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Date ![]() Helpful Rating 0 out of 0 users found this helpful Posted: 7/25/2007A review of Star Trek Generations by js3601 This is the best Star Trek TNG films yet and forever will be.
Outcome: Buy Was this review helpful? Sign In 0 out of 0 users found this helpful Posted: 8/16/2003A review of Star Trek Generations by Anonymous This movie came out very shortly after the last episode of the Next Generation aired: All Good Things. That last episode left us with our hearts in our throats and a strong sense of family. This movie is no different, beginning with Captain Kirk and the rest of his crew. Aboard the maiden voyage of the Enterprise-B, Kirk saves the vessel from certain destruction while it appears he has sacrificed himself. 78 years in the future, Captain Picard and the Enterprise-D have a small problem, a man, Dr. Soran, who wants to enter a "Nexus" where he will have eternal happiness to his liking, and he will do anything to get to it. Kirk happens to be caught in this Nexus as well. As such, there are several legendary Picard/Kirk scenes where they're fighting for each other. In the end Kirk dies, Picard buries him. In the meantime, Riker's having a ship battle with Klingons who happen to plow through the Enterprise's shields with their torpedoes and destroys the Star Drive section (Bottom Half) of the ship. The Saucer gets launched into the planets atmosphere, and eventually crashes onto the planet.<br><br>In one of the last scenes, Riker and Picard are on the tattered bridge of the Enterprise. Riker tells Picard that he always thought he'd get a shot at the Captain's chair, and that the ship went before her time. Picard reassures him, saying: "Someone once told me that time is a predator that stalks us all our lives. But I rather believe that time is a companion that goes along with us for the journey, and reminds us to cherish every moment, for it may never come again." -The predator part came from Soran earlier in the movie.<br><br>Good movie, and a great start for the Next Generation set of movies Was this review helpful? Sign In 0 out of 1 users found this helpful Posted: 2/24/2003A review of Star Trek Generations by lowellv70 This film marks the ";changing of the guard"; as Federation patrolmen and explorers exchange mutual tribute. The Excelsior class U.S.S. Enterprise NCC 1701-B is about to be launched and the revered crew of its precursors is on hand for the maiden voyage generating much media interest. But ";B"; is not finished with proper re-fitting and in the midst of the ceremony is called to rescue two transport freighters caught in the midst of a mysterious quantum ";storm"; that is rending them apart. Kirk and Scotty manage to assist but in the process, the power stream brushes the secondary hull seemingly obliterating the lower deck where Kirk was making repairs. Meanwhile, in the future the Enterprise ";D"; crew is taking Mr.Worf through a promotional hazing when Picard gets word of a family tragedy. As if that's not enough, the ship is summoned to assist an observatory outpost who is under siege from this same singularity. On the outpost as an observer is Dr. Soran, an original survivor from the Enterprise B rescue who harbors an intense desire to be near this spatial distortion and has enlisted the help of a renegade band of Klingons in his quest. Picard must deal with his personal trauma while pieceing out the mystery of this quantum flux which only his bartender seems to understand. A cohesive effort designed as a loose tie between the two TV series featuring a spectacular sequence involving the fate of Enterprise D and Brent Spiner going through the gytrations of adjusting to artificial emotions. Plausible Sci-Fi. Computer Voice: Majel Barrett Various Com Voices: Brent Spiner Was this review helpful? Sign In 1-3 of 3 Per Page | ||
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