One thing I would add to this discussion, especially with the TNG films, is that I never got the feeling that Paramount or anyone involved expected them to be "blockbuster" level films, nor do the movies aspire to be that.
What strikes me about the TNG movies when you watch them now is the lack of ambition. It's probably a function of the bean counters at Paramount, and whatever formula they were using to gauge what box office gross was possible for the franchise, but almost all of the TNG movies, with maybe the possible exception of First Contact, feel like something that could have been two-part episodes on the series padded out a little.
And maybe that was a reasonable way to look at it. People loved TNG. Just give the audience 2 hours of the same dynamic with a few extra visual effects.
But really at no point do you get the feeling of people in a creative place where they want to try to do things they could never do before. It never feels like anyone either on the creative end or production end said: "Hey, we got an opportunity to stretch with a film." All of the TNG movies fit within the four corners of a Rick Berman produced Star Trek episode, and don't aspire to be anything more than that.
What strikes me about the TNG movies when you watch them now is the lack of ambition. It's probably a function of the bean counters at Paramount, and whatever formula they were using to gauge what box office gross was possible for the franchise, but almost all of the TNG movies, with maybe the possible exception of First Contact, feel like something that could have been two-part episodes on the series padded out a little.
And maybe that was a reasonable way to look at it. People loved TNG. Just give the audience 2 hours of the same dynamic with a few extra visual effects.
But really at no point do you get the feeling of people in a creative place where they want to try to do things they could never do before. It never feels like anyone either on the creative end or production end said: "Hey, we got an opportunity to stretch with a film." All of the TNG movies fit within the four corners of a Rick Berman produced Star Trek episode, and don't aspire to be anything more than that.