I posted this during the first Reddit exodus, I don’t make many memes so I think it’s time I dusted it off.
Strangely, that whole sequence was at the request of Patrick Stewart. Dude likes off-roading.
I know. Which is probably why he’s an actor and not a writer.
Sometimes that producer credit goes to people’s heads. If Frakes were director, he might’ve talked Stewart down. Wouldn’t have saved the weak story, but still.
Another generation of the first officer being the talent behind the camera, and the captain being terrible. It’s like poetry. It rhymes.
Picking on nemesis when the final frontier exists.
I, for one, think Nemesis is worse. At least Star Trek V wasn’t incredibly bleak.
Agree completely! Star Trek V is fun if you don’t take the main story too seriously.
I agree with this. It’s such a silly premise, one cannot possibly take any of it seriously.
Finding out that “God” is just some prisoner trapped at the center of the galaxy who wants to steal a starship to escape isn’t bleak? Perhaps not for those of us who already knew God isn’t real, but still.
Does it confirm that or does it confirm that there’s an alien claiming to be god who isn’t?
Because I’m an atheist and it seemed to me like the latter.
I’d say it’s clearly both. Sybok had been following this person, claiming to be God, all this time, and finds out it was just some alien who is being held prisoner at the center of the galaxy. This alien then reveals that they have, in their time, worn the faces of many different gods for many different people.
The plot was pretty easy to follow. I just saw it again recently, and it’s just as terrible as you remember.
Right, but that doesn’t mean it’s the monotheistic god of humans. And the movie took very great care to say it wasn’t. It was a god Sybok believed in.
I’d have liked it to be an atheistic movie, but it was not.
Actually, it didn’t. At the end of the film, the god character says that it had “worn many faces,” which sounds pretty open ambiguous to me. Nothing clearly stated that it wasn’t any human god, and it certainly appeared to be human.
I have found all of Star Trek to be pretty strongly atheist. While many characters, themselves, have individual, spiritual or religious beliefs, the show always seems to portray the idea of religion as bogus, something to be socially evolved beyond. Every God always turns out to be some kind of alien that could be explained by something rational.
You’re essentially saying that he didn’t have to say who he was to be who you want him to be because he says he has a lot of forms and looked human. Thor appeared human. Zeus appeared human. Why couldn’t he have been appearing as Zeus? Or as a god in any of the many planets that had people who looked exactly like humans on them?
Memory Alpha always puts god in quotes. I usually defer to their judgment because they do a hell of a lot of research.
Excuse me, but why does god need a star ship? :shocked pikachu face:
To hold all his Jaffa, obviously
It’s a generational repeat. The captain had to get behind the camera and ruin the franchise somehow. It just took Terry Matalis 30 years to come back and give us our Star Trek VI for the next generation with PIC S03
Nemesis was a bit lame but still a decent enough film. Generations on the other end could be single TNH episode and it would be equally engaging and interesting.
I liked how they show a young Picard in a photo at some point and he’s even more bald than present Picard and it’s like the opposite of most people who lose their hair as they age.
I like it, it’s a bit over the top at times though. It felt like a flawed prototype of what became JJ trek films later on, which while flawed on their own were much more successful at being the big action blockbuster Nemesis was trying to be, but ended up out of character and style for the TNG crew.
I’m sure we’d all agree it’s a bad movie, but I fucking love it at the same time.
Now that’s clever.
Nemesis is what we call a Franchise Killer
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My take is that it’s best viewed as a 2 parter from the show. The first part ending after the “badmiral” admits the Federation had chosen to ignore the plight of the Ba’ku.