Star Trek: Nemesis Movie Review
Star Trek: Nemesis Review

"Star Trek: Nemesis" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2002
Cast and Crew
Director : Stuart BairdProducer : Rick Berman
Screenwiter : John Logan
Starring : Patrick Stewart,Jonathan Frakes,Brent Spiner,LeVar Burton,Michael Dorn,Gates McFadden,Marina Sirtis,Tom Hardy
Long has held the rule that even-numbered Star Trek movies are good and
odd-numbered ones are bad. I hereby propose a new rule be adopted: Say what you
will about the odds and evens, but above all else, every fifth movie is utter
crap.
Star Trek: Nemesis, the tenth (and God help us, the last) movie in the
unstoppable Trek series, offers the thinnest story since Star Trek V took the
previous crew to the center of the galaxy in search of God. But at least this
one isn't saddled by metaphysical nonsense. All of that's out the shuttle bay
doors in favor of good, old-fashioned idiocy, ripped from yesterday's headlines.
This time out, the bad guys aren't the Klingons (really old hat), cool outcasts
like Khan, the Borg (all but done away with in movie #8), or mystery technology
sent from afar (dispensed with in #1 and #4). It's not really even the
Romulans, perhaps the last major remaining enemy in the Trek universe. In
fact, this time the baddies are ourselves! Or rather, it's Picard, who comes
face to face with -- wait for it -- his own clone!
That's not the Enterprise (now the sixth version of the ship) creaking, that's
the audience groaning at the sheer stupidity of the plot. In the past, Picard
(Patrick Stewart) was cloned with stolen DNA, but the clone was abandoned on
the Romulan mining planet of Remus when the plan to have the clone take over
Picard's life fizzled out. Years later, the clone Shinzon (Tom Hardy) escapes
his slavery, engineers a coup on Romulus, and becomes the first human Praetor
of the empire! (Note to non-Trek geeks: This would be the equivalent of Yasser
Arafat becoming the U.S. President.)
Naturally, not only does Shinzon want Picard personally, he's planning to
destroy the earth with a made-up doomsday radiation weapon. (When was the last
time in a Trek movie the entire earth was not in danger? That's a joke. Don't
write me with the answer.) The crew must go all the way to Romulus to stop the
madness!
It takes forever to actually get there, of course. It's been four years since
the last movie, so we need to catch up with our beloved crew. At the film's
beginning, it's the eve of the wedding between Riker (Jonathan Frakes) and Troi
(Marina Sirtis). Everyone's there, even old cast members Whoopi Goldberg and
Wil Wheaton (in what was reduced to a silent cameo). Unfortunately, this is no
longer the cast we used to love from the TV series. La Forge (LeVar Burton) has
his eyes. Troi has her hair straightened. Once-humorless robot Data (Brent
Spiner) can now sing, for God's sake. Even Kate Mulgrew, from the Voyager
series, makes a cameo as a Starfleet Admiral.
Once we get the crew to Romulus, things start to pick up, but barely. The few
action scenes are uninspired with the sole exception of Picard's ultimate
gambit against a far-superior Romulan ship. His intermittent duel with Shinzon
is laughable, and unfortunately the remaining cast members are given nothing to
do. Poor Riker is dispatched to fight hand to hand with some alien or another.
Worf (Michael Dorn) is reduced to providing cover for Picard in one of the
sequences. That's about the extent of it. And you've seen it all in the
trailers already.
Speaking of the trailers, the promised death of one character does occur, but
everyone knows you can never really kill a Star Trek character. This one is
particularly open-ended, and should they decide to make another movie (though
it's long been rumored this is the last), I have no doubt he'll be back to
dutifully collect his paycheck.
Why have the Star Trek movies become such junk? For starters, with 10 movies
and 500 or so TV episodes in various Trek series, it's safe to say all the good
ideas are long since tapped out. Just watch the cast and tell me they don't
look bored to tears. One of the reasons I still enjoy the Star Wars movies
(even though they're admittedly weaker these days) is that they've been
exploring its mythology and fleshing it out. Star Trek has long since exhausted
that and is just taking its crew on a series of adventures, each more absurd
than the last. Now it's just embarassing.
Those absurdities take place not just within Nemesis's dumb plot but with the
endless contrivances required to keep it going. When Picard beams aboard the
enemy ship, the transporters promptly break, ensuring no one can follow him.
For the ship to deploy its super-weapon, it takes seven minutes… just enough
time to -- well, you get the picture.
Star Trek wouldn't be Star Trek without some kind of "message" for us, and in
this case it's a watery something about self-improvement making us human. Too
bad that for everyone involved with this film, including director Stuart Baird
(U.S. Marshals) and screenwriter John Logan (The Time Machine), that seems to
have gone right over their heads.
Now on DVD, you will unfortunately find no apology for the movie anywhere on
the disc. Stuart Baird's oblivious commentary track talks on and on about the
shot setups and special effects. Interviews with producer Rick Berman and the
cast talk cagily about how impressed they are with the story or how much "the
work" spoke to them (or their wallets, I imagine). Twenty of the 45 minutes
trimmed from the film are restored as deleted scenes, nearly all of them
dialogue and exposition (meaning: they cut everything out of the movie but the
action sequences). Unlike Chateau Picard's Bordeaux, I just don't see this one
improving with age.
Naturally there's also a "collector's edition" DVD, which adds a second disc,
featuring commentary from Berman, a text commentary track, and tons of
production shorts.
Prepare to beam the script into the black hole.
Reviewer: Christopher Null





