A television movie based on the futurist story by William Shatner.A television movie based on the futurist story by William Shatner.A television movie based on the futurist story by William Shatner.
- Awards
- 1 nomination
Photos
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaWilliam Shatner first conceived the idea of TekWar while directing Star Trek V: The Final Frontier (1989).
- Quotes
Beth Kittridge: I'm an android. A Level 10.
Jake Cardigan: At least.
- ConnectionsFollowed by TekWar: TekLords (1994)
Featured review
An okay film, but could've been better if it wasn't for all of the 90's B-movie clichés
I don't know how the books are compared to this movie, because I never read them. I hope their better though.
The basic plot of the story is Jake is a former cop who supposedly killed his teammates when they were trying to stop a drug lord. As a result, he's framed and sentenced to be cryogenically frozen. The character, Bascom, grants him early parole so Jake can stop the Tek drug from becoming an epidemic.
Although that plot sounds interesting on paper, it didn't work as well as I thought when I was watching it on YouTube. It wasn't given much praise by critics anyway. Here are some problems I had with it: The book setting is supposed to be portrayed in the 22 century. The movie setting ends up being a 90's semi-futuristic B-movie.
The acting and plot are okay, but fall short and become boring after a while.
The 90's B-movie tech and special effects often become a distraction from the acting and plot.
Being that this was a TV movie, its typical that it didn't have a big budget. However, I don't know if having a bigger budget would've saved it. Maybe if Hollywood decided to make this a stand-alone feature film, they could make it well enough that it becomes an A-movie and finally saves this franchise.
The basic plot of the story is Jake is a former cop who supposedly killed his teammates when they were trying to stop a drug lord. As a result, he's framed and sentenced to be cryogenically frozen. The character, Bascom, grants him early parole so Jake can stop the Tek drug from becoming an epidemic.
Although that plot sounds interesting on paper, it didn't work as well as I thought when I was watching it on YouTube. It wasn't given much praise by critics anyway. Here are some problems I had with it: The book setting is supposed to be portrayed in the 22 century. The movie setting ends up being a 90's semi-futuristic B-movie.
The acting and plot are okay, but fall short and become boring after a while.
The 90's B-movie tech and special effects often become a distraction from the acting and plot.
Being that this was a TV movie, its typical that it didn't have a big budget. However, I don't know if having a bigger budget would've saved it. Maybe if Hollywood decided to make this a stand-alone feature film, they could make it well enough that it becomes an A-movie and finally saves this franchise.
helpful•18
- americanbanksta
- Jul 5, 2015
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