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Here is my TOP 6 (and the rest of the 6 movies that didn't made it into my TOP 6):
01. "Star Trek IX: Insurrection" (1998)
02. "Star Trek VIII: First Contact" (1996)
03. "Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country" (1991)
04. "Star Trek VII: Generations" (1994)
05. "Star Trek I: The Motion Picture" (1979)
06. "Star Trek XII: Into Darkness" (2013)
07. "Star Trek III: The Search For Spock" (1984)
08. "Star Trek II: The Wrath Of Khan" (1982)
09. "Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home" (1986)
10. "Star Trek XI" (2009)
11. "Star Trek X: Nemesis" (2002)
12. "Star Trek V: The Final Frontier" (1989)
Let's see if "Star Trek XIII: Beyond" can live up to my expectations by bringing us back to a more intelligent, more 'Roddenberry'-esque, 'Arthur C. Clarke'-esque Star Trek. Because that very first teaser trailer, basically showed us 'Transformers'; action porn that's far far away from Rodenberry's vision.
Luckily the second trailer made me slightly more enthusiastic. But only because after all the criticism on the first teaser trailer director Justin Lin and Paramount felt it necessary to add a bit more intellect to the film by adding actress Shohreh Aghdashloo to the cast as the (vice?-)president of the United Federation Of Planets (She is also great in "The Expanse"). Perhaps she will be a valuable character that will ask us questions about the complex unions, like the European Union and the United Nations. Anyway, here is that trailer:
01. "Star Trek I: The Motion Picture" (1979)
02. "Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home" (1986)
03. "Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country" (1991)
04. "Star Trek II: The Wrath Of Khan" (1982)
05. "Star Trek VIII: First Contact" (1996)
06. "Star Trek III: The Search For Spock" (1984)
07. "Star Trek IX: Insurrection" (1998)
08. "Star Trek V: The Final Frontier" (1989)
09. "Star Trek XI" (2009)
10. "Star Trek XII: Into Darkness" (2013)
11. "Star Trek X: Nemesis" (2002)
12. "Star Trek VII: Generations" (1994)
My top three are constantly switching places...
Motion Picture
Search for Spock
Undiscovered Country
Voyage Home
Final Frontier
First Contact
Generations
Star Trek Into Darkness
Star Trek
Insurrection
Nemesis
My order changes alot, though top two never change.
1. The Wrath of Khan
2. The Search For Spock
3. The Voyage Home
4. The Final Frontier
5. The Undiscovered Country
6. Star Trek (Reboot)
The Decent
7. Star Trek: First Contact
8. Star Trek Into Darkness
9. Star Trek The Motion Picture
The unwatchable pieces of garbage.
10. Star Trek: Insurrection
11. Star Trek: Nemesis
12. Star Trek: Generations
Terrible I say! :P Then again I'm not a big TNG fan.
I think it was a wonderful film. Full of serious themes. It's perhaps one of very few Trek movies that really can be compared with certain geopolitical affairs in today's world.
A) It shows how much difficulty the United Federation of Planets has to uphold the almighty Prime Directive. Especially when the Federation is torn apart by costly conflicts like the war with the Dominion and the Borg (You should watch the first episodes of season 7 of "Star Trek: Deep Space Nine", around stardate 52300, which corresponds with the events from "Insurrection"). We see it now when the European Union, against all enlightened human ideals, signs a treaty with the current more dictatorial led Turkey.....all for the sake of forcefully letting immigrants return back to Turkey.
B) And there are more reflections this movie gave to me. God knows how many forced 'relocations' humans have executed. The Indians in what is now the USA. And what about the forced relocation of Jews during World War II. It puts "Insurrection" in a different light, and it really asks difficult questions about these issues. A must-see film, especially in today's fucked up world we live in.
The whole thing is, There was no need for the Forced relocation. The entire planet was covered with the life prolonging radiation that Starfleet and the villains ultimately wanted. All they had to do is ask the Ba'ku to put a settlement on the opposite end of the planet and no one would bother each other. The conflict was pointless. Why go to the trouble to move the Ba'ku when there was the entire planet which seemed to be basically uninhabited aside from the previously mentioned Ba'ku Colony. Heck Starfleet was able to put in that secret cloaked base to watch them, they could have just made another base somewhere else to research the radiation. Nobody reached out to the Ba'ku and told them this was coming. If Starfleet had actually talked to the Ba'ku in the beginning, they may have been willing to move or share the Planet.
The Ba'ku weren't indigenous to the planet. They were there for around 300 some years so it wasn't their planet to begin with. Now I know relocating anyone is wrong but nobody had to be relocated to begin with. If it was a mass populated planet that would be problematic but there was only the Ba'ku settlement. Starfleet and the Son'a could have put colonies anywhere else on the planet and no conflict would have even needed to happen. It just doesn't make sence. Why was Data even there? He's the 3rd in command on the Fleet's flagship. This kind of situation has happened before in TNG and ended badly. Why does Picard suddenly have this double standard to help the Ba'ku when he'd relocated others before in TNG? The movie is a boring mess. It's not terrible but It's unwatchable to me. Along with the other TNG movies sans First Contact.
I've tried. I just can't get into them. All the other Trek movies I can enjoy, just not those 3.
:)>-
I truly liked "Generations". Perhaps it's because I'm more a fan of the TV series than the movies.
What I liked so much about "Generations" was the ongoing theme of families and generations, of birth and death. It was so wonderfully woven into the entire film:
--> The goodbye to an 'old' generation (Captain Kirk and his crew) and welcoming the 'next' generation, which is set 100 years after The Original Series (Captain Picard).
--> Captain Picard gets to know that his brother and his little nephew René have died in a fire. The sheer realization, with help of Counselor Troi, that the end of the Picard-generation ends with him, is rather emotional an sad.
--> Captain Kirk realizes on the maiden voyage of the Enterprise-B that also he actually never had the chance to get kids; it makes him a bit uncomfortable when he sees Hikaru Sulu's daughter after such a long time.
--> When villain Soran talks to Picard and says the words "Time is the fire in which we burn", it comes across as perhaps the best verbalization of this movie's theme. Obviously, Picard is shocked by it as he just lost his family through fire, and that 'time' must feel like a burning wound.
--> Soran is actually longing to find happiness and solace by tracing back his family, his good life, which he lost when the Borg destroyed his world. The Nexus can give that solace to him.
--> Soran is the connection between Captain Kirk and Captain Picard and their generations. He decides more or less the destinies of them, mainly because El-Aurians can get more than 300 years old.
--> Data is struggling with his own life of becoming more human. When he integrates the emotion chip in his system, we can actually witness his emotions with regard to his own little family: his cat Spot.
--> The destruction of the USS Enterprise-D means the end of an era, but also the start of a new era of exploration and unknowns.
I'm quite surprised people can't see these emotional complexities and themes of this film. In many ways this could have been a Sam Mendes Star Trek film. It's a wonderful, emotional gem within the movie franchise. And apart from all these ties of families and generational issues, it's actually a pretty neat action-adventure too. The way Picard and Data try to figure out what Soran is doing is intrigueing and exciting. The scene in stellar cartography proves that.
9 POINTS: your 1st place
7 POINTS: your 2nd place
5 POINTS: your 3rd place
3 POINTS: your 4th place
2 POINTS: your 5th place
1 POINTS: your 6th place
A new Director's Cut BluRay of "The Wrath Of Khan" (new artwork for amaray holder with slipcase):
http://www.treknews.net/2016/04/14/wrath-of-khan-directors-cut-blu-ray/
There's already a first version steelbook BluRay for "The Wrath Of Khan" available:
http://www.ebay.nl/itm/STEELBOOK-STAR-TREK-II-THE-WRATH-OF-KHAN-BLURAY-/331872604204?hash=item4d4526102c:g:xFgAAOSwneRXRNDX
And, like with James Bond, Paramount/CBS relaunches all first 10 Trek films on BluRay (not 4K) in steelbook format:
http://www.zavvi.nl/blu-ray/star-trek-limited-edition-steelbook-collection/11279871.html
1.Wrath Of Khan
2.First Contact
3.The Undiscovered Country
4.The Voyage Home
5.The Motion Picture
6.Star Trek reboot
The good
7.Insurrection
8.The Search for Spock
9.Into Darkness
Not so good
10.Final Frontier
11.Nemesis
12.Generations
The Good (Prime Filet Mignon)
1. ST 2 The Wrath of Khan
2. ST8 First Contact
3. ST 6 Undiscovered Country
4. ST 4 The Voyage Home
5. ST 3 The Search for Spock
6. ST Into Darkness
The Okay (Sirloin)
ST 7 Generatins
ST Reboot 2008
ST 9 Ibnsurrection
The Bad, The Ugly, (liverworth, I would not feed to a starving dog)
ST 1 The Motion Picture
ST 10 Nemesis
ST 5 The final Frontier (a particularly foul turd)
39 POINTS: 02. "Star Trek II: The Wrath Of Khan" (1982)
25 POINTS: 06. "Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country" (1991)
23 POINTS: 08. "Star Trek VIII: First Contact" (1996)
20 POINTS: 01. "Star Trek I: The Motion Picture" (1979)
20 POINTS: 04. "Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home" (1986)
15 POINTS: 03. "Star Trek III: The Search For Spock" (1984)
09 POINTS: 09. "Star Trek IX: Insurrection" (1998)
04 POINTS: 05. "Star Trek V: The Final Frontier" (1989)
03 POINTS: 07. "Star Trek VII: Generations" (1994)
02 POINTS: 12. "Star Trek XII: Into Darkness" (2013)
02 POINTS: 11. "Star Trek XI" (2009)
00 POINTS: 10. "Star Trek X: Nemesis" (2002)
Also more new BluRay box sets are being released, including this wonderful 50th anniversary collection that will include all 3 seasons of "Star Trek: The Original Series" ánd the first 6 "Star Trek" movies from the same TOS-timeline:
http://nerdist.com/star-trek-50th-anniversary-blu-ray-box-set-beaming-down-this-fall/
1) TMP
2) Reboot
3) Into Darkness
4) The Voyage Home
5) First Contact
6) Khan
7) Spock
8) Undicovered Country
9) Generations
10) Nemesis
11) Insurrection
12) Final Frontier
http://nerdist.com/star-trek-star-anton-yelchin-has-passed-away-at-27/