Star Trek: First Contact Movie Review
Star Trek: First Contact Review
"Star Trek: First Contact" Overview

Rating: PG-13
1996
Cast and Crew
Director : Jonathan FrakesProducer : Rick Berman
Screenwiter : Brannon Braga,Ronald D. Moore
Starring : Patrick Stewart,Jonathan Frakes,Brent Spiner,LeVar Burton,Michael Dorn,Gates McFadden,Marina Sirtis,Alfre Woodard,James Cromwell,Alice Krige,Michael Horton
People tend to measure the quality of a Star Trek movie in relation to those
near it in the cycle. Compared to episodes before (5 and 7) and those that
followed (9 and 10), this eighth installment of the unkillable series is
surprisingly watchable.
Jonthan "Riker" Frakes is at the helm this time, taking the Next Generation
crew on its first mission without the original series cast. The setup comes
fast, as Frakes trots out one of the series' most reliable villains: The Borg.
Building from the mythology set up in the series, Picard (a former Borg
captive) has a serious axe to grind, and when Starfleet ends up in a skirmish
with an invading Borg ship, he defies orders and engages them in battle. The
day is won, but an escape pod shoots from the ship, tunnels through time (stop
rolling your eyes), and lands on earth. We see the effects immediately: The
Borg has completely taken over the planet. The only sensible solution: Follow
the Borg through the time hole and try to wipe 'em out in the past.
Trek has been on time trips like this before (notably in #4, the one with the
whales), only this time we're given a bit more of a tech-friendly setup, as the
destination is the eve of mankind's first spaceflight with warp drive (that is,
faster than the speed of light). As history tells us, this is when the Vulcans
make first contact with a war-torn earth, changing everything and opening up
the planet's golden age of space exploration and good feelings. But there's
trouble: the warp drive's inventor Zefram Cochrane (James Cromwell) is a drunk
and doesn't live up to the expectations of a hero. And the Borg have managed to
set up shop right on the Enterprise, slowly assimilating decks while they set
up a radio system to call home for reinforcements. The story progresses on both
fronts, as the crew aids Cochrane in getting off the ground (never mind the
paradox) and Picard and his gang fight the Borg on the ship. (The unilateral
highlight of all of this is the appearance of Alice Krige as the Borg "queen,"
dripping a unique kind of sexuality that is making me feel dirty just thinking
about it.)
As for depth, the episode takes a refreshing look at how we elevate long-gone
people into heroes, knowing nothing about what they were really like. Plus, the
Borg battles are innovative (including some zero-G fun) and a pleasant enough
diversion for close to two hours. As Trek movies goes, this is easily the best
(and actually the only truly watchable one) from the Next Generation crew. If
it weren't for some really tired antics -- time travel again, Alfre Woodard in
an absurd role (and delivering one of the series' silliest speeches, comparing
Picard to Captain Ahab), and a finale that doesn't quite end in the
self-destruction of the Enterprise -- we'd almost have a classic installment on
our hands.
The film is available on Paramount's now well-established Special Edition DVD
set, two discs full of extras designed for the Trek fanatic. Two commentary
tracks and the usual trivia track are included; unfortunately the trivia track
is very intrusive, as the subtitles consume close to a quarter of the screen.
Disc two offers tons of making-of featurettes and interviews (more Krige!),
plus archive material.
Reviewer: Christopher Null





