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Star Trek-The Next Generation Movies(4 Movies)

Infohash:

E9384EC4D170F99270494E58085213E55EA25BF5

Type:

Movies

Title:

Star Trek-The Next Generation Movies(4 Movies)

Category:

Video/Movies

Uploaded:

2008-11-19 (by SCash)

Description:

Star Trek: Generations (1994) In the late twenty-third century, the gala maiden voyage of the third Starship Enterprise (NCC-1701-B) boasts such luminaries as Pavel Chekov, Montgomery Scott, and the legendary Captain James T. Kirk as guests. But the maiden voyage turns to disaster as the unprepared ship is forced to rescue two transport ships from a mysterious energy ribbon. The Enterprise manages to save a handful of he ships' passengers and barely makes it out intact...but at the cost of Captain Kirk's life. Seventy-eight years later, Captain Jean-Luc Picard and the crew of the Enterprise-D find themselves at odds with the renegade scientist Soren...who is destroying entire star systems. Only one man can help Picard stop Soren's scheme...and he's been dead for seventy-eight years... Written by Gregory A. Sheets {[email protected] /* */} Stardate: the 23rd Century. Retired Starfleet officers James T. Kirk, Montgomery Scott and Pavel Chekov are guests of honor aboard the newly christened Enterprise-B. A test run takes an unexpected turn, however, when the starship encounters two vessels trapped inside the Nexus, a mysterious energy ribbon. During a perilous rescue attempt, Kirk is swept out into space. Seven decades later, Captain Jean-Luc Picard and the crew of the Enterprise-D rescue an El-Aurian named Soran. Unbeknownst to Picard, Soran harbors a deadly plan that includes the destruction of the Enterprise and millions of lives. Now Picard's only hope for the future rests within the Nexus . . . and a legendary captain from the past. Written by Robert Lynch {[email protected] /* */} Star Trek: First Contact (1996) The time is the 24th century and the ship is the newly commissioned Enterprise-E. It's captain, Jean-Luc Picard, has been ordered not to interfere in a combat between a Borg Cube and ships from the Federation. However, seeing the Federation is about to lose, Picard ignore his orders and take command of the defending fleet. With his knowledge of the weak spot of the Cube, they destroy it. However, a small part of it escapes and plot a course directly to Earth. The Enterprise chases it and enters a time distortion created by the Borg. They end up in the mid 21st century, their only chance of stopping the Borg from assimilating Earth being to help Zefram Cochrane make his famous first faster than light travel to the stars... Written by Marc-André Deschênes {[email protected] /* */} The Borg have returned, in another attempt to conquer Earth. Disregarding orders, Capt. Picard and the new Enterprise-E rush to save the Federation Home World, only to get sucked back in time with the Borg as they attempt to interfere with the course of human kind's evolution into a peaceful, unified race. Written by Matthew Dworkin {[email protected] /* */} If Chocran (Inventor of warp drive) does not make his flight (in the mid 21st century), a routine Vulcan mapping mission would not detect the warp signature, and first contact would not be made. Borg go back in time to destroy the ship, once an American nuclear missile left over from World War 3. Written by Porkchop {[email protected] /* */} It is the 24th century, and a collective of part humanoid, part machine beings face the Federation in what would be the biggest battle of all time. This collective, called the Borg, lose, and desperately attempt to go back in time to April 4th, 2063, to stop Earth's First Contact with an alien species (the Vulcans, to be precise). Captain Picard, and the crew of the Enterprise-E (NCC 1701-E) go back in time to make sure that Zefram Cochrane makes his warp flight. The Enterprise runs into unexpected trouble, however, when they start to assimilate the Enterprise. Written by Julian King {[email protected] /* */} Star Trek: Insurrection (1998) When an alien race--and forces within Starfleet--attempt to take over a planet that has "magical" properties, it falls upon Captain Picard and the crew of the Enterprise-E to defend the planet's people as well as the very ideals upon which the Federation itself was founded. Written by Jack Witzig {[email protected] /* */} Lt. Cmdr. Data, on a mission to observe the race of Ba'ku, suddenly behaves as if having to fear for his existance. The peaceful Ba'ku, whose planet offers regenerative radiation and therefore incredible lifespans, live in harmony with nature and reject any kind of technology. Their planet and their culture is studied by the starfleet and the associated Son'a - in secrecy. But the So'na, lead by Ru'afo, intend to abduct the Ba'ku in order to take the planet for themselves and for the starfleet officials who all would like to regenerate their bodies. But they did not think of the loyalty of the Enterprise's crew to the Prime Directive. Written by Julian Reischl {[email protected] /* */} Engage! Captain Jean-Luc Picard and his Next Generation crew are back. From the beginning of the Federation, the Prime Directive was clear: no Starfleet expedition may interfere with the natural development of other civilizations. But now Picard is confronted with orders that undermine that decree. If he obeys, 600 peaceful residents of Ba'ku will be forcibly removed from their remarkable world, all for the reportedly greater good of millions who will benefit from the Ba'ku's Fountain of Youth-like powers. If he disobeys, he will risk his Starship, his career, his life. But for Picard, there's really only one choice. He must rebel against Starfleet . . . and lead the insurrection to preserve Paradise. Written by Robert Lynch {[email protected] /* */} Star Trek: Nemesis (2002) On their way to Riker's and Troi's honeymoon, the Enterprise is sent near the neutral zone to Romulan space, and picks up a prototypic twin of android Data. Immediately they are further sent to Romulus, where a new praetor, Shinzon, a human cloned from Captain Picard who lives on the slave planet Remus, appears to want peace with the Federation. But then the crew detects a break-in on their computer systems, and Picard is captured by the Remans because Shinzon needs him as his only matching supplier of genetic material. Picard and the Enterprise can escape, only to find themselves battling Shinzon's completely cloaked Warbird, who is after the complete destruction of earth. Written by 42/103 Cast (Cast overview, first billed only) Patrick Stewart ... Captain Jean-Luc Picard Jonathan Frakes ... Commander William Riker / Holodeck Musician Brent Spiner ... Lt. Commander Data LeVar Burton ... Lt. Commander Geordi La Forge (as Levar Burton) Michael Dorn ... Lt. Commander Worf Gates McFadden ... Doctor Beverly Crusher Marina Sirtis ... Counselor Deanna Troi

Files count:

1

Size:

2313.95 Mb

Trackers:

udp://tracker.openbittorrent.com:80
udp://open.demonii.com:1337
udp://tracker.coppersurfer.tk:6969
udp://exodus.desync.com:6969

Comments:

SCash (2008-11-19)

Please Seed!
Keep sharing...Keep Seeding

nerd707 (2008-11-25)

two of these movies are TERRIBLE quality, and sadly they're the two most watchable films, they're also foldered and named oddly.

SCash (2008-11-25)

Which two are you writing that are terrible quality?
I've watched them all and had no quality issues.

bburwood (2008-11-27)

Which 2? I think I can tell even without having downloaded and watching them. Let's put it this way, assuming they are all encoded with DivX or XviD with all the nice quality options turned on, 431MB and 480MB for a *full* movie is going to give bad quality no matter how you look at it. Period!
If you have used a decent resolution (say around 640 pixels wide ... still not DVD quality) then with a file size like that you are going to have some serious blockiness issues for a 2 hour (or even 1hr 45min) movie. Guaranteed! If you dropped the resolution to reduce the blockiness then you will have a low quality blurry movie with no crispness to the picture. Also guaranteed!
The *ONLY* mainstream way (currently) you could get close to a good quality movie (and I'm talking around 640pixels wide or better ... and no *major* compression artifacts) in that file size (430 - 480MB) is if h264 was used for the video compression. Generally though if someone uses h264 they don't put it in a ".avi" file - it'll be far more likely to be in either a ".mkv" or a ".mp4" and would likely get mentioned in the comments about the torrent.
Trust me I've seen a 650MB encode of Saving Private Ryan (~2hrs 45min) in DivX (admittedly an earlier version - 3 or 4 I think) and there were so many blocky artifacts it was rediculous! If the resolution had been dropped to 512 pixels wide those artifacts would have been reduced, but not eliminated, but that then also puts it squarely into low res blurry territory.
The simple truth is that DivX and XviD just can't compress that much data into that small a file without a major impact on visual quality - either resolution or blocky artifacts, take your pick but you won't get high res *and* few artifacts at such low bitrates.

SCash (2008-11-28)

"431MB and 480MB for a *full* movie is going to give bad quality no matter how you look at it. Period!"
I've watched them all and even those two are good quality.
Additionally, I didn't Rip the originals. I downloaded these movies as individual torrents and then put them in one file and uploaded them back to Pirate Bay.
I've read no complaints from anyone that has actually watched them.
Finally, the great thing is...if you don't want the torrent download because you feel it may not be up to your standards...then move on...Go to Walmart and buy the damn movies!...LOL!!!
From the looks of things, the torrent has been up since 11/19/08 and it is still going strong.
24 Seeders, 44 Leechers.
Have a great day!
Keep Pirate Bay alive...Keep Seeding...

SCash (2008-11-28)

If you have downloaded and actually watched these Star Trek movies, please leave some feedback as to the quality of the movies.
Thanks.

bburwood (2008-11-29)

OK fair comment. I haven't actually downloaded these particular files (I have other versions). Let's see, Nemesis, 700MB, 640x272, XviD 729kbps, 1hr 51min audio 128k mp3. Bitrate-wise that's about as low as you really want with Xvid / DivX. It's ok quality, but certainly not DVD, even though the res is not too far from it (horizontally at least, dvd would put a little more in vertically because of aspect ratio considerations which would improve the quality at full screen a decent amount).
To chop that down to 481MB you need a total bitrate of about 600kbps. That leaves around 500k for the video, give or take, depending on how much you give to the audio. That's only two thirds of the video bitrate in the larger version that already has some small signs of low bitrate artifacts. That kind of squeeze will show up in the final video - either in action scenes if an average bitrate mode is used, or in the overall clarity if a constant quality mode is used. That's just the way it is with digital video - some compromise has to be made to fit it into such small file sizes. XviD and DivX are good at it, but they have their limitations. h264 has it's limitations as well, but at this kind of low bitrate the final video will be far better than with XviD or DivX.
I found a low bitrate SG1 and SGA episode in h264. They are about 530kbps *total* bitrate including audio. The video however is full 540p quality (ie., 960 x 540, higher than NTSC dvd). There are obvious artifacts in action scenes but the overall quality is quite amazing given the file size of only 164MB for a full 44 minute ep - I only downloaded it (ages ago) out of curiosity to see just how well h264 could do at extremely low bitrates, and I have seen *NOTHING* that even comes close.
But, I guess I'm picky when it comes to video quality. I see a big difference between DVD or almost DVD quality (let alone anything less than DVD quality) and 720p HD quality. There are many people who apparently don't, which just plain amazes me - since there's a huge difference, even on my little 17" LCD monitor (which, of course, can handle full 720p without shrinking it to fit).
I could go on ... but there's not much point really. Each to his/her own I guess, and if you (or anyone else) are satisfied with the visual quality (or like many places, including my own country, have data limits on internet connections) then go for the smaller files. My only suggestion to anyone who can't pick the difference between standard and high def is to get your eyes checked - you might be surprised by what you are missing (even in normal everyday life). (and yes, I wear glasses full time, otherwise I'd miss little details everywhere. I can legally drive without them, but I would only do that if they were broken.)
D'oh, this has become yet another really long post ... I'll stop now!

SCash (2008-11-29)

"I could go on ... but there's not much point really."
Exactly!
What are you?
The guru of torrents?
LOL!!!
This isn't a classroom and you're not the teacher.
Here is the long and short of it...
I am a Trekkie fan. The movies are not the best quality that they could be. I took what I could get from torrents due to the fact that I wanted to watch the movies. And the quality of these movies was good enough to provide that service.
Additionally, I suspected there were many other Trekkie fans that would appreciate the ability to get all four movies in one download.
It's that simple.
LOL...In closing, I've got an idea that you are scaring people away from this torrent with all of your brow beating about the quality.
But, as long as others are leeching and seeding, I'll keep it on Pirate Bay.
Thanks for all of the input.
You have an excellent day.
Keep Pirate Bay alive...Keep Seeding!!!

bburwood (2008-12-01)

"This isn't a classroom and you're not the teacher."
Got that right, hehe. Me ... a teacher ... nooooo no no no! But I do try to inform about the possibilities ... perhaps a little too verbosely at times.
Guru? Not that either.
"I am a Trekkie" Me too.
"I've got an idea that you are scaring people away from this torrent with all of your brow beating about the quality."
Not trying to scare people, but if anyone reading is lucky enough to have an unlimited (or very large) data allowance then I'd recommend a 720p or 1080p Blu-Ray rip, but since most people (myself included) don't have that luxury then go for whatever falls within your data allowances, just check any info about resolution and quality if available and then decide which one to get.
A few years ago I did see an XviD 80MB Voyager ep and it was slightly better quality than I had thought it would be, given the tiny file size, but it was still low res and had no fine detail - it had all been shrunk, smoothed and compressed out - but that was well before h264 came on the scene. (can you tell I think h264 rules in the quality stakes at present? hehe)
"What are you? "
Just your regular everyday scifi lovin' tech geek. ;-)
"You have an excellent day."
You too. :-)

 BrysonC (2009-04-02)

I originally downloaded the torrent for Perfect Disk 10 at The Pirate Bay, but it was a crappy download. Luckily the one file I was able to extract was the Perfect Disk 10 Key Gen.
So, I just went to the website And downloaded the free trial version and then used the key gen, and BAM...Success! I still have the Key-Gen open if anyone needs a new key...Email me at the addy listed below. I've already generated four numbers each for the files below.
Perfect Disk 10
http://www.perfectdisk.com/products/business-perfectdisk10-professional/free-trial/c67e9e4094d600939c0d5909a18f725c029cb221

Stop by my blog when you have time.
http://ncmountainpolitics.blogspot.com/
americanvoter@usa.com
Today is another great day to be alive and an American!
Enjoy,
AV
Perfect Disk 10
Home Edition
-------------
187-4577243-149187-3075
118-2349518-101991-2574
115-1569466-185276-0502
212-9921809-143993-3632
Pro
------------
140-3556762-104811-8667
129-7010912-118089-1701
213-1436269-187218-1760
104-8344789-153754-6159
Server
--------------------
160-7441157-164632-0636
179-2460136-162554-9473
151-8040198-134573-9278
136-3823186-209831-3694
Virtual Enterprise Edition
-----------------------
112-1433342-128098-9349
182-8369207-131126-5729
207-9787421-110233-3170
151-2041257-176827-4920
VMWare
-------------------------
132-6577522-189659-3032
189-5892770-194073-2818
151-9950557-135013-2937
176-8949366-122637-9736