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Was there ever an official explanation in Nemesis...

I like to think that after NEM, Worf crashed landed on a primitive planet. He had many adventures and finally made his own kingdom by his own hand.........but that is another story.
 
I like to think after NEM, Worf went "shit I'm an ambassador" and ran all the way back to Qo'nos!

Nah, it's just a case of Berman hates DS9...in First Contact they wanted to blow up the Defiant as a show of how tough the Borg were...Ira Steven Behr said "Go for it, but I'll show the Defiant clearly not destroyed in the very next episode"

Though in the end Voyager showed Admiral Hayes miraculously returned from the dead...so who knows?!
 
I wished they would have referenced his new position. I loved how far he came at the end of DS9, and then they kind of just intentionally forgot it to put things back the way they were on the series.
Yeah, I'd be perfectly happy to declare all three post-Generations TNG films non-canon. :p
 
I'd be perfectly happy to declare all 4 non-canon!

I'd also rather like a cannon...I don't know why...
 
?????
Burton has won one award for directing. A Black Reel Award for directing a TV show in 2006. That was 4 years AFTER Nemesis. When Nemesis was filming, all Burton had directed was a bunch of Star Trek episodes, two TV movies, and two episodes of "Soul Food". That's not the resume of someone you give a major motion picture that is trying to save the franchise. You could argue about Frakes since he had at least directed 2 TNG movies by that point, but I don't think Burton was ever really a serious consideration.

lol, I love how you say that Burton shouldn't have directed a TNG movie because he'd only directed a bunch of episodes of Trek and other stuff.

When Frakes directed First Contact, what other movies had he done? OH! So I guess a guy with only TV-episode-directing experience really CAN direct a big movie and make it good!
 
The Dominion War was over for a while by this point, so it doesn't make much sense for Tom Riker to still be in prison.
Tom Riker had nothing to do with the Dominion War.
Maybe not, but he's likely dead due to it.

The Dominion wiped out The Maquis at a time when Tom was in jail...do you really think they left all those already-caught Maquis members alive?
 
^ Yes I do, because they were in prison, so not a threat...and Tom Riker's imprisonment was a very specific political move, to kill him would undermine the Dominion's position, and for no reason
 
As far as the original question of why Worf was on the Enterprise-E, the film takes place between the wedding on Earth, and the wedding on Betazed. Since everyone involved is going to the wedding on Betazed, its a simple matter of taking Worf with them (he doesn't necessarily have to have arrived at the Earth wedding on the Enterprise, he could have just as easily come on a transport ship or some other means).

Doesn't explain my other gripes with the film, like where were the rest of Riker's guests. His dad should have been at the wedding, and I would imagine Thomas Riker would have been there as well (unless he's in jail).

Then this leads me to another Nemesis gripe... the flagship of the Federation was serving as a party bus for the Riker/Troi wedding??? They had nothing better to do than shuttle people back and forth? What if Ensign Red Shirt was getting married, would they do the same thing for him?

And I imagine the last person Will or Deanna would have wanted at the wedding was Tom Riker.
 
the flagship of the Federation was serving as a party bus for the Riker/Troi wedding???
What flagship?

The movies never indicated that the Enterprise-E held this status, or indeed any preferred status. Quite to the contrary, ST:FC established that Starfleet felt the ship was worthless in fighting the Borg. No reason not to use her as a shuttle, really.

The movie maintains the internal logic quite nicely. If the ship is at liberty to investigate a positronic signature on a random planet at a whim, then logically she should also be at liberty to cater for other whims of her skipper, such as the arrangements of a personally important wedding.

Timo Saloniemi
 
the flagship of the Federation was serving as a party bus for the Riker/Troi wedding???
What flagship?

The movies never indicated that the Enterprise-E held this status, or indeed any preferred status.

I think that being the Enterprise, it's fairly implied that it would be the flagship...

Quite to the contrary, ST:FC established that Starfleet felt the ship was worthless in fighting the Borg. No reason not to use her as a shuttle, really.


On the contrary, Starfleet would have deployed the Enterprise if Picard had not been in command.

The movie maintains the internal logic quite nicely. If the ship is at liberty to investigate a positronic signature on a random planet at a whim, then logically she should also be at liberty to cater for other whims of her skipper, such as the arrangements of a personally important wedding.

Timo Saloniemi

Probably a case of what Admiral Chakotay (or what ever the guy was called in Gambit) called "detached duty" with the Enterprise's Mission at her discretion, but I agree, this does maintain internal logic, but isn't reliant on the assertions above.
 
the flagship of the Federation was serving as a party bus for the Riker/Troi wedding???
What flagship?

The movies never indicated that the Enterprise-E held this status, or indeed any preferred status.

I think that being the Enterprise, it's fairly implied that it would be the flagship...

The Enterprise was never mentioned as the flagship until 1701-D on TNG. There is no reason to assume that 1701-E would keep the flagship roll.
 
I think that being the Enterprise, it's fairly implied that it would be the flagship...

As said above, only the E-D was considered special in that respect. There seemed to be nothing exceptional about Kirk's TOS ride, and the E-A was only seen in a couple of movies so it's hard to tell. The E-B was seen even less, but at least there we could speculate that she was the biggest thing around at the time, and thus perhaps deserved some sort of preferential treatment. The E-C is again relatively obscure.

On the contrary, Starfleet would have deployed the Enterprise if Picard had not been in command.

If that were true, Starfleet would simply have told Riker to throw Picard in the brig (or kill him) and take the ship to battle.

Clearly, what Picard tells his crew is a comforting lie. Starfleet does not have faith in Picard, that much is clear. But apparently it doesn't trust Riker, Data and Worf, either. Or then the ship is a dud. Or perhaps both... What better place for celebrated but untrustworthy officers than a ship they can't achieve much with? :devil:

I think Kirk got the same treatment at the end of ST4:TVH...

Timo Saloniemi
 
I think that being the Enterprise, it's fairly implied that it would be the flagship...

As said above, only the E-D was considered special in that respect. There seemed to be nothing exceptional about Kirk's TOS ride, and the E-A was only seen in a couple of movies so it's hard to tell. The E-B was seen even less, but at least there we could speculate that she was the biggest thing around at the time, and thus perhaps deserved some sort of preferential treatment. The E-C is again relatively obscure.

I think that the fact that the E-A was sent to meet Chancellor Gorkon...in lieu of an ambassador or Federation Official...implies some status the ship holds - particularly since at least 3 members of its crew hold the rank of Captain...

On the contrary, Starfleet would have deployed the Enterprise if Picard had not been in command.

If that were true, Starfleet would simply have told Riker to throw Picard in the brig (or kill him) and take the ship to battle.

Could Starfleet trust Riker to do that though? It's no secret that the crew of the Enterprise was fairly loyal to one another...

Clearly, what Picard tells his crew is a comforting lie. Starfleet does not have faith in Picard, that much is clear. But apparently it doesn't trust Riker, Data and Worf, either. Or then the ship is a dud. Or perhaps both... What better place for celebrated but untrustworthy officers than a ship they can't achieve much with? :devil:
It does trust Worf...because the implication of FC was that Starfleet ordered the Defiant to Earth, but that Sisko should stay behind (which, with his wife being killed by the Borg is unsurprising) and that like the Enterprise where Picard's senior staff might defer to him if the ship were taken into battle, Worf was the only member of DS9's crew who SF trusted not to do that...
 
Flagship or not, it just seems like a waste of resourses to use a Starfleet vessel of that magnitude as a wedding limo. Runabouts or shuttle crafts, sure, but not the Enterprise. I get that it serves the purpose of moving the plot along, but that's it.
 
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It shouldn't have been difficult for Riker and Picard to arrange things from the opposite POV, though. Why not have the wedding when the E-E is scheduled to leave Earth for a mission that takes her past Betazed? It's not as if we would have heard of other factors affecting the scheduling.

Timo Saloniemi
 
And the wedding was put on hold when they got a more pressing assignment. No hard feelings on the rest of the crew, who knew they had a job to do.
 
And Picard and Riker probably had a fair amount of currency (not that sort of currency) with Starfleet Command, to be able to say "Do you mind if we use the E-E as a wedding car..." Riker's father's pretty well connected as well so it might have been his wedding present!
 
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