The Star Trek movies employed a very similar strategy for both Kirk and Picard, but while it worked excellently for the former, it ultimately failed the latter. While the Star Trek franchise will probably always be best remembered for its TV offerings, the movies are also some of Hollywood’s greatest sci-fi adventures.
Creator Gene Roddenberry’s utopian view of the future continues to be popular over half-a-century later, and that’s due in large part to the feature films which helped bring Star Trek to the movie-going mᴀsses. The original Enterprise crew appeared in six total films on their own, but had a crossover adventure with the Next Generation era in Star Trek Generations.
Captain Picard’s Enterprise ensemble would then go on three more feature-length adventures throughout the ’90s and early 2000s, but the TNG era lost a lot of the magic of the original movie series. While some of the entries were bona fide box office successes, it was clear that the focus of Star Trek‘s movies had shifted somewhat.
The TNG era of movies borrowed heavily from what had come before, sometimes to the detriment of the new cast. Many of the story beats were lifted directly from Kirk’s time and were reused when Picard took center stage. By trying to make the same stories work again, the TNG movie era was held back by poor writing decisions.
Kirk’s Revenge Arc Is One Of The Best Parts Of The Star Trek Movies
The Space Cowboy Got A Compelling Arc In The Original Movies
Though Kirk’s reputation as a reckless leader is exaggerated, it isn’t wrong to say that he often acts emotionally, especially in the movies. The beauty of the TOS era movies is that Kirk and Spock both grow and change as characters, and they have compelling arcs that see them become different people than they were during the TV series.
Nestled neatly within the overarching Spock storyline that dominates Star Trek II through IV, Kirk gets a compelling arc that is subtle and effective. Though he’s clearly dealing with his own aging in The Wrath of Khan, it takes a string of unfortunate events for the cocky bravado that is Kirk’s outward demeanor to be broken down.
He exits the first sequel a changed man, though his reckless streak comes through when he leads a starship heist in Star Trek III. Kirk’s real arc begins in the threequel, when his son David is killed by a Klingon. This turns the seasoned Starfleet officer bitter, and that hatred toward Klingons simmers under the surface until Star Trek VI.
His emotional recklessness costs him, and he learns that forgiveness is more important than holding onto painful memories.
Kirk’s outright racism toward Klingons is used to frame him for murder, and Kirk again learns a valuable lesson. His emotional recklessness costs him, and he learns that forgiveness is more important than holding onto painful memories. It’s much subtler than his arc in Star Trek II, but the payoff is greater.
Picard’s Violent Streak Never Made Any Sense
The TNG Movies Gave Picard The Same Revenge Arc
Over a decade after the events of Star Trek III, the first standalone Star Trek: The Next Generation movie was making not-so-subtle changes to Captain Picard’s character and copying Kirk’s arc too. First Contact pits the Enterprise crew against The Borg in a desperate chase through time, and there’s also a subplot about Picard’s wrath toward the cybernetic life forms.
Picard had been ᴀssimilated during the two-part TNG episode, “The Best of Both Worlds”, and the series spent its final three seasons hinting at the emotional trauma that Picard suffered during his ordeal. However, all hints were thrown out the window in First Contact, where Picard is suddenly an angry and violent man bent on getting revenge against The Borg.
Not only is it totally out of character for Picard to act so rashly, the movie doesn’t even do much to set up the change. Banking on his past with The Borg isn’t enough, especially since episodes like “I,Borg” showed that Picard could still be reasonable towards them even after his ᴀssimilation.
A violent and vengeful Captain Picard is the anтιтhesis of who he is, and it’s a textbook example of writers copying and pasting an existing formula onto a character that doesn’t match. None of the Enterprise crew have substantial overarching growth throughout the TNG era of movies, and Picard’s transformation is unlike Kirk’s because almost no time has pᴀssed.
Picard is only a few years removed from the events of The Next Generation by the time the movies roll around, so it’s not like he’s significantly older. Thrusting tragedy upon him in the movies just feels pointless, especially since Picard doesn’t learn anything from his sudden shift toward violence.
Borrowing Elements From Earlier Movies Was Why The TNG Era Didn’t Work
Wasted Potential Ultimately Squandered Picard’s Time On The Big Screen
The Star Trek: The Next Generation movies were an opportunity for the film franchise to enter a new era, but they sadly got stuck in the past. First Contact copied Kirk’s arc by making Picard angry and jaded, but the other two sequels mostly dropped that trend and returned the French captain to normal.
This copying doomed the TNG movies to mediocrity, and very likely prevented them from going on for longer than four installments. By the time Star Trek: Nemesis rolled around, the films had become a shell of their former selves, and so had the Enterprise crew. Nemesis blatantly copied the formula from The Wrath of Khan, but it was blandly emotionless.
Star Trek: Nemesis was a box office failure, earning only $67 million against a $60 million budget (via Box Office Mojo).
The Next Generation ironically kicked off a new era for the franchise on the small screen, but the original Star Trek movie franchise was halted by its films. A full-on reboot followed in 2009, and it’s hard not to think that the failures of the TNG era helped push Hollywood toward a new start after so many stale entries.
Star Trek
- Created by
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Gene Roddenberry
- First Film
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Star Trek: The Motion Picture
- First TV Show
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Star Trek: The Original Series
- First Episode Air Date
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September 8, 1966
- Cast
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William Shatner, Leonard Nimoy, George Takei, Nichelle Nichols, Deforest Kelley, James Doohan, Walter Koenig, Jonathan Frakes, Patrick Stewart, Michael Dorn, Marina Sirtis, Gates McFadden, Brent Spiner, LeVar Burton, Wil Wheaton, Avery Brooks, Nana Visitor, Rene Auberjonois, Alexander Siddig, Cirroc Lofton, Armin Shimerman, Colm Meaney, Terry Farrell, Kate Mulgrew, Robert Beltran, Roxann Dawson, Jeri Ryan, Robert Duncan McNeill, Robert Picardo, Ethan Phillips, Garrett Wang, Jolene Blalock, Connor Trinneer, Dominic Keating, Scott Bakula, Linda Park, John Billingsley, Anthony Montgomery, Chris Pine, Zachary Quinto, Simon Pegg, Zoe Saldana, Karl Urban, John Cho, Chris Hemsworth, Benedict Cumberbatch, Anton Yelchin, Idris Elba, Sonequa Martin-Green, Mary Wiseman, Doug Jones, Anthony Rapp, Wilson Cruz, Oyin Oladejo, Emily Coutts, Jess Bush, Christina Chong, Anson Mount, Ethan Peck, Rebecca Romijn, Michelle Yeoh
- TV Show(s)
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Star Trek: The Original Series, Star Trek: The Animated Series, Star Trek: The Next Generation, Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, Star Trek: Voyager, Star Trek: Enterprise, Star Trek: Discovery, Star Trek: Short Treks, Star Trek: Picard, Star Trek Lower Decks, Star Trek: Prodigy, Star Trek: Strange New Worlds, Star Trek: Starfleet Academy