Of the four TNG movies, it's by far the one that feels the most like "Star Trek: The Next Generation... on the big screen".
The simple comfort factor of good old 1701-D being there; the combination of the TNG and DS9/VOY uniforms; the callbacks to older TV episodes (Data's emotion chip, Picard's family, Spot, the Duras Sisters, etcetera); Picard being 100% in-character on Veridian III when trying to reason with Soran by appealing to deeply hidden his sense of morality (it almost works at one point, too)...
Even now, 21 years later, 'Generations' is the only TNG movie that to me actually feels like TNG ('Insurrection' has its moments, though). I never really embraced 1701-E as a starship, I never liked the gray-and-black-dirge uniforms introduced in 'First Contact', I hated that the following movies all took these characters and turned them into something atypical of what we expected from seven years of the TV show, and also disliked that 'negative continuity' had crept in by the time 'Nemesis' came around (the TNG TV show actually had an admirable sense of continuity that built up over 7 years and remained relatively consistent).
As much as I hate some parts of 'Generations', particularly the lame ass destruction of 1701-D (when, frankly, I never bought the idea of replacing it with a new ship anyway), 'Generations' is still a guilty pleasure of mine...

The simple comfort factor of good old 1701-D being there; the combination of the TNG and DS9/VOY uniforms; the callbacks to older TV episodes (Data's emotion chip, Picard's family, Spot, the Duras Sisters, etcetera); Picard being 100% in-character on Veridian III when trying to reason with Soran by appealing to deeply hidden his sense of morality (it almost works at one point, too)...
Even now, 21 years later, 'Generations' is the only TNG movie that to me actually feels like TNG ('Insurrection' has its moments, though). I never really embraced 1701-E as a starship, I never liked the gray-and-black-dirge uniforms introduced in 'First Contact', I hated that the following movies all took these characters and turned them into something atypical of what we expected from seven years of the TV show, and also disliked that 'negative continuity' had crept in by the time 'Nemesis' came around (the TNG TV show actually had an admirable sense of continuity that built up over 7 years and remained relatively consistent).
As much as I hate some parts of 'Generations', particularly the lame ass destruction of 1701-D (when, frankly, I never bought the idea of replacing it with a new ship anyway), 'Generations' is still a guilty pleasure of mine...
