Before tomorrow's viewing of it:
Loved the lighting or lack of it. Lighting was there, but it was more atmospheric and not merely "dark". External light sources like stars was inspired. @Turtletrekker said it already, the 7-year-old TV sets were knackered sets and every imperfection would show, hence the subdued interior lighting.
GREAT soundtrack and direction.
Not since TWOK was mortality a major plot point, and GEN does some of it better.
Soran and Picard have a great scene together, which hits harder if you see the movie a second time. It's a great "show vs tell" clue that Soran is also of the same species Guinan is, for being able to perceive time and the timeline in outsider-looking-in ways.
Loved the 1701-D crash. Not since Blake's 7 was there something approaching a good spaceship crash, though B7 had the better underlying plot reason for it to crash. Could have sworn that the "D"'s demise was longer in the theater, with a mid-stratosphere angle. Not as good as the 1701's destruction in Star Trek III, but it's iconic in its own right. Both are.
Kirk's death, on screen, was as pointless as his being there and was pointless as his on-screen death. Come to think of it, Kirk's Nexus retirement fantasy is even odder than Picard's. On the plus side, Kirk dies alone (see Star trek V for that.)
Never cared for Guinan's presence, shoehorned in and for the sake of something something Soran something Chekov something an insane amount of candles that the ship's suppression system should have surely snuffed out.
The comedy didn't gel, though Data early on was okay.
Glass isn't transparent aluminum.
Soran was made too sympathetic instead of being just a freakin' villain. Deleted scenes reveal Soran closer to where he needed to be in order for audiences to loathe him. Outright villain, or at least single-purpose scientific amorality.
Pretend the rocket is capable of doing warp 9 and it works, up to a point.
Ultimately, this should have been solely a TNG film and without many vague plot points or plot holes. There is a great film in this that also fits Q's description of what awaits the crew out there, but it doesn't quite get there. (Heck, none of the TNG flicks had, but GEN comes closest.)
Loved the lighting or lack of it. Lighting was there, but it was more atmospheric and not merely "dark". External light sources like stars was inspired. @Turtletrekker said it already, the 7-year-old TV sets were knackered sets and every imperfection would show, hence the subdued interior lighting.
GREAT soundtrack and direction.
Not since TWOK was mortality a major plot point, and GEN does some of it better.
Soran and Picard have a great scene together, which hits harder if you see the movie a second time. It's a great "show vs tell" clue that Soran is also of the same species Guinan is, for being able to perceive time and the timeline in outsider-looking-in ways.
Loved the 1701-D crash. Not since Blake's 7 was there something approaching a good spaceship crash, though B7 had the better underlying plot reason for it to crash. Could have sworn that the "D"'s demise was longer in the theater, with a mid-stratosphere angle. Not as good as the 1701's destruction in Star Trek III, but it's iconic in its own right. Both are.
Kirk's death, on screen, was as pointless as his being there and was pointless as his on-screen death. Come to think of it, Kirk's Nexus retirement fantasy is even odder than Picard's. On the plus side, Kirk dies alone (see Star trek V for that.)
Never cared for Guinan's presence, shoehorned in and for the sake of something something Soran something Chekov something an insane amount of candles that the ship's suppression system should have surely snuffed out.
The comedy didn't gel, though Data early on was okay.
Glass isn't transparent aluminum.
Soran was made too sympathetic instead of being just a freakin' villain. Deleted scenes reveal Soran closer to where he needed to be in order for audiences to loathe him. Outright villain, or at least single-purpose scientific amorality.
Pretend the rocket is capable of doing warp 9 and it works, up to a point.
Ultimately, this should have been solely a TNG film and without many vague plot points or plot holes. There is a great film in this that also fits Q's description of what awaits the crew out there, but it doesn't quite get there. (Heck, none of the TNG flicks had, but GEN comes closest.)