Is there no one posting on these boards who loves STAR TREK: Insurrection ... as much as I?
Insurrection has its defenders. Just not very many of them.

Is there no one posting on these boards who loves STAR TREK: Insurrection ... as much as I?
Is there no one posting on these boards who loves STAR TREK: Insurrection ... as much as I?
Is there no one posting on these boards who loves STAR TREK: Insurrection ... as much as I?
Is there no one posting on these boards who loves STAR TREK: Insurrection ... as much as I?
Is there no one posting on these boards who loves STAR TREK: Insurrection ... as much as I?
I don't understand how Star Trek fans could hate it.
"Why doesn't the Federation study the rings and find a way to replicate them?" Sure, it would take years, but it keeps the soul of humanity in-tact.
The Son'a didn't have years. Even if the Baku left the planet, they'd have longer than the Son'a.
The movie needed to show us how dire the Federation situation is and never does.
I enjoy the movie; that enjoyment being on par with my enjoyment of the TNG television run. Then again there isn't any Trek movie I don't enjoy; just some more than others. Where it falls down at--where all Trek movies, and most movies in general, fall down--for me is when I have to stop, think, and start getting critical and analytical about the movie. The problem is with Insurrection (like Nemesis) that there is so many moments that just kick you out of the narrative and make you ask "What are they thinking?"Is there no one posting on these boards who loves STAR TREK: Insurrection ... as much as I?
Insurrection has its defenders. Just not very many of them.![]()
The federation where during a massive shooting war Sisko can devote time to a baseball game, helping a hologram get his club back, and the dominion was getting its ass handed to it until the Breen showed up a few episodes before the end.
Yes, thing were very dire for the federation at the time![]()
I don't understand how Star Trek fans could hate it.
Personally, I think Star Trek: Insurrection is the biggest missed opportunity in the history of the franchise. They could have given us something memorable but instead gave us jokes about boobs and floatation devices, and face stretching.
Did you see Star Trek: Generations? There, you have the potential of Picard in pain, the aftermath of the Borg (and Soran's nihilism), having the two crews unite (at least Kirk and Picard), the destruction of the Enterprise-D, the promise of the Nexus described by Guinan, etc. THAT'S the most disappointing moment in this series.
Is there no one posting on these boards who loves STAR TREK: Insurrection ... as much as I?
I love Insurrection. Unlike other Star Trek moral conundrums that are black and white, this one engages the audience in a dilemma, the lesser of two evils, that is debated to this day.
I liked TNG. And this movie is the closest in the formula for TNG. It was unabashedly unapologetically Star Trek: The Next Generation. You had to know the characters before you had any investment in the movie. You had to love Data. You had to know about the "strange, new worlds." You have to love that Data learns how to be a child. You had to love that Geordi watches a sunrise. You had to appreciate the fact that Riker shaved and he had a relationship with Deanna. You had to watch the series to understand this movie. It didn't make any effort to "expand the universe," as Rick Berman productions too often tried to do.
I like them when they are explorers and not soldiers. They are soldiers in this movie, but you have to get through 60 minutes before you see a phaser hoisted. This wasn't just light-hearted, it created two, unique cultures and had us peel the layers off of them. The Son'a had produced Ketrecel White. They are addicted to plastic surgery. The Ba'ku loved to live in isolation. They had technology that wasn't replicated, but was discovered some 10,000 years ago on Earth. They have immortality and so there society adjusts, changes, because of it. "Apprenticing for 30 years." There's more than just the exploring. These characters, in this movie, LIKE being explorers. With the exception of poo-pooing some diplomacy, Picard likes being on the planet. He tries to ask questions and see the world through their eyes.
You have to bring your imagination to this one. First Contact is very easy to understand--good versus evil, Captain is damaged, but comes around, and our heroes aren't all that perfect. Concise storytelling and mass appeal. Insurrection is about the 24th century and its belief system. How we have violated everything that Starfleet and the Federation stand for. That we have acted like the 19th century version of Americans. And Picard stands in the way of that. He is protecting the "soul" of humanity. Not high stakes if you don't understand Star Trek.
Common complaints about the Ba'ku could've said "we'll leave" after they are asked. Well, that's forgetting they rejected technology and they would have a problem with why they had to leave, not to mention sacrifice their culture in order to stay immortal. So they are damning themselves to dying if they keep their way of life. Why people don't ask "Why doesn't the Federation study the rings and find a way to replicate them?" Sure, it would take years, but it keeps the soul of humanity in-tact.
Another common complaint is that people don't like Ba'ku, the movie treats them like heroes when they are just "selfish." They didn't set out to find immortality, but they found it. And you are asking them to die. People forget that. They wouldn't die, and suddenly, they would die. That seems a pretty steep price to pay, not understanding them, and robbing them of their lives.
I like this movie. It's my favorite TNG movie, and my third favorite in the whole series of 12. I like it. It is thought-provoking, poignant, and fun. It is a celebration of what makes Star Trek unique.
I don't understand how Star Trek fans could hate it.
Generations certainly has it's flaws, but I found it quite enjoyable. I enjoy Insurrection, but it's the only chapter in the saga where I want to slap the stupid out of Picard.
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