I don’t think I agree with this. FC has some fantastic character stuff for Picard in particular, who really gets put through a ringer.
-He has to face the Borg and come to terms (finally, unlike the TV series which brushed it off) with the trauma, fear, and hatred he has built up over the years.
- He has his high-and-mighty worldview and self-image challenged and rightfully shit upon by Lily Sloan. Stewart and Woodard’s scenes together are the best thing in the entire TNG movie franchise. Absolute electricity.
-He shows his absolute loyalty and love for Data, far more than at any other time, when he resolves to stay aboard and potentially even re-join the collective just to ensure Data’s freedom.
Additionally, it’s a great character study of Data and Cochrane. Data we get to see being truly tempted and having his loyalty tested. Cochrane is a cool twist in the Star Trek universe, a guy who is responsible for the “evolved humanity” of Roddenberry’s dreams, who ironically was basically a very flawed, cynical, cowardly guy interested only in money and naked women.
I think FC has some great character stuff.
After "Family", TNG decided Picard was able to move on without being haunted by his ex every two episodes. That said, you still raise a good point - there could still be underlying trauma or issues. And yet I kept thinking "Dang, this is like a reversal of TWOK except the Borg is now the big ol' whale that Captain Picahab wants to spear. Given their moves in this flick and how convenient Picard's plotting were, who am I supposed to cheer on again?" Even in overlooking everything else and focusing on Picard, the joke of disobeying orders* combined with simply sending a communication over with the tender area they all need to hit in unison could have saved a boatload of lives. Several boats. Picard delayed and did all that shizplop on purpose. And speaking of cynical:
The take on Cochrane is definitely cynical, if not a take on Roddenberryisms.
Data's subplot is just dumb. The Borg could easily reprogram him. Their mistake was using the android as a lab rat for a bizarre cheap thrill that's antithetical to the Borg, and after Data and Lore who else would get the same-- what the heck would
that treatment be called... then again, the Queen and her order to do this is reminiscent of a certain WW2 adversary, but even then it still doesn't make sense because their experiments are on a robot for which the design exists for only 2 units (or 3 including B4) and after that... are they turning toasters into Borg now?
The Lilian/Picard scenes were indeed electric and were genuine movie highlights. Picard was already off his rocket, a la Kirk in TMP over a big bad causing him to lose his marbles and to the point she could see he wasn't walking his talk. Sorta like Cochrane...
* the same trope being used in the next movie, played utterly straight
this time - and against plot contrivances that shriek "FORCED MELODRAMA!" no better than how FC was doing it, just from the opposite end of things. Yeah, NEM > INS by an increasing margin, the more I think about it. I should watch both this weekend; even I would be shocked if I reevaluate them so much that I'd find NEM to be better than FC.
