Posts Tagged ‘Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan’

Interesting Essay on Acting in Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan

Monday, June 13th, 2016

Here’s an interesting piece on the acting in Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan.

You could study Wrath of Khan as a portrait of different performing styles. Consider William Shatner and Leonard Nimoy, and a central paradox of their chemistry. Spock is the alien – a being who strives to rid himself of all emotion – but past a certain point, you notice how Nimoy is a much more natural performer, communicating so much with droll phrasing lilts and micro-gestures. Whereas the human Kirk is played by Shatner, one of Hollywood’s great experts in hyperbole. (Khan is Shatner at his most wide-eyed.) As a young actor, Nimoy learned the Method and idolized Brando; Shatner came up performing energetic Shakespeare. That doesn’t make one better nor one worse – the dissonance is the key – but it adds layers to their pairing. You associate Spock with explicit stiffness – he’s a freaking Vulcan – but Nimoy’s acting is maybe more “cinematic,” eye-focused, while Shatner is more “theatrical,” full-bodied.

Plus a lot about how director Nicholas Meyer sets up shots for maximum effect.

It’s a very interesting essay on the best Star Trek movie. Read the whole thing.

(Hat tip: Derek Johnson.)