i don't mind the focus on picard and data because they are the most watchable characters, lol. just like i don't mind voyager having alot of Seven stories. who else did you want them to focus on? geordie? troi?
One of the things I liked in Nemesis was that the filmmakers didn't try to yet again (for what would be the third of four times) make Data mostly (unfunny) comic relief although the story they did give him was pretty lacking.
And they forgot that Data had a emotion chip
i don't mind the focus on picard and data because they are the most watchable characters, lol. just like i don't mind voyager having alot of Seven stories. who else did you want them to focus on? geordie? troi?
Shinzon's motivations seemed so odd wanting to get revenge on the federation, even though he was abused all his life by Romulans.
It wasn't revenge, that plays no part in his motivations. He conquered his hated Romulans, and wanted to ensure that nobody that could potentially subjugate him again could get the opportunity to. The Federation was just the first target. I'm sure Klingons were next on his list.
He was also crazy.
I don't so much mind the focus on Picard and Data (though I hate the ambiguity/messiness of the emotion chip narrative through the TNG movies) in Nemesis. However, I do mind that it gets really really boring as it goes along. I struggle to concentrate. And I enjoy action, don't get me wrong, but it is boring action, without rooting in a great, coherent character-driven storyline (or any great sci-fi ideas). To be honest, my feelings towards Nemesis are similar to my feelings on the Abrams movies - there's good stuff in there, lots of potential, on paper some interesting concepts, some fun action-movie madness, but it just doesn't grab my attention.
But then what do I know, I think Final Frontier is great...![]()
To me NEM was really just a fanboi's wet dream that got greenlit
It's not for no reason tho'. This is Shinzon's first real life contact with a (half) human woman and he lusts after her. It demonstrates how much a hideously monstrous yet pathetically inexperienced human he is.For all its faults, NEM was the movie where they finally remembered that Troi isn't an ordinary human.
But of course, that doesn't excuse how horribly the character was treated for absolutely no reason.
Kor
Perhaps there could have been a better way to convey such a flaw without resorting to a three-way mind rape? Plus, having not experienced being human isn't really worth delving on since it doesn't really go anywhere. His problem isn't that he doesn't know what being human is like, his problem is that he's a psychopath. When the film spends more time showing off how evil Shinzon is and less time actually getting to the core of his character, you're going to have a very shallow character.It demonstrates how much a hideously monstrous yet pathetically inexperienced human he is.
I think the mind-rape is a very harrowing way to disclose this inhuman human characteristic of Shinzon. It could've been executed better with more preliminary shots of Shinzon eyeing up an increasingly disturbed Troi perhaps. But as a device I think that's interesting myself -- he's one of us but he's not one of us. He's not just some alien. There's the pathetic feature of him that you'll find with violent anti-social types that are far closer to home. Troi then counters this attack on her later in the film as a way of weakening Shinzon on his otherwise virtually invincible Scimitar during the battle scenes. So it's both a useful and interesting device, these attacks and counter-attacks via telepathy.Perhaps there could have been a better way to convey such a flaw without resorting to a three-way mind rape? Plus, having not experienced being human isn't really worth delving on since it doesn't really go anywhere. His problem isn't that he doesn't know what being human is like, his problem is that he's a psychopath. When the film spends more time showing off how evil Shinzon is and less time actually getting to the core of his character, you're going to have a very shallow character.
If you think that kind of stuff is 'interesting', you're going to love all the Rape/Revenge movies that are out there. Take your pick. I Spit On Your Grave, Death Wish, Irreversible, Eye For An Eye. Heck, even the legendary Clint Eastwood did his own take with Sudden Impact.Troi then counters this attack on her later in the film as a way of weakening Shinzon on his otherwise virtually invincible Scimitar during the battle scenes. So it's both a useful and interesting device, these attacks and counter-attacks via telepathy.
He doesn't tell her to walk it off. The discrepancy there is that Crusher is easy going on her diagnosis, ok. But Picard tells her -- to paraphrase -- this is a grave intergalactic crisis, that he needs her at her side (true). This might be a request handed out to any kind of essential officer that sustained a severe injury. Indeed, officers are expected to lay down their own lives if the circumstances demand it.If you think that kind of stuff is 'interesting', you're going to love all the Rape/Revenge movies that are out there. Take your pick. I Spit On Your Grave, Death Wish, Irreversible, Eye For An Eye. Heck, even the legendary Clint Eastwood did his own take with Sudden Impact.
Only difference here is that when bad things happen to the ladies in those movies, it's taken very seriously. In Nemesis, Picard does not give a flying crud that Troi was just mentally violated by Shinzon and his Viceroy. He just tells her to walk it off. Oh, and despite being told that she was violated, Picard doesn't take any precautions to safe guard the ship. They only raise shields AFTER he gets kidnapped. And when Picard is held captive onboard the Scimitar, does he bring any of this up to Shinzon? Of course not. All he cares about is nurturing this poor unfortunate soul who is still going to murder many of Picard's crew later on.
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