Premiered:
Jun 4, 1982
Director: Nicholas Meyer
Screenplay: Jack B. Sowards
Story: Harve Bennett and Jack B. Sowards
Music: James Horner
Stardate: 8130.4
The cast:
- James T. Kirk: William Shatner
- Spock: Leonard Nimoy
- Leonard "Bones" McCoy: Deforest Kelley
- Chekov: Walter Koenig
- Sulu: George Takei
- Uhura: Nichelle Nichols
- Kahn: Ricardo Montalban
- Lt. Saavik: Kirstie Alley
- Dr. Carol Marcus: Bibi Besch
- Dr. David Marcus: Merritt Butrick
"Captain"
Saavik, a Vulcan lieutenant in Starfleet, manages to lose to the Kobayashi Maru
simulator's preprogrammed no-win situation, like every other cadet ever to take
the test (with a single exception). Spock, now Captain of the Enterprise, returns
to the ship to prepare for Kirk's upcoming pre launch inspection after dismissing
the students from the simulator exercise. Kirk returns home and is visited by
Dr. McCoy, who, after presenting him with a birthday present, tells Kirk that
his abilities are wasted on a desk job and that he should resume his command
of a starship.
USS Reliant, on assignment searching for lifeless planets
as potential test sites for the top secret Genesis project, arrives at Ceti
Alpha V. Beaming down, Captain Terrell and his first officer, Commander Chekov,
discover a series of cargo bays formerly of the SS Botany Bay, a vessel full
of genetically engineered supermen from late 20th century Earth led by the cunning
Khan. Chekov urges Terrell to return to the Reliant, but they are captured by
Khan and his followers. Khan, after fifteen years, is still seeking revenge
against Kirk for exiling the Botany Bay's crew. Khan infests Chekov and Terrell
with Ceti eels, which affect the brain and make their victims susceptible to
suggestion, although the eels' victims will eventually go mad and die painfully.
Khan hijacks the Reliant and has Chekov contact space station Regula 1, where
the Genesis project is being developed by Dr. Carol Marcus, an old flame of
Kirk's, along with a team of scientists including her son David. Chekov says
that Kirk has ordered the Genesis device to be transferred to the Reliant upon
arrival for immediate testing. David Marcus fears the worst, always suspicious
of Starfleet's motives concerning the Genesis project. Carol contacts Kirk while
the Enterprise is on a cadet cruise. Kirk takes command of the ship and sets
it on a course to the station.
En route, Kirk, Spock and McCoy review a presentation prepared by Carol which
reveals that the Genesis "torpedo" is a device which will, when fired on a lifeless
planet, restructure it into a verdant, life-supporting world ready for colonization.
The Enterprise arrives at Regula 1 and is fired upon by the Reliant, which,
since the shields were not raised in the presence of a presumably friendly ship,
causes critical damage to the Enterprise and kills many of the unprepared cadets.
Khan reveals himself and demands that Kirk surrender himself, but Kirk bluffs
Khan into giving him time to consider. Kirk overrides Reliant's shields by remote
control and returns fire, forcing Khan to retreat. Kirk, Saavik and McCoy beam
down to the space station, finding most of the scientists slaughtered and the
Genesis device missing. They do find Chekov and Terrell, apparently left for
dead by Khan although the Reliant officers are actually keeping an eye on Kirk
for their master. Deducing that the Genesis team must have had an underground
test site on the dead planetoid Regula that the station orbits, Kirk gambles
on beaming down into the surface under the station. There, they find the Genesis
device, but are ambushed by David and one of the other scientists. Terrell kills
the other scientist, and then contacts Khan, who orders Terrell and Chekov to
kill Kirk. Terrell goes mad and kills himself, while Chekov collapses and the
Ceti eel vacates his body. Khan beams the Genesis device up to Reliant. McCoy
begins tending to Chekov as Kirk and Carol discuss why David - their son - remained
with Carol and became a scientist himself. They all go deeper into the test
area and find a lush cave with vegetation and a waterfall, created by a fraction
of the Genesis device's power. Kirk then reveals to Saavik that he became the
only cadet in history to beat the Kobayashi Maru test by reprogramming the simulator,
which elicits a comment from David that Kirk has never had to deal with death
on a personal basis. Reliant returns to the station after makeshift repairs,
but the Enterprise is nowhere to be seen.
The Enterprise, apparently contradicting the repair estimates
of an earlier communication between Kirk and Spock which Kirk realized that
Khan would be eavesdropping on, arrives and retrieves Kirk and the others while
hiding behind the other side of Regula. Kirk orders the ship into the nearby
Mutara Nebula, where sensors of both ships will not function. Khan is unable
to resist the chance to pursue, and plunges into the nebula behind the Enterprise.
In the ensuing battle, the Enterprise's warp drive is damaged. Sulu manages
a few lucky shots of his own, crippling the Reliant and killing most of Khan's
crew, but the dying Khan is unwilling to admit defeat and prepares to detonate
the Genesis device at point blank range, which will destroy both ships. Scotty
is unable to repair the engines, and Spock rushes to engineering without a word
to anyone (except for what seems to be a very quick mind-meld with Dr. McCoy),
forgoing safety precautions and entering the radiation-saturated engine chamber
to repair the warp engines. When Spock finishes his task, Kirk orders the ship
out of the nebula at top speed. The Reliant explodes, initiating the full Genesis
effect on Regula, as Kirk, receiving a message from McCoy, hurries to engineering
only to see Spock die from massive radiation poisoning. Spock's body is loaded
into a torpedo casing, which is fired at the Genesis planet. David admits that
he may have misjudged Kirk and says he is proud to be his son, while the crew
reflects on Spock's sacrifice and the marvel of Regula's transformation into
a world of its own.
The Wrath of Khan