Now that the original cast of Star Trek has grown far too old to be whizzing
around the universe, Paramount Studios has completed the transition of
replacing them with a less geriatric cast. First Contact is the first Star
Trek movie to consist entirely of members from the television series known
as the Next Generation. It is a brisk, entertaining romp done in the
traditional Hollywood style. However, if you expect the film to boldy go
where no ones gone before, youre in for a disappointment. Its just us
humans fighting that good fight against the little green men, one more
time.
Directed by Jonathan Frakes, who plays the ships first officer Will Riker,
First Contact is delivered in what has become something of a standard in
contemporary film-making, complete with dazzling effects and 2.5 explosions
per minute. It includes the obligatory travel back into time, where the
half-human, half-synthetic creatures known as the Borg have gone back to
twenty-first century Earth to basically catch us with our pants down before
our ray guns have become sophisticated enough to allow us to defend
ourselves (the bastards!).
The Borg, a collection of drone-like beings, aim to conquer all and
assimilate us into their slavish culture (not unlike how Viacom
assimilated Paramount Studios into theirs a couple of years back). The
fearless crew of the Enterprise pursues these rogue aliens across the
galaxy and through time barriers (against Star Fleet orders, of course) to
prevent the Borgs conquest from succeeding. I dont suppose it would ruin
the film for you if I said that unlike Paramount Studios, the Entriprise
proves that resistance is, in fact, not futile.
Dammit Spock!
On a positive note, not all is just laser beams and force fields until
youre space-sick in First Contact. The film does have its strong points.
It is a successfully delivered edge-of-your-seat thriller. Few will be
bored. And the quality of acting from the new crew is clearly superior
to that of the old cast, particularly on the part of Patrick Stewart
(Captain Jean-Luc Picard) and Brent Spiner (the android Data) who are
unquestionably at the top of their forms. (However, I must admit I did
miss the occasional blathering such as "Dammit Spock!" and "Im a doctor,
dammit, not a trained thespian!" delivered with perfect over-emphasis by
former member DeForest Kelly.)
Another standout is Alice Krige, who plays the evil Borg queen. This is
where the movies biggest spark of creativity lives and breathes. Krige
manages to be both grotesque and alluring all in the same body (which, as
youve seen in the promos, gets connected to her head at the start of the
story). Never before has a woman with blood vessels protruding from her
frontal lobes managed to be so convincingly seductive.
Another one of the films attributes is its steady stream of humor. The
jokes, which have become key to the Star Trek formula, are fairly fresh
and provide us with well-needed distractions from the rest of the
shoot-em-up proceedings. But the problem, once again, is formula. A
play-it-safe canned plot works better for Paramounts budget than it
does for our sensibilities. There are those of us who long for something
new. Watching the good ship Enterprise zipping across the universe to save
us from evil aliens is starting to grow a wee bit tired. A surprise or two
would be nice around this time next year when Star Trek: Second Contact
hits the theaters.
November 1996
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