In Generations, it’s still the characters and ship I love from the show.
David Carson's directing definitely helps. He had brought cinematic ideas to the TV screen for TNG, so it's no surprise that he'd use some of the same techniques - minus some pan'n'scan thanks to 2.35:1 big screen aspect ratio - to the big screen. Indeed, having to storyboard scenes in 1.33:1 then fiddle with pan and scan for added horizontal movement
on cue, perfectly timed was pretty dang phenomenal back then. So when people say "it feels like a tv episode", I perceive it as a compliment, given how TNG was using big screen techniques at the time. He probably invented one or two along the way as well. TNG often felt like a motion picture event, with several episodes - especially in seasons 2 through 4 - really feeling big. Which was due as much to the scripts going the extra mile.
Dennis McCarthy's score also excels. After 3 years of "frogs farting on a log in a bog" in every episode (save for the weekly teasers, which clearly teased a lot!), now we have music that fits the stories instead of rubberstamp glop that fit none of them. Though on the flipside, "Descent" pt 1's intrusive music was minimal and the plotting and characters kept it going. Lack those and then the music has to carry the weight.
It starts to shift a bit visually in FC in terms of uniforms and then there’s the E which… I just didn’t ever form any attachment to. I think it’s a bland design.
An interesting amalgamation, it's an odd mishmash of "D" and "A"/79-refit. It looks sleeker, avoiding fan art of the saucer separating helps, the nacelle design is pure art deco awesome, and yet the 1701-A style engineering section and cargo bay (nee aft shuttle bay or whatever the tail end is back there) make as little sense as the alcove where Lily and Picard crawl into in FC that also has no backup should the force field goes out... looked great overall, but the stories it was in often stunk...
From FC onwards Picard becomes Movie Picard. It’s also a movie where it’s clear people were afraid to give Brent Spiner notes, cause he doubles down on the scenery chewing from GEN.
LOL
Spiner's scene chewing was fun IMHO, but generally when the script had something other than a direct joke to rely on. The 90s movies just never found the mojo that Kirk's had in TWOK onward (IMHO). Or, especially in the 90s, I was expecting something more. Then again, the Bond flicks of the 90s also were too jokey and Brosnan deserved better too.
I think ultimately GEN feels like an event in the way FC doesn’t. Two worlds colliding. Two captains. Two shows. I think FC is fine. It’s hampered by having a workmanlike person in the directors chair visually, but it works as a movie. I just don’t feel it puts anything onscreen that TNG couldn’t do and I don’t think that’s the case with GEN.
IMHO, it's trying too hard at times and Chekov is given Bones' lines and Scotty acts like the person who directly reports to Geordi (Senior lead under the division mgr), but there are a lot of eventful scenes that stand on its own.
i'm not
@Richard S. Ta , but here's mine.
Generations displays some ambition in its willingness to destroy the
status quo. The
Enterprise is destroyed, potentially scattering the crew. I've described the film's tone as "funereal," and there's a sense of closure to it that "All Good Things..." didn't have. It feels like an ending.
A shame TNG's crew didn't feel as scattered as TOS's were, and how naturally the crew's return felt - unlike TNG where Worf returns for increasingly write-off reasons.
GEN is closest to Q's promise of "things to come", of "what's really out there". Ignore some meretricious minutiae over how the El Aurians were never noticed until they wandered into Earth solar system where the only ship around is the Enterprise, minus half of everything until Tuesday-- was Wimpy in charge and was spending more time ensuring the hamburgers got to the galley on time? GEN isn't perfect, but - and especially given the hurried nature of writing and rewriting - it's fairly good, but not *great*. Especially that first 50~75%.
First Contact feels like just another story. The visual bling is different -- new uniforms, a new ship -- but it's a story that wouldn't have been out of place, or done any differently (except for the location shooting), if made five years before. Narratively, it's a tonal mess; you have this serious Borg plot happening alongside a fish-out-of-water comedy on Earth.

Well said! The direction is sublime, elevating material that was sometimes too jokey, too hokey, too fanservicey, or just plain nonsensical. GEN wasn't perfect, but some issues are just too readily visible. Inverting the Moby Dick/revenge trope was interesting, but TNG the TV show addressed the issue well enough and they weren't telepathically communicating with him or Hugh or anyone else for 3 years either. The Borg felt underused, with superficial gimmicks.
And, double-bingo, the juxtaposition of fish-out-of-water stuff does not gel with the seriousness of the threat at all.
But we got a cool pee joke, right? It's about time Trek the franchise breaks the 4th wall on something so obvious. Plenty of rooms or alcoves on the ship that seem to go nowhere go to a toilet. Even in the Ready Room. There. Problem solved*.
I've also never been impressed with Frakes' direction, which I find bland. David Carson made a much more visually interesting and varied film.
Frakes is solid, but Carson - per my reply to Richard above - definitely brought in some nifty variations and techniques that felt as cinematic on the big screen as they had on the small.
* obligatory photoshop:
I really need to fix Data's reflection off the fluorescent light there...