| | | The Show Was Cancelled...But the Adventure Has Only Begun. Features: DVD For four years, the courageous crew of the NSEA Protector -- "Commander Peter Qunicy Taggart" (Tim Allen), "Lt. Tawny Madison" (Sigourney Weaver), and "Dr. Lazarus" (Alan Rickman) -- set off on thrilling and often dangerous missions in space...and then their series was canceled!Now, twenty years later, aliens under attack have mistaken the Galaxy Quest television transmissions for "historical documents" and beamed up the crew of has-been actors to save the universe. With no script, no director, and no clue, the actors must turn in the performances of their lives in this hilarious adventure Jeffrey Lyons (NBC-TV) calls "The funniest, wittiest comedy of the year." "Whip smart and loudly funny!" Dennis Cunningham, WCBS-TV "Two thumbs up!" Roger Ebert And Harry Knowles, Roger Ebert & The Movies "The funniest, wittiest comedy of the year!" Jeffrey Lyons, NBC-TV "An exceptionally funny science-fiction comedy." Bob Stephens, San Francisco Examiner "An affectionate, often clever and unflaggingly funny satire." Jonathan Foreman, New York Post "A fast, loose, and very funny parody that pulls off the not-so-simple feat of tweaking Trekkies and honoring them." Lisa Schwarzbaum, Entertainment Weekly "...a thoroughly satisfying comedy -- and a respectable space adventure, as well." Mick LaSalle, San Francisco Chronicle
 Editor's Note
 GALAXY QUEST is a satirical comedy that pokes fun at the influence science fiction shows such as STAR TREK have had on their audience. The cast members of the cult sci-fi television series GALAXY QUEST now earn their livings appearing at conventions and grand openings, led by their bombastic captain Jason Nesmith, played by Tim Allen. When an alien race--the Thermians--arrives on earth, it appears that they have mistakenly appropriated the show's culture as their own, thinking the series was actual fact. Desperate for help in battling the evil General Sarris, they bring the actors with them into space to save their planet. A surprisingly smart and funny send-up of the science-fiction culture and the influence television has on the world at large, GALAXY QUEST is a comedy that even nongenre fans can enjoy, with terrific turns by Sigourney Weaver, Alan Rickman, Sam Rockwell, and Tony Shalhoub.
| Features | Production Notes |  | Behind-The-Scenes Featurette |  | Theatrical Trailer |  | Cast & Crew Bios |
| Entertainment Reviews
 | Galaxy Quest - DVD Review By: Christopher Null - filmcritic.com DVD Reviews Published on: 5/1/2009 5:39 PM | |
Just when you thought "high concept" couldn't get any lower....And just when you thought lowbrow humor couldn't be funny any more....That's right, it's an amazing double negative that hasn't successfully been pulled off since South Park: A movie that's incredibly stupid yet fall-down funny. How stupid? Here's the plot: Washed-up actors from a 1960s sci-fi TV show called Galaxy Quest are mistaken for a real starship crew and are whisked to the stars to do battle with an evil entity. How funny? Well, it's not South Park funny, but it's frankly one of the better comedies of its year....read the full review |
| Technical Info
| Release Information
|  | Studio: Dreamworks (Universal) |
 | Release Date: 12/26/2005 |
 | Running Time: 102 minutes |
 | Original Release Date: 1999 |  | Catalog ID: 86017 |  | UPC: 00667068601725 |  | Number of Discs: 1 | Audio & Video
|  | Original Language: English |  | Available Audio Tracks: English [CC], English |  | Video: Color | Aspect Ratio |  | Anamorphic Widescreen 2.35:1 |
| Cast & Crew
| Memorable Quotes| "Never give up, never surrender!"----Captain Jason Nesmith (Tim Allen) |
|
| | Professional Reviews | Variety "...Mischievously clever..." 12/20/1999 pp.57-62Premiere "...The expert cast is more than game. Extra points to [Rickman and Weaver]..." -- 3 out of 5 stars 06/01/2000 pp.100-1 USA Today "...Genuinely imaginative special effects which manage to recognisably in the spirit of the cheesy originals..." 05/01/2000 p.48-9 Box Office "...This tightly scripted, lightning-paced laffer delightfully pulls all the elements together and builds to a giddy and gleeful climax..." 02/01/2000 p.57 Los Angeles Times "...Fast, light and funny, GALAXY QUEST has a wide, generation-spanning appeal -- and you don't have to be a die-hard Trekkie to enjoy it..." 12/24/1999 p.C2 Entertainment Weekly "...[With] Enrio Colantoni scoring as a marble-mouthed alien; and a deeply funny Sam Rockwell as the crew member-extra..." 04/28/2000 p.83 James Berardinelli's ReelViews 8 of 10 Galaxy Quest has a good time playing with different aspects of science fiction in general, and Star Trek in particular. And, although it isn't necessary to come armed with an encyclopedic knowledge of the original Star Trek TV series to enjoy this movie, the better you know Galaxy Quest's inspiration, the more you will get out of this picture. ReelViews 8 of 10 Back in the years when Star Trek was still a cult phenomenon (instead of a mainstream cash cow for Paramount Pictures), fan fiction was about the only way Trekkies could experience the latest exploits of their favorite characters. One of the more inventive examples of such writing was called "Visit to a Weird Planet Revisited" (by Ruth Berman). The premise underlying this story is that a transporter malfunction causes three Star Trek characters (from an alternate universe) to switch places with the actors playing them. Consequently, William Shatner finds himself in command of a very real starship out in space that is under attack by the nefarious Klingons. This same central conceit forms the basis of the movie Galaxy Quest, except that the TV show in question is only Star Trek in spirit, not in fact...The actors do solid jobs. Tim Allen, who is almost certainly on hand to broaden the film's appeal, doesn't attempt to mimic Shatner or Kirk, but there are times when certain mannerisms make it apparent that he has seen a few Star Trek episodes. Sigourney Weaver, trying to get as far away from Ripley as possible, goes through the film as a blonde who displays ample cleavage (she credits the costume designers with "supporting" her in this area). Alan Rickman is suitably dour and Tony Shalhoub has his moments. Meanwhile, Sam Rockwell is on hand as someone who had a walk-on part being killed off in a Galaxy Quest episode, and is now afraid the same thing is going to happen in real life...Galaxy Quest has a good time playing with different aspects of science fiction in general, and Star Trek in particular. And, although it isn't necessary to come armed with an encyclopedic knowledge of the original Star Trek TV series to enjoy this movie, the better you know Galaxy Quest's inspiration, the more you will get out of this picture. - James Berardinelli Chicago Sun-Times 8 of 10 One of my favorite moments in "Galaxy Quest" takes place as a Red Digital Readout is ticking off the second until a spaceship is blown to smithereens. The only person who can save it is a teenage science fiction fan far away on Earth--and he has just been ordered by his mother to take out the garbage. But then the ship is saved! How? I won't spoil the moment, except to say the ship is modeled in every possible respect on a ship that appears on a TV show, and that includes a digital readout that is also consistent with TV cliches..."Galaxy Quest" begins at a convention for the fans of a cult TV program not a million light years removed from "Star Trek." Anyone who has seen "Trekkies," the documentary about "Star Trek" fans, will recognize this world at once--a world of fanatics who take the show very seriously indeed, packing hotel ballrooms to screen classic episodes of the show and get autographs from its aging cast members...Backstage in a dressing room, Alexander Dane (Alan Rickman), who played an alien who was a doctor on the show, vows, "I won't say that stupid line one more time." Other cast members are enraged that the show's star is late as usual. He is Jason Nesmith (Tim Allen), who plays Cmdr. Peter Quincy Taggart and is not a million light years removed from William Shatner. The heroine is Gwen DeMarco (Sigourney Weaver), who plays Lt. Tawny Madison and complains that TV Guide only interviewed her about her boobs...The movie's humor works best when the illogic of the TV show gets in the way. There is on board, for example, a passageway blocked by alternating vertical and horizontal clappers that smash back and forth across the passageway. Negotiating it could be fatal. Why are they there? No reason. Just because they look good on TV. - Roger Ebert
|
| |
|
|
|