Movie Review – Star Trek: First Contact

Star Trek: First Contact (1996)
Written by Brannon Braga and Ronald D. Moore
Directed by Jonathan Frakes

With a sleek new Enterprise, the Next Generation cast set out on their second film, fully realized as a big-screen product. While the budget is bigger and the stakes are higher, something is lost in the process. It’s that distinct sense of a family. The focus is narrowed to Picard and Data, while the rest of the crew become supporting to minor players in these characters’ stories.

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Movie Review – Star Trek: Generations

Star Trek: Generations (1994)
Written by Ronald D. Moore & Brannon Braga
Directed by David Carson

Star Trek: Generations is not a film that is going to bring new viewers into the franchise, it exists as something for fans of the series. That said, even if you don’t know who these characters are and the legacy bits are lost on you, the story is still comprehensible. It’s a story about regret, how time goes back so fast, and you find yourself thinking about the other life you could have had. Generations is the perfect companion piece to “All Good Things,” the final episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation. They both focus on Picard, his sense of aging, and confronting the life not lived.

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TV Review: Best of Star Trek: The Next Generation Part 11

All Good Things Parts 1 & 2 (original airdate: May 23rd, 1994)
Written by Brannon Braga & Ronald D. Moore
Directed by Winrich Kolbe

We live in an age where the future is a blur, hazy, and unfocused due to so many dire circumstances. The clash of ideologies with fascism gaining a sort of traction that it hasn’t had in a long time. The screaming threat of climate change, setting off klaxons, and demanding our immediate action. The existential crisis of the soul that has come about from two decades of war. The hypernormalization of a system that is collapsing. Star Trek posits that one day this human strife will end, and we will ascend into new enlightenment, a socialist utopia where our species unites with the galaxy. It’s hard to see that while you stand in the middle of the burning forest but I hope this show is correct.

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TV Review – Best of Star Trek: The Next Generation Part 10

Parallels (original airdate: November 29th, 1993)
Written by Brannon Braga
Directed by Robert Wiemer

While Parallels is a fantastic, large-scale exploration of alternate realities at its core, it’s a way to introduce and explore a relationship between Worf and Troi. This relationship is a much better fit for Troi than her forced romance with Riker, whom she was ultimately married to (more on that when I review Star Trek: Nemesis later this month). They are such perfect contrasts to each other: Worf being always awkward on how to convey his emotions while Troi is relaxed with who she is and how she feels. From what I have read, not every member of the production team was happy with this idea, but I think it is one of the best crew romances any of the Star Trek shows have ever featured because it feels like the most organic.

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TV Review – Best of Star Trek: The Next Generation Part 9

Descent Parts 1 & 2 (original airdates: June 21st, 1993, September 20th, 1993)
Written by Jeri Taylor, Ronald D. Moore, and René Echevarria
Directed by Alexander Singer

I’ve always liked the idea of Data’s brother Lore more than the execution. I think that is due in part to Brent Spiner’s decisions as an actor when he plays Lore. He’s not merely doing a more human Data or an evil version of the android. Spiner chooses to be a mustache-twirling embarrassment. Lore never feels like a genuine threat to the Enterprise, always a momentary annoyance they have to deal with. That continues in this two-parter that I wish was better because it does hold one crucial aspect, it features the return of Hugh the Borg.

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TV Review – Best of Star Trek: The Next Generation Part 8

Ship in a Bottle (original airdate: January 25th, 1993)
Written by René Echevarria
Directed by Alexander Singer

This episode returns to a storyline first introduced in season two. In “Elementary, Dear Data,” the holodeck program for Professor Moriarity in a Sherlock Holmes simulation becomes self-aware. That incident ended with a promise that one day, a permanent form for Moriarity would be developed. Now the program is accidentally released with Lt. Barclay is doing work on the holodeck. This time around, Moriarty appears to have created a way for himself to exist the boundaries of the holodeck and move about the ship. Picard and Data must try to puzzle out if a new form of life has been created or have they been tricked through Moriarity’s cunning.

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TV Review – Best of Star Trek: The Next Generation Part 7

Relics (original airdate: October 12th, 1992)
Written by Ronald D. Moore
Directed by Alexander Singer

Every once in a while, TNG would remind us of its roots in the original series. In the pilot episode, Dr. McCoy made a brief appearance. Later, Spock would play a pivotal in an arc that involved the Romulans. Those guest spots were fun but didn’t tug at our heartstrings, definitely not in the way this return would. The Enterprise comes across a Dyson sphere thanks to a distress call from the lost USS Jenolan. Trapped onboard in a rigged transporter stasis is Montgomery Scott, the engineer on the old Enterprise. He’s been kept the same age he was at the time of the accident due to his quick thinking with the transporter.

Once on the Enterprise-D, Scotty is overwhelmed with the changes in technology. I was reminded of his scene in Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home, where he struggled to work a 1980s PC, believing you spoke into the mouse. Anytime Scotty leaves his particular era, he is a fish out of water, befuddled by the way another time’s technology works. Geordi tries to ease Scotty into life in the 24th century, but the old man gets in the way and is ultimately ordered to leave Engineering. Eventually, Scotty shows his older knowledge and creative thinking is useful when he saves the entire Enterprise crew.

This is an episode my wife admitted made her tear up, and she has not ever been a Trekkie or really consumed a lot of Star Trek media. I think that speaks to the quality of Ronald Moore’s writing that he can evoke those feelings in people with only a passing knowledge of Scotty. When it comes to guest spots by original cast members, this is hands down the best one. The technical aspects of the plot entirely justify Scotty’s appearance without feeling heavily contrived. James Doohan is brilliant at bringing his character back to life and imbuing him with depth and pathos. You genuinely feel the grief of being the last one standing, all your friends are gone, and the world just doesn’t feel the same anymore.


Chain of Command Parts 1 & 2 (original airdates: December 14th & December 21st, 1992)
Written by Frank Abatemarco and Ronald D. Moore
Directed by Robert Scheerer and Les Landau

This is a case of Part 2 being vastly superior to the first installment. The first episode is essential to understand the second, though. It sets up a scenario where Picard, Crusher, and Worf are pulled off of regular duty on the Enterprise to engage in a top-secret mission for Starfleet. Captain Edward Jellico is put in command of the Enterprise, and the first part deals heavily with Riker’s bristling over Jellico’s regimented and harsh style of leadership. It’s okay but not nearly as good as what waits in the second part.

We eventually learn that the mission involves going into Cardassian territory to gather intelligence on a pending attack. That goes south, and Picard ends up captured by Gul Madred (David Warner), a Cardassian who specializes in interrogations. In a similar fashion to the Room 101 sequence in Orwell’s 1984, Picard is systematically broken down. Madred uses the lights in his office as the focus of this torture, forcing Picard to acknowledge over and over that there are five lights when, in reality, only four exist.

David Warner does a fantastic job as Madred; his career had led him to specialize in playing these insidious villain types. The moments between him and Picard are the best of this whole two-parter, full of genuine tension and peril. It’s one of the few times we see someone really get the best of Picard, and you wouldn’t be faulted for worrying if this will totally shatter the captain. My one complaint is that this arc should have more ripples in episodes that follow, the same way the Locutus arc haunted Picard into the feature films. Deep Space Nine became the show that developed the Cardassian conflict more, so maybe because of that, we don’t get much follow up.

TV Review – Best of Star Trek: The Next Generation Part 6

I, Borg (Original airdate: May 10th, 1992)
Written by René Echevarria
Directed by Robert Lederman

With Jonathan Del Arco listed in the cast for the upcoming Picard, I suspect this episode will be of core importance to the events that go down in that series. No matter how important this episode proves to be, it is one of the best of TNG, once again focusing on questions about humanity and dignity. The Enterprise comes across a crashed Borg ship with a single survivor. This Borg drone is brought onboard the vessel and becomes disconnected from the Collective. A debate ensues about whether to load this being with a virus that could kill the species or allow him to develop autonomy.

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TV Review – Best of Star Trek: The Next Generation Part 5

Darmok (original airdate: September 30, 1991)
Written by Philip LaZebnik and Joe Menosky
Directed by Winrich Kolbe

This is probably my favorite episode of Star Trek: TNG because it represents the very core ethos that Gene Rodenberry set out to show the world. The most simple description of this episode is two people who do not share a language must find a way to communicate or they die. The story is so beautifully executed, and I would argue it is a perfect episode.

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TV Review – Best of Star Trek: The Next Generation Part 4

Brothers (original airdate: October 8, 1990)
Written by Rick Berman
Directed by Rob Bowman

To go alongside the theme of Family from the previous episode of TNG, Rick Berman wrote this story that features Data coming face to face with his creator, Dr. Noonien Soong. There’s also a return visit from Data’s brother, Lore, the black sheep of the Soong family. Data episodes are always some of my favorites with a few exceptions, this is one of them.

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