...which still has no bearing on them being first generation colonists and not natives.
Okay, how long do they have to live there before it becomes wrong? They'd already been there a few hundred years.
...which still has no bearing on them being first generation colonists and not natives.
I wish he'd hurry up and do a proper review of Star Trek: 2009.
And where are my damned pizza rolls?
He said that he liked Star Trek 2009 a lot.
Just jumping in on page 5 to say this must be thread number 45 that defends Insurrecion.
It may soon catch up to the number of apologetic threads by fans that are stunned that nobody likes Nemesis.
We need stickies at the top, one for each of these films. for the fans that are still boggled by the disdain these movies receive.
Well, referring to people who don't like the movie as "supposed" "fans" isn't a great start.This is classic Star Trek... it's like watching a really excellent two-parter and the writing and characters are true to the series. I enjoy rewatching this movie and I'm consistently surprised that some supposed "fans" are so hostile about a really good TNG movie.
Thoughts?
Needs its own sub-forum, I'd say.Oh absolutely!
But we need one to contain all the new "Is there anything really wrong with Insurrection/Nemsis?" threads.
...which still has no bearing on them being first generation colonists and not natives.
Okay, how long do they have to live there before it becomes wrong? They'd already been there a few hundred years.
to me, Insurrection is like watching a really crappy two-parter with utterly lame writing and characters who only superficially resemble their series counterparts.
Watch some of the DVD interviews with Michael Pillar; he makes it clear that his intent was to create an allegory for the relocation of Native American tribes (e.g, the Trail of Tears), and so forth.
I'd say "for more than one generation." If the colony's founding members had all died off and the Ba'ku Picard was protecting had lived their whole lives there, and thus the planet was the only home they'd known, then the moral imperative of the film would have been much stronger. As it stands, Anij and company are selfish, insular squatters rather than oppressed native minorities.
to me, Insurrection is like watching a really crappy two-parter with utterly lame writing and characters who only superficially resemble their series counterparts.
Bingo. And it totally reverses the attitudes and positions of characters. Picard was "orders above all!"
So it's okay to move a group from an area to get a resource WITHOUT ACTUALLY TALKING TO THEM ABOUT GETTING ACCESS TO SAID RESOURCE as long as there not native to the area,
I didn't hate it, I just found it pretty forgettable, like the rest of the TNG movies. Generations is probably my favorite of all of 'em. I will say that I liked Insurrection more than I liked FC.
It's a shame, really. The TNG movies could have been SO good, but they squandered all that potential, and now those characters are gone forever, our final memories of them being those mediocre films.
At least the TOS crew got a proper sendoff. TNG just seems so...unfinished.
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