At the beginning of each episode of Star Trek, Captain Kirk informed us that the crew of the starship Enterprise was on a five-year mission to
explore strange new worlds and so on. Unfortunately, he and the rest of the
gang never got to finish their mission on TV because hostile aliens from the
planet NBC aborted it after just three years.
In light of season-three’s high ratio of stinker episodes
like “Spock’s Brain” and “Turnabout Intruder”, Star Trek’s early cancellation may have actually been merciful, though
there were more tales worth telling in that universe, hence the franchise’s
healthy life beyond 1969.
One of the most recent continuations of the Star Trek story returns us to its
origins to complete the Enterprise’s
original mission. Star Trek: Year Five
is a comic series from IDW that began last April, and the groovy thing about
this series is how faithful it is to the original series at its best. Like that
original, Year Five is the work of
multiple writers and multiple directors—or in this case, artists—yet all are
dedicated to recreating the Star Trek
we know and love in terms of storytelling, characterizations, themes, and
visuals. While the art style varies from issue to issue, it never becomes so
stylized that we cannot recognize the faces of Shatner, Nimoy, Nichols, and the
rest. As soon as Bones orders Kirk to drink brandy on the job in “episode” one
(these are episodes, not issues), we are transported right back to the sixties.
Fortunately, that period flavor does not extend to its treatment of Uhura, who
gets a much bigger role throughout these comics than she did in the original
series (Sulu, however, tends to get sidelined).