Honestly, I would have demanded there be no families on board, aside from maybe Insurrection. The rest of those plots are just gross incompetency to put families in to immediate battle with the Borg.
Or perhaps the ship could be designed to somehow separate into a couple of different sections, with the part of the ship that has the living quarters being left in a safe place while the other part, likely having more weaponry and/or speed or maneuverability, goes into battle or whatever other dangerous situation is going on in this week's episode.
Kor
I politely disagree. The E-E always seemed overdesigned to me, and in a sense it was, if you read John Eaves' thoughts on how ihe went about it. There's not a strong enough visual link/lineage between it and the D as there was between the original Enterprise and its TMP refit.
Yeah, them ditching the families and civilians after Generations allowed to do more horrifying plots (like the Borg takeover) without having to go into the whole unfortunate implications.
But that could have been done quite easily with the Enterprise D too; either make Starfleet change its policy and the families are removed from the ship permanently....or just put a line in First Contact about the Enterprise loading off the families at a space station before they go to fight the Borg.
it’s different though because the Galaxy and Sovereign are two totally different classes of ships. The refit is still a Constitution Class just refit/upgraded.
The Sovereign is a “next gen” starship. It’s going to have more in common with the Defiant and Voyager, etc…then say the Galaxy class had with the Nebula class.
sorta how the Excelsior and Oberth classes are radically different from the Connie’s and Miranda’s.
Sure, but I wasn't talking about in-universe explanations, but simply choices relating to design and iconicity. That factor was kept intact between the 1701 and its movie refit. The D - even if it hadn't been to everyone's tastes, including some people on the film crew - was the iconic ship of the show. The E had nothing to do with it design-wise and I felt that diminished its impact strictly from the perspective of emotional attachment. This could've been any ship, not necessarily an Enterprise. In short: I would've preferred to see a Galaxy-class refit, I suppose.
fair enough. I dunno what more you could do design wise for a Galaxy refit though. Going with the AGT version of the ship seems like overkill and still presents the same “problems” they had with the ED filming wise.
Generations is a film that misses being great due to avoidable pitfalls. The Nexus being one of them. How would you alter the ending or make it work better?
I would keep Kirk’s death. Just alter how it happens.It's difficult to answer this question without knowing what stipulations there are, if any.
For instance, if Kirk has to die, that's a significant plot consideration.
Oh man. The hits just keep on coming. I'd rather they not used the Duras sisters at all then. They could've wrapped up that story on DS9 then. The sisters did appear in season 1 of that show.Well, the other side of it is budget limitations/decisions. There was never going to be more than one ship, nor was there going to be a new model of ship, which made it harder to tell a convincing story about the Duras sisters taking out the E-D. Nor did they apparently even have the budget to not reuse literally the same explosion they used in the immediately prior film, which was perhaps GEN's most horrible moment (for this viewer at least).
Here’s a question that I’ve had on my mind for years.
How would you fix the end action scene of Generations?
Oh man. The hits just keep on coming. I'd rather they not used the Duras sisters at all then. They could've wrapped up that story on DS9 then. The sisters did appear in season 1 of that show.
I think I figured out a scenario where the movie can have it’s cake and eat it too. Keep Picard on the ship as it battles in the skies above Veridian III. My idea of increasing the number ships the ENT-D faced is a must. The enemy ships would be armed with Soran’s experimental weapons. With greater destructive yields than the ENT-D was designed to handle.Well, the additional money was just for reshoots of Kirk's death, not to redo what should have been a significant combat sequence.
Which is to say, upon rewatches it becomes clear just how pathetic that combat sequence is.
General audience isn’t going to read books to fill in details a movie should explain.A post-credits blurb saying Captain Kirk will return in the Shatner/Reeves-Stevens novels?
I forgot about Firstborn and I’m a super fan. I doubt the general audience were all following the show continuity as closely as well.Yes, but they were in season 7 of TNG after that.
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