---
product_id: 694215760
title: "STAR TREK (2009) TITANS OF CULT"
price: "303.46 DT"
currency: TND
in_stock: true
reviews_count: 7
url: https://www.desertcart.tn/products/694215760-star-trek-2009-titans-of-cult
store_origin: TN
region: Tunisia
---

# STAR TREK (2009) TITANS OF CULT

**Price:** 303.46 DT
**Availability:** ✅ In Stock

## Quick Answers

- **What is this?** STAR TREK (2009) TITANS OF CULT
- **How much does it cost?** 303.46 DT with free shipping
- **Is it available?** Yes, in stock and ready to ship
- **Where can I buy it?** [www.desertcart.tn](https://www.desertcart.tn/products/694215760-star-trek-2009-titans-of-cult)

## Best For

- Customers looking for quality international products

## Why This Product

- Free international shipping included
- Worldwide delivery with tracking
- 15-day hassle-free returns

## Description

The future begins in J.J. Abrams’ “high-octane hit”* STAR TREK that has taken audiences by storm. When the Romulan Nero comes from the future to take revenge on the Federation, rivals Kirk and Spock must work together to stop him from destroying everything they know. On an “exhilarating”** journey filled with “spectacular action”***, comedy and cosmic peril, the new recruits of the U.S.S. Enterprise will voyage through unimaginable danger, boldly going where no one has gone before. “Even if you’ve never seen Star Trek before, this movie is for you!”**** This 2-disc SteelBook set includes: Star Trek (2009) on 4K Ultra HD & Blu-ray, collectable SteelBook case, Captain's log pocket notebook and a vulcan greeting pin.

Review: A truly entertaining and thoroughly enjoyable movie! - Every time I watch this movie I am reminded how much I enjoy it. Let me say from the start that I grew up on the original series (TOS), and I am a die-hard "Star Trek" fan. However, since TOS is truly unique and unrepeatable, I don't judge the movie by those standards, as I think to do so is a losing proposition. Why not let this movie stand or fall on its own merits? Why not appreciate it for what it is rather than what some people imagine it should have been? For people familiar with TOS, there are definitely moments that are genuinely Star Trek, such as the interactions between Kirk/Spock and Kirk/McCoy. It was funny, for instance, to hear what they suggested as the origins of McCoy's nickname, Bones. McCoy also has some classic moments when, like his TOS counterpart, his emotions get the better of him. And then there is the scene where Chekov attempts to speak his password to the computer, only to be initially rejected because of his thick Russian accent ("Wictor, Wictor" instead of "Victor, Victor"). These are the kinds of moments that made TOS truly memorable, and it was wonderful to see them in the movie. I think Zachary Quinto does exceedingly well as the young Spock. I found young Kirk's character to be a little more reckless than I think is necessary, but Chris Pine did a fine job portraying him. We learned the first names of several major characters. There is plenty of action, excellent special effects, and a good story line. And, just like TOS, there are some very funny one-liners. I actually would give the movie four and a half stars if I could. Despite the high entertainment value of this movie, there were a few things that proved to be just plain silliness for me. Overall they did not ruin the movie, but they were certainly momentary distractions and warranted a minor deduction in my rating: 1. The whole Spock/Uhura romance is utterly foreign to TOS, so I don't know why it was introduced in this movie. It just seemed pointless to me. 2. The idea of the "red matter" was also problematic. TOS was consistent in making the science of its day very believable. Even though the show was science fiction, many of the concepts contained therein were based on real science. How is it, then, that while one drop of the red matter can create a small black hole, it can be touched with a syringe and stored in a container? 3. Arguably the most absurd aspect of the technology in the movie was the decision to use a brewery for the engineering shots. My goodness, it's the 23rd century. Take a look at the Enterprise's bridge. It's brimming with ultra hi-tech equipment, yet the engineering section of the ship consists of lots of pipes, valves, barrels, and very 20th-century looking panels and boxes. Bad, bad choice. Despite these minor distractions, I would definitely recommend this movie. It is highly entertaining, fast-paced, action-filled, and engaging.
Review: The Blu should keep everyone happy...great product - The minor disappointments I had with some little items are buried by the amount of great things that is the Star Trek Blu. The packaging is the single hinged chassis with cardboard slip cover, but the info sheet (typical rear cover art) is a hot-glued paper that cannot fit anywhere once it comes off. The resulting Blu art front is a head shot of Pine and the back is Quinto. The picture is as good as would be expected, with plenty of great space effects, the heavy lens glare that Abrams likes does not bleed too bad but ILM does not disappoint. They went with TrueHD which gives an adequate immersion, some of the best tests were with Spocks ship and that unique sound (but 7.1 DTS would have been nice). Plenty of reference points throughout, but even with that clarity I still couldn't get a read on some of the little things (tried freezing the fence signs in the Corvette scene, freezing some of the panel displays to read what the actors were looking at, etc.). But what takes the time and is worth every moment for the supplement geeks like me is the entire disc 2. Disc 1: Menus are unfortunately only minimal still animation (no live action or HD pics). Commentary by the makers. Disc 2: Blue screen animated left sided selections. Most items pop up with an "extended" option that has an icon appear when watching each documentary to facilitate viewing little snippets of additional material, or each one can be watched individually - no play all on anything with this disc. * 16:41 To Boldly Go. Several extensions including the Kirk dilemma (1:58), more Green Girl stuff (3:25). The main piece covers aspects of creation, whys and what fors. All of these supplements are HD interviews of the filmmakers spliced with low def footage (past and present Treks). * 28:53 Casting. Once again all HD present footage mixed with grainy low def shots of behind the scenes - gives some good material on why we saw who we did. * 24:33 Starships. Concepts, art design and some of my favorite stuff on the making of regarding construction. Seven extensions are selectable here including Warp Drive and Paint stuff. * 16:30 Aliens. Shows the meetings and thought process behind some of the critters and humanoids. Five extensions here. * 16:10 Planets. Some nice history for Trek regarding the Vasquez Rocks, which showed an obvious deleted sequence - made me look forward to those even more. * 9:22 Props and Costumes. One extension here about Klingons - which led to another whole deleted sequence I was now REALLY wanting to watch them. * 9:45 Sounds. I enjoyed this one the most as the sounds intrigued me when I first saw this in theaters. Nice homage/respect paid to the old series connections. * 8:47 Gene Roddenberry vision. A nice history with at least half of it being Nimoy narrating/being interviewed (there was a blatant absence of someone here but you will notice that through this entire set). * 13:30 Deleted Scenes - FINALLY. Play all option with commentary on/off of Abrams, Kurtzman. - Spock's birth. Throughout all of these you notice Winona's entire screen time was removed. Nice little plug on how he gets his name. - Klingon battle with the Narada, effects unfinished - which leads into an entire storyline removal - did not agree with the reasons for the removal but oh well. - Dysfunctional home life of the early Kirk sequence. Explains who that kid was on the road and who the voice was on the car phone. - Spock's parents arguing about which side Spock should embrace. - Klingon Prison Planet sequence - wow. I want this in the director's cut. Would have explained a great deal of how Nero and the Narada disappeared. - Vulcan sequence prior to destruction (Vasquez Rocks). - Kirk and Green Girl - can never have too much of that. Once you see this you can find out what Uhura and Kirk were really talking about in the theatrical cut (Klingon Prison - not battle). - Scene involving more Green Girl and Kirk defeating the Maru test - good scene. - Kirk apologizing to Green Girl - had to go once the others were cut. * Simulator: Mix of animated and slight HD footage of interactive material on the Enterprise and the Narada. The vast majority of material centers on the Narada (weapons, propulsion etc.). * 6:22 Gag Reel. A brief retro title sequence followed by a hilarious slew of swearing by even the best (priceless watching Nimoy cuss his lines). Fast paced and fun. * 3 trailers. Everything subtitled in French, Spanish, & Port. Disc 3. Digital copy and game demo. Did not use either. Overall, I had a great time going through all of this and I honestly think even the discerning Trekkie will be happy with this product. Yes, I feel the deleted scenes should have been left in as they explained some obvious gaps in the film, but at least we got to see them. The HD screenings have been very popular and I don't tire of watching this through and through. Enjoy.

## Technical Specifications

| Specification | Value |
|---------------|-------|
| ASIN  | B0BDFT95M7 |
| Aspect Ratio  | Unknown |
| Best Sellers Rank | #155,005 in Movies & TV ( See Top 100 in Movies & TV ) #43,573 in Blu-ray |
| Customer Reviews | 4.8 4.8 out of 5 stars (29,545) |
| Language  | English (Dolby Digital 5.1), English (Dolby Digital 5.1), French (Dolby Digital 5.1) |
| Package Dimensions  | 6.93 x 5.43 x 1.26 inches; 9.88 ounces |
| Subtitles:  | English, French, Spanish |

## Images

![STAR TREK (2009) TITANS OF CULT - Image 1](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/71Lazi9eM0L.jpg)

## Customer Reviews

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ A truly entertaining and thoroughly enjoyable movie!
*by J***S on July 8, 2013*

Every time I watch this movie I am reminded how much I enjoy it. Let me say from the start that I grew up on the original series (TOS), and I am a die-hard "Star Trek" fan. However, since TOS is truly unique and unrepeatable, I don't judge the movie by those standards, as I think to do so is a losing proposition. Why not let this movie stand or fall on its own merits? Why not appreciate it for what it is rather than what some people imagine it should have been? For people familiar with TOS, there are definitely moments that are genuinely Star Trek, such as the interactions between Kirk/Spock and Kirk/McCoy. It was funny, for instance, to hear what they suggested as the origins of McCoy's nickname, Bones. McCoy also has some classic moments when, like his TOS counterpart, his emotions get the better of him. And then there is the scene where Chekov attempts to speak his password to the computer, only to be initially rejected because of his thick Russian accent ("Wictor, Wictor" instead of "Victor, Victor"). These are the kinds of moments that made TOS truly memorable, and it was wonderful to see them in the movie. I think Zachary Quinto does exceedingly well as the young Spock. I found young Kirk's character to be a little more reckless than I think is necessary, but Chris Pine did a fine job portraying him. We learned the first names of several major characters. There is plenty of action, excellent special effects, and a good story line. And, just like TOS, there are some very funny one-liners. I actually would give the movie four and a half stars if I could. Despite the high entertainment value of this movie, there were a few things that proved to be just plain silliness for me. Overall they did not ruin the movie, but they were certainly momentary distractions and warranted a minor deduction in my rating: 1. The whole Spock/Uhura romance is utterly foreign to TOS, so I don't know why it was introduced in this movie. It just seemed pointless to me. 2. The idea of the "red matter" was also problematic. TOS was consistent in making the science of its day very believable. Even though the show was science fiction, many of the concepts contained therein were based on real science. How is it, then, that while one drop of the red matter can create a small black hole, it can be touched with a syringe and stored in a container? 3. Arguably the most absurd aspect of the technology in the movie was the decision to use a brewery for the engineering shots. My goodness, it's the 23rd century. Take a look at the Enterprise's bridge. It's brimming with ultra hi-tech equipment, yet the engineering section of the ship consists of lots of pipes, valves, barrels, and very 20th-century looking panels and boxes. Bad, bad choice. Despite these minor distractions, I would definitely recommend this movie. It is highly entertaining, fast-paced, action-filled, and engaging.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ The Blu should keep everyone happy...great product
*by S***L on November 13, 2009*

The minor disappointments I had with some little items are buried by the amount of great things that is the Star Trek Blu. The packaging is the single hinged chassis with cardboard slip cover, but the info sheet (typical rear cover art) is a hot-glued paper that cannot fit anywhere once it comes off. The resulting Blu art front is a head shot of Pine and the back is Quinto. The picture is as good as would be expected, with plenty of great space effects, the heavy lens glare that Abrams likes does not bleed too bad but ILM does not disappoint. They went with TrueHD which gives an adequate immersion, some of the best tests were with Spocks ship and that unique sound (but 7.1 DTS would have been nice). Plenty of reference points throughout, but even with that clarity I still couldn't get a read on some of the little things (tried freezing the fence signs in the Corvette scene, freezing some of the panel displays to read what the actors were looking at, etc.). But what takes the time and is worth every moment for the supplement geeks like me is the entire disc 2. Disc 1: Menus are unfortunately only minimal still animation (no live action or HD pics). Commentary by the makers. Disc 2: Blue screen animated left sided selections. Most items pop up with an "extended" option that has an icon appear when watching each documentary to facilitate viewing little snippets of additional material, or each one can be watched individually - no play all on anything with this disc. * 16:41 To Boldly Go. Several extensions including the Kirk dilemma (1:58), more Green Girl stuff (3:25). The main piece covers aspects of creation, whys and what fors. All of these supplements are HD interviews of the filmmakers spliced with low def footage (past and present Treks). * 28:53 Casting. Once again all HD present footage mixed with grainy low def shots of behind the scenes - gives some good material on why we saw who we did. * 24:33 Starships. Concepts, art design and some of my favorite stuff on the making of regarding construction. Seven extensions are selectable here including Warp Drive and Paint stuff. * 16:30 Aliens. Shows the meetings and thought process behind some of the critters and humanoids. Five extensions here. * 16:10 Planets. Some nice history for Trek regarding the Vasquez Rocks, which showed an obvious deleted sequence - made me look forward to those even more. * 9:22 Props and Costumes. One extension here about Klingons - which led to another whole deleted sequence I was now REALLY wanting to watch them. * 9:45 Sounds. I enjoyed this one the most as the sounds intrigued me when I first saw this in theaters. Nice homage/respect paid to the old series connections. * 8:47 Gene Roddenberry vision. A nice history with at least half of it being Nimoy narrating/being interviewed (there was a blatant absence of someone here but you will notice that through this entire set). * 13:30 Deleted Scenes - FINALLY. Play all option with commentary on/off of Abrams, Kurtzman. - Spock's birth. Throughout all of these you notice Winona's entire screen time was removed. Nice little plug on how he gets his name. - Klingon battle with the Narada, effects unfinished - which leads into an entire storyline removal - did not agree with the reasons for the removal but oh well. - Dysfunctional home life of the early Kirk sequence. Explains who that kid was on the road and who the voice was on the car phone. - Spock's parents arguing about which side Spock should embrace. - Klingon Prison Planet sequence - wow. I want this in the director's cut. Would have explained a great deal of how Nero and the Narada disappeared. - Vulcan sequence prior to destruction (Vasquez Rocks). - Kirk and Green Girl - can never have too much of that. Once you see this you can find out what Uhura and Kirk were really talking about in the theatrical cut (Klingon Prison - not battle). - Scene involving more Green Girl and Kirk defeating the Maru test - good scene. - Kirk apologizing to Green Girl - had to go once the others were cut. * Simulator: Mix of animated and slight HD footage of interactive material on the Enterprise and the Narada. The vast majority of material centers on the Narada (weapons, propulsion etc.). * 6:22 Gag Reel. A brief retro title sequence followed by a hilarious slew of swearing by even the best (priceless watching Nimoy cuss his lines). Fast paced and fun. * 3 trailers. Everything subtitled in French, Spanish, & Port. Disc 3. Digital copy and game demo. Did not use either. Overall, I had a great time going through all of this and I honestly think even the discerning Trekkie will be happy with this product. Yes, I feel the deleted scenes should have been left in as they explained some obvious gaps in the film, but at least we got to see them. The HD screenings have been very popular and I don't tire of watching this through and through. Enjoy.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Review
*by D***H on May 28, 2009*

The producers of the new Star Trek movie are asking a lot of us. We have taken the characters of Kirk, Spock, and Bones to our hearts. To see them played by different actors from those we are used to is a very unsettling experience. Wisely, the film stands alone, so younger viewers who haven't seen repeats, video's or the later movies featuring the original actors, will not be worried that they don't speak Klingon and don't know what the Genesis Project is. Director J.J.Abrams has cast a fine group of actors, mostly unknown, except for Simon Pegg in the role of Scotty and an actor from the original series in a cameo (I won't spoil it by telling you who it is!). The actor playing Kirk bears more resemblance to Brad Pitt than to William Shatner, and there is a danger that his arrogance doesn't come with the charm that Shatner always had. The character of Kirk in the original series had one flaw, which was that he was in some ways 'too perfect', and with this in mind, the writers have chosen to emphasise the one part of Kirk's character that can be seen as a weakness, his inability to accept a losing scenario. They have added to this, making Kirk more of a rebel, like a James Dean in space, indeed the first sight we have of this new Kirk is in a bar room brawl just like Paris from Star Trek Voyager. The other actors are given good lines to speak, including a few catchphrases, but as there are seven main crew characters, the minor four are sidelined in favour of Kirk, McCoy, and Spock. Lieutenant Uhura gets more to do in this, and unfortunately she does seem to be more of a token representative of her race and sex than she did back in 1966, as the remainder of the cast seems mainly caucasian and male. Still, Zoe Saldaña makes a good job of the material she's given and is nearly as captivating as the original. Cleverly, the film-makers have set this story in an alternate reality which avoids having to stick slavishly to the original series/movies' continuity, which is probably a good idea if you want to make a good movie rather than a fan novel. It would be a remarkable co-icidence if Abrans were not influenced by the recent re-launch of Doctor Who, as he uses 'Who' actor Simon Pegg, a sword fight on the edge of a space ship, and the destruction of a major character's home planet just like the 2005 Doctor Whos. The action moves quickly, it's jam-packed with action and special effects, and yet there are still a few quiet moments when we can reflect on the most important aspect of Star Trek; its characters. The re-casts of Chekov and Sulu are good actors and enjoyable in their small roles, and all have reportedly been signed up for a further two movies. If Paramount continues to employ Abrams as writer and Director, they should be well worth watching.

---

## Why Shop on Desertcart?

- 🛒 **Trusted by 1.3+ Million Shoppers** — Serving international shoppers since 2016
- 🌍 **Shop Globally** — Access 737+ million products across 21 categories
- 💰 **No Hidden Fees** — All customs, duties, and taxes included in the price
- 🔄 **15-Day Free Returns** — Hassle-free returns (30 days for PRO members)
- 🔒 **Secure Payments** — Trusted payment options with buyer protection
- ⭐ **TrustPilot Rated 4.5/5** — Based on 8,000+ happy customer reviews

**Shop now:** [https://www.desertcart.tn/products/694215760-star-trek-2009-titans-of-cult](https://www.desertcart.tn/products/694215760-star-trek-2009-titans-of-cult)

---

*Product available on Desertcart Tunisia*
*Store origin: TN*
*Last updated: 2026-07-15*