Star Trek: The Next Generation (season 1)

The first season of the American science fiction television series Star Trek: The Next Generation was erstausgestrahlt starting on 26 September 1987 in the United States.

In the center of gambling in the 2364 act is the crew of the starship Enterprise, this is the move in space and is confronted primarily with unknown creatures and new civilizations. The coincidence resulting from emergency calls, threats, and the urge to explore. Frequently they advised members of the crew in danger. The squadron consists of the 90 -minute pilot movie and 24 other, 45 -minute episodes, each tell a completed story.

In the Federal Republic of Germany, the pilot film and the following 12 episodes were first published in 1988 and 1989 video cassettes. The produced with these voice-overs, dubbing was not continued. Instead, the ZDF started producing a new dubbed version, the Original Air began in September 1990. The series was also published in this dubbed version full 1995 VHS, 2002 DVD and 2012 Blu -ray.

  • 3.1 criticism
  • 3.2 Awards

Episodes, plot and Release Date

Posted on storage media

The series was distributed on various storage media in the trade of the German-speaking countries, and it usually under the English series title.

First German -language VHS release

Video cassettes

German dubbed version

The 14 episodes were synchronized by the Alster Studios in Hamburg. Andreas von der Meden was responsible for both dialogue book and dialogue director.

Other VHS releases

The synchronized by ZDF Season was released in Germany in 1995 on videocassette. Each cassette contained two episodes. The cassettes appeared in more week intervals.

DVD

In the German-speaking countries, the series was first published on 25 March 2002 on DVD. On the second DVD of the first Staffelbox this edition of the German tone of the episode was given the law of Edo for just under four minutes asynchronous; therefore the rental put each box of the second season in a replacement DVD with the correct tone. A re-release took place on 9 April 2009 in the form of two sub- boxes ( Season 1.1 and 1.2). She also appeared as part of the complete boxes The Full Journey ( December 2012), 20th Anniversary Box (September 2007 ) and Series Stick ( 2003). The pilot also appeared as part of the Star Trek - Next Generation Moviebox ( 2003).

Blu-ray

The squadron appeared in the German-speaking countries 26 July 2012 for the first time on Blu -ray. On October 19, 2012 at Amazon.de followed the publication in a Steelbook as a container. The pilot episode was released as part of the previously released Blu -ray ' The Next Level: insight into the next generation " already published January 31, 2012.

Reception

Criticism

On the occasion of the first German VHS release in 1988 and 1989 ruled the lexicon of international film: " A naive fairy tale with endless dialogues and technical bells and whistles. A rather disappointing revival. " " With the usual infantile drama and the usual technical mumbo jumbo staged TV adventure. " " Stereotype conversation with stilted dialogue and sluggish action. " " In unsophisticated television style tells science with little technical and large ( pseudo-) vocabulary consumption in the unintentionally comical dialogues. "

The period was evident in two parts to the German Erstausstrahlungsbeginn 1990. Although the series was " well-crafted entertainment, but not more than any science fiction series with lots of special effects. " The main female characters are designed somewhat colorless; annoying is the idea of ​​taking the families of the crew members on board.

Awards

  • Emmy Awards 1988: Best Costume Design for a Series
  • Best Sound Editing for a Series
  • Nominated 2x, 1x awards: Best Makeup for a Series
  • Nominated: Best sound mixing for a series
  • Nominated: Best Cinematography for a Series
  • Nominated: Best hairstyle for a series
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