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Title:
Star Trek: The Next Generation Motion Picture Collection
Media:
Blu-ray Disc
Genre:
Science Fiction/Space Opera
Films:
Star Trek: Generations, Star Trek: First Contact, Star Trek: Insurrection,
Star Trek: Nemesis
Stars:
Patrick Stewart, Jonathan Frakes, Brent
Spiner, Levar Burton, Michael Dorn, Gates McFadden, and Marina Sirtis
Respective Feature Film Guest Stars: Malcolm McDowell, James Doohan, Walter Koenig, William Shatner, Whoopi Goldberg, Alfre Woodward, James Cromwell, Alice Krige, Robert Picardo, Ethan Phillips, Dwight Schultz, F. Murray Abraham, Donna Murphy, Anthony Zerbe, Will Wheaton, and Kate Mulgrew
Writers:
Ronald D. Moore, Brannon Braga, Michael Piller, and John Logan
Directors:
David Carson, Jonathan Frakes, and Stuart Baired
Respective
Feature Lengths: 117 minutes, 111 minutes, 103 minutes, 116 minutes
BD
Exclusive Extras: Commentary By David Carson and Manny Coto on Star Trek:
Generations, Audio Commentary By Damon Lindelof and Anthony Pascale on Star
Trek: First Contact, Commentary With Jonathan Frakes and Mirina Sirtis on Star
Trek: Insurrection, Audio Commentary By Michael and Denise Okuda on Star
Trek: Nemesis, ILM – The Next Generation, Greetings From The International
Space Station, Spaceshiphone’s Historic Flight, Next Generation Designer
Flashback: Andrew Probert, Westmore’s Legacy, Mariana Sirtis: The Counselor,
Reunion With The Rikers, Today’s Tech Tomorrow’s Data, Robot Hall Of Fame,
Stellar Cartography On Earth, Brent Spiner: Data And Beyond Parts 1, 2, 3, &
4, Trek Roundtable For All Four Films, Starfleet Academy Briefings On Trilithium,
Temporal Vortex, Origins Of The Ba’ku and Son’a Conflict, Thalaron
Radiation, Library Computer, Star Trek I.Q. (BD-Live)
Star
Trek: Evolutions:
Exclusive Bonus Disc Extras: The Evolution Of The Enterprise, Villains
Of Star Trek, I Love The Star Trek Movies, Farewell To Star Trek:
Experience, Klingon Encounter, Borg Invasion, Charting The Final Frontier
Languages:
English Dolby TrueHD 5.1 Surround Sound and French and Spanish Dolby Digital 5.1
Surround Sound and Dolby Surround Sound For The Bonus Disc Only
Subtitles:
English Subtitles For The Deaf And Hearing Impaired and English, French,
Spanish, and Portuguese Language Subtitles
Packaging:
Five Slim Blue BD Cases Within A Hard Cardboard Slipcase Box
Sound: Dolby True HD 5.1 Surround Sound and Dolby Digital 5.1
Surround Sound and Dolby Surround Sound on Bonus Disc Only
Respective
Years of Theatrical Release: 1994, 1996, 1998, 2002/Blu-ray Disc Release: 2009
Theatrical
Distributor: Paramount Pictures
Home
Video Distributor: Paramount Home Entertainment
Respective
MPAA Ratings: PG, PG-13, PG, PG-13
Reviewer:
Mark A. Rivera
Star
Trek: The Next Generation
is as classic a television series as Star Trek: The Original Series
and even though there will always be fans who prefer one incarnation to another,
the thing I feel most admirers of Star Trek will agree to is the series
earned it’s spot in the greater pantheon of galactic heroes and stories of
discovery where no one has gone before that is Star Trek. In fact Star
Trek is the rare franchise that legitimately fits into both the science
fiction and more fantasy oriented sci-fi subgenre with the occasional touch of
space opera mixed in for good measure. The four feature films in the Next
Generation Movie Collection on Blu-ray Disc cover a time when Star Trek
was at the height of it’s popularity in the mid 1990s to when the franchise on
television began to lose popularity as trends in genre storytelling favored less
fanatical elements like elaborately made up aliens and characters that were
clearly defined as heroes or villains to a less flashy, but definitely dramatic
form of space opera or sci-fi that has come to define the 2000s decade with
shows like the reimagined Battlestar Galactica, LOST, Smallville, Heroes, and
whose influence can especially be seen new shows like Stargate: Universe,
which is completely unlike it’s predecessors.
In
time this trend will change again and we may go back to more traditional space
operas like Star Wars: The Clone Wars as tastes change with the time.
Thus in some ways the four Star Trek: The Next Generation Motion Pictures
are a bit of a time capsule just as the TV series that launched the movies
reveal as much about the time in which it was made as Star Trek: The Original
Series carries elements reflecting both the nature of the kind of dramatic
television programming that had been a staple of popular culture from the 1950s,
the western, and also tackle subject matter related to what was going on in the
late 1960s. In fact holding up a mirror to the world around it and exploring it
through science fiction conventions has always been an element that has made the
genre profound and it is something that Star Trek in all of it’s
incarnations has done arguably better than it’s contemporaries. This is just
one of the elements that has made Star Trek stand the test of time to be
discovered by new generations with each passing decade.
Star
Trek: Generations
was noteworthy at the time of its release because it gave viewers their first
onscreen meeting between the characters of Jean Luc Picard (Patrick Stewart) and
James T. Kirk (William Shatner). Malcolm
McDowell is the main villain of the film. He plays a mad scientist whose family
was wiped out by The Borg and subsequently has become obsessed with entering a
strange ribbon of energy that travels the galaxy known as The Nexus. With the
fate of an inhabited star system in the balance that Dr. Soran (McDowell) is
willing to destroy so he can enter the Nexus, Picard finds himself drawn into
the Nexus to where he discovers Captain Kirk and convinces him to return to the
24th Century with him to foil Soran’s plan.
Star
Trek: Generations
fulfills a prophecy Kirk made about his fate in Star Trek V: The Final
Frontier, though not quite as he may have expected. Malcolm McDowell is one
of the better villains in the feature film series and I think a missed
opportunity the film should have shown was what the temporal Nexus was for him
since it basically gives the being inside a fantasy world where their wishes
could come true and death is only a dream. The Borg would make their big screen
appearance in the next film in the series, which of all The Next Generation
movies is perhaps the best, Star Trek: First Contact. Here Picard and
crew follow the Borg back in time to the mid twenty-first century to prevent the
Borg from preempting the official first contact with an extra terrestrial
species following Zephram Cochran’s (James Cromwell) first warp space flight
from Earth. Alice Krige adds great dimension to her character as The Borg Queen,
who is as seductive as she is menacing. The film has been referred to as the
first true Next Generation Star Trek movie because it is the first one
not to feature any actors from The Original Series.
Sadly
the last two Star Trek films, while not horrible, never reached the
notoriety of Star Trek: First Contact or Star Trek: Generations,
not to mention most of The Original Series themed movies. Despite Jonathan
Frakes returning to the director’s chair and the additions of F. Murray
Abraham as the main villain and Anthony Zerbe as a misguided Federation Admiral,
Star Trek: Insurrection feels like an extended episode of The Next
Generation and not even a good one. In fact the premise was explored in part
far better in The Next Generation episode “Who Watches The
Watchers?” Star Trek:
Nemesis was supposed to be for The Next Generation cast what Star
Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country was to The Original Series cast.
Unfortunately the film is little more than a whimper of a goodbye to fans with a
substandard storyline and unnecessary exposition, some truly poorly
choreographed dramatic and action sequences like the attempted long distance
mind rape of Counselor Troi (Marina Sirtis) that kills the pacing of the film
and even the apparent breaking of certain Star Trek trademarks like how
phasers operate. In Star Trek phasers are usually direct beams of energy
that remain constant either according to how long the trigger or firing
mechanism is touched or how the weapon was designed to begin with. In Nemesis,
the phaser guns shoot like laser blasters from Star Wars. There are a few
references in both Insurrection and Nemesis that relate to
previous and ongoing events in the feature films and television series of the
time, but while they help to broaden the scope of the Star Trek Universe,
at times they just sound like lame dialogue to appeal to fanboys and girls. The
ending of Nemesis continues to confound me because I honestly cannot
figure why Picard has a smile on his face at the end of the film. I mean, what
the hell does he have to be happy about? There were a lot missed opportunities
to build upon the films with each installment, which was what the majority of
the previous Star Trek films did, but ultimately what I think also hurt The
Next Generation feature films as a whole is that they don’t stand well on
their own for viewers not familiar with Star Trek.
The
Original Series
cast films had the benefit of years of syndicated reruns so that the generation
that went to see the films was raised on Star Trek and their parents, who
were fans too, introduced it to them at a young age. When The Next Generation
films were released, Star Trek: The Next Generation had only recently
completed it’s first run TV broadcast and there were other Star Trek TV
shows referenced directly or indirectly in the films that meant nothing if you
didn’t watch them. So as big as the Star Trek fan base is, non-Trek
fans got little out of the experience of viewing The Next Generation
motion pictures. It would not be until J.J. Abrams Star Trek premiered
theatrically in 2009 that viewers familiar with Star Trek and unfamiliar
with it as well, could sit down and mutually enjoy a film that paid respect to
all that had come before it and blazed a new pathway for future features to
follow. This makes it both a sequel and a reboot at the same time.
Most
people who purchase this Blu-ray Disc set will be people who already own the
films in some form on DVD and there are features from the DVDs that are carried
over to these discs, but since they have already been reviewed and available for
sometime now and for the interest of maintaining focus on this review, I will
only cover the exclusive Blu-ray features that make the upgrade worth while. Off
all the films in The Next Generation Motion Picture Collection, only Star
Trek: First Contact is available on Blu-ray Disc separately at the time of
this writing. All four films are presented in their original (2.35:1) aspect
ratio and are presented beautifully in 1080p high definition. Since these four
films are still relatively recent, Generations is 15 years old as of this
writing, they all look very good and benefit greatly as the films become more
contemporary in part because of the improvements in film stocks and the digital
revolution that has changed filmmaking forever now makes things possible in post
production that would have required a lot more work in the days of analogue
effects techniques and so forth. Thus the best looking films are First
Contact, Insurrection, and Nemesis, but it should be noted that Generations
still looks great. Probably better than it ever has and one can appreciate the
work done to darken up the bridge of the Enterprise-D in the film for
dramatic effect more than I think when I saw the original theatrical release.
The first reveal of the bridge with crewmembers still in costume from the
holographic promotion ceremony held for Lt. Commander Worf is a good scene to
compare with the previous Special Collector’s Edition DVD to see what I mean.
Great demo shots from the other three films include the Enterprise-E
swooping over the Defiant as it’s shield’s block fire from The Borg
cube vessel in the opening space battle sequence from First Contact. The
view of the Enterprise swooping over the giant device that was designed to
harvest the metaphasic radiation from the rings of the planet Ba’ku looks very
cool and the big fight between the Reman Warbird Scimitar and the Enterprise-E
with the assist of Romulan vessels fighting the Scimitar in a green
nebula from Nemesis looks fantastic in true 1080p/24fps high definition.
I
was kind of surprised that DTS-HD MA soundtrack options were not included for
these Blu-ray Disc releases since the Special Collector’s Edition DVD releases
included standard DTS soundtrack options for all four Next Generation
two-disc sets. Of course the English Dolby True HD 5.1 Surround Soundtracks on
all four films is as uniformly fantastic as one would expect, but since
Paramount included DTS HD MA 7.1 Surround Soundtracks on their Blu-ray Disc
releases of Star Trek: The Original Series, I find the exclusion of
DTS-HD MA Losses Master Audio Theatrical Surround Soundtracks to be a bit of a
disappointment. French and Spanish Language Dolby Digital 5.1 Surround
Soundtracks have been included along with English Subtitles For The Deaf And Hearing Impaired and English, French,
Spanish, and Portuguese Language Subtitles as options.
One
thing neither the Star Trek: Generations nor the Star Trek:
Insurrection DVDs ever included was Director commentaries so I was very
pleased to listen to veteran Trek Writer Manny Coto and Generations
Director David Carson discuss the making of the film and in particular the on
location reshoots in the valley of fire where Picard and Kirk confront Doctor
Soran to be quite enlightening. One should remember the fantastic directing job
Carson did on the Star Trek: Deep Space Nine premiere episode “Emissary.”
I think it is what won him the theatrical directing assignment for Generations.
I really enjoyed Jonathan Frakes and Mirina Sirtis audio commentary because
Jonathan Frakes is not afraid to point out his own mistakes, even so far as to
say, “I hate this” on Insurrection. While listening to Frakes and
Sirtis’ commentary on Insurrection, I thought there were hints of a
possible fifth Next Generation feature film to give the crew of the Enterprise-D
and E a better farewell than Nemesis had, but after hearing
Michael and Denise Okuda’s audio commentary on Star Trek: Nemesis, I
guess any hints I thought were given are just wishful thinking on my part. I’m
not sure if certain scenes deleted from Nemesis would improve upon the film, but
I can certainly think of some scenes that I wish never existed entirely. Damon
Lindelof and Anthony Pascale provide an at times humorous commentary track for
Star Trek: First Contact
The
LCARS computer format used on The Next Generation and feature films serve
as an interactive manner for getting information on things seen in the film in
what is labeled as the Library Computer viewing option present on the discs and
I liked the 24th Century Starfleet Academy briefings that cover
Trilithium, Temporal Vortex, Origins of the Ba’ku and Son’a Conflict, and
Thalaron Radiation respectively for the four films. Other features include ILM
– The Next Generation, Greetings From The International Space Station,
Spaceshiphone’s Historic Flight, Next Generation Designer Flashback: Andrew
Probert, Westmore’s Legacy, Mariana Sirtis: The Counselor, Reunion With The
Rikers, Today’s Tech Tomorrow’s Data, Robot Hall Of Fame, Stellar
Cartography On Earth, Brent Spiner: Data And Beyond Parts 1, 2, 3, & 4, Trek
Roundtable for all four films, and Star Trek I.Q. BD-Live features. Trailers and
TV spots for all of the films are included as well and the theatrical trailers
are all in true 1080p/24fps high definition.
There is an exclusive bonus Blu-ray Disc entitled Star Trek: Evolutions that includes additional featurettes like The Evolution Of The Enterprise, which features some interesting designs for future incarnations of the Starship Enterprise and covers all of the incarnations of the Enterprise from the NX-01 seen in Star Trek: Enterprise through the Enterprise – E, which was specifically built with The Borg in mind and is seen in the final three Next Generation films. However if it was designed to fight The Borg, why would Star Fleet not call it in when the Borg attack Earth for the second time. I mean if they are that concerned with Picard’s reliability because he was once assimilated into The Bog Collective, they could have assigned temporary command to Riker and keep Picard on the bridge as a tactical advisor. Please note that the alternate timeline design for the Enterprise as seen in the new Star Trek film is not covered here. Villains Of Star Trek is a terrific featurette with Writer/Director Nicolas Meyer explaining how the true villains of Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home are the humans that hunted the humpback whales to extinction and not the probe trying to communicate with them in the movie. Farewell To Star Trek: Experience, Klingon Encounter, and Borg Invasion, are bittersweet featurettes showing the final days of the Star Trek: Experience attraction in Las Vegas with a look at the actors who appeared in the attraction for about a decade and then there are some grainy videos of the actual attractions within the Star Trek: Experience that gives the viewer an idea of what it was like. They reminded me a bit of what one might see at Universal Studios in California or Florida. Charting The Final Frontier is an interactive examination of all of the galactic locations visited in the first ten Star Trek movies. An I Love The Star Trek Movies roundtable wraps up the bonus features on the disc.

The
interactive menus as well as packaging and design for the Blu-ray Disc set are
in keeping with the previous Motion Picture Collection box set released earlier
this year. Star
Trek: The Next Generation Motion Picture Collection
is available on Blu-ray Disc now at retailers on and offline courtesy of
Paramount Home Entertainment.
©
Copyright 2009 By Mark A. Rivera
All Rights Reserved.

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