calls with news of sensors detecting a Romulan scout send inside the Neutral Zone. The Romulan on-lath requires assistance; he's seeking asylum and is fleeing from several pursuing hostile warbirds. When he's beamed aboard and the firsthand crisis is averted, the defector warns Picard of a pending Romulan invasion of Federation territory. A forwards base of operations has been established -- without the Federation catching then much as a whiff of its construction -- and it volition be fully operational in only two days time. War appears imminent, if he's telling the truth, that is. He sets his vessel to cocky-destruct, he possesses intimate cognition of operations beyond the telescopic of his supposed ranking in the Romulan hierarchy, and the entire set-upwardly seems all likewise user-friendly to draw the Enterprise illegally into the Neutral Zone. Picard and crew must discern the truth before engaging in any activity that could lead to war.
  • D�j� Q: A moon is collapsing effectually the planet Bre'el Iv. It'due south only a matter of hours before it mercilessly impacts the globe beneath, an bear upon which volition destroy countless lives and potentially engender a new water ice age. The Enterprise engages in a futile effort to push the moon dorsum into its original orbit. Suddenly, Q appears on the bridge, naked, stripped of his powers and forced out of the Continuum. He registers as fully human being, wants to be treated as a human, and is locked in the transport'southward brig. Suddenly, a mysterious alien race known as the Calamarain attack Q in Ten-Froward, leaving the Enterprise to deal with the crisis on Bre'el IV, an one-time enemy who may be upward to new tricks, and a new external threat at a virtually inopportune time.
  • A Matter of Perspective: Commander Riker is beamed aboard the Enterprise just in fourth dimension before the Federation infinite station he was just on suddenly explodes. A power drain was evident just earlier transport. The debris field suggests a reactor core problem. A local security force liaison arrives, forcing Picard'south mitt to seek the full story from an obviously troubled Riker. The security official immediately arranges Riker'southward arrest for his role in what is being accounted a murder. Witnesses claim Riker "threatened" the lone sole left on board the station when it was destroyed. Local law dictates a suspect guilty before existence proven innocent, leaving Riker with no choice but to prove his innocence beyond the shadow of a doubt. Picard orders Information to clarify testimony and recreate the possible avenues of activity that took identify on the station leading upwards to the explosion in the Enterprise's holodeck.
  • Yesterday's Enterprise: A "fourth dimension displacement" appears directly alee of the Enterprise and from it a vessel emerges, the Enterprise C. When information technology does, everything on the Enterprise D changes. She'south suddenly in a wartime posture, a primal histrion in a decades-long struggle with the Klingon Empire. What's more, the long-deceased Tasha Yar is manning the tactical position. The Enterprise C was thought destroyed ii decades prior. Data theorizes she's been adrift in fourth dimension. Scans reveal heavy damage just signs of life. An abroad squad finds well over 100 survivors, including the helm and helmsman. While the rest of the crew believes everything to exist as it should, Guinan feels something awry and comes to believe that sending the Enterprise C dorsum through the rift and to her doom could mean a return to the normal timeline in which the war never occurred and billions never died.
  • The Offspring: With Riker away on personal leave, the Enterprise travels to sector 396 to chart an asteroid chugalug. En road, Data summons Wesley, Geordi, and Counselor Troi to his "secret labratory" to meet a humanoid android of his creation that he has named Lal. Lal is introduced every bit Information's "child" and is his ain construction, built through the lessons he learned while in attendance at a cybernetics conference. He has crafted his child to be characterless, without gender and without species -- beyond humanoid -- so Lal may chose its own time to come. Captain Picard is shocked, concerned that Information does not sympathize the consequences of bringing a new life into the universe, even if it'southward not at all biological but rather completely technological. Now, Data must learn to exist a parent who lacks even basic emotions, while Lal must determine how all-time to be on lath a starship with peers that do not understand its awkward ways while demonstrating some evolutionary skills even Data has yet to feel.
  • Sins of the Father: For more information on this previously released-to-Blu-ray episode, please click here.
  • Allegiance: The Enterprise is en road to USS Hood with orders to assist her in a terraforming mission. While relaxing in his quarters, Picard is transported off the ship and placed in a small, enclosed room with 2 additional guests and an obvious infinite for a yet-unarrived 4th captive. In the mystery room, Picard meets two aliens, 1 of whom is a Starfleet cadet, both of whom take been captive for days prior to Picard'due south arrival. They are fed with gelled discs and given no way out of the room salvage for a door panel that pains those who enter the incorrect code, a code too complex to guess at random. When the 4th abductee arrives, the prisoners must work together to escape or tear one some other apart in the name of fear. Meanwhile, back on the ship, Worf and his security team follow up on a calculator alert past conducting a welfare cheque on Picard; they find him relaxing in his quarters. "Picard" orders a communication coma and bug strange orders which his loyal crew of grade follows to the letter, but word and firsthand accounts of his odd behavior brainstorm to circulate around the ship, leading the bridge crew to further clandestinely investigate its beloved helm.
  • Hollow Pursuits: Lieutenant Barclay is having his way with his superior officers, pushing Geordi effectually, overpowering Riker, gaining the attending of a sexually aroused Counselor Troi. Only it'south all a holodeck simulation. In the 'deck, Barclay is confident, big-headed, even, but in existent life he'south a quiet, unconfident, aristocratic sort who is always late for duty and does but enough to scrape past at piece of work in technology. He's disliked past his peers and superiors alike, and he's earned the nickname "Broccoli" amongst his shipmates. Riker and Geordi desire to see him gone, simply Picard will not hear of it. He orders his officers to try harder to reach him rather than brush him off and make him someone else's problem. When Geordi follows orders, and Gunian's advice, to get to know Barclay better, he stumbles into his elaborate holodeck programme that could land the awkward Lieutenant in very hot h2o. Meanwhile, it's discovered that ii small technical bug may be related and indicative of a larger, ship-wide issue.
  • Sarek: The Enterprise is welcoming aboard the elderly Federation ambassador Sarek, a Vulcan who will be negotiating a critical treaty with a race known every bit the Legarans. He arrives with his married woman, Perrin, and goes against the wishes of his staff, choosing to visit the ship'southward conference room rather than retire immediately to his quarters. Upon the administrator'due south arrival, tensions rise and reports of erratic behavior begin to surface around the ship. Sarek himself shows heightened emotion while on board the Enterprise. It is feared he may be suffering from Bendii Syndrome, an illness that weakens a Vulcan's mental field of study, pushing emotions to the forefront of one's being. Additionally, it breaks down the emotional boundaries of those around the victim, leading to just the sort of raucous action plaguing the Enterprise crew. At present, Picard must aid Sarek by undergoing a dangerous bonding with the alien ambassador.
  • The All-time of Both Worlds, Part 1: For more information on this previously released-to-Blu-ray episode, please click hither.

Star Trek: The Next Generation, Season 3 Blu-ray, Video Quality

4.5 of 5

Conspicuously, at that place hasn't been much difference between the previous Next Generation releases in terms of movie quality -- the results have been uniformly outstanding -- merely Star Expedition: The Adjacent Generation, Season 3 might show an ever-so-slight edge ahead of seasons i and two. This one looks positively excellent. There's nary a speckle to exist seen, hardly a shot that isn't Star Trek picture-perfect. To be certain, there are a handful of softer shots throughout the grade of the flavor -- a few shots of Doctor Crusher sandwiched around sharper footage at the first of "The Ensigns of Control," for case -- but the overwhelming majority of the season makes for an absolutely remarkable viewing experience that's sure to dazzle even the most demanding viewer and transfix longtime Star Trek fans who will feel like they're watching these episodes all over again for the very first time. Details are amazing, to put it merely. Of class, all of the usual elements stand out -- lines in uniforms, creases in the bridge'southward leather seats, the wood trim wrapping around tactical, the sharpness of the LCARS displays, Data's and Worf's makeup -- only what really looks fantastic this season is the attention to particular seen on Enterprise beauty shots every bit she orbits planets or appears otherwise stationary or slow-moving from space. The model reveals with impeccable clarity words and windows on the hull to gorgeous film-like consequence. It'south astonishing just how awesome such shots await, a real attestation both to the revamped visuals and the power of the picture-quality, largely flawless transfer on brandish. Colors are wonderful, besides; there'due south a startling balance across the three primary shades of Starfleet uniforms, not to mention the pleasing lighter hues seen throughout the ship, from beige accents to light royal carpet. The green surface down on Delta-Rana every bit seen in the episode "The Survivors" offers a striking display of natural beauty that couldn't be more pic-perfect. Skin textures are amazing, whether light colors, darker tones, or makeup-influenced hues from a number of alien races. Black levels, too, are perfectly deep and pure. It never gets sometime, re-watching these episodes on Blu-ray, and there's hardly ever a shot that's anything less than a fan's wildest dream come true.

Star Expedition: The Next Generation, Season 3 Blu-ray, Audio Quality

4.5 of 5

Star Trek: The Next Generation, Season 3 features the series-standard DTS-Hard disk Main Audio 7.1 lossless soundtrack, and like the residuum, it'southward spectacular. A perusal of the previous Next Generation release reviews -- either of the total seasons or one or both of the smaller single-disc offerings -- would offer basically the same insight as this review, and that consistency is a wonderful matter. The meridian end of music can come across equally a trivial abrupt and harsh, specially over the opening titles that play at a rather loftier, aggressive volume at reference levels. Nonetheless, the swooping Enterprise is a thing to behold as information technology rushes from one speaker to the next in several unique directions every bit the bluish titles appear on the screen. General music throughout the episodes plays with precision spacing and an obvious, only not overpowering, surround audio element. Listeners will enjoy the near-abiding bustling of the engines on board the send; the consequence is so natural it blends correct into the background, faultlessly enveloping the listener whether moderately on the bridge, lightly in Ten-Forward, or more heavily in applied science. Various episode-specfic sound effects are nicely implemented throughout the season. There are some big, heavy electrical audio elements to brainstorm "The Enemy" and Romulan vessel phaser fire in "The Defector," both of which work the phase with a natural flair. Dialogue is fantastic, whether delivered through the quiet backdrop of Picard's ready room, a bit more than loudly in Applied science, through the din of Ten-Forward, or in the oestrus of battle in "Yesterday's Enterprise." This is a bully track, very well balanced merely at the same time highly aggressive and clear. Fans know what to await, and newcomers are in for a real care for.

Star Trek: The Next Generation, Season 3 Blu-ray, Special Features and Extras

5.0 of 5

Star Trek: The Next Generation, Season 3 contains a treasure trove of fantastic supplements, both new and erstwhile. Discs one through five, primarily, handle the vintage material, presented in standard definition, while disc six offers nearly 3 hours of new HD supplements. The primary theme revolves around the writers, with a dedicated roundtable supplement every bit well as additional insights into the writers and the writing process' evolution in season three. Additionally, various audio commentaries are included with the season's best episodes. Annotation that extras for "The All-time of Both Worlds, Part Ane" are simply included on the standalone double-episoide release, while "Sins of the Male parent" earns supplements non plant on the previously released sampler disc.

Disc One:

  • Sound Commentary: Writer Ronald D. Moore and Star Trek experts Mike & Denise Okuda chat about the episode "The Bonding."
  • Mission Overview: Yr Iii (SD, 17:41): A look at the season's best episodes, including "Yesterday'south Enterprise" and "The Offspring," the hard early circumstances surrounding the flavour due to an absence of scripts and creativity, Beverley Crusher'south return, Frakes' turn in the managing director's chair, Whoopi Goldberg's role in the season and the importance of Star Trek in her life, visitors to the ready, and the season's final episode.
  • Episodic Promos (SD): Corny TV advertisements for each episode.

Disc Two:

  • Selected Crew Analysis Year Three (SD, 13:51): A closer look at Picard, the Crushers, the Riker-Troi human relationship, Majel Barrett's role in the series, Worf, and both LaForge's promotion to Chief Engineer and his sexuality.
  • Episodic Promos (SD).

Disc 3:

  • Sound Commentaries: The all-time classic Star Trek episode "Yesterday's Enterprise" earns a pair of tracks. The first is with Writers Ronald D. Moore and Ira Steven Behr and Trek experts Mike & Denise Okuda. Track two features Manager David Carson.
  • Departmental Briefings Twelvemonth Three: Memorable Missions (SD, 13:25): A piece that features bandage and crew briefly discussing various elements from the episodes "Sarek," "The Offspring," "Deja Q," "The Nigh Toys," "Who Watches the Watchers?," "The Enemy," and "G�nage � Troi."
  • Episodic Promos (SD).

Disc Four:

  • Audio Commentaries: Writer Rene Echevarria and Trek experts Mike & Denise Okuda speak on "The Offspring." "Sins of the Begetter" besides earns a rails with Writer Ronald D. Moore, Visual Furnishings Supervisor Dan Back-scratch, and Trek experts Mike & Denise Okuda.
  • Departmental Briefing Twelvemonth Three: Production (SD, xx:04): An overview look at the season'southward new writers, including Rene Echevarria; design and visual furnishings in the episodes "Yesterday'due south Enterprise," "Deja Q," "Captain's Holiday," "Sins of the Father," and "Tin can Human being;" transport models; music and sound effects; and the importance of technical consultants in the season.
  • Episodic Promos (SD).

Disc 5:

  • In Memoriam: David Rappaport (HD, 5:07): A collection of scenes featuring the thespian performing in "The Most Toys." Rappaport ended his own life while in the process of filming the episode.
  • Gag Reel (HD, viii:37).
  • Episodic Promos (SD).

Disc Six:

  • Star Trek: The Adjacent Generation, Inside the Writer's Room (Hd, ane:10:52): Seth MacFarlane hosts a roundtable discussion with many of the Next Generation writers, including Naren Shankar, Rene Echevarria, Ronald Moore, and Brannon Braga. Betwixt some lighthearted banter, they hash out how they became role of the writing squad, the details behind diverse episodes, best and worst writing moments, penning the finale upward against the first feature film, humorous moments from the set, the low-cal sense of humour in the series, hypothetical season eight story lines, and more than. This is a superb supplement that's fun, enlightening, and packed with relevant and interesting data, much of which will be new to even dedicated Trek fans. It lonely makes this supplemental package one of the all-time available to date.
  • Resistance is Futile -- Assimilating Star Trek: The Next Generation (Hd): A three-part Documentary that begins with Biological Distinctiveness (xxx:02), a piece that examines separating the show from the original series, the relationships and contributions of the artistic team backside the show, bringing aboard new writers, and Michael Piller's "writers memo" that caused a rift in the writing room. Function 2, Technological Distinctiveness (29:54), opens with a glimpse into the episode "The Ensigns of Control" and moves on to take a closer look at the writing procedure, the identify of the holodeck in the show, the importance of "Sins of the Male parent" in allowing the prove to build larger grapheme arcs that extend beyond single episodes, writing "Yesterday's Enterprise," bringing back the character Sarek (Spock's father), ideas Roddenberry scrapped and wanted in the show, Michael Piller'southward contributions, and the importance of "The Best of Both Worlds" to the Star Trek universe. Finally, The Collective (30:04) focuses on the characters, including the return of Gates McFadden; the series' cinematography; each actor'south challenges in the show; Jonathan Frakes' directorial debut; Denise Crosby's return in "Yesterday'south Enterprise;" Riker's graphic symbol arc; and more.
  • A Tribute to Michael Piller (Hard disk drive, 13:50): Cast and coiffure remember the belatedly Screenwriter and Producer.
  • Episodic Promos (SD).

Star Trek: The Next Generation, Flavor 3 Blu-ray, Overall Score and Recommendation

4.5 of 5

Simply put, Star Expedition: The Next Generation, Flavour 3 represents the very best of Star Trek. It doesn't comprise all the all-time episodes, just what's here are amongst the very finest the serial and the unabridged Trek universe has ever seen. It all comes together -- bandage, characters, stories, plot arcs, emotions, -- opening an unabridged galaxy's worth of content with a broad range of actions and feelings that blend together like simply Star Expedition tin can deliver. Season iii's Blu-ray technical presentations are largely above reproach, and the wonderful supplemental content -- spread beyond all vi discs -- is almost alone worth the cost of assimilation. This is one of the finest releases of 2012 and earns my highest recommendation.

Star Trek: The Next Generation: Other Seasons


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1-disc

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six-disc set

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vi-disc prepare
$27.99

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five-disc set

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Best Buy

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6-disc fix
$29.13

Blu-ray
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1-disc
$12.99

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$12.99

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Star Trek: The Side by side Generation, Flavor 3 Blu-ray, News and Updates

• Amazon Blu-ray Deal of the Week: Masterpiece, Star Trek, and Univ...

- September xiii, 2015

Amazon'southward Blu-ray Bargain of the Week affects selected titles from Masterpiece Theater, Paramount's Star Trek: The Next Generation serial, and Universal Studios Home Entertainment. Titles include Downton Abbey: Season 1, Grantchester: Flavor One, and the offset v ...

• Star Trek: The Next Generation Season 7 & All Good Things Blu-ray... - December 7, 2014

Blu-ray.com, Paramount Home Entertainment and CBS Habitation Entertainment are offer members a risk to win a new ST:TNG Blu-ray release. Each grand prize winner will receive a copy of Star Trek: The Adjacent Generation, Season seven and each runner-up volition receive a copy ...

• Blackness Friday Calendar week, Blu-ray Movies as Low as $3.99 (Update 22) - Nov 29, 2014

Blackness Friday Blu-ray deals go along coming in (so continue an eye on the newest deals page for updates). Now is the time to go your movies and/or Holiday gifts at the all-time prices.

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