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Star Trek V: The Final Frontier Poster

Star Trek V: The Final Frontier

Adventure and imagination will meet at the final frontier.
1989 | 106m | English

(66488 votes)

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Popularity: 2 (history)

Details

A renegade Vulcan with a startling secret hijacks the U.S.S. Enterprise in order to find a mythical planet.
Release Date: Jun 09, 1989
Director: William Shatner
Writer: William Shatner, David Loughery, Harve Bennett
Genres: Adventure, Action, Science Fiction, Thriller
Keywords uss enterprise-a, loss of loved one, self sacrifice, starship, hostage, spacecraft, teleportation, liberation of hostage, half-brother, space western, romulans, belief in god, cult leader, space opera, levitation, deity, el capitan, outer space, jailbreak
Production Companies Paramount Pictures
Box Office Revenue: $70,200,000
Budget: $30,000,000
Updates Updated: Feb 01, 2025 (Update)
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

Full Credits

Name Character
William Shatner Captain James T. Kirk
Leonard Nimoy Captain Spock
DeForest Kelley Dr. Leonard 'Bones' McCoy
James Doohan Captain Montgomery 'Scotty' Scott
George Takei Cmdr. Hikaru Sulu
Walter Koenig Cmdr. Pavel Chekov
Nichelle Nichols Cmdr. Uhura
Laurence Luckinbill Sybok
David Warner St. John Talbot
Charles Cooper Gen. Korrd
Cynthia Gouw Caithlin Dar
Todd Bryant Capt. Klaa
Spice Williams-Crosby Vixis (as Spice Williams)
Rex Holman J'onn
George Murdock God
Jonathan Simpson Young Sarek
Beverly Hart High Priestess
Steve Susskind Pitchman
Harve Bennett Starfleet Chief of Staff
Cynthia Blaise Amanda
Bill Quinn McCoy's Father
Melanie Shatner Yeoman
Michael Berryman Sybok Warrior (uncredited)
Carey Scott Young Spock
Name Job
Bill Shepard Casting
Andrew Laszlo Director of Photography
Peter E. Berger Editor
Herman F. Zimmerman Production Design
John M. Dwyer Set Decoration
Michael Wood Special Effects, Special Effects Supervisor
Mel Efros Unit Production Manager
Kenny Myers Makeup Designer
Nilo Rodis-Jamero Costume Design
Douglas E. Wise First Assistant Director
Frank Orsatti Stunts
Don Pulford Stunt Double
James M. Halty Stunts
Donna Barrett Gilbert Hairstylist
Hazel Catmull Hairstylist
Janice Alexander Special Effects Makeup Artist
Ellis Burman Jr. Special Effects Makeup Artist
Katalin Elek Special Effects Makeup Artist
Wes Dawn Makeup Artist
Edouard F. Henriques Special Effects Makeup Artist
Rolf John Keppler Special Effects Makeup Artist
Tina Hoffman Makeup Artist
Michael Mills Special Effects Makeup Artist
Erin Koplow Special Effects Makeup Artist
George Fortmuller Second Assistant Director
Gary Alexander Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Chris Jenkins Sound Re-Recording Mixer
David M. Ronne Sound Mixer
Linda Fetters Howard Stunts
David Burton Stunts
Terry Jackson Stunts
Tommy J. Huff Stunts
Joyce McNeal Stunts
Bruce Birmelin Still Photographer
Bruce Randall Stunts
William Shatner Story, Director
David Loughery Story, Screenplay
Jerry Goldsmith Original Music Composer
Dick Ziker Stunts
Mark Mangini Sound Effects
Harve Bennett Story
Allan A. Apone Makeup Designer
R.A. Rondell Stunt Double
Gregory J. Barnett Stunt Double
Freddie Hice Stunts
David R. Ellis Stunts
Glenn R. Wilder Stunt Coordinator
Jeff Dawn Makeup Artist
Doug Hemphill Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Alan Howarth Sound Effects
Tom Morga Stunts
Scott Wilder Stunts
Gene Roddenberry Original Series Creator
Alexander Courage Music
Name Title
Mel Efros Co-Producer
Ralph Winter Executive Producer
Harve Bennett Producer
Gene Roddenberry Executive Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 28 35 22
2024 5 30 45 18
2024 6 29 45 18
2024 7 30 55 18
2024 8 24 54 15
2024 9 26 43 17
2024 10 23 42 14
2024 11 19 30 13
2024 12 22 47 13
2025 1 21 33 15
2025 2 16 26 3
2025 3 9 27 1
2025 4 2 4 2
2025 5 2 3 2
2025 6 3 4 2
2025 7 2 3 2
2025 8 2 2 2

Trending Position


Year Month High Avg
2025 6 682 751
Year Month High Avg
2025 5 987 988
Year Month High Avg
2025 4 874 921
Year Month High Avg
2025 2 745 885

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Reviews

IanBeale
10.0

**Underrated and fun!** This is my favorite Star Trek movie. The whole film bubbles with humour and the music score is fantastic. I love the bookend _'Row, row, row your boat'_ sequences. An emotional and funny film - my favourite goosebumps moment being when Kirk says 'I've always known...I'll d ... ie alone". Brings tears to my eyes that part - it really does. You'll have to excuse me, I'm getting emotional thinking about it. It's trendy to give this film a bad review and I am more than happy to be honest and open about ny admiration for this film. If anything, Star Trek VI is the weakest Trek movie - a plodding episode of Columbo in space. _Star Trek V: The Final Frontier_ is a rousing and fun movie. - Ian Beale

Jun 23, 2021
Wuchak
7.0

_**At the end of the day, it entertains**_ This 1989 entry in the Star Trek film series was an earnest and noble effort by William Shatner, who directed and plotted the film, to tackle a subject that only he and Star Trek would dare attempt. Unfortunately it's become law in Trekdom to pick apart ... this film as a turkey of astronomical proportions; consequently a sort of bandwagon phenomenon has developed amongst the cookie-cutter fundamentalist Trekkers who have somehow failed to evolve to the level of independent thought. (They're no doubt still mad at Shatner for telling them to "get a life"). In fact, it's become such a cliché to hate "Star Trek V" that it has become the "Spock's Brain" of the feature films. I disagree. While "The Final Frontier" certainly has its share of flaws -- the story goes over the edge into the realm of goofy camp at times and some argue that the F/X are possibly the least of the feature films -- it remains an entertaining picture. Besides, Star Trek was never about great special effects (disregarding the triumphant "The Motion Picture"). It's about people, their joy of living and their grand spirit of exploration; this is what "The Final Frontier" is all about and it scores high marks in this regard. No other Trek film showcases the character interplay of the Kirk/Spock/McCoy troika to the level of intimacy shown in "The Final Frontier," and only "The Voyage Home" exceeds the joyful energy of the characters displayed here. As far as the spirit of exploration goes, "Star Trek V" surpasses all other Trek adventures; after all, no exploration is greater than the quest for ultimate reality and the Creator of all. It touches on many important themes: personal pain, healing, faith, family, love, fanaticism, the desire to know ultimate reality, God, false beliefs, loyalty, repentance and forgiveness. Name another film in the series that addresses so many weighty topics and yet remains entertaining. The film was actually doomed with critics and Trekker fundamentalists the moment it was disclosed that Shatner would direct it; the knives hit the sharpening stones well before it was ever released and once the buzz got out that it was a bad film a feeding frenzy ensued. It would have been better received if Shatner had directed the film anonymously and if it were released after "Star Trek III." As it was, it came out on the heels of "Star Trek IV," arguably the pinnacle of the feature films. If "The Wrath of Khan" had come out after The Voyage Home it would have been deemed a mediocre affair. The bottom line is that "Star Trek V" is a solid and extremely original Trek outing, equal parts amusing, thought-provoking, wonder-inducing and heart-warming; it possesses a wealth of quality scenes and has an interesting assortment of colorful characters who unite together for the ultimate discovery. Its best character is Sybok, played excellently by Laurence Luckinbill. Sybok isn't really a villain at all, but rather a rebel Vulcan who rejects Stoicism and develops a compulsion to heal people and find ultimate knowledge. His mistake is allowing this compulsion to assume the creature beyond the Great Barrier is God, which it obviously isn't. Of course the film would have been more successful if the studio hadn't repeatedly cut the budget the closer the it came to completion, thus robbing Shatner (and us) of his original vision. As it is, the climax is serviceable, but also missing something. Regardless, "The Final Frontier" is an entertaining Trek romp, if nothing else. Thankfully it offers much more. Personally, I'd view it in any day before "The Wrath of Khan." By all means, watch it again for the first time. The film runs 1 hour, 46 minutes. GRADE: B

Jan 16, 2022
GenerationofSwine
10.0

I know, I know, I know, please don't hate me. Please. But, this came out in '89, my parents were busy, they dropped Heath and I off at the theater and didn't come in with us, and, yeah, that happened a lot growing up, but this was the FIRST STAR TREK MOVIE I GOT TO SEE BY MYSELF. And, really, ... it sort of became MY Star Trek movie. Not the ones I shared with my father, but MY Star Trek. And now when I watch it, yeah, I realize how bad it is, but it sort of has that landmark feeling of being my own Star Trek film... so I can't give it the horrible rating it deserves. But... yeah, I know it sucks.

Jan 10, 2023
Geronimo1967
5.0

Starts off promisingly, but descends quickly into a somewhat outlandish tale as the crew of the Enterprise meet up with the half brother of "Spock". We are then lumbered with a search for "God" that messes up the whole point of escapist fantasy with religiosity and along the way subjects us to a min ... d-numbing attempt at indoctrination. Of course there is scope for a discussion on a more ethical approach to the universe and our place in it; but "Star Trek" movies are just not that place - and I am afraid the story just glugs along like a rhino stuck in a puddle of treacle. The SFX are great and the usual trekkie team keep this from being a complete disaster, but it's not a good film.

May 30, 2024
kevin2019
5.0

"Star Trek V: The Final Frontier" is a highly watchable film which features a much greater reliance upon rollicking humour than we have become accustomed to during the more recent adventures. This humour works for the most part and William Shatner seems inexhaustibly determined in his new role as di ... rector to include as much eye catching action as he possibly can into the running time - he really delivers the goods in this regard - and he easily evokes the spirit of the ground breaking television series. However, the major flaw is the film does dramatically grind to a halt after it becomes clear it has run out of significant things to say once they eventually arrive on the planet at the centre of the galaxy.

Oct 11, 2024