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Author: Kendall McKeithan
Class/Section: COIN 61
Date Created: April 18, 2010
Time: 1:47PM
Copyright 2010 H Tags and Alignment
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COIN 61 Lab Practice One
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COIN 61 Lab Practice One
H Tags and Alignment
<h1>Star Trek: the Motion Picture 1</h1>
<h2>Star Trek II</h2>
<h3>Star Trek III</h3>
<h4>Star Trek IV</h4>
<h5>Star Trek V</h5>
<h6>Star Trek VI</h6>
<h5>Star Trek Generations</h5>
<h4>Star Trek: First Contact</h4>
<h3>Star Trek: Insurrection</h3>
<h2>Star Trek: Nemesis</h2>
<h1>Initially appearing in 1966, the original "Star Trek" is a utopian fantasy of the first order, a vision
of the enlightened future in which whites, blacks, Asians and one poker-faced Vulcan are united
by their exploratory mission ("to boldly go"), a prime directive (no intervention) and the
occasional dust-up.</h1>
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<itl>Written by Roberto Orci and Alex Kurtzman</itl> [italic/emphasis]
<b>Directed by J. J. Abrams</b> [bold/strong]
<h2>Working with Text</h2>
<h3>An original story directed with a sure touch and perfect tone by J. J. Abrams, the fully loaded
film - a showcase for big-studio hardware, software, muscled boys who can act and leggy girls
who aren't required to - turns back the narrative clock to the moment before the main characters
first assembled on the deck of the U.S.S. Enterprise, a sleek spacecraft that invariably sails
into intergalactic storms.
Zachary Quinto as Spock and Chris Pine as James T. Kirk in "Star Trek." </h3>
<p>Kirk and Spock don't meet in person until they're adults - now played by Chris Pine and Zachary
Quinto - at Starfleet Academy, which, in keeping with the show's liberal leanings, is in San
Francisco.
Mr. Quinto (bold and italic) lets you see and hear the struggle between the human and the
Vulcan in Spock through the emotions that ripple across his face and periodically throw off his
unmodulated phrasing.
<b><itl>Mr. Pine has the harder job (bold and italic) - he has to invoke Mr. Shatner's sui generis
performance while transcending its excesses - which makes his nuanced interpretation all the
more potent.</itl></b>
A bright, shiny blast from a newly imagined past, "Star Trek," the latest spinoff from the
influential television show, isn't just a pleasurable rethink of your geek uncle's favorite science-
fiction series. It's also a testament to television's power as mythmaker, as a source for some of
the fundamental stories we tell about ourselves, who we are and where we came from. The
famous captain (William Shatner, bless his loony lights) and creator (Gene Roddenberry, rest in
peace) may no longer be on board, but the spirit of adventure and embrace of rationality that
define the show are in full swing, as are the chicks in minis and kicky boots.
"Star Trek" is rated PG-13 (Parents strongly cautioned). Some intense but bloodless action.
1. Text in this assignment taken from a review of Star Trek in the New York Times by Manohla
Dargus, published: May 8th , 2009.</p>
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