With the unflappable Capt. James T. Kirk at the helm of this classic sci-fi series, the crew of the starship USS Enterprise keeps intergalactic danger at bay and delves deep into the exploration of space: the final frontier. |
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Scotty is suspected of murdering a belly dancer. |
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Troi's mother visits the Enterprise and becomes infatuated with a man whose culture forces him into a suicidal ritual called the Resolution. |
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Impressed by his old friend's stories from military school, Wally starts thinking that he'd like the same experience. |
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The Enterprise is on a mission to warn the human colony on planet Moab IV about a massive stellar fragment that's approaching. |
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Murderous intrigue abounds for the Enterprise when one of the crew aboard a subspace communications station is believed dead. |
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After mediating a treaty, Capt. Picard is encouraged to take a much needed vacation -- yet his efforts to rest are repeatedly interrupted. |
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Capt. Picard is kidnapped and held with three different aliens; meanwhile, he is replaced aboard the Enterprise by an imposter. |
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Hoping to further his creator's work and perpetuate his species, Data creates an android named Lal. |
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The wildly successful Star Trek franchise continues as Capt. Kathryn Janeway and the crew of the &NFi;U.S.S. Voyager&NFi_; follow a Maquis ship into the Badlands, and one species-saving decision later, find themselves in the Delta Quadrant, 70,000 light years away from the Alpha Quadrant, the Federation, and home. The two ships must join together to make it back, facing treacherous battles from the outside world -- and from within. |
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The widow of respected scientist Dr. Nel Apgar accuses Riker of seducing her and killing her husband. |
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Spock, Bones, Scotty and several crew members crash-land a shuttlecraft on a planet where they're attacked by deadly giants. In a race against time, Spock risks his and the lives of the other survivors for a slim and dangerous chance at a rescue. |
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The Enterprise transports the Medusan ambassador Kollos; his telepathic interpreter, Dr. Miranda Jones; and engineer Laurence Marvick. |
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When the Enterprise's systems are disrupted after hitting a quantum filament, Troi is left in command while Capt. Picard is stuck in the turbolift. |
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Kirk and the derelict starship Defiant vanish into a spatial interphase between universes. |
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Kirk must deal with Federation bureaucrats, a Klingon battle cruiser and a peddler who sells furry, purring, hungry little creatures as pets. |
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As punishment for trespassing on their planet, the inhabitants condemn Capt. Kirk and his landing party to reenact the Gunfight at the O.K. Corral. |
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In the throes of his Pon Farr mating period, Spock must return to Vulcan to meet his intended future wife, betrothed from childhood. |
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The crew of the Enterprise races to uncover an archaeological secret which also attracts the attention of the Klingons and the Cardassians. |
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The Enterprise arrives at a planet where a virus puts humans in a perpetual childlike state. Kirk and his away team are hit with the same bizarre bug, and only Bones's medical expertise can save them from the terrible preteenage wasteland. |
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While boldly going where no man has gone before, Capt. Kirk (William Shatner) and the intrepid crew members of the Enterprise run into dangerous conflicts with Klingons, Romulans, psychic humanoids and a host of other alien races. In the final season of this groundbreaking sci-fi series, Kirk tries to track down Spock's (Leonard Nimoy) stolen brain, reenacts the shootout at the O.K. Corral and gets trapped between dimensions. |
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Picard awakens to find himself in a village where he is a well-known member of the community suffering from a delusion of being a starship captain. |
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While the Enterprise is in a starbase, La Forge gets a very special visitor: brilliant engineering designer Dr. Leah Brahms. |
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The Enterprise's search for Roger, a famous scientist, leads Kirk to find him on a deserted planet with two extremely lifelike androids. Roger turns on Kirk and attempts to replace him with an identical Kirk android for control of the Enterprise. |
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It's the 23rd century in director Leonard Nimoy's Oscar-nominated sci-fi adventure, and a mysterious power is threatening Earth by evaporating the oceans and destroying the atmosphere. To save mankind, Capt. Kirk (William Shatner), Dr. McCoy ( |
A retired admiral boards the Enterprise in an effort to determine the actions aboard the ship surrounding an act of sabotage and possible treason. |
The crew of the Enterprise enters into orbit around the home planet of their former crewmate, Tasha Yar, where they encounter her sister. |
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The Enterprise crew literally sees double when the transporter malfunctions and beams Kirk onboard with his evil doppelganger. Scotty rushes to fix the transporter in time to save Kirk and crewmates stranded on the frigid surface of the planet below. |
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Dr. Crusher's anxiety over losing loved ones is magnified when she becomes trapped in an alternate reality. |
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Wesley Crusher's team has an accident at Starfleet Aacademy. Capt. Picard offers to help a Starfleet investigation into what happened. |
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On a rescue mission to a Talarian shipwreck, they discover one of the alien crew happens to be a young human. |
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Riker falls for a member of an androgynous race, who lost a couple of their people in an unmapped region of space. |
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The crew of the Enterprise returns to Earth for shore leave. Still recovering from his experience with the Borg, Picard meets up with his brother. |
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Before leaving for Starfleet Academy, Wesley Crusher accompanies Capt. Picard at the negotiation proceedings of a mining dispute. |
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When a female crewmember is infatuated with Data, he decides to give a romantic relationship a try. |
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Kirk attempts to establish a Federation outpost on the planet of the seemingly primitive Organians. But when Klingons attack, the Organians reveal that everyone has greatly underestimated their true power and evolution. |
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Feeling ignored by their parents, college freshmen and platonic pals Gordon Slide (Tommy Sands) and Blythe Holloway (Toby Michaels) opt to spend their vacation together at a Southern California beach house owned by Gordon's mother (Jan St... |
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When assigned to investigate an unknown probe, Lt. Barclay receives an unexplainable boost of confidence and a vast increase in his knowledge. |
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When a bizarre monster kills several men at a mining colony, Kirk and Spock beam down to investigate. Through a Vulcan mind-meld, Spock learns the creature is intelligent and has a valid motive for its murderous actions against the miners. |
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While answering a distress call, Capt. Picard finds himself dealing with a person who claims to be the planet's version of the Devil. |
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Kirk and the crew land on a planet whose plant spores cause everyone to become extremely passive and affectionate toward one another. Kirk discovers the spores' mental manipulation and resorts to violence to bring Spock and the others back to normal. |
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Surgically altered to appear like a local, Riker has been on an acculturation mission under an alias for months on the Arkonian planet. |
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After his teacher hands him a sealed note to take home to his parents, Beaver starts to believe he's being expelled. |
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An officer is killed in what appears to be a freak accident, but when computer records indicate Kirk is to blame, he must stand trial for a court-martial. As the case unfolds, evidence suggests someone must have framed Kirk. |
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Aliens abduct Kirk and a Gorn, a large, violent, lizardlike humanoid. For a chance to save the lives of their crews, the aliens order Kirk and the Gorn to fight to the death. But Kirk won't agree to being some alien bullies' space gladiator. |
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In many ways, this classic 1950s sitcom is the grandfather of them all, following the misadventures of 7-year-old Theodore "Beaver" Cleaver and his older brother, Wally, as they come of age in suburban Mayfield. |
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In many ways, this classic 1950s sitcom is the grandfather of them all, following the misadventures of 7-year-old Theodore "Beaver" Cleaver and his older brother, Wally, as they come of age in suburban Mayfield. |
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The Enterprise receives a distress signal from the USS Lantree. When they arrive, they find everyone aboard the Lantree dead from old age. |
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Riker has to leave his birthday party early to head an away team after a Romulan secret base is found on a planet which was believed uninhabited. |
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The Enterprise responds to a request for medical assistance from Dr. Ira Graves, considered by many to be the greatest living mind in the universe. |
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Wesley Crusher returns to the Enterprise on vacation from Starfleet Academy, only to discover the crew is acting mysteriously. |
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Waiting for Capt. Picard's return from a Federation conference, the Enterprise crew discovers a disabled 20th-century Earth satellite. |
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Capt. Picard races against time to find out the facts behind a Cardassian commander's claim that the Federation attacked one of their outposts. |
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Looking for a missing Federation cultural observer, Kirk and Spock find themselves on a planet whose culture is modeled on the Nazi Party. |
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While the Enterprise struggles to contend with a mysterious life-form, Troi inexplicably loses her empathetic powers. |
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The Enterprise transports an elderly Starfleet Admiral to negotiate a hostage crisis. |
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After an accident aboard the Enterprise leaves one of its children in danger, Data commandeers the ship to take him to an unknown destination. |
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While boldly going where no man has gone before, Capt. Kirk (William Shatner) and the intrepid crew members of the Enterprise run into dangerous conflicts with Klingons, Romulans, psychic humanoids and a host of other alien races. In the final season of this groundbreaking sci-fi series, Kirk tries to track down Spock's (Leonard Nimoy) stolen brain, reenacts the shootout at the O.K. Corral and gets trapped between dimensions. |
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Kirk finds Capt. Tracey of the USS Exeter violating the prime directive and interfering with a war between the Yangs and the Kohms. |
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After the crew transports a dangerous material to the Enterprise, a collector carries out an intiricate plan to kidnap Data. |
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A shy member of the Enterprise crew becomes addicted to the holodeck, where relationships are easier there than in real life. |
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Data resigns his commission rather than be dismantled for examination by an inadequately skilled scientist. |
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The crew ferries a deaf, telepathic mediator to Solais V to negotiate an end to a civil war. |
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Riker finds out his former commander from the starship Pegasus has orders that entail more than what is revealed to Capt. Picard. |
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Ensign Ro is sent to infiltrate the Maquis and finds herself torn between her loyalty to Starfleet and her sympathy for the Maquis. |
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Investigating a planet applying for membership into the Federation, the crew of the Enterprise finds a group of inhabitants who used to be soldiers. |
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While boldly going where no man has gone before, Capt. Kirk (William Shatner) and the intrepid crew members of the Enterprise run into dangerous conflicts with Klingons, Romulans, psychic humanoids and a host of other alien races. In the final season of this groundbreaking sci-fi series, Kirk tries to track down Spock's (Leonard Nimoy) stolen brain, reenacts the shootout at the O.K. Corral and gets trapped between dimensions. |
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After the Enterprise landing party beams down to investigate a geologically interesting planet, their ship is hurled across the galaxy. |
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Season 2 takes Capt. Picard and his crew on more intergalactic adventures, among them the introduction of the frightfully powerful Borg. Also, Picard again faces the omnipotent Q, while the crew welcomes a new medical officer and an alien bartender. |
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Capt. Picard finds himself shifting continually into the past, future and present, and must discover a threat to humanity's existence. |
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The Enterprise narrowly escapes from Balok, a seemingly imposing alien, and his starship. When Balok transmits a distress call, Kirk and the crew attempt to help. As a result, the alien shares an amazing secret and makes the crew an incredible offer. |
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After passing through a wormhole, the crew uncovers clues that they were unconscious for more than the 30 seconds they were led to believe. |
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A deranged doctor escapes from a planetary penal colony to the Enterprise. When Kirk beams down to investigate the planet and is brainwashed by the colony's maniacal director, it's up to Spock to rescue Kirk by any means necessary. |
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The new starship Enterprise and its crew's first mission is to explore the mystery surrounding the creation of Farpoint station on planet Deneb IV. |
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Capt. Picard and Data return to the Enterprise to find the entire crew in various states of devolution. |
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The Enterprise reaches out to an alien being while dancing around with the Romulans, who want to reach it first. |
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Legendary Federation ambassador Sarek visits the Enterprise to conclude peace talks with a race called the Legarans. |
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Senator Pardek finds Capt. Picard on Romulus and brings him to ambassador Spock, who explains about the chance of a Vulcan-Romulan reunification. |
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Join Jonathan Frakes, Next Generation's Commander Riker, for this fascinating chronicle of Gene Roddenberry's beloved, Emmy Award-winning series. |
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Capt. Kirk obsessively hunts for a mysterious cloud creature he encountered in his youth. |
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When Kirk and his landing party arrive on the planet below, they are met with eerie mists, a dark castle, witches, goblins and a black cat. |
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The Enterprise finds a lone Borg drone, separated from the collective, and brings him aboard. |
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The planet Sarpeidon is about to be destroyed by its star, Beta Niobe, becoming a supernova. |
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On Federation planet Atrea IV, Data encounters a woman who claims to be his mother, the former wife of his creator. |
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The Enterprise is at Tagus III to host the Federation archaeologists council's annual symposium, where Capt. Picard is to give the keynote lecture. |
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The Enterprise has finally tracked down the missing starship USS Brattain, but Troi senses trouble with the life on board. |
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The Enterprise is accosted by scientists from a nearby planet who claim that cumulative exposure to warp energy is weakening the fabric of space. |
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With longtime foes the Romulans at last willing to negotiate peace with the Federation, the Enterprise and its crew are dispatched on a diplomatic mission. But it's all a ruse that will pit them against a wily villain with a sinister agenda. |
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The Enterprise pursues a race of "gatherers" who continue to raid Federation outposts, unaware of the dangers lurking among them. |
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Capt. Picard and Dr. Crusher discover things about one another when they are captured by an alien race. |
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Troi awakens to find herself altered to look like a Romulan, unaware she's involved in a cat-and-mouse game as a member of their intelligence agency. |
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After diverting to a secret meeting with an old friend and some of Starfleet's finest commanders, Capt. Picard finds the USS Horatio destroyed. |
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La Forge gets left behind on a storm-plagued planet when the rest of his team encounters a Romulan warrior. |
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Feeling ignored by their parents, college freshmen and platonic pals Gordon Slide (Tommy Sands) and Blythe Holloway (Toby Michaels) opt to spend their vacation together at a Southern California beach house owned by Gordon's mother (Jan Sterling). When a sailing mishap brings amorous Coast Guardsman Guiseppi La Barba (Fabian) into the picture, will Blythe and Gordon realize that their friendship has turned into love? |
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Beaver is left alone when Wally starts dating Penny. But after the couple breaks up, Beaver selflessly decides to help his brother win Penny back. |
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Follow the adventures of Capt. Jean-Luc Picard and his crew as they explore new worlds aboard the all-new USS Enterprise. Season 1 finds the crew defending humanity against an omnipotent being; getting caught in a 1940s detective story; and more. |
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Beaver wants to join the club that Wally started with his friends, but it costs $3 to become a member. |
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The Enterprise crew is stalked by a shape-shifting creature that fatally drains the salt out of humans for its survival. When the monster is unintentionally brought aboard, McCoy makes a heartbreaking decision to ensure his shipmates' survival. |
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Kirk, Uhura and Chekhov are trapped on a planet where gladiators are enslaved and trained to perform for the amusement of bored, faceless aliens. |
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Newly minted teacher Kim (Pippa Scott) is thrilled to land her first job, even though the principal warns her that the school has a rough reputation. Before classes begin, Kim dates a local, Hank (Robert Harland), and is horrified to learn that he's one of her students. Kim tries to do the right thing and end her relationship with Hank but he continues to pursue her, leading to scandalous rumors. When Kim again rejects him, Hank abducts her. |
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Harry Mudd returns with a plot to take over the Enterprise by stranding the crew on a planet populated by androids under his command. |
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The Enterprise transports Elaan, a member of the ruling dynasty of the warrior Elasians, to the planet of their enemy, the Troyians. |
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Kirk, McCoy, Scotty and Uhura find themselves in a mirror universe aboard a parallel Enterprise run by ruthless barbarians. |
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While Wesley Crusher takes a Starflet entrance exam, Capt. Picard and the Enterprise are subjected to an investigation by Starfleet. |
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Kirk is confronted with the deep hatred of an old love, Janice Lester, who is severely ill from celebium radiation. |
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Worf's mother boards the Enterprise with his son and news that Worf's human parents can no longer care for him. |
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The crew visits Velara III, where a group of terraformers work to transform the seemingly desolate planet into one capable of supporting life. |
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An artificially intelligent probe with a murderously twisted imperative comes on to the Enterprise and confuses Capt. Kirk with his creator. |
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Dr. Crusher meets a man from her deceased grandmother's past when she tries to put her affairs in order. |
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The crew of the Enterprise races against time when a scientist experiments with time, and claims to have opened a window into another dimension. |
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The Enterprise rescues the captain of a broken-down freighter, only to become involved in a dispute between feuding worlds. |
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Wally and Beaver find jobs delivering newspapers when Ward refuses to give them money to buy new bikes. But the boys need help. |
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Capt. Picard falls for the new head of the stellar science department, but has misgivings when he's forced to assign her to a dangerous mission. |
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The Federation is in competition with the Klingons for an alliance with the inhabitants of Capella IV, a warrior tribe. |
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Capt. Picard and Data follow Spock into Romulan space on a dangerous mission. |
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While investigating the death of Capt. Picard, Riker is abducted by a group of intergalactic archaeological thieves. |
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The Enterprise encounters the wrecked Constellation, whose distraught captain is determined to stop the giant ship that killed his crew. |
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Both Capt. Picard and Lt. Worf must decide where their priorities lie as the Klingon Empire descends into civil war. |
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The Enterprise picks up ancient radio signal code from the ruined planet Orelious IX, a remnant of a total war over 1,000 years ago. |
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A proto-Vulcan culture worships Capt. Picard as if he were a god, and they prepare to offer a sacrifice in his honor. |
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Returning to the Enterprise with three others from the planet Marlonia, Capt. Picard's shuttle is disintegrated by an energy field. |
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The Enterprise responds to a distress call from Rana IV, a Federation colony that is under attack from an unknown alien ship. |
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When the Enterprise comes to the rescue of an ambassador and his mother, Troi finds herself attracted to him. |
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Capt. Pike is held prisoner and tested by aliens who have the power to project incredibly lifelike illusions. |
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It's the 23rd century in director Leonard Nimoy's Oscar-nominated sci-fi adventure, and a mysterious power is threatening Earth by evaporating the oceans and destroying the atmosphere. To save mankind, Capt. Kirk (William Shatner), Dr. McCoy (DeForest Kelley) and the rest of the Starship Enterprise crew travel back in time to 1986 San Francisco, a world as alien to them as anything they've encountered in their travels through the galaxy. |
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Capt. Picard and the crew respond to a distress call from the Enterprise's sister ship the USS Yamato. |
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Some classic episodes are in Season 5, including one in which Picard experiences an alternate lifetime, and another featuring a guest appearance by Leonard Nimoy as Spock. Also the crew rescues a Borg survivor, Worf adapts to fatherhood and more. |
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On Kirk's orders, the Enterprise deliberately crosses the Neutral Zone into Romulan space and is promptly surrounded by Romulan warships. |
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Troi deals with the feelings that are overwhelming her as she and Worf begin to form a relationship. |
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The Enterprise is unwittingly used to present a unique gift to an alien race: a beautiful empath whose sole purpose is to please her mate. |
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With the unflappable Capt. James T. Kirk at the helm of this classic sci-fi series, the crew of the starship USS Enterprise keeps intergalactic danger at bay and delves deep into the exploration of space: the final frontier. |
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The Enterprise hosts a number of quarrelling diplomats -- including Spock's father -- but someone on board has murder in mind. |
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Reaching Panthera IV after an asteroid wreaks havoc of catastrophic proportions, the Enterprise crew deals with trying to save the planet. |
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Kirk beams down to the planet Gideon and appears to find himself trapped on the deserted Enterprise. |
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In many ways, this classic 1950s sitcom is the grandfather of them all, following the misadventures of 7-year-old Theodore "Beaver" Cleaver and his older brother, Wally, as they come of age in suburban Mayfield. |
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When the crew has a bit of leisure time, La Forge programs the holodeck to create a Sherlock Holmes mystery for Data to unravel. |
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Follow the adventures of Capt. Jean-Luc Picard and his crew as they explore new worlds aboard the all-new USS Enterprise. Season 1 finds the crew defending humanity against an omnipotent being; getting caught in a 1940s detective story; and more. |
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The final season begins with Data experiencing negative emotions while his "brother" leads a dangerous faction of Borg to destroy all organic life. The crew also assists in disarming a Vulcan weapon, and Q tests Picard on his ability to adapt. |
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As the USS Enterprise continues its voyage, the crew deals with an inquisitive 19th-century writer; Capt. Picard is captured when he goes on a mission in Cardassian territory; a hostile character on the holodeck tries to find his way out; and more. |
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Season 2 takes Capt. Picard and his crew on more intergalactic adventures, among them the introduction of the frightfully powerful Borg. Also, Picard again faces the omnipotent Q, while the crew welcomes a new medical officer and an alien bartender. |
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When the head of the Klingon high council passes on, Capt. Picard finds himself in the middle of the struggle for the now-vacant position. |
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Troi is more than just a little embarrassed when her mother, Lwaxanna -- as outrageous as ever -- arrives on board the Enterprise. |
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Worf must choose between his loyalty to Starfleet and his Klingon heritage when two Klingon fugitives take over the Enterprise. |
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In the year 2364, Capt. Jean-Luc Picard leads the new Enterprise on missions of discovery. First Officer William Riker, engineer Geordi La Forge, and Klingon crewmember Worf join Picard as they explore the universe and interact with alien species. |
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Bones travels back to 1930s America and inadvertently destroys the future. To reverse the damage, Kirk and Spock travel to the past, where Kirk falls in love with a social worker and must make a heartbreaking decision. Joan Collins guest stars. |
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Data tries to comprehend the complex emotions between O'Brien and Keiko, who are about to be married. |
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Kirk and Spock are caught up in a revolution on a planet where intellectuals and artists live in a utopian city in the sky. |
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In this prequel to the film Star Trek II, the Enterprise encounters a group of brutal superhumans led by Khan Noonien Singh. Khan battles Kirk for control of the ship and turns a trusted crew member against Starfleet. Ricardo Montalban guest stars. |
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Commander Riker and other members of the crew are unable to find rest, putting the Enterprise on the trail of a mystery. |
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"Space -- the final frontier." Easily one of the most beloved television series of all time, Gene Roddenberry's groundbreaking sci-fi classic has captured the minds and hearts of fans across generations. |
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The crew of the Enterprise is infected with a virus that causes them to behave as though they were intoxicated. |
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They planned to save their loose change to buy baseball gear for themselves, but now they have their eyes on a different purchase. |
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Kirk and a landing party beam down to what seems to be an ideal, Eden-like planet. |
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After hearing that the Cleaver boys are dependable, the Wilsons ask Wally and Beaver to babysit their young daughter. |
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Inspired by one of Ward's stories, Wally and Beaver play a practical joke on Lumpy Rutherford, the neighborhood bully who's been picking on them. |
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Commander Benjamin Sisko (Avery Brooks) heads the crew of Deep Space Nine -- including Odo (Rene Auberjonois), Worf (Michael Dom), Dax (Terry Farrell) and others -- as it travels through space, trying to keep both the ship and the areas it travels safe, secure and free. One of the first (and greatest) challenges the intrepid voyagers face is the violence of the Dominion, a group composed partially of the shape-shifting Changelings. |
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After accepting an invitation to Linda Dennison's birthday party, Beaver finds out that no other boys were asked to come. |
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Results from a test show that Beaver is the smartest person in his class. Beaver's principal suggests that Beaver transfer to a school for the gifted. |
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Eddie convinces Wally and Beaver to go see a horror movie, which the boys had promised their parents they wouldn't watch. |
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Join Capt. Kirk (William Shatner), Mr. Spock (Leonard Nimoy) and the entire Enterprise crew as they continue to explore the outer reaches of space, investigating peculiar phenomena, interacting with alien races and protecting the universe from a multitude of threats. In Season 2 of this landmark sci-fi series, Spock visits his home planet, Scotty (James Doohan) faces murder charges and Russian navigator Chekov (Walter Koenig) joins the team. |
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When the long-lost Enterprise C enters the Enterprise D's time and space continuum, an alternate history places the crew at war with the Klingons. |
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An entity traps the Enterprise crew and the crew of a disabled Klingon battle cruiser in an unending war aboard the Enterprise. |
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A landing party from the Enterprise is exposed to strange form of radiation that rapidly ages them. |
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Capt. Picard, La Forge and Troi try to find a way to escape their cell after being imprisoned by Lore. |
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In order to win a brand-new movie projector, Beaver and Wally team up to sell bottles of perfume around the neighborhood. |
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The Enterprise visits the planet where Data was created and discovers another android like him, but when he's assembled, he's not exactly like him. |
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With June out of town, Aunt Martha comes to help take care of the Cleaver boys, much to Wally and Beaver's chagrin. |
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Wesley Crusher suffers from the pangs of first love when the Enterprise is tasked to transport a young woman, Salia, back to her home. |
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On an urgent medical emergency, Kirk, Spock and McCoy encounter an alien society that had once flourished on Earth during the time of Plato. |
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Follow the adventures of Capt. Jean-Luc Picard and his crew as they explore new worlds aboard the all-new USS Enterprise. Season 1 finds the crew defending humanity against an omnipotent being; getting caught in a 1940s detective story; and more. |
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"Space -- the final frontier." Easily one of the most beloved television series of all time, Gene Roddenberry's groundbreaking sci-fi classic has captured the minds and hearts of fans across generations. |
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The Enterprise is ordered to undergo a series of tests that will propel the ship at unfathomable speed. |
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The Enterprise encounters a race known as the Ferengi, a race believed to be more like pirates rather than traders. |
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When the leader of an alien culture takes a romantic interest in Lt. Yar, he claims her for his own, to the dismay of his own wife. |
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The Enterprise encounters a mysterious void in space and when they move in closer to investigate further, it envelops them and they can't get out. |
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The Enterprise encounters a mysterious energy cloud that pulls them down to planet Gamma Canaris N, where they meet a castaway. |
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The Enterprise is chosen to be the test ship for the new M-5 multitronic computer system, which is designed to run a ship without human help. |
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La Forge is distracted by the news of his missing mother while he uses a new remote probe technology to search for a downed spacecraft. |
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Newly minted teacher Kim (Pippa Scott) is thrilled to land her first job, even though the principal warns her that the school has a rough reputation. Before classes begin, Kim dates a local, Hank (Robert Harland), and is horrified to learn that he's one of her students. Kim tries to do the right thing a... |
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While the Enterprise is en route to rendezvous with Troi's shuttlecraft, a bizarre malfunction causes the transport vehicle to crash on Vagra II. |
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A Klingon commander boards the Enterprise in an officer exchange program initiated by Starfleet, much to the chagrin of the crew. |
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Kirk, Spock, Abraham Lincoln and Surak are pitted in battle against four notorious villains from history. |
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Everyone at school notices that Beaver likes his beautiful teacher, Miss Canfield, so they start calling him a teacher's pet. |
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A startling surprise awaits the crew of the Enterprise when a mission costs the life of a crew member, who left her son behind. |
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The Enterprise returns to an abandoned outpost that is accessible only once every eight years -- and finds a familiar face. |
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The Cleaver boys want to buy baseball uniforms, but they're broke. Wally lands a job and works slowly. Beaver also finds a way to make lots of money! |
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In an effort to preserve a race of people from being bombarded by deadly storms, Worf's foster brother violates the Prime Directive. |
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When Starfleet receives an old Earth distress signal from deep in space, the Enterprise is sent to investigate. |
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While establishing diplomatic relations with an alien race called the Cairn, Deanna's mother experiences a mental breakdown and falls into a coma. |
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In the year 2364, Capt. Jean-Luc Picard leads the new Enterprise on missions of discovery. First Officer William Riker, engineer Geordi La Forge, and Klingon crewmember Worf join Picard as they explore the universe and interact with alien species. |
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The Enterprise investigates strange debris in orbit around a nearby planet only to find a piece of a NASA spacecraft emblazoned with the US flag. |
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The Enterprise encounters two duo-chromatic and mutually belligerent aliens who put the ship in the middle of their old conflict. |
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In Season 4, the crew of the USS Enterprise continue their voyage through space as Wesley Crusher departs for Starfleet Academy, Data finally meets his creator, an away team teleports aboard a Borg ship to save Capt. Picard and much more. |
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After dropping off some colonists in a nearby system, the crew visits a world of beautiful, healthy and tanned human-looking people. |
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The Enterprise provides transportation to two delegations who are constantly at odds with each other. |
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The Enterprise is on course to install new equipment on Memory Alpha, the central library storage facility for the Federation. |
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Data and the rest of the crew discover that the ship's computer is exhibiting strange behavior as it begins to become self-aware. |
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When a Romulan officer defects to the Federation with a warning of a impending invasion, Capt. Picard struggles to decide if he is to be believed. |
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Q tries to prove that Capt. Picard needs him on the crew by hurling the Enterprise 7,000 light years away, where they first encounter the Borg. |
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Much to Capt. Picard's displeasure, Q reappears on the Enterprise claiming to have been ejected from the Q Continuum and stripped of his powers. |
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Wally and Beaver's constant quarreling has June fit to be tied. To restore order to her home, she demands that both of her sons be good. |
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Upon his return from a bat'leth competition in the Klingon Empire, Worf notices changes among the Enterprise crew. |
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The Enterprise discovers that an apparent asteroid on a collision course with a planet is actually an ancient populated generation ship. |
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Beaver delivers flowers to the family's new next-door neighbors, the Donaldsons. Mrs. Donaldson surprises Beaver by giving him a peck on the cheek. |
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Trapped on a planet whose inhabitants resemble American Indians, Kirk loses his memory and is proclaimed a God. |
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The Enterprise is assigned to observe Earth's history in 1968. |
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The final season begins with Data experiencing negative emotions while his "brother" leads a dangerous faction of Borg to destroy all organic life. The crew also assists in disarming a Vulcan weapon, and Q tests Picard on his ability to adapt. |
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The Enterprise is carrying an eminent scientist, Dr. Paul Stubbs, to the site of a binary star where they are expecting a massive stellar explosion. |
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A powerful being claiming to be the Greek god Apollo appears and demands that the crew disembark onto his planet to worship him. |
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While investigating the disappearance of the USS Drake on the planet Minos, the crew battles floating mechanical death spheres. |
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As Kirk and Spock investigate the mystery behind a Starfleet tragedy, a friend of Kirk's finds himself endowed with godlike powers. To stop him from controlling mankind, Kirk hatches a risky plan to banish his former friend to an uninhabited planet. |
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The Enterprise gets caught in a time loop which always has one result: total destruction of the ship. |
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The crew participates in a battle exercise, pitting Capt. Picard against Riker. Yet they are all caught off guard when the Ferengi arrive. |
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Charlie, a powerful teenage psychic, beams aboard. Although Charlie wants to be liked, he uses his powers to attack others. Kirk bravely confronts him and finds help from a most unexpected visitor, who reveals the secret behind Charlie's powers. |
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With Capt. Picard away for routine surgery, the Enterprise responds to a distress call from a Pakled vessel. |
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The Enterprise is ordered to pursue a group of antiestablishment idealists who have stolen a space cruiser. |
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Commander Benjamin Sisko (Avery Brooks) heads the crew of Deep Space Nine -- including Odo (Rene Auberjonois), Worf (Michael Dom), Dax (Terry Farrell) and others -- as it travels through space, trying to keep both the ship and the areas it travels safe, secure and free. One of the first (and greatest) challenges the intrepid voyagers face is the violence of the Dominion, a group composed partially of the shape-shifting Changelings. |
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Beaver's in hot water because he keeps losing his lunch money. After he loses his haircut money, too, Beaver decides to cut his own hair. |
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The wildly successful Star Trek franchise continues as Capt. Kathryn Janeway and the crew of the &NFi;U.S.S. Voyager&NFi_; follow a Maquis ship into the Badlands, and one species-saving decision later, find themselves in the Delta Quadrant, 70,000 light years away from the Alpha Quadrant, the Federation, and home. The two ships must join together to make it back, facing treacherous battles from the outside world -- and from within. |
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The Enterprise crew arrives at a planet where they're informed that they all must die. Kirk learns they're the casualties of a virtual war between two planets that make their own people kill themselves to avoid the messiness of combat. |
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The Enterprise travels to a planet where a Starfleet ship disappeared years ago. Upon their arrival, the crew learns a tyrannical computer rules over the planet's oppressed people. Later, Kirk conspires with a band of rebels to crash the computer. |
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Kirk travels to a planet to visit his brother and discovers his sibling's been killed by amoebalike aliens. Spock gets infected by one of the aliens, and when Bones attempts to cure him using light, Spock is left blind. Majel Barrett guest stars. |
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Dr. Crusher falls for a Trill ambassador, but learns that this kind of life-form is not at all what they appear to be. |
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When Beaver brings a black eye home from school, Ward vows to teach the boy how to fight. |
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When a mysterious intruder on the "Enterprise" cunningly steals Spock's brain, Bones tries to keep the Vulcan alive while Kirk tracks down the thief. |
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"Space -- the final frontier." Easily one of the most beloved television series of all time, Gene Roddenberry's groundbreaking sci-fi classic has captured the minds and hearts of fans across generations. |
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Kirk, Spock and McCoy beam down and find themselves in a culture similar to Earth gangs of the 1920s. |
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Without getting their parents' permission, Wally and Beaver order a baby alligator through the mail. The boys hide their new pet in the bathroom. |
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Troi is impregnated by a unknown alien life-form, and Dr. Katherine Pulaski joins the Enterprise as the ship's new Chief Medical Officer. |
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Kirk, Spock and McCoy beam down to a supposedly uninhabited planet to gather the mineral ryetalyn to fight a plague of Rigelian fever. |
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Upon arriving at a newly identified planetary group, the crew finds that the entire region is unstable. |
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Join Capt. Kirk (William Shatner), Mr. Spock (Leonard Nimoy) and the entire Enterprise crew as they continue to explore the outer reaches of space, investigating peculiar phenomena, interacting with alien races and protecting the universe from a multitude of threats. In Season 2 of this landmark sci-fi series, Spock visits his home planet, Scotty (James Doohan) faces murder charges and Russian navigator Chekov (Walter Koenig) joins the team. |
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Capt. Picard and some of his crew are caught in a deadly trap on the holodeck as the result of a ship-wide scan from an alien race. |
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While an alien archive transforms the Enterprise into its ancient society, Data is taken over by personalities from the extinct civilization. |
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A planet that was able to cloak itself for thousands of years suddenly reveals itself, with its inhabitants proposing peace. |
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The Enterprise comes across a Federation shuttlecraft that is floating in space and without much power but does exhibit life signs. |
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The Enterprise docks at a starbase for repairs, where it is commandeered by a race of technologically linked aliens. |
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The Enterprise is ordered to proceed to an emergency rendezvous to collect a special envoy who is traveling from Starbase 153 to meet them. |
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After an accident that leaves him no longer able to walk, Worf asks Riker to help him commit suicide. |
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Riker, Troi, Data and Yar beam down to a planet ruled by a matriarchal government in the hopes of locating a missing freighter crew. |
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While on a mission to a planet called Haven, Troi meets her husband-to-be -- a marriage arranged by her father years before. |
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While visiting a planet under civil war, Dr. Crusher is taken hostage by an opposing faction of the planet's ruling government. |
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Capt. Picard is trapped aboard the Enterprise while the ship is docked for a lethal maintenance procedure. |
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While the Enterprise hosts negotiations for control of a stable wormhole, Troi forms a personal relationship with an opposing negotiator. |
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Riker returns from an away team mission wounded and infected with microbes from the planet below, and is soon in a coma in sick bay. |
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Riker begins to question reality when he finds himself in an insane asylum and faces the prospect that his life on the Enterprise is a delusion. |
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As Worf fights in the Klingon Civil War, Capt. Picard and his crew must stop the Romulans from helping their pawns win it. |
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Shortly after the Enterprise saves a planet from an asteroid impact by destroying it, the ship begins experiencing strange breakdowns. |
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The crew of the Enterprise enters into a diplomatic mission and find the ambassadors are making life aboard the ship difficult. |
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Kirk encounters Lazarus, a man whose moods and looks constantly seem to reverse. Lazarus explains he's chasing his parallel self through space and time and that it poses a threat to the entire multiverse. He implores Kirk to help set a strange trap. |
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As the USS Enterprise continues its voyage, the crew deals with an inquisitive 19th-century writer; Capt. Picard is captured when he goes on a mission in Cardassian territory; a hostile character on the holodeck tries to find his way out; and more. |
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When the Donaldsons go out of town, Beaver and Wally are given the responsibility of looking after their cat, Puff Puff. |
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Some classic episodes are in Season 5, including one in which Picard experiences an alternate lifetime, and another featuring a guest appearance by Leonard Nimoy as Spock. Also the crew rescues a Borg survivor, Worf adapts to fatherhood and more. |
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Responding to a distress call on one of the Federation's outer-most colonies, the Enterprise arrives and must face a powerful foe. |
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Larry plans to spend the weekend at Beaver's house, which promises to be lots of fun -- that is, until the two friends get into a fight. |
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In Season 4, the crew of the USS Enterprise continue their voyage through space as Wesley Crusher departs for Starfleet Academy, Data finally meets his creator, an away team teleports aboard a Borg ship to save Capt. Picard and much more. |
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The Enterprise pursues a Romulan warbird after it destroys several Federation outposts. The physical similarities between Vulcans and Romulans spark bigotry against Spock by a racist human member of the Enterprise crew. Mark Lenard guest stars. |
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After succumbing to pressure from Larry to use Ward's new drill, Beaver damages the garage wall and gets into big trouble. |
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Kodos, a fugitive wanted for mass murder, is allegedly living as a 23rd-century Shakespearean actor. Kirk's friend tips him off about Kodos and is murdered. When Kirk brings a Shakespearean acting troupe aboard to investigate, the body count grows. |
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An animal has been chewing up June's flowers. But in the process of trying to catch the culprit, Beaver traps a rabbit and insists on keeping it. |
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During Spock's court-martial trial, video images of Capt. Pike's encounter with the Talosians, aliens who possess great psychic powers, reveal Spock's motivation for hijacking the ship. Later, the Talosians make Pike an offer he can't refuse. |
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After ripping a pair of expensive pants at a construction site he was told not to visit, Beaver makes up an incredible lie to tell his parents. |
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Spock abducts the Enterprise's severely injured former captain and forces the ship to set course for a forbidden planet. As a result, Spock faces court-martial charges. Despite Kirk's attempts to reason with him, the Vulcan refuses to back down. |
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Wally is excited when Ward offers him a job painting garbage cans for 50 cents each. But Wally soon learns Eddie got paid $3 a can for the same job. |
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Capt. Picard, La Forge, Data and Troi experience strange instances where either one or several of them appear to be frozen in time. |
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When the Federation promotes an officer exchange program, Riker decides to accept an assignment aboard a Klingon warship. |
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A virus causes the Enterprise crew to lose all self-control. As a result, Sulu threatens his crewmates with a sword, Spock cries, and a crewman takes over the ship. With no time to spare, Bones rushes to save everyone with a makeshift antidote. |
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The intrepid crew of the USS Enterprise continues on its mission to explore new worlds in Season 3 of this beloved sci-fi series, in which the Ferengi kidnap Troi and Riker; Data experiences fatherhood; and a time shift brings back Tasha Yar. |
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A black star sends a helpless Enterprise back in time to 1960s Earth. Before they can return to the 2300s, Kirk and the crew must destroy all evidence of their visit, including erasing the memories of a fighter pilot they're forced to beam aboard. |
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When Wally comes down with a sore throat, June, Ward and Dr. Bradley all pay careful attention to him, which makes Beaver jealous. |
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The Enterprise finds a deserted planet and a downed ship's lone survivor, who has no memory but possesses extraordinary healing powers. |
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The Enterprise travels to a planet where Trelane, a childish alien with a fascination for Napoleon Bonaparte, rules with godlike power. When Trelane captures the Enterprise, Kirk offers his life for the freedom of his ship and crew. |
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Beaver feels neglected when Ward and June make a fuss about Wally making the baseball team, and wants to impress his family with his own abilities. |
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Kirk and Spock are taken prisoner by a former starship captain who now resides at -- and has taken over -- an asylum for the criminally insane. |
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Worf is offered coordinates by a Eurydian who claims that his father didn't die in battle but is in a Romulan prison camp. |
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Kirk and the crew rescue slick salesman Harry Mudd and three seemingly beautiful "mail-order brides" from Mudd's matchmaking service. When Mudd's checkered past catches up with him, he conspires to keep Kirk from bringing him to justice. |
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Ward plans a camping trip. But when Ward gets called into the office and his outdoor adventure falls apart, Beaver and Wally go camping anyway. |
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Capt. Picard and the crew follow Data back to the 1800s to get him back, only to find the suspected alien visitors killing people of that time period. |
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Data is sent to follow a probe that has drifted off course and crashed on a primitive planet, only to crash on the planet himself and lose his memory. |
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The Enterprise crew arrives at a picturesque planet for some much-needed shore leave. But the crew's vacation is ruined when a Samurai and a bloodthirsty knight attack Sulu and Bones. Later, Spock realizes the strange cause of the odd attacks. |
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To impress Wally's friends, Beaver lies and tells them an Indian battle occurred in a nearby lot. Beaver is under pressure to prove that it's true. |
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The Enterprise is called upon by scientists to return to Earth when there is evidence that aliens had visited the planet in the late 1800s. |
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Having discovered survivors from the Romulan attack on Khitomer, Worf resists becoming one of them, even though he becomes a prisoner himself. |
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Wally is planning on going stag to eighth-grade dance. Mary Ellen Rogers wants Wally to take her instead, and turns to Beaver for help. |
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When the Enterprise responds to a Romulan ship's disress call, Ensign Ro and La Forge are lost in a transporter malfunction. |
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Kirk, Spock, McCoy and a couple of red shirts beam down to the surface of a planet in answer to a fake distress call. |
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The Enterprise discovers a planet whose oppressive government is a 20th-century version of Earth's Roman Empire. |
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Ward builds Beaver his very own soapbox racecar. Beaver knows he's not supposed to ride it without supervision, but he disobeys the rule. |
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After a century of silence, the Enterprise receives a message from the Sheliac system informing them that they have discovered a human colony. |
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During an encounter with the Borg, Data feels his first emotion when he gets angry with the cybernetic race. |
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After finding a stray Chihuahua, Ward tries to find the dog's real owner, while Beaver and Wally become attached to their new furry friend. |
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Questions of duty and honor arise amongst some junior officers as they question the actions of the Enterprise command crew. |
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To impress girls, Wally cleans himself up and starts paying attention to his appearance. Ward and June try to encourage Beaver to follow suit. |
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The Enterprise crew is stalked by a shape-shifting creature that fatally drains the salt out of humans for its survival. When the monster is unintentionally brought aboard, McCoy makes a heartbreaking decision to ensure his shipmates' survival. |
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After waiting for a response to their hails for three days, Capt. Picard finds that the Ferengi have discovered the Stargazer, his old ship. |
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The Enterprise encounters two neighboring cultures, one suffering from a plague, the other marketing a cure, and learn that nothing is as simple as it seems. |
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Overcoming his fear of transporter, Lt. Barclay joins an away team, only to have visions of something in the beam with him. |
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Diagnosing anomalies in the recreative Sherlock Holmes hologram game programs, Lt. Barclay awakens Professor Moriarty. |
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While the humorless Capt. Jellico leads an effort to prevent a Cardassian invasion, the captured Capt. Picard is tortured by an interrogation expert. |
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Picard is replaced as captain of the Enterprise so he, Worf and Dr. Crusher can go on a secret mission into Cardassian space. |
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While the crew is experiencing some much needed down time, Worf and his son go on an Old West excursion on the holodeck. |
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When an honor student in the medical field is assigned to the Enterprise as an intern, she begins to demonstrate powers of the Q. |
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Capt. Picard races the Ferengi in an effort to track down the son he never knew he had. |
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The Enterprise responds to a distress call from the planet Scalos, but when a landing party beams down, they find no living beings. |
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In an effort to help him accept his Klingon heritage, Worf and his son, Alexander, attend an ancient Klingon ceremony. |
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The Enterprise encounters a gigantic, energy-draining space organism that threatens the galaxy. |
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Trapped in an alien laboratory, Kirk, Spock and McCoy meet an empath and are involved in a series of experiments. |
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The Cardassians grant the Federation access to Dorvan V, where Capt. Picard must relocate the Native American Indians who have migrated there. |
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Data rescues a boy, and in a way to repress his own pain, the boy begins to mimic Data's personality. |
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The Enterprise encounters Q again, and he tempts Riker by endowing him with the powers of the Q. |
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In Season 4, the crew of the USS Enterprise continue their voyage through space as Wesley Crusher departs for Starfleet Academy, Data finally meets his creator, an away team teleports aboard a Borg ship to save Capt. Picard and much more. |
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Transporting three Ullian mind-probing historians, the Enterprise crew is stymied when some of its members fall into a coma. |
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Riker, Data, Crusher and other crewmembers are enjoying a recreational day on an Earth-like human colony when they are hit by an electrical storm. |
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When La Forge is assigned to survey a new mining development, Dr. Farallon uses her new robot, called an Exocomp, to repair a power grid. |
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"Space -- the final frontier." Easily one of the most beloved television series of all time, Gene Roddenberry's groundbreaking sci-fi classic has captured the minds and hearts of fans across generations. |
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A new officer, Ensign Ro, is enlisted to track down a band of Bajoran terrorists. Yet Ro, a Bajoran herself, must first win her crewmates' trust. |
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When Troi's mother spurns advances made by a Ferengi, DaiMon, he takes it upon himself to kidnap both mother and daughter. |
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A child who recently moved onto the Enterprise begins playing with an imaginary friend, but the new playmate begins affecting the ship's operations. |
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Capt. Picard must learn to communicate with a race who speaks in a language that is not compatible with the universal translator. |
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The last three members of an ancient race far more advanced than humans wish to borrow the bodies of Kirk, Spock and Dr. Mulhall. |
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La Forge is brainwashed by the Romulans to assassinate a Klingon ambassador. |
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Kirk returns to the planet Neural, where he spent time 13 years earlier. A friend of Kirk's from his previous visit is now the leader of its people. |
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Join Capt. Kirk (William Shatner), Mr. Spock (Leonard Nimoy) and the entire Enterprise crew as they continue to explore the outer reaches of space, investigating peculiar phenomena, interacting with alien races and protecting the universe from a multitude of threats. In Season 2 of this landmark sci-fi series, Spock visits his home planet, Scotty (James Doohan) faces murder charges and Russian navigator Chekov (Walter Koenig) joins the team. |
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A long-lost ship is found on a planet where cosmic storms prevented detection for 200 years. |
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Capt. Picard incurs serious wounds in a fight, and his artificial heart is gravely damaged. |
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After being distracted while on duty, Worf is placed on leave and given time to get his personal affairs in order. |
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The intrepid crew of the USS Enterprise continues on its mission to explore new worlds in Season 3 of this beloved sci-fi series, in which the Ferengi kidnap Troi and Riker; Data experiences fatherhood; and a time shift brings back Tasha Yar. |
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The Enterprise stumbles upon a Dyson Sphere, with a ship crashed on the outer surface. |
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Dr. Crusher puts her career on the line to prove a scientist's theoretical new shielding technology which may have cost him his life. |
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Join Jonathan Frakes, Next Generation's Commander Riker, for this fascinating chronicle of Gene Roddenberry's beloved, Emmy Award-winning series. |
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As acting captain, Commander Riker has no choice but to fire full force on the Borg starship, despite Capt. Picard being on board. |
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When an approaching alien ship wipes their memory, the crew struggles to put back together what happened. |
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This first Star Trek film reunites the U.S.S. Enterprise's original crew from the 1960s television show. Capt. James T. Kirk (William Shatner) -- now an admiral -- and his former crew must save humanity from a giant alien ship steadily approaching Earth. There's conflict on the ship as well as in the universe, as displaced Cmdr. Decker (Stephen Collins), the Enterprise's new captain, becomes Kirk's assistant. Leonard Nimoy and DeForest Kelley ... |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "The Man Trap," "Charlie X," "Where No Man Has Gone Before" and "The Naked Time." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "The Enemy Within," "Mudd's Women," "What Are Little Girls Made Of?", "Miri" and "Dagger of the Mind." |
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Directed by Gene Kelly, this all-star romp centers on faithful married man Paul Manning (Walter Matthau), who's tempted by his philandering friend Edward (Robert Morse) to cheat on his beautiful wife ( |
This disc includes the following episodes: "Spock's Brain," "The Enterprise Incident," "The Paradise Syndrome," "And the Children Shall Lead" and "Is There In Truth No Beauty?" |
This disc includes the following episodes: "Spectre of the Gun," "Day of the Dove," "For the World Is Hollow and I Have Touched the Sky," "The Tholian Web" and "Plato's Stepchildren." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Wink of an Eye," "The Empath," "Elaan of Troyius," "Whom Gods Destroy" and "Let That Be Your Last Battlefield." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "The Mark of Gideon," "That Which Survives," "The Lights of Zetar," "Requiem for Methuselah" and "The Way to Eden." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "The Man Trap," "Charlie X" and "Where No Man Has Gone Before." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "The Cloud Minders," "The Savage Curtain," "All Our Yesterdays" and "Turnabout Intruder." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "The Naked Time," "The Enemy Within" and "Mudd's Women." |
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This disc includes the show's pilot, entitled "The Cage," as well as "The Cage: Extended Version." |
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Beaver wants to join the club that Wally started with his friends, but it costs $3 to become a member. In an effort to get the money he needs, Beaver goes around the neighborhood in hopes of finding a paying gig. |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "What Are Little Girls Made Of?," "Miri" and "Dagger of the Mind." |
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This first Star Trek film reunites the U.S.S. Enterprise's original crew from the 1960s television show. Capt. James T. Kirk (William Shatner) -- now an admiral -- and his former crew must save humanity from a giant alien ship steadily approaching Earth. There's conflict on the ship as well as in the universe, as displaced Cmdr. Decker ( |
This disc includes the following episodes: "The Corbomite Maneuver," "The Menagerie: Part 1" and "The Menagerie: Part 2." |
This disc includes the following episodes: "The Conscience of the King," "Balance of Terror" and "Shore Leave." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "The Galileo Seven," "The Squire of Gothos" and "Arena." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Tomorrow is Yesterday," "Court Martial" and "The Return of the Archons." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Space Seed," "A Taste of Armageddon" and "This Side of Paradise." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "The Last Outpost," "Where No One Has Gone Before," "Lonely Among Us," "Justice." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Descent, Part II," "Liaisons," "Interface" and "Gambit, Part I." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "The Devil in the Dark," "Errand of Mercy" and "The Alternative Factor." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "The Battle," "Hide and Q," "Haven," "The Big Goodbye." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Gambit, Part II," "Phantasms," "Dark Page" and "Attached." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "The City on the Edge of Forever" and "Operation: Annihilate!" |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Datalore," "Angel One," "11001001," "Too Short a Season." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Force of Nature," "Inheritance," "Parallels" and "The Pegasus." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "When The Bough Breaks," "Home Soil," "Coming of Age," "Heart of Glory." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "The Arsenal of Freedom," "Symbiosis," "Skin of Evil," "We'll Always Have Paris." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Homeward," "Sub Rosa," "Lower Decks" and "Thine Own Self." |
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Impressed by his old friend's stories from military school, Wally starts thinking that he'd like the same experience. Ward and June don't like the idea of Wally attending a military academy, but they're willing to consider his request. |
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This disc includes the episodes "Conspiracy" and "The Neutral Zone," along with bonus features. |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "First Born," "Bloodlines," "Emergence" and "Preemptive Strike." |
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June's flower bed looks awful because some sort of animal has been chewing it up. But in the process of trying to catch the culprit, Beaver traps a rabbit and insists on keeping it. Little does he know that his new pet is pregnant. |
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This disc includes the complete "All Good Things" episode, plus various special features. |
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After ripping a pair of expensive pants at a construction site he was told not to visit, Beaver makes up an incredible lie to tell his parents. June and Ward know Beaver is fibbing, so they make him promise to always tell the truth. |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Masks," "Eye of the Beholder," "Genesis" and "Journey's End." |
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Larry plans to spend the weekend at Beaver's house, which promises to be lots of fun -- that is, until the two friends get into a fight and no longer want to see each other. Still, with Larry's folks out of town, there's nowhere else for him to stay. |
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In many ways, this classic 1950s sitcom is the grandfather of them all, following the misadventures of 7-year-old Theodore "Beaver" Cleaver (Jerry Mathers) and his older brother, Wally (Tony Dow), as they come of age in suburban Mayfield. The show's first season introduces us to the characters we've come to love, including mother June (Barbara Billingsley), father Ward (Hugh Beaumont) and the smarmy Eddie Haskell (Ken Osmond). |
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After succumbing to pressure from Larry to use Ward's new drill, Beaver damages the garage wall and gets into big trouble. Facing a severe punishment, Beaver decides to pack up his things and run away from home. |
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When the Donaldsons go out of town, Beaver and Wally are given the responsibility of looking after their cat, Puff Puff. Eddie's dog, Wolf, ends up scaring the cat away, and the Cleaver boys can't find it anywhere. |
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Go back to where it all began -- aboard the &NFi;Enterprise&NFi_;, helmed by Capt. James T. Kirk (William Shatner) and his first officer, Spock (Leonard Nimoy). On a mission to explore space, Kirk, Spock and the rest of the crew -- including Dr. McCoy (DeForest Kelley) and Scotty (James Doohan) -- encounter a host of strange phenomena and alien races. This series includes the first 15 volumes of Gene Roddenberry's groundbreaking show. |
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At first Wally is excited when Ward offers him a job painting garbage cans for 50 cents each. But after hearing that Eddie got paid $3 a can for the same job, Wally tries to back out of the deal and get Beaver to do the work. |
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While cleaning out the garage, Beaver stumbles upon his favorite childhood teddy bear. After Ward and Wally tell him he's too old for teddy bears, Beaver tosses the toy into the trash. But it's a decision he soon regrets. |
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When Wally comes down with a sore throat, June, Ward and Dr. Bradley all pay careful attention to him, which makes Beaver jealous. Beaver decides that the only way for him to get noticed is to pretend he's sick, too. |
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Beaver feels neglected when Ward and June make a fuss about Wally making the baseball team. Hoping to impress his family with his own abilities, Beaver starts taking clarinet lessons and tries out for the school band. |
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Everyone at school notices that Beaver likes his beautiful teacher, Miss Canfield, so they start calling him a teacher's pet. Beaver decides to play a prank on Miss Canfield to impress his classmates, but he's soon overcome with guilt. |
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Ward plans a weekend camping trip in an effort to give the boys some new experiences. But when Ward gets called into the office and his great outdoor adventure falls apart, Beaver and Wally decide to go camping anyway. |
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In an effort to impress Wally's friends, Beaver lies and tells them that a major Indian battle occurred in a nearby lot. Under pressure to prove that his story is true, Beaver enlists Wally's help to place fake Indian artifacts at the site. |
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This disc includes episodes 4 and 5, "Mudd's Women" and "The Enemy Within." |
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The eighth grade dance is fast approaching, and Wally is planning on going stag just like his friend Eddie. In order to convince Wally to be her date to the dance, Mary Ellen Rogers turns to Beaver for help. |
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This disc includes episodes 6 and 7, "The Man Trap" and "The Naked Time." |
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In order to impress girls, Wally cleans himself up and starts paying attention to his appearance. When Ward and June see how much Wally has changed, they try to encourage the untidy Beaver to follow suit. |
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This disc includes episodes 8 and 9, "Charlie X" and "Balance of Terror." |
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Using an old lawn mower motor, Ward builds Beaver his very own soapbox racecar. Beaver knows he's not supposed to ride it without supervision, but he disobeys the rules and, in the process, gets in trouble with the law. |
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When Ward gives the boys a piggy bank to encourage them to save their loose change, it doesn't take long for them to build up a decent sum. They planned on buying baseball gear for themselves, but now they have their eyes on a different purchase. |
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After hearing that the Cleaver boys are dependable, the Wilsons ask Wally and Beaver to babysit their young daughter. But when the adults leave for the night, the little girl locks herself in the bathroom, sending the boys into a panic. |
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Wally and Beaver find jobs delivering newspapers when Ward refuses to give them money to buy new bikes. After June and Ward see that their boys need help, the two parents pitch in and start delivering the papers for them. |
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Inspired by one of Ward's stories, Wally and Beaver set out to play a practical joke on Lumpy Rutherford, the neighborhood bully who's been picking on them. Everything goes wrong when their trap catches Lumpy's father instead of Lumpy. |
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After accepting an invitation to Linda Dennison's birthday party, Beaver finds out that no other boys were asked to come. Beaver doesn't want to go, but June and Ward refuse to listen to his excuses and force him to attend against his will. |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "The Corbomite Maneuver," "The Menagerie: Part 1," "The Menagerie: Part 2" and "The Conscience of the King." |
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Results from an IQ test show that Beaver is the smartest person in his class. Beaver's principal suggests that Beaver challenge himself by transferring to a school for the gifted. But does he want to leave his classmates behind? |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Balance of Terror," "Shore Leave," "The Galileo Seven" and "The Squire of Gothos." |
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Eddie convinces Wally and Beaver to go see a horror movie, which the boys had promised their parents they wouldn't watch. But the film has a lasting effect on Beaver, who's inspired to make a voodoo doll of Eddie. |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Arena," "Tomorrow is Yesterday," "Court Martial" and "The Return of the Archons." |
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In order to win a brand-new movie projector, Beaver and Wally team up to sell bottles of perfume around the neighborhood. Unfortunately, the powerful perfume smells awful, and nobody is willing to buy it. |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Space Seed," "A Taste of Armageddon," "This Side of Paradise" and "The Devil in the Dark." |
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With June out of town, Aunt Martha comes to help take care of the Cleaver boys, much to Wally and Beaver's chagrin. After giving Beaver a terribly embarrassing outfit as a present, Aunt Martha demands that he wear it to school. |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Errand of Mercy," "The Alternative Factor," "The City on the Edge of Forever" and "Operation: Annihilate!" |
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This disc includes episodes 10 and 11, "What Are Little Girls Made Of?" and "Dagger of the Mind." |
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This disc includes episodes 12 and 13, "Miri" and "The Conscience of the King." |
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Kirk travels to a planet to visit his brother and discovers his sibling's been killed by amoebalike aliens. Spock gets infected by one of the aliens, and when Bones attempts to cure him using light, Spock is left blind. Majel Barrett guest stars. |
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This disc includes episodes 14 and 15, "The Galileo Seven" and "Court Martial." |
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Bones travels back to 1930s America and inadvertently destroys the future. To reverse the damage, Kirk and Spock travel to the past, where Kirk falls in love with a social worker and must make a heartbreaking decision. Joan Collins guest stars. |
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This disc includes episode 16, ""The Menagerie" (Parts I and II). |
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Kirk encounters Lazarus, a man whose moods and looks constantly seem to reverse. Lazarus explains he's chasing his parallel self through space and time and that it poses a threat to the entire multiverse. He implores Kirk to help set a strange trap. |
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This disc includes episodes 17 and 18, "Shore Leave" and "The Squire of Gothos." |
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Kirk attempts to establish a Federation outpost on the planet of the seemingly primitive Organians. But when Klingons attack, the Organians reveal that everyone has greatly underestimated their true power and evolution. |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Remember Me," "Legacy," "Reunion" and "Future Imperfect." |
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This disc includes episodes 19 and 20, "Arena" and "The Alternative Factor." |
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This disc includes episodes 29 and 30: "Operation-Annihilate!" and "Catspaw." |
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When a bizarre monster kills several men at a mining colony, Kirk and Spock beam down to investigate. Through a Vulcan mind-meld, Spock learns the creature is intelligent and has a valid motive for its murderous actions against the miners. |
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This disc includes episodes 21 and 22, "Tomorrow is Yesterday" and "The Return of the Archons." |
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This disc includes episodes 27 and 28: "Errand of Mercy" and "The City on the Edge of Forever." |
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Kirk and the crew land on a planet whose plant spores cause everyone to become extremely passive and affectionate toward one another. Kirk discovers the spores' mental manipulation and resorts to violence to bring Spock and the others back to normal. |
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This disc includes episodes 23 and 24, "A Taste of Armageddon" and "Space Seed." |
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This disc includes episodes 23 and 24, "A Taste of Armageddon" and "Space Seed." |
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The Enterprise crew arrives at a planet where they're informed that they all must die. Kirk learns they're the casualties of a virtual war between two planets that make their own people kill themselves to avoid the messiness of combat. |
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This disc includes episodes 25 and 26, "This Side of Paradise" and "The Devil in the Dark." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Spock's Brain," "The Enterprise Incident," "The Paradise Syndrome" and "And the Children Shall Lead." |
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This disc includes episodes 21 and 22, "Tomorrow is Yesterday" and "The Return of the Archons." |
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The Enterprise arrives at a planet where a virus puts humans in a perpetual childlike state. Kirk and his away team are hit with the same bizarre bug, and only Bones's medical expertise can save them from the terrible preteenage wasteland. |
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In this prequel to the film Star Trek II, the Enterprise encounters a group of brutal superhumans led by Khan Noonien Singh. Khan battles Kirk for control of the ship and turns a trusted crew member against Starfleet. Ricardo Montalban guest stars. |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Final Mission," "The Loss," "Data's Day" and "The Wounded." |
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This disc includes episodes 27 and 28: "Errand of Mercy" and "The City on the Edge of Forever." |
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This disc includes episodes 19 and 20, "Arena" and "The Alternative Factor." |
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The Enterprise's search for Roger, a famous scientist, leads Kirk to find him on a deserted planet with two extremely lifelike androids. Roger turns on Kirk and attempts to replace him with an identical Kirk android for control of the Enterprise. |
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The Enterprise travels to a planet where a Starfleet ship disappeared years ago. Upon their arrival, the crew learns a tyrannical computer rules over the planet's oppressed people. Later, Kirk conspires with a band of rebels to crash the computer. |
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This disc includes episodes 29 and 30: "Operation-Annihilate!" and "Catspaw." |
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This disc includes episodes 17 and 18, "Shore Leave" and "The Squire of Gothos." |
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Kirk and the crew rescue slick salesman Harry Mudd and three seemingly beautiful "mail-order brides" from Mudd's matchmaking service. When Mudd's checkered past catches up with him, he conspires to keep Kirk from bringing him to justice. |
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Aliens abduct Kirk and a Gorn, a large, violent, lizardlike humanoid. For a chance to save the lives of their crews, the aliens order Kirk and the Gorn to fight to the death. But Kirk won't agree to being some alien bullies' space gladiator. |
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This disc includes episodes 25 and 26, "This Side of Paradise" and "The Devil in the Dark." |
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An officer is killed in what appears to be a freak accident, but when computer records indicate Kirk is to blame, he must stand trial for a court-martial. As the case unfolds, evidence suggests someone must have framed Kirk. |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "The Homecoming," "The Circle," "The Siege" and "Invasive Procedures." |
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This disc includes episode 16, ""The Menagerie" (Parts I and II). |
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The Enterprise crew literally sees double when the transporter malfunctions and beams Kirk onboard with his evil doppelganger. Scotty rushes to fix the transporter in time to save Kirk and crewmates stranded on the frigid surface of the planet below. |
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A black star sends a helpless Enterprise back in time to 1960s Earth. Before they can return to the 2300s, Kirk and the crew must destroy all evidence of their visit, including erasing the memories of a fighter pilot they're forced to beam aboard. |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Devil's Due," "Clues," "First Contact" and "Galaxy's Child." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Cardassians," "Melora," "Rules of Acquisition" and "Necessary Evil." |
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A virus causes the Enterprise crew to lose all self-control. As a result, Sulu threatens his crewmates with a sword, Spock cries, and a crewman takes over the ship. With no time to spare, Bones rushes to save everyone with a makeshift antidote. |
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The Enterprise travels to a planet where Trelane, a childish alien with a fascination for Napoleon Bonaparte, rules with godlike power. When Trelane captures the Enterprise, Kirk offers his life for the freedom of his ship and crew. |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Second Sight," "Sanctuary," "Rivals" and "The Alternate." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Amok Time" and "Who Mourns for Adonais?." |
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As Kirk and Spock investigate the mystery behind a Starfleet tragedy, a friend of Kirk's finds himself endowed with godlike powers. To stop him from controlling mankind, Kirk hatches a risky plan to banish his former friend to an uninhabited planet. |
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Spock, Bones, Scotty and several crew members crash-land a shuttlecraft on a planet where they're attacked by deadly giants. In a race against time, Spock risks his and the lives of the other survivors for a slim and dangerous chance at a rescue. |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Armageddon Game," "Whispers," "Paradise" and "Shadow Play." |
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This disc contains the following episodes: "The Child," "Where the Silence Has Lease," "Elementary, Dear Data" and "The Outrageous Okona." |
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Kodos, a fugitive wanted for mass murder, is allegedly living as a 23rd-century Shakespearean actor. Kirk's friend tips him off about Kodos and is murdered. When Kirk brings a Shakespearean acting troupe aboard to investigate, the body count grows. |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Playing God," "Profit and Loss," "Blood Oath" and "The Maquis, Part 1." |
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The Enterprise crew arrives at a picturesque planet for some much-needed shore leave. But the crew's vacation is ruined when a Samurai and a bloodthirsty knight attack Sulu and Bones. Later, Spock realizes the strange cause of the odd attacks. |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Night Terrors," "Identity Crisis," "The Nth Degree" and "Qpid." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "The Maquis, Part II," "The Wire," "Crossover" and "The Collaborator." |
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The Enterprise pursues a Romulan warbird after it destroys several Federation outposts. The physical similarities between Vulcans and Romulans spark bigotry against Spock by a racist human member of the Enterprise crew. Mark Lenard guest stars. |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Tribunal" and "The Jem'Hadar." Also included are special features, which consist of five featurettes: "New Frontiers: The Story of Deep Space Nine"; "Michael Westmore's Aliens - Season Two"; "Deep Space Nine Sketchbook: Season Two"; "Crew Dossier: Jadzia Dax"; and "New Station, New Ships." |
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During Spock's court-martial trial, video images of Capt. Pike's encounter with the Talosians, aliens who possess great psychic powers, reveal Spock's motivation for hijacking the ship. Later, the Talosians make Pike an offer he can't refuse. |
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Spock abducts the Enterprise's severely injured former captain and forces the ship to set course for a forbidden planet. As a result, Spock faces court-martial charges. Despite Kirk's attempts to reason with him, the Vulcan refuses to back down. |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "The Drumhead," "Half A Life," "The Host" and "The Mind's Eye." |
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Charlie, a powerful teenage psychic, beams aboard. Although Charlie wants to be liked, he uses his powers to attack others. Kirk bravely confronts him and finds help from a most unexpected visitor, who reveals the secret behind Charlie's powers. |
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The Enterprise narrowly escapes from Balok, a seemingly imposing alien, and his starship. When Balok transmits a distress call, Kirk and the crew attempt to help. As a result, the alien shares an amazing secret and makes the crew an incredible offer. |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Redemption, Part II," "Darmok," "Ensign Ro" and "Silicon Avatar." |
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A deranged doctor escapes from a planetary penal colony to the Enterprise. When Kirk beams down to investigate the planet and is brainwashed by the colony's maniacal director, it's up to Spock to rescue Kirk by any means necessary. |
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The Enterprise crew is stalked by a shape-shifting creature that fatally drains the salt out of humans for its survival. When the monster is unintentionally brought aboard, McCoy makes a heartbreaking decision to ensure his shipmates' survival. |
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This disc includes the episodes "In Theory" and "Redemption, Part I," plus bonus features. |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "The Man Trap," "Charlie X" and "Where No Man Has Gone Before." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "The Naked Time," "The Enemy Within" and "Mudd's Women." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "What Are Little Girl's Made of?," "Miri" and "Dagger of the Mind." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: ""The Corbomite Maneuver," "The Menagerie (Part 1)" and "The Menagerie (Part 2)." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "The Conscience of the King," "Balance of Terror" and "Shore Leave." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "The Galileo Seven, The Squire of Gothos" and "Arena." |
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"Space … the final frontier." Easily one of the most beloved television series of all time, Gene Roddenberry's groundbreaking sci-fi classic has captured the minds and hearts of fans across generations. Joined by Mr. Spock (Leonard Nimoy) and Dr. McCoy (DeForest Kelley), Capt. James T. Kirk (William Shatner) leads the crew of the USS Enterprise on an intergalactic search for new worlds and new civilizations. |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Tomorrow is Yesterday," "Court Martial" and "The Return of the Archons." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Space Seed," "A Taste of Armageddon" and "This Side of Paradise." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "The Devil in the Dark," "Errand of Mercy" and "The Alternative Factor." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "The City on the Edge of Forever" and "Operation: Annihilate!." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "The Man Trap," "Charlie X," "Where No Man Has Gone Before" and "The Naked Time." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "The Enemy Within," "Mudd's Women," "What Are Little Girls Made Of?", "Miri" and "Dagger of the Mind." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "The Corbomite Maneuver," "The Menagerie: Part 1," "The Menagerie: Part 2" and "The Conscience of the King." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Balance of Terror," "Shore Leave," "The Galileo Seven" and "The Squire of Gothos." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Spock's Brain," "The Enterprise Incident," "The Paradise Syndrome," "And the Children Shall Lead" and "Is There In Truth No Beauty?" |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Spock's Brain," "The Enterprise Incident," "The Paradise Syndrome" and "And the Children Shall Lead." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Redemption, Part II," "Darmok," "Ensign Ro" and "Silicon Avatar." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Arena," "Tomorrow is Yesterday," "Court Martial" and "The Return of the Archons." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Spectre of the Gun," "Day of the Dove," "For the World Is Hollow and I Have Touched the Sky," "The Tholian Web" and "Plato's Stepchildren." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Is There In Truth No Beauty?," "Spectre of the Gun," "Day of the Dove" and "For the World is Hollow and I Have Touched the Sky." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Disaster," "The Game," "Unification, Part I" and "Unification, Part II." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Space Seed," "A Taste of Armageddon," "This Side of Paradise" and "The Devil in the Dark." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "The Changeling," "Mirror, Mirror," "The Apple" and "The Doomsday Machine." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Wink of an Eye," "The Empath," "Elaan of Troyius," "Whom Gods Destroy" and "Let That Be Your Last Battlefield." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "The Tholian Web," "Plato's Stepchildren," "Wink of an Eye" and "The Empath." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "A Matter of Time," "New Ground," "Hero Worship" and "Violations." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Errand of Mercy," "The Alternative Factor," "The City on the Edge of Forever" and "Operation: Annihilate!" |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Catspaw," "I, Mudd," "Metamorphosis" and "Journey to Babel." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Elaan of Troyius," "Whom Gods Destroy," "Let That Be Your Last Battlefield" and "The Mark of Gideon." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "The Masterpiece Society," "Conundrum," "Power Play" and "Ethics." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Friday's Child," "The Deadly Years," "Obsession" and "Wolf in the Fold." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "The Mark of Gideon," "That Which Survives," "The Lights of Zetar," "Requiem for Methuselah" and "The Way to Eden." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "That Which Survives," "The Lights of Zetar," "Requiem for Methuselah" and "The Way to Eden." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "The Outcast," "Cause and Effect," "The First Duty" and "Cost of Living." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "The Gamesters of Triskelion," "A Piece of the Action," "The Immunity Syndrome" and "A Private Little War." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "The Cloud Minders," "The Savage Curtain," "All Our Yesterdays" and "Turnabout Intruder." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Return to Tomorrow," "Patterns of Force," "By Any Other Name" and "The Omega Glory." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "The Cloud Minders," "The Savage Curtain," "All Our Yesterdays" and "Turnabout Intruder." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "The Cage" and "The Cage: Extended Version." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "The Perfect Mate," "Imaginary Friend," "I, Borg" and "The Next Phase." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "The Man Trap," "Charlie X" and "Where No Man Has Gone Before." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "The Ultimate Computer," "Bread and Circuses" and "Assignment: Earth." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Encounter At Fairpoint," "The Naked Now," "Code of Honor." |
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This disc includes the show's pilot, entitled "The Cage," as well as "The Cage: Extended Version." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "The Inner Light" and "Time's Arrow, Part I"; also included are several special featurettes, including a tribute to Gene Roddenberry. |
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The Cleaver boys want to buy baseball uniforms, but they're broke. Wally lands a job and works slowly, hoping to get paid more. Beaver also finds a way to make lots of money after learning the city is shutting off the water supply. |
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Beaver is left all alone when Wally starts spending lots of time with his new girlfriend, Penny. After the young couple breaks up, Wally is absolutely crushed, so Beaver selflessly decides to help his brother win Penny back. |
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Wally and Beaver's constant quarreling has June fit to be tied. In an attempt to restore order to her home, she demands that both of her sons be good and promise to do things together. But for the boys, following her orders proves challenging. |
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At his mother's request, Beaver delivers flowers to the family's new next-door neighbors, the Donaldsons. Mrs. Donaldson surprises Beaver by giving him a peck on the cheek, an act Eddie Haskell says will surely infuriate Mr. Donaldson. |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "The Trouble with Tribbles." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Time's Arrow, Part II," "Realm of Fear," "Man of the People" and "Relics." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Schisms," "True Q," "Rascals" and "A Fistful of Datas." |
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This companion disc to the tenth big-screen Star Trek adventure includes featurettes on production, the Star Trek universe and the Romulan scenes, as well as deleted scenes, archives and trailers. |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "The Quality of Life," "Chain of Command, Part I," "Chain of Command, Part II" and "Ship in a Bottle." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Aquiel," "Face of the Enemy," "Tapestry" and "Birthright, Part I." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Birthright, Part II," "Starship Mine," "Lessons" and "The Chase." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Frame of Mind," "Suspicions," "Rightful Heir" and "Second Chances." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Timescape" and "Descent, Part I," plus various special features. |
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The Bonus Disc for this popular Star Trek adventure is packed with informative featurettes covering everything from time travel in the Star Trek universe to the language of whales and visual effects. Plus, there's a Gene Rodenberry scrapbook; cast interviews; storyboards; a production gallery; the theatrical trailer and more! |
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The Bonus Disc for Star Trek: The Motion Picture contains a nice array of special features: new retrospective documentaries with cast and crew interviews ("Phase II: The Lost Enterprise," "A Bold New Enterprise" and "Redirecting the Future"); five additional scenes (from the 1979 theatrical version); eleven deleted scenes (from the 1983 TV version); a storyboard archive; eight TV spots; and three trailers. |
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This disc contains extensive interviews with the cast and crew regarding the first season of Voyager, the difficulties they faced in creating new characters, the real science incorporated into the show and more. Also included are numerous outtakes, background on the visual effects work, Easter Eggs, Star Trek's history on the Web and much more. |
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This disc contains the following episodes: "Cathexis," "Faces," "Jetrel" and "Learning Curve." |
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This disc contains the following episodes: "Emanations," "Prime Factors," "State of Flux" and "Heroes and Demons." |
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This disc contains the following episodes: "Phage," "The Cloud," "Eye of the Needle" and "Ex Post Facto." |
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This disc contains the following episodes: "Caretaker," "Parallax" and "Time and Again." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "The Best Of Both Worlds, Part II," "Family," "Brothers" and "Suddenly Human." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Beaver's Crush," "The Clubhouse," "Wally's Girl Trouble," "Beaver's Short Pants," "The Perfume Salesmen," "Voodoo Magic" and "Part Time Genius." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Party Invitation," "Lumpy Rutherford," "The Paper Route," "Child Care," "The Bank Account," "Lonesome Beaver" and "Cleaning Up Beaver." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "The Perfect Father," "Beaver and Poncho," "The State vs. Beaver," "The Broken Window," "Train Trip," "My Brother's Girl" and "Next Door Indians." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Tenting Tonight," "Music Lesson," "New Doctor," "Beaver's Old Friend," "Wally's Job," "Beaver's Bad Day" and "Boarding School." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Beaver and Henry," "Beaver Runs Away," "Beaver's Guest" and "Cat Out of the Bag." Also includes the bonus episode "It's a Small World." |
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The Bonus Disc for this popular Star Trek adventure is packed with informative featurettes covering everything from time travel in the Star Trek universe to the language of whales and visual effects. Plus, there's a Gene Rodenberry scrapbook; cast interviews; storyboards; a production gallery; the theatrical trailer and more! |
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This disc contains the following episodes: "Loud As a Whisper," "The Schizoid Man," "Unnatural Selection" and "A Matter of Honor." |
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This disc contains the following episodes: "The Measure of a Man," "The Dauphin," "Contagion" and "The Royale." |
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This disc contains the following episodes: "Time Squared," "The Icarus Factor," "Pen Pals" and "Q Who?" |
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Jessica Ann (Rachel Lemieux) is a normal 12-year-old girl who has never been nominated for her school's top honor of "Student of the Year." But Jessica Ann's Mommy (Patty McCormack, who played evil child Rhoda Penmark in the 1956 classic The Bad Seed) is obsessed with her daughter's success. When Mommy decides to take matters into her own hands by resorting to murder, everyone in her path is in danger -- including her own child. |
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This disc contains the following episodes: "Samaritan Snare," "Up the Long Ladder," "Manhunt" and "The Emissary." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Is There In Truth No Beauty?," "Spectre of the Gun," "Day of the Dove" and "For the World is Hollow and I Have Touched the Sky." |
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This disc contains the episodes "Peak Performance" and "Shades of Gray," along with special features. |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "The Tholian Web," "Plato's Stepchildren," "Wink of an Eye" and "The Empath." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Elaan of Troyius," "Whom Gods Destroy," "Let That Be Your Last Battlefield" and "The Mark of Gideon." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "That Which Survives," "The Lights of Zetar," "Requiem for Methuselah" and "The Way to Eden." |
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This disc includes episodes 31 and 32: "Metamorphosis" and "Friday's Child." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "The Cloud Minders," "The Savage Curtain," "All Our Yesterdays" and "Turnabout Intruder." |
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This disc includes episodes 33 and 34: "Who Mourns for Adonis" and "Amok Time." |
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This disc contains the following episodes: "Evolution," "The Ensigns of Command," "The Survivors" and "Who Watches the Watchers." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "The Cage" and "The Cage: Extended Version." |
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This disc includes episodes 35 and 36, "The Doomsday Machine" and "Wolf in the Fold." |
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This disc contains the following episodes: "The Bonding, " "Booby Trap," "The Enemy" and "The Price." |
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This disc includes episodes 37 and 38, "The Changeling" and "The Apple." |
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This disc contains the following episodes: "The Vengeance Factor," "The Defector," "The Hunted" and "The High Ground." |
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This disc includes episodes 39 and 40, "Mirror, Mirror" and "The Deadly Years." |
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This disc contains the following episodes: "Deja Q," "A Matter of Perspective," "Yesterday's Enterprise" and "The Offspring." |
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Jessica Ann (Rachel Lemieux) is a normal 12-year-old girl who has never been nominated for her school's top honor of "Student of the Year." But Jessica Ann's Mommy (Patty McCormack, who played evil child Rhoda Penmark in the 1956 classic The Bad Seed) is obsessed with her daughter's success. When Mommy d... |
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This disc includes episodes 41 and 42, "I, Mudd" and "The Trouble with Tribbles." |
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This disc contains the following episodes: "Sins of the Father," "Allegiance," "Captain's Holiday" and "Tin Man." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Amok Time," "Who Mourns for Adonais?," "The Changeling" and "Mirror, Mirror." |
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This disc includes episodes 43 and 44, "Bread and Circuses" and "Journey to Babel." |
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This disc contains the following episodes: "Hollow Pursuits," "The Most Toys," "Sarek" and "Menage a Troi." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "The Apple," "The Doomsday Machine," "Catspaw," "I, Mudd" and "Metamorphosis." |
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This disc includes episodes 45 and 46, "A Private Little War" and "The Gamesters of Triskelion." |
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This disc contains the following episodes: "Transfigurations," "The Best of Both Worlds, Part I" and special features. |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Journey to Babel," "Friday's Child," "The Deadly Years," "Obsession" and "Wolf in the Fold." |
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This disc includes episodes 47 and 48, "Obsession" and "The Immunity Syndrome." |
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This disc includes the episode "The Trouble With Tribbles." |
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This disc includes episodes 49 and 50, "A Piece of the Action" and "By Any Other Name." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "The Gamesters of Triskelion," "A Piece of the Action," "The Immunity Syndrome" and "A Private Little War." |
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This disc includes episodes 51 and 52, "Return to Tomorrow" and "Patterns of Force." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Return to Tomorrow," "Patterns of Force," "By Any Other Name" and "The Omega Glory." |
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This disc includes episodes 53 and 54, "The Ultimate Computer" and "The Omega Glory." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "The Ultimate Computer," "Bread and Circuses" and "Assignment: Earth." |
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In "Assignment: Earth," the Enterprise encounters Gary Seven (Robert Lansing), who says he has been sent by advanced beings trying to help the planet. In "Spectre of the Gun," Captain Kirk (William Shatner) must reenact a famous shootout. These two episodes from one of television's most prominent sci-fi shows explore time travel as well as relations with the Melkotians, the mysterious inhabitants of Theta Kiokis II. |
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Go back to where it all began -- aboard the &NFi;Enterprise&NFi_;, helmed by Capt. James T. Kirk (William Shatner) and his first officer, Spock (Leonard Nimoy). On a mission to explore space, Kirk, Spock and the rest of the crew -- including Dr. McCoy (DeForest Kelley) and Scotty (James Doohan) -- encounter a host of strange phenomena and alien races. This series includes the first 15 volumes of Gene Roddenberry's groundbreaking show. |
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This disc contains the following episodes: "Evolution," "The Ensigns of Command," "The Survivors" and "Who Watches the Watchers." |
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This disc contains the following episodes: "The Bonding, " "Booby Trap," "The Enemy" and "The Price." |
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This disc contains the following episodes: "The Vengeance Factor," "The Defector," "The Hunted" and "The High Ground." |
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This disc contains the following episodes: "Deja Q," "A Matter of Perspective," "Yesterday's Enterprise" and "The Offspring." |
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This disc contains the following episodes: "Sins of the Father," "Allegiance," "Captain's Holiday" and "Tin Man." |
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This disc contains the following episodes: "The Child," "Where the Silence Has Lease," "Elementary, Dear Data" and "The Outrageous Okona." |
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This disc contains the following episodes: "Hollow Pursuits," "The Most Toys," "Sarek" and "Menage a Troi." |
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This disc contains the following episodes: "Loud As a Whisper," "The Schizoid Man," "Unnatural Selection" and "A Matter of Honor." |
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This disc contains the following episodes: "Transfigurations," "The Best of Both Worlds, Part I" and special features. |
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This disc contains the following episodes: "The Measure of a Man," "The Dauphin," "Contagion" and "The Royale." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "The Best Of Both Worlds, Part II," "Family," "Brothers" and "Suddenly Human." |
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This disc contains the following episodes: "Time Squared," "The Icarus Factor," "Pen Pals" and "Q Who?" |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Remember Me," "Legacy," "Reunion" and "Future Imperfect." |
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This disc contains the following episodes: "Samaritan Snare," "Up the Long Ladder," "Manhunt" and "The Emissary." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Final Mission," "The Loss," "Data's Day" and "The Wounded." |
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This disc contains the episodes "Peak Performance" and "Shades of Gray," along with special features. |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Devil's Due," "Clues," "First Contact" and "Galaxy's Child." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Night Terrors," "Identity Crisis," "The Nth Degree" and "Qpid." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "The Drumhead," "Half A Life," "The Host" and "The Mind's Eye." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Aquiel," "Face of the Enemy," "Tapestry" and "Birthright, Part I." |
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This disc includes the episodes "In Theory" and "Redemption, Part I," plus bonus features. |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Birthright, Part II," "Starship Mine," "Lessons" and "The Chase." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Disaster," "The Game," "Unification, Part I" and "Unification, Part II." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Frame of Mind," "Suspicions," "Rightful Heir" and "Second Chances." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "A Matter of Time," "New Ground," "Hero Worship" and "Violations." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Timescape" and "Descent, Part I," plus various special features. |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "The Masterpiece Society," "Conundrum," "Power Play" and "Ethics." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Descent, Part II," "Liaisons," "Interface" and "Gambit, Part I." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "The Outcast," "Cause and Effect," "The First Duty" and "Cost of Living." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Gambit, Part II," "Phantasms," "Dark Page" and "Attached." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "The Perfect Mate," "Imaginary Friend," "I, Borg" and "The Next Phase." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Force of Nature," "Inheritance," "Parallels" and "The Pegasus." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "The Inner Light" and "Time's Arrow, Part I"; also included are several special featurettes, including a tribute to Gene Roddenberry. |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Homeward," "Sub Rosa," "Lower Decks" and "Thine Own Self." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Time's Arrow, Part II," "Realm of Fear," "Man of the People" and "Relics." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Masks," "Eye of the Beholder," "Genesis" and "Journey's End." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Schisms," "True Q," "Rascals" and "A Fistful of Datas." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Encounter At Fairpoint," "The Naked Now," "Code of Honor." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "The Quality of Life," "Chain of Command, Part I," "Chain of Command, Part II" and "Ship in a Bottle." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "The Last Outpost," "Where No One Has Gone Before," "Lonely Among Us," "Justice." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "First Born," "Bloodlines," "Emergence" and "Preemptive Strike." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "The Battle," "Hide and Q," "Haven," "The Big Goodbye." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Datalore," "Angel One," "11001001," "Too Short a Season." |
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This disc includes the complete "All Good Things" episode, plus various special features. |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "When The Bough Breaks," "Home Soil," "Coming of Age," "Heart of Glory." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "The Arsenal of Freedom," "Symbiosis," "Skin of Evil," "We'll Always Have Paris." |
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This disc includes the episodes "Conspiracy" and "The Neutral Zone," along with bonus features. |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Amok Time," "Who Mourns for Adonais?," "The Changeling" and "Mirror, Mirror." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Beaver Gets 'Spelled'," "Captain Jack," "The Black Eye," "The Haircut," "New Neighbors," "Brotherly Love" and "Water, Anyone?" |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "The Apple," "The Doomsday Machine," "Catspaw," "I, Mudd" and "Metamorphosis." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Journey to Babel," "Friday's Child," "The Deadly Years," "Obsession" and "Wolf in the Fold." |
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This disc includes the episode "The Trouble With Tribbles." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "The Gamesters of Triskelion," "A Piece of the Action," "The Immunity Syndrome" and "A Private Little War." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Return to Tomorrow," "Patterns of Force," "By Any Other Name" and "The Omega Glory." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "The Ultimate Computer," "Bread and Circuses" and "Assignment: Earth." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "The Naked Time," "The Enemy Within" and "Mudd's Women." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "What Are Little Girls Made Of?," "Miri" and "Dagger of the Mind." |
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This disc includes episodes 2 and 3, "Where No Man Has Gone Before" and "The Corbomite Maneuver." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "The Corbomite Maneuver," "The Menagerie: Part 1" and "The Menagerie: Part 2." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "The Conscience of the King," "Balance of Terror" and "Shore Leave." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "The Galileo Seven," "The Squire of Gothos" and "Arena." |
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This disc includes the following episodes: "Tomorrow is Yesterday," "Court Martial" and "The Return of the Archons." |
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