J.J.'s Star Trek Beams to '09

Much anticipated prequel, originally slated for Christmas release, bumped to May 8, 2009

By Natalie Finn Feb 14, 2008 6:07 AMTags

The revamped USS Enterprise won't be docking anywhere soon this Christmas.  

Paramount has pushed the release of J.J. Abrams' Star Trek from Dec. 25 to May 8, 2009, part of a larger scheduling shift now that the writers' strike is over and producers can look realistically at their films' ETAs. 

Abrams' much anticipated addition to the franchise, which will take fans back to Kirk and Spock's formative years, is now due out on the Thursday before Mother's Day. 

To date, no other film jockeying for the same audience is slated to be released at the same time. The only possible eyeball-stealers at the moment are 20th Century Fox's X-Men Origins: Wolverine, which is due in theaters May 1, 2009, and Sony's Da Vinci Code prequel Angels and Demons

So, while moviegoers couldn't turn around during the summer of '07 without smacking into a threequel, the summer of 2009 is shaping up to be the season of the prequel. 

And there are plenty of Trekkies out there displeased to find their Christmas Day plans have been turned asunder, although plenty like the fact that Paramount seems confident enough in its product to make it a warm-weather movie.

"I'm psyched that this gives them more time to do their stuff to make as good a film as possible, but also, I can't help thinking 'Dammit' because I'm already dying to see this movie as it is," wrote Kamen Rider Blade on a trekweb.com message board. 

The Star Trek teaser trailer, which premiered last month before Cloverfield and which features Leonard Nimoy's familiar voice intoning over images of an under-construction Enterprise, stoked fan interest.

"It means Paramount has great faith in the film," added timmer33. "They're seeing the dailies and know it has the potential to be huge. May is the time for BIG releases." 

The prequel's cast is certainly big—rich with both newcomers and familiar Vulcan faces. 

Among those venturing to the final frontier are Winona Ryder, playing Mr. Spock's Vulcan mother (a twist on the original); Zachary Quinto, playing young Spock (Nimoy will also appear as the older version); Chris Pine as Kirk; Karl Urban as Dr. McCoy; Simon Pegg as Scotty; John Cho as Sulu; Zoe Saldana as Uhura; Anton Yelchin as Chekov; and Eric Bana, playing the villainous Nero.

Paramount shuffled a few other high-profile projects, as well:

  • David Fincher's take on the F. Scott Fitzgerald story The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, starring Brad Pitt as a man who's aging in the wrong direction, is moving from Nov. 26 to Dec. 19. 
  • The Renée Zellweger thriller Case 39 has been bumped from Aug. 22 to Apr. 10, 2009.
  • Eddie Murphy's latest foray into family-friendly territory, Nowhereland (which had to shut down production for a day when filming was interrupted by WGA picketers), originally scheduled for Sept. 26, will have to wait until June 12, 2009.