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'''''The Captains''''' is a 2011 feature documentary that follows actor [[William Shatner]] through interviews with all of the actors who have portrayed Captains in the [[Star Trek]] universe. Shatner's subjects discuss their lives and careers before, during and after their tenure in a [[Starfleet]] uniform, exploring the pressures, stigmas, and sacrifices that accompanied the role.<ref name="NYTimes">{{cite news |title=William Shatner in ''The Captains'' – Review |work=NYTimes.com |url=http://tv.nytimes.com/2011/07/22/arts/television/william-shatner-in-the-captains-review.html | first=Mike |last=Hale |date=July 21, 2011}}</ref><ref name="TrekMovie">{{cite web |title=William Shatner talks ''The Captains'' |work=TrekMovie.com |url=http://trekweb.com/articles/2011/07/21/William-Shatner-Talks-The-Captains-Says-He-Still-Interested-to-Appear-in-Star-Trek-XII.shtml}}</ref> The film makes use of conversations, personal observations, interviews, and [[archival footage]].
'''''The Captains''''' is a 2011 feature documentary that follows actor [[William Shatner]] through interviews with all of the main cast actors who have portrayed Captains in the [[Star Trek]] universe (with the exception of George Takai). Shatner's subjects discuss their lives and careers before, during and after their tenure in a [[Starfleet]] uniform, exploring the pressures, stigmas, and sacrifices that accompanied the role.<ref name="NYTimes">{{cite news |title=William Shatner in ''The Captains'' – Review |work=NYTimes.com |url=http://tv.nytimes.com/2011/07/22/arts/television/william-shatner-in-the-captains-review.html | first=Mike |last=Hale |date=July 21, 2011}}</ref><ref name="TrekMovie">{{cite web |title=William Shatner talks ''The Captains'' |work=TrekMovie.com |url=http://trekweb.com/articles/2011/07/21/William-Shatner-Talks-The-Captains-Says-He-Still-Interested-to-Appear-in-Star-Trek-XII.shtml}}</ref> The film makes use of conversations, personal observations, interviews, and [[archival footage]].


==Cast==
==Cast==

Revision as of 04:03, 27 September 2011

The Captains
Official poster
Directed byWilliam Shatner
Written byWilliam Shatner
Produced by
  • William Shatner
  • J. Craig Thompson
  • David Zappone
  • Kevin Layne
Starring
CinematographyDecebal Dascau
Edited byDecebal Dascau
Music by
Production
company
Le Big Boss Productions
Distributed by
Release dates
  • July 22, 2011 (2011-07-22) (United States)
  • October 1, 2011 (2011-10-01) (Canada)
Running time
113 minutes
CountryTemplate:Film Canada
LanguageEnglish

The Captains is a 2011 feature documentary that follows actor William Shatner through interviews with all of the main cast actors who have portrayed Captains in the Star Trek universe (with the exception of George Takai). Shatner's subjects discuss their lives and careers before, during and after their tenure in a Starfleet uniform, exploring the pressures, stigmas, and sacrifices that accompanied the role.[1][2] The film makes use of conversations, personal observations, interviews, and archival footage.

Cast

Story

William Shatner (Captain James T. Kirk, The Original Series) interviews Sir Patrick Stewart (Jean-Luc Picard, TNG), Avery Brooks (Benjamin Sisko, DS9), Kate Mulgrew (Kathryn Janeway, Voyager), Scott Bakula (Jonathan Archer, Enterprise), and Chris Pine (James T. Kirk, the 2009 film). The Captains delves into each actor's life and career leading up to their film or television performances. The film devotes attention to Shatner's own acting roots, tracking his journey from his beginnings at the Stratford Shakespeare Festival and CBC Radio and Television, to headlining Broadway shows, and eventually getting his break in Hollywood at the helm of Gene Roddenberry's Star Trek series.

"My hope is to delve deeply into these actors' psyches, find out more about them so you can ... see what common denominator there is among us as actors that brought [us] to this worldwide renown as part of Star Trek."

William Shatner on his hopes for The Captains.

Shatner's travels takes him from Los Angeles to Oxfordshire, England, to Toronto and Stratford, Ontario, Las Vegas, and finally New York City and Princeton, New Jersey. While in Stratford, Shatner sits down with his friend Christopher Plummer, who was instrumental in Shatner's young career, and who would eventually play the role of bloodthirsty Klingon General Chang in Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country.[2]

The documentary also chronicles Shatner's own six-decade career and reveals the embarrassment he felt over his role within the Star Trek franchise. During the process of the film, with help from the other Captains, Shatner overcomes his disdain and learns to embrace his character, Captain James T. Kirk of the Starship Enterprise.[2]

Production

The Captains is produced by Le Big Boss Productions in association with Movie Central, a Corus Entertainment Company, The Movie Network, an Astral Media Network; Les Chaines Tele Astral – a division of Astral Broadcasting Group Inc. and EpixHD, and in association Ballinran Entertainment, 455 Films and Love Lake Productions with the participation of the Canada Media Fund, the Canadian Film or Video Production Tax Credit and the Ontario Media Development Corporation Film and Television Tax Credit.

Reception

On July 21, 2011, Mike Hale of the New York Times wrote, "The Captains turns out to be largely about William Shatner. That's not a criticism. Mr. Shatner's genial, relaxed self-absorption is a large part of his charm, along with his odd cadences and his unparalleled knack for blurring the line between pomposity and sincerity. He has a kind of reverse Midas effect: everything he touches should turn creepy, but somehow it doesn't." Hale goes on to say in his review that the film is, "pretty tolerable as vanity projects go. And it should be catnip for Trekkers and Trekkies".[1]

TrekMovie.com's reviewer Anthony Pascale had mixed feelings claiming, "The Captains is overly long, a bit self-indulgent, and possibly overly ambitious. The direction and editing are trying a bit too hard with Shatner not really letting the core content of his interviews stand out." However in the same article Pascale concludes with saying that The Captains "is still a must-watch for any Trekkie. You will learn, you will laugh, and you may even cry watching The Captains. Sure there is an element of being an ego-trip for the director, but what else would you expect from The Shatner. It is still a delight to spend almost two hours with these six outstanding actors who have entertained us for decades."[3]

Pop-Culture/Science Fiction website UGO.com reviewer Jordan Hoffman gave the film a B-rating declaring, if you like this film, "You recognize that William Shatner may be a fool, but he's our fool."[4]

Gregory Weinkauff of Huffington Post wrote of the The Captains that the production was "elegant, enlightening, expansive, and, by turns, hilarious and moving."[5]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Hale, Mike (July 21, 2011). "William Shatner in The Captains – Review". NYTimes.com.
  2. ^ a b c "William Shatner talks The Captains". TrekMovie.com.
  3. ^ "Review: William Shatner's The Captains". TrekMovie.com.
  4. ^ "William Shatner's The Captains Review". UGO.com.
  5. ^ "William Shatner Salutes The Captains". The Huffington Post. 2011-07-31.