Immagine dell'autore.

Roberto Orci

Autore di Star Trek [2009 film]

29+ opere 4,663 membri 50 recensioni

Sull'Autore

Comprende il nome: Roberto Orci

Fonte dell'immagine: Roberto Orci speaking at the 2014 San Diego Comic-Con International in San Diego, California. By Gage Skidmore, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=58197738

Serie

Opere di Roberto Orci

Star Trek [2009 film] (2009) — Screenwriter — 1,195 copie
Transformers [2007 film] (2007) — Screenwriter — 764 copie
Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen [2009 film] (2009) — Screenwriter — 540 copie
Star Trek: Countdown (2009) 375 copie
Cowboys & Aliens [2011 film] (2011) — Screenwriter — 354 copie
The Island [2005 film] (1930) — Writer — 281 copie
The Legend of Zorro [2005 film] (2005) — Screenwriter — 276 copie
Fringe: The Complete First Season (2010) — Creator — 151 copie
Fringe: The Complete Second Season (2010) — Creator — 109 copie
Fringe: The Complete Third Season (2011) — Creator — 102 copie
Countdown to Darkness (2013) — Autore — 81 copie
Fringe: The Complete Fifth and Final Season (2013) — Creator — 80 copie
Nero (2010) 56 copie
Fringe: The Complete Series (2009) — Creator — 49 copie
Sleepy Hollow: The Complete First Season (2014) — Creator — 49 copie
Star Trek: Countdown #1 (2009) — Autore — 22 copie
People Like Us [2012 film] (2012) — Writer — 17 copie
Sleepy Hollow Ssn 4 (2014) — Creator. — 8 copie
Star Trek: Countdown #2 (2010) — Autore — 5 copie
Star Trek: Countdown #3 (2010) — Autore — 5 copie
Star Trek: Countdown #4 (2010) — Autore — 4 copie
Transformers (2009) 4 copie
Fringe #1 — Autore — 2 copie

Opere correlate

Mission: Impossible III (Full Screen Edition) (2006) — Screenwriter — 445 copie
The Amazing Spider-Man 2 [2014 film] (2014) — Writer — 314 copie
Eagle Eye [2008 film] (2008) — Producer — 239 copie
Star Trek, Volume 1 (2012) — Creative Consultant — 120 copie
Alias: The Complete Third Season (2004) — Writer — 87 copie
Star Trek, Volume 2 (2012) — Creative Consultant — 82 copie
Star Trek, Volume 3 (2012) — Creative Consultant — 55 copie
Khan (2014) — Story Consultant — 40 copie
Star Trek: The Official Motion Picture Adaptation (2010) — Screenplay — 32 copie
Star Trek: The New Adventures, Volume 3 (2016) — Creative Consultant — 14 copie

Etichette

2009 (11) alieni (12) Anni 2000 (13) Avventura (56) Azione (152) Blu-ray (88) cinema (47) Comic book (16) da leggere (15) Dramma (15) DVD (436) DVDs (17) Fantascienza (385) Fantasy (19) film (135) Film (60) fringe (19) Fumetti (46) fumetto (22) Horror (11) IDW (11) letto (12) motion pictures (11) Narrativa (62) occidentale (32) Paranormale (19) PG-13 (18) Robot (12) romanzi grafici (20) Romanzo grafico (66) Serie (30) serie tv (71) SF (18) Star Trek (177) Televisione (46) Thriller (27) Transformers (22) TV on DVD (12) Video (13) watched (25)

Informazioni generali

Data di nascita
1973
Sesso
male
Nazionalità
USA
Luogo di nascita
Mexico City, Mexico
Attività lavorative
Film producer
screenwriter

Utenti

Recensioni

I don't normally read graphic novels or comic books, but I bought this for my 10 year old because we love all things Star Trek. It's a quick engaging read and tells us the fate of The Next Generation characters following their last movie, "Nemesis" released in 2002, as well as being a prequel to the first Star Trek movie featuring younger versions of the original characters (2009). Suffice it to say, time travel is involved.

Recommended if you have seen the movies and are into Star Trek.
 
Segnalato
amurray914 | 17 altre recensioni | Feb 27, 2024 |
Resilience
 
Segnalato
BooksInMirror | 5 altre recensioni | Feb 19, 2024 |
So that's how Nero became Nero and had that amazingly big and nasty ship that travels through time in pursuit of Spock. This is the missing prequel to the most recent Star Trek reboot movie. The book makes pretty good use of the characters from Star Trek: The Next Generation, although it is a bit trite that they are the ones that are constantly called out to save the universe. They almost do it, too.
 
Segnalato
zot79 | 17 altre recensioni | Aug 20, 2023 |
James T. Kirk is just about to be born when the Federation starship USS Kelvin is suddenly attacked by a Romulan ship. As the ship's acting captain, Kirk's father sacrifices his own life to give more people a chance to evacuate.

Years later, Kirk is a roguish Starfleet cadet who finds himself at odds with a young Spock. When the Romulan ship that killed Kirk's father suddenly reappears, Kirk and Spock must learn to work together in order to keep it from destroying everything they love.

Or at least that's as much as I can say without going into too many spoilers. There's not actually a whole lot to the story.
I'll start off by saying that, although I was a fan of Star Trek: Enterprise, Voyager, and some of movies based on the original series, I was never actually much of a fan of the original series. I'd watched a few episodes (I distinctly remember one in which the alien beast was clearly footage of a domestic cat that was still wearing its collar), but it never really grew on me. Which is to say that I may have a different perspective on this movie than a diehard fan of the original series.

This movie felt like a character cameo vehicle, and that's even without all the actor cameos that were originally planned, according to the Wikipedia article for the movie. Which wasn't necessarily a bad thing. I enjoyed recognizing the younger versions of all the original series characters, although the one I thought was most effectively cast was Zachary Quinto as Spock. Chris Pine was good as Kirk, but he was better when he shared the screen with Quinto's Spock.

The story was...okay, if a tad long. This was my second time watching the movie (first was in the theater), and I was left with several questions. I initially assumed that the Romulans had somehow managed to jump forward in time a little more, to catch up with Spock, but this time around I noted the dialogue stating that they'd waited 25 years for Spock to arrive. Where did they wait? Why did no one find or notice them? Also, how did average Romulan miners figure out how to use red matter? And what even is red matter? No one ever asked that question, not even Kirk, who should have been as clueless as me.

All in all, this was okay, but it did leave a somewhat sour taste that the action was more memorable than the destruction of an entire alien homeworld. Does the next movie even bring that up? I can't remember, but I have a feeling it didn't get the time and emotional weight that something that horrible and enormous should have.

Extras:

A gag reel that wasn't particularly funny, a commentary I didn't listen to, and a "making of" featurette that had some interesting info.

(Original review posted on A Library Girl's Familiar Diversions.)
… (altro)
 
Segnalato
Familiar_Diversions | 6 altre recensioni | Jul 24, 2022 |

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Statistiche

Opere
29
Opere correlate
11
Utenti
4,663
Popolarità
#5,405
Voto
½ 3.7
Recensioni
50
ISBN
105
Lingue
3

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