Star Trek: First Contact (1996) - Blast Off! Scene | Movieclips
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- Опубликовано: 8 сен 2024
- Star Trek: First Contact - Blast Off!: The Phoenix blasts off into outer space piloted by Zefram Cochrane (James Cromwell).
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FILM DESCRIPTION:
The Enterprise and its crew follow a Borg ship through a time warp to prevent the Borg from taking over the Earth in a past era. Stuck in the past, Geordi La Forge (LeVar Burton) helps a pioneer of space travel (James Cromwell) in his efforts to create the first warp drive while Capt. Picard (Patrick Stewart) and Cmdr. Data (Brent Spiner) battle the Borg Queen (Alice Krige) as she tries to take over the Enterprise.
CREDITS:
TM & © Paramount Pictures (1996)
Cast: James Cromwell, Jonathan Frakes, LeVar Burton, Marina Sirtis
Screenwriter: Brannon Braga, Ronald D. Moore
Director: Jonathan Frakes
Producer: Rick Berman
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I like the weary face expression of Deanna* at "Begin ignition sequence", referring to some hangover, and with the feeling on it by: Just get over this already! :D
You mean, Deanna?
Jonathan Frakes both starred and directed this movie.
Originally Riker was going to be on the ship leading the fight against the Borg and Picard was going to be on the planet assisting with the Phoenix project, but since Frakes already had his hands full directing he decided to switch the roles so he wouldn't have to exhaust himself doing tons of action scenes. And dramatically it makes a lot more sense given Picard's prior history with the Borg.
The counselor got an earful of '60s rock and roll when it blared over her headset.
You mean what the future calls classical music
Right after she gets a face full of nitogen tetroxodie and what 's that other one? Oh, unsymtretcal dimethyl hdrazine.
Glad we finally got to hear some Rock and Roll on Star Trek. Most of Star Trek all we heard was Jazz, Blues, Opera and Classical music.
I remember this in the theater -- all I'd seen was the rocket before, and then the panels blew off and the warp nacelles extended.
Oh yeah.😁
"let's bring the warp core online." Riker just clicks a small trigger, in the F***ing FIRST WARP SHIP
History records that Dr. Zefram Cochrane, Commander William T. Riker (USN), and Lt. Commander Geordi La Forge (USN) were on the Phoenix.
Did they have a visit from The Agents of The Temporal Investigations Division to explain how they were credited as serving in The United States Navy USN Once the Enterprise-E returned to the 24Th Century?
@@marcusjustice6165 Yes.
Man this scene does wonders for my morale
Humans reaching the stars kind of hope. 🤟😎
Frakes has the best "this is gonna suck" face
Imagine one day you are sitting in a bar and all of a sudden that crazy doctor guy launches a rocket out of the ground. The. That night some weird pointy ear people land in a space ship. Would be an awesome time to be alive.
Don't forget the night before you were bombarded from space by who knows what, and then a bunch of strangers appeared from seemingly nowhere to help said scientist complete his project.
I come here after every Starship IFT launch. It's just the same ... :D
if I ever go to space im yelling this and playing that song XD
Love that they kept the traditional nacelle design
Considering that there's usually a 3 mile minimum distance from a launch, to keep from killing people from the noise, I wonder how much more advanced these rockets were to be able to be that close to the settlement when launching...
But yes, I know.... Suspension of disbelief...
Yeah, and how did they get back to Earth after the flight? Not exactly a Space Shuttle setup in the Phoenix.
such a wonderful movie
Making first contact with a Titan II ICBM.
To be fair, I do live that song. I wasn't alive during that time, yet I still enjoy it.
Lol scene cracks me up every time
Before the Enterprise came along, what was Cochran's original plan to get back to the surface of the Earth after testing the wrap drive?
I assumed it would be something similar to how the Apollo rockets landed
Could be ... though without the US Navy to pick him up in middle of the Pacific.
That far into our future and they still use toggle switches 😊
In the Star Trek timeline, 2063 still saw the world recovering from WW3. I mean, these people are living in run-down shacks & shanties, so yeah - it's not that unbelievable that they're using toggle switches. Cochrane built the Phoenix out of whatever he could scrounge up. Heck, the NX-01 was built almost a hundred years later and it STILL used toggle switches for some panels.
If it ain't broke, don't fix it.
We landed on the moon using simple toggles and switches, don't bad mouth tried and tested equipment.
What was the red light on the second intake valve?
Great video😂
I want to know what happened to that Quantum Drive test, the ship is missing...
next week i want Air Force One (1997) and I'm mean it
Get off my plane!
I really am reluctant to say what that rocket resembled as it appeared.
What I'd like to know is how they got back to earth. I didn't see any heat tiles on that ship.
The hull is titanium which could take the heat.
@@jasonchard8636 Just the cockpit which is what I recall. So Titanium can withstand the heat of re-entry? What about those getting cooked inside?
Titanium is a poor conduit of heat. Assuming a proper re-entry angle and appropriate design it would work. It was under consideration for the space shuttles originally.
Like the Star Trek crew would know which buttons and procedures to engage in a 300 year old rocket
You ever hear of something called the historical record?
@@stevenhenry5267 Historical record of a homebuilt makeshift rocket?
@@80s_Boombox_Collector Of the very first human-built warp ship? Pretty dang important and worth preserving for the historical record, I'd say.
Like riding a bicycle dude.
Of course there would be. Picard said that in their day, the Phoenix resides in the Smithsonian, so it only makes sense that out National Archives or Starfleet would have the blueprints. Otherwise, how would the Enterprise computer have them?
Please can you rurouni kenshin the beginning
Riker was a dumb character