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Every Star Trek Movie In Chronological Order


Star Trek now has 14 feature films that premiered theatrically and as a streaming-only release, and there are different orders in which to watch them. When Star Trek: The Motion Picture premiered in 1979, Star Trek officially became a movie franchise. Starting in 1987, when Star Trek: The Next Generation premiered, fans could enjoy voyages in the final frontier on both television and on movie screens.

Every decade since the 1970s has seen at least one Star Trek movie released, with the 1980s and the 1990s as the golden age of Star Trek feature films. Every era of Star Trek, from when Gene Roddenberry controlled the franchise to Rick Berman’s heyday in the 1990s to the current Paramount+ streaming era under Alex Kurtzman, has also presented Star Trek movies.

Before Star Trek: Section 31 in 2025, Star Trek was strictly a theatrical movie franchise. Similarly, every Star Trek movie before Section 31 was about a version of the Starship Enterprise commanded by Captain James T. Kirk (William Shatner), Captain Jean-Luc Picard (Patrick Stewart), or the alternate Kelvin timeline’s younger Captain Kirk (Chris Pine).

Many of the biggest, most beloved, and resonant moments in Star Trek history happened in movies, and here’s how to experience them:



















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01

The USS Enterprise is the most iconic starship in science fiction. What is the registry number of Captain Kirk’s original Enterprise from The Original Series?




✓ Correct! NCC-1701 is the registry of Kirk’s original Constitution-class Enterprise. The “-D” suffix belongs to Picard’s Galaxy-class ship, NX-01 is Archer’s Enterprise, and NCC-74656 is Voyager.

✗ Red alert! The answer is NCC-1701. Kirk’s original Constitution-class Enterprise carried this now-legendary registry. NCC-1701-D is Picard’s Enterprise from TNG, NX-01 is Captain Archer’s, and NCC-74656 belongs to Voyager.

02

Kirk’s most trusted officer is a half-human, half-Vulcan science officer famous for his logic and iconic salute. Who is this legendary character?




✓ Correct! Mr. Spock, played by Leonard Nimoy, is the half-Vulcan science officer whose “Live long and prosper” salute became a cultural icon. His struggle between logic and emotion defines the heart of the Original Series.

✗ Red alert! The answer is Spock. Data is an android from TNG, Tuvok is Voyager’s Vulcan tactical officer, and Sarek is Spock’s Vulcan father. Only Spock is the half-human, half-Vulcan first officer of Kirk’s Enterprise.

03

Starfleet’s most important regulation forbids interference with the natural development of alien civilizations. What is this guiding principle called?




✓ Correct! The Prime Directive (also known as General Order 1) is Starfleet’s most sacred law. It prohibits interfering with less-developed civilizations — though Kirk, Picard, and Janeway have all famously bent or broken it when lives were at stake.

✗ Red alert! The answer is the Prime Directive. While “General Order One” is technically another name for it, the Prime Directive is the universally known term. The Omega Directive and Temporal Accord are separate, more specialized Starfleet protocols.

04

“Resistance is futile.” This chilling declaration belongs to a cybernetic collective that assimilates entire civilizations into its hive mind. What is this fearsome species called?




✓ Correct! The Borg are Star Trek’s most terrifying villains — a hive-mind collective that forcibly assimilates species and technology. Captain Picard was famously assimilated and transformed into Locutus in the landmark TNG episode “The Best of Both Worlds.”

✗ Red alert! The answer is the Borg. The Dominion is the Gamma Quadrant empire from DS9, the Romulans are a rival empire, and Species 8472 is actually one of the few species that the Borg themselves fear. Only the Borg declare “Resistance is futile.”

05

Captain Jean-Luc Picard commands the Enterprise-D in The Next Generation and later received his own series, Star Trek: Picard. Which acclaimed actor portrays him?




✓ Correct! Sir Patrick Stewart brought gravitas, Shakespeare, and Earl Grey tea to the captain’s chair for seven seasons of TNG, four films, and three seasons of Star Trek: Picard. His “Make it so” is one of TV’s most iconic catchphrases.

✗ Red alert! The answer is Patrick Stewart. William Shatner plays Captain Kirk, Avery Brooks is Captain Sisko on Deep Space Nine, and Scott Bakula captains the NX-01 Enterprise. Only Sir Patrick Stewart portrays the legendary Jean-Luc Picard.

06

Starfleet vessels travel faster than light by bending space around them using a matter-antimatter reaction. What is this propulsion system called?




✓ Correct! Warp Drive is the standard faster-than-light propulsion in Star Trek, powered by dilithium-regulated matter-antimatter reactions. Zefram Cochrane invented it in 2063, which led to humanity’s first contact with the Vulcans.

✗ Red alert! The answer is Warp Drive. Transwarp is an advanced Borg technology, Slipstream is an experimental quantum drive, and the Spore Drive uses mycelial network navigation (from Discovery). Standard Starfleet vessels use Warp Drive.

07

At Starfleet Academy, cadets face a notorious no-win scenario designed to test their character under impossible circumstances. James Kirk is the only cadet who ever beat it — by cheating. What is this test called?




✓ Correct! The Kobayashi Maru is an unwinnable rescue simulation that tests how cadets handle certain death. Kirk reprogrammed it so he could win — earning a commendation for original thinking. It was memorably featured in Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan.

✗ Red alert! The answer is the Kobayashi Maru. The Corbomite Maneuver is a TOS episode, not an Academy test. The Kobayashi Maru is the famous no-win scenario that Kirk defeated by reprogramming the simulation — because he doesn’t believe in the no-win scenario.

08

In the widely regarded greatest Star Trek film, a genetically enhanced superhuman from Earth’s past seeks revenge against Captain Kirk. “KHAAAAN!” Who is this iconic villain?




✓ Correct! Khan Noonien Singh, played by Ricardo Montalbán, is Star Trek’s greatest villain. First appearing in the TOS episode “Space Seed,” he returned in The Wrath of Khan (1982) for a devastating revenge plot that cost Spock his life.

✗ Red alert! The answer is Khan Noonien Singh. General Chang is a Klingon from Star Trek VI, Q is TNG’s omnipotent trickster, and Gul Dukat is DS9’s Cardassian antagonist. Only Khan inspired Kirk’s legendary scream across the cosmos.

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How To Watch Star Trek Movies Chronologically In Theatrical & Streaming Release Order

Watching the Star Trek movies in their theatrical and streaming release order is the simplest way to go. The 14 films are broken up into easy-to-digest blocks: the 6 Star Trek: The Original Series films, the 4 Star Trek: The Next Generation films, the three Star Trek movies produced by J.J. Abrams set in the alternate Kelvin timeline, and finally, Star Trek: Section 31.

Here are the Star Trek movies in theatrical and streaming release order by year:

Star Trek: The Original Series Movies

Release Year

Director

Star Trek: The Motion Picture

1979

Robert Wise

Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan

1982

Nicholas Meyer

Star Trek III: The Search For Spock

1984

Leonard Nimoy

Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home

1986

Leonard Nimoy

Star Trek V: The Final Frontier

1989

William Shatner

Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country

1991

Nicholas Meyer

Star Trek: The Next Generation Movies

Release Year

Director

Star Trek Generations

1994

David Carson

Star Trek: First Contact

1996

Jonathan Frakes

Star Trek: Insurrection

1998

Jonathan Frakes

Star Trek: Nemesis

2002

Stuart Baird

J.J. Abrams’ Star Trek Kelvin Timeline Movies

Release Year

Director

Star Trek

2009

J.J. Abrams

Star Trek Into Darkness

2013

J.J. Abrams

Star Trek Beyond

2016

Justin Lin

Star Trek Streaming Movie

Release Year

Director

Star Trek: Section 31

2025

Olatunde Osunsanmi

How To Watch Star Trek Movies By In-Universe Timeline Order

A more interesting and challenging way to watch the Star Trek movies is by in-universe timeline order.



The Complete Star Trek Timeline Explained

Star Trek’s timeline spans a thousand years of Starfleet and the United Federation of Planets, with alternate realities and time travel galore.

Although the ‘present day’ of the Star Trek movies is either The Original Series‘ 23rd century or The Next Generation‘s 24th century, some of the Star Trek movies involve time travel and flashbacks. Meanwhile, J.J. Abrams’ films are set actually before the events of Star Trek: The Original Series.

In J.J. Abrams’ Star Trek 2009, the destruction of the USS Kelvin and the death of James T. Kirk’s father, Lt. George Kirk (Chris Hemsworth), by time-traveling Romulans in 2233 spawned an alternate reality where numerous major events happened at an accelerated pace.

Star Trek: Section 31 deposits Emperor Philippa Georgiou (Michelle Yeoh) in the early 24th century, 40 years before Star Trek: The Next Generation. How Georgiou became Emperor in the Mirror Universe is also revealed in flashbacks set a hundred years before Star Trek: Section 31‘s main story.

Factoring in time travel and alternate universes, here’s how to watch the Star Trek movies by in-universe timeline order:

Star Trek Movie

In-Universe Timeline Order

Star Trek Timeline

Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home

Main story set in 1986 San Francisco

Prime Timeline

Star Trek: First Contact

Main story set in 2063 Bozeman, Montana, and the USS Enterprise-E

Prime Timeline

Star Trek (2009)

Prologues set in 2233/2240s/2255

Kelvin Timeline

Star Trek (2009)

Present-day set in 2258

Kelvin Timeline

Star Trek Into Darkness

Present-day set in 2259

Kelvin Timeline

Star Trek Beyond

Present-day set in 2263

Kelvin Timeline

Star Trek: The Motion Picture

Present-day set in the 2270s

Prime Timeline

Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan

Present-day set in 2285

Prime Timeline

Star Trek III: The Search for Spock

Present-day set in 2285

Prime Timeline

Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home

Present-day prologue and epilogue set in 2286

Prime Timeline

Star Trek V: The Final Frontier

Present-day set in 2287

Prime Timeline

Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country

Present-day set in 2293

Prime Timeline

Star Trek Generations

Prologue set in 2293

Prime Timeline

Star Trek: Section 31

Prologue set in 2200s Mirror Universe, Present-day set in 2324

Mirror Universe, Prime Timeline

Star Trek Generations

Present-day set in 2371

Prime Timeline

Star Trek: First Contact

Prologue/Present-day set in 2373

Prime Timeline

Star Trek: Insurrection

Present-day set in 2375

Prime Timeline

Star Trek: Nemesis

Present-day set in 2379

Prime Timeline

Star Trek (2009)

Romulan Supernova, Spock and Nero Time Travel happens in 2387

Prime Timeline

Paramount Skydance Is Making New Star Trek Movies Only For Theaters

An upgraded Space Dock appears in Star Trek_ Picard season 3.

Following Skydance Media’s 2025 purchase of Paramount Global, Paramount Skydance is prioritizing making new Star Trek movies as part of the studio’s ambitious agenda to release 30 theatrical films a year. Paramount Skydance CEO David Ellison, who executive produced Star Trek Into Darkness and Star Trek Beyond, considers Star Trek a “beloved franchise.”

Paramount Skydance formally announced a new Star Trek movie in development at CinemaCon 2026. While not offering specifics, this new film could be the reported project by Dungeons and Dragons: Honor Among Thieves filmmakers John Francis Daley and Jonathan Goldstein, which will not be connected to any previous Star Trek movie or TV show.

Paramount Skydance seems to be interested in a new vision of Star Trek to attract new and wider audiences.

More than one Star Trek movie is rumored to be in the works. However, Paramount Skydance seems to be interested in a new vision of Star Trek to attract new and wider audiences that won’t be dependent on 60 years of Star Trek canon.

Whether it’s another reboot, set in a different century or galaxy, or simply ignoring the Star Trek that preceded it, Paramount Skydance may want new Star Trek movies disconnected from the franchise’s past, and this could go for future Star Trek TV series on Paramount+ as well.

Paramount Skydance has also made it clear that Star Trek movies will be made for theaters going forward. Star Trek: Section 31‘s disappointing reception from critics and audiences ended Paramount+’s hopes to make more Star Trek streaming movies.

Paramount Skydance Canceled Star Trek 4 & Other Star Trek Movies

Star Trek Beyond cast phasers

Paramount Skydance also canceled Star Trek 4, which was disappointing but not wholly unexpected. ‘Star Trek 4‘ is what the fourth movie produced by J.J. Abrams and starring the cast led by Chris Pine, Zachary Quinto, and Karl Urban was commonly referred to.

Star Trek Beyond’s Justin Lin is the only Taiwanese-American director and Star Trek: Section 31‘s Olatunde Osunsanmi is the only Black director of a Star Trek movie so far.

After Star Trek Beyond underperformed in 2016 relative to Star Trek (2009) and Star Trek Into Darkness’ box office numbers, J.J. Abrams’ fourth Star Trek movie entered what became nine years of development hell. Multiple directors, including S.J. Clarkson, Matt Shakman, and Quentin Tarantino, were attached to Star Trek 4, then left due to ‘creative differences.’

Despite J.J. Abrams’ Star Trek cast, including Academy Award-winner Zoe Saldana, Simon Pegg, and Sofia Boutella, echoing Pine, Quinto, and Urban’s public statements of wanting one more movie aboard the Starship Enterprise, Paramount Skydance officially dashed those hopes in 2025.

Fargo and Alien: Earth‘s executive producer Noah Hawley was developing his own Star Trek movie project that was killed by Paramount’s change of management. A Star Trek Origins movie by director Toby Haynes and screenwriter Seth Grahame-Smith is also officially dead.

Star Trek‘s remarkable run of 14 movies will inevitably expand, adding more unforgettable voyages in the final frontier. Whether the future of Star Trek movies will involve new characters or see the return of the Starship Enterprise to the big screen in some fashion remains to be seen.



This story originally appeared on Screenrant

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