Well, I have no problem with a dune buggy existing in the 24th century. I mean, are anti-grav/hovering/flying vehicles so common and standard that wheels just don't exist anymore?
Kor
Nemesis = easily the best of the TNG movies.
I did like Baird's approach to Trek.
The fight scene between Riker and the Viceroy in the bowels of the Enterprise, the lighting in there was meant as a sort of homage to "Alien".
As far as the story goes, I must be one of the few who had no objection whatsoever to the Argo sequence.
I remember after seeing it with my friends the first time in its very short theatrical run, I loved the hell out of the whole movie, and some of them were "meh". And then one of them telling me, "Dude, you seriously have got to stop defending that movie so much.".![]()
I thought the Riker fight scene was the only bit of the movie I would class as genuinely 'bad' - it just seemed so limp and flat, and - where the hell did this deep pit suddenly appear from? Plus why didn't Picard just turn the fucking lights up?
I know I called the buggy scene 'shit' earlier but that was more of a story thing than anything, I didn't really mind it in isolation. I guess it's easy to diss the scene as it's generally seen as a contentious part of the film which people like to debate, what with the prime directive/what's a buggy doing in the 24th century points, but it was reasonably well executed, and had a couple of humorous moments in it, and (I know I keep banging on about it) still better than most of the stuff found in Insurrection.
Well, I have no problem with a dune buggy existing in the 24th century. I mean, are anti-grav/hovering/flying vehicles so common and standard that wheels just don't exist anymore?
Kor
I appreciated that the climatic battle actually felt like a battle. That is, it went on after the initial adrenaline rush --- for the audience and for the characters --- wore off, and it kept going on until both sides had given all they had and were on the brink of collapse. That's a rare thing to experience, especially in Star Trek, where normally a couple of exchanges of phaser fire and a report of the percentage shields plays the part of a battle.
I think that was the film's 'deck 78' moment
I appreciated that the climatic battle actually felt like a battle. That is, it went on after the initial adrenaline rush --- for the audience and for the characters --- wore off, and it kept going on until both sides had given all they had and were on the brink of collapse. That's a rare thing to experience, especially in Star Trek, where normally a couple of exchanges of phaser fire and a report of the percentage shields plays the part of a battle.
I think that was the film's 'deck 78' moment
So NEM is a mish-mash of TWOK, TUC, and TFF.
Kor
That bit was okay, but the way he ran into a spike that Picard pulled out of nowhere was hard to buy, and not shot in an interesting way.I thought it was pretty good to be honest - you've got to be a badass to drag yourself down a spike you've just been impaled on just so you can look your enemy in the eye as you pass away.You forgot Shinzon's death scene, too mundane to be properly effective.
Thanks.Assuming we're thinking about the same Austrian Corporal....that's actually a pretty interesting comparison.I Apart from clone-envy, his main issue was wanting to get back at his oppressors by being "more Romulan than the Romulans". (A little like a certain Austrian corporal.)
Best dunebuggy scene in all of Trek. Best. Dunebuggy. Scene. Evah.
It's like a message from God, skywriting, indubitable, a voice through a bullhorn: "We are now jumping the shark!"
It's so nice, really, when something is so clear.
And the public responded appropriately.
Something I think I forgot to say in my last post, I did like the whole idea of the Remans, a colony of slaves mutated by dilithium, whose only alternative is military servitude. It gave depth to the scenario and made the Romulans more interesting. BTW, a couple of Remans appear in the background during ENT's Andorian arc.
That bit was okay, but the way he ran into a spike that Picard pulled out of nowhere was hard to buy, and not shot in an interesting way.I thought it was pretty good to be honest - you've got to be a badass to drag yourself down a spike you've just been impaled on just so you can look your enemy in the eye as you pass away.You forgot Shinzon's death scene, too mundane to be properly effective.
Thanks.Assuming we're thinking about the same Austrian Corporal....that's actually a pretty interesting comparison.I Apart from clone-envy, his main issue was wanting to get back at his oppressors by being "more Romulan than the Romulans". (A little like a certain Austrian corporal.)Thinking a bit more about it, I wonder if, after he took over Romulus, Shinzon then annexed Remus to make it part of Romulus rather than a vassal state?
Seriously it would be like a platoon of Marines being stranded in some rocky terrain and a helicopter was dispatched to get them. Only the helicopter, for no real reason, lands 60 miles away from the troops and drops off a humvee to drive the rest of the way over the rocky terrain to pick them up and then drive back to the helicopter.
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