Videos by ComicBook.com
That has turned out to be the primary selling point of Star Trek: Starfleet Academy: Getting to see a young cast of characters trying to learn what the values and legacy of Starfleet are all about, at a time when both have nearly faded from the collective memory of the galaxy. But did you know that this show is one that Star Trek has been trying to launch for years? As you can read below, Starfleet Academy has one of the longest and most convoluted origin stories of any franchise TV show.
Star Trek VI Was Almost An Academy Story

Leaving aside the literary lore about Starfleet Academy, the institution started appearing in films as early as Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan, and almost became the subject of Star Trek VI.
The 25th anniversary of the Star Trek franchise happened in 1991; to prepare for the event, longtime Star Trek movie writer and producer Harve Bennett re-teamed with David Loughery, his co-writer on Star Trek V: The Final Frontier, following that film’s release in 1989. The pair went to work on the story for a film that is widely known as Star Trek: The First Adventure, but also went by the tentative titles of Star Trek: The Academy Years, and Starfleet Academy, which had been pitched to Bennett by Star Trek producer Ralph Winter, during development on Star Trek IV. The film would’ve been a prequel to the original Star Trek TV series. It would’ve explored how a hotheaded young earthling from a farm (James T. Kirk) and a stoic half-Vulcan (Spock) met at Starfleet Academy and bilt the iconic friendship we know and love.
“We had already locked in the Star Trek IV storyline with the whales and I said, ‘You know, I have a great idea, let’s do a prequel’ in the middle of this reception for his daughter. I suggested we develop a series of films to be another franchise, another tent pole that we could open,” Winter explained in The Making of Star Trek VI. “We could do a prequel and find out how Kirk and Spock met at the Starfleet Academy. When we were doing Star Trek V, we got the studio to approve work on the script. It is an excellent story, but it has been misperceived.”
The real appeal for the studio and producers, was that the Starfleet Academy movie would’ve required the role of William Shatner’s Kirk and Leonard Nimoy’s Spock to be recast. That would’ve cut down on the ballooning salary costs for the two actors, who (at that point) held a lot of leverage as the faces of both the original TV series, and moive franchise. Star Trek IV: The Voyage Honme earned $133 million (second highest of the film franchise to that point); after that, the cost per film started to jump by $10 million, and the studio saw an easy alleyway to bringing that number back down.









