* AlternateCharacterInterpretation:
** Kirk's death in the novel is decidedly more bitter than bittersweet, as in the movie his "it was fun..." is about his own life and his experiences [[TraumaCongaLine despite everything]]. In the book, he feels desperately alone after [=McCoy=] and Spock go their separate ways, is something of a DeathSeeker after retirement, and his line is about the hundred of lives he lived in the Nexus (saving Edith, saving every crewmember who died under his command, marrying Carol, him and his friends being young again). While still at peace, it's a lot more depressing.
** After Harriman hands over command of the ''Enterprise''-B to Kirk, prior to walking to the turbolift to head to the deck that contains the deflector relay controls, there is a short shot of Kirk happily settling into the captain's chair, before ultimately deciding that he should go and Harriman should stay on his bridge as the captain of his ship. If Kirk stayed in command and Harriman "died" due to the hull breach from the Nexis, it is possible that Kirk would have decided to unretire and continue captaining the ''Enterprise''-B.
* AngstWhatAngst: Granted the movie was about letting go of past failures and moving on with your life but Picard seemed rather subdued in the fact that ''the Enterprise'' was destroyed in his brief absence. He even picked up a priceless artifact he got from a friend [[ContinuityNod during the series]] that was completely ruined and set it aside like it meant nothing.[[note]]WordOfGod stated it was a replica, the original [[ItBelongsInAMuseum being in a museum on Earth]], which is certainly plausible in hindsight, given that ''Series/StarTrekPicard'' shows the captain keeps a lot of personal effects and mementos he acquired over the years in storage.[[/note]]
** Likely he's thoroughly in shock. First, losing his brother and nephew (to a remarkably mundane cause). Then he fights Soran and loses, knowing millions will die as a result. In the Nexus, he has a fantasy about a non-existent family and a living Renee, and he knows it's fantasy. Then he meets Kirk, a legend and likely personal hero who soon gets a bridge dropped on him. Picard is then alone for who knows how long before being in contact with the destroyed Enterprise, possibly with no food or drink.
* SugarWiki/AwesomeMusic: Regardless of how one feels about the film, it is hard to deny that the score, one of composer Dennis [=McCarthy=]'s few cinematic offerings, is first-rate. [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ooIUtXEuTYQ Here's the main theme]].
* BrokenAesop: In the end, Picard tells Riker "time is a companion that goes with us on a journey and reminds us to cherish every moment... because it will never come again." Except that Picard saved the day ''because'' he was able to revisit particular moments in time. However one could interpret his speech as a reflection on Soran's obsession with the past, and not being able to move on — had he done so, the events of the film would never have happened.
* ContinuityLockOut: Seeing Picard being crushed about receiving news that his brother and nephew have died in a fire and the return of the Duras sisters don't have much dramatic weight unless you've seen the episodes in which those characters appear.
* DelusionConclusion: Because of the nature of the Nexus, it's a pretty common fan theory that Picard rescuing his crew and going off on other merry adventures was just a part of his perfect fantasy world.
%%* FranchiseOriginalSin: Data's saying "Oh, shit!" on realizing the impending crash was the first instance of a ''Franchise/StarTrek'' show or film featuring a swear word that wouldn't be considered acceptable for broadcast on network television.[[note]](Unless you count the various instances of "dumbass" being spoken in ''Film/StarTrekIVTheVoyageHome'', but that isn't consistently censored in the U.S., and usually isn't considered a swear word in other countries)[[/note]] It was considered a funny enough moment by itself, but presaged the much more liberal approach to profanity that the reboot movies and the TV shows broadcast from 2017 and onwards would take.
* GeniusBonus:
** Soran's line "They say time is the fire in which we burn" is lifted from Delmore Schwartz' 1938 poem "Calmly We Walk Through This April's Day" ("Time is the school in which we learn / Time is the fire in which we burn."). Another line from the poem, which Picard is undoubtedly familiar with, is "Many great dears are taken away / What will become of you and me / (This is the school in which we learn...) / Besides the photo and the memory?" -- Picard later reminisces, looking at René's picture in his photo book. It also {{Foreshadow}}s part of the plot: "The great globe reels in the solar fire / Spinning the trivial and unique away".
** The poet is also what "[[https://seanhorgan.wordpress.com/2016/10/25/defeating-the-delmore-effect/ The Delmore Effect]]" is named after. It's about the tendency to ignore the most important parts of life, and focus on the more immediate -- something Soran, Picard and Kirk all share.
** "René" is short for "Renatus", meaning "reborn". Guess what happens to him in The Nexus?
* HarsherInHindsight: One of Kirk's pieces of advice to Picard is to stay a captain. That's where he can make a difference. When Picard ends up taking an admiral position later on in life to try and improve a situation, it ends up backfiring and disenchanting him about Starfleet to the point of resignation. It would take three seasons of ''Series/StarTrekPicard'' with him getting his butt back into the captain's seat to truly make a difference again.
* HeartwarmingInHindsight:
** Picard laments that with the passing of his brother and nephew, he is now the last Picard. [[spoiler:The third season of ''Series/StarTrekPicard'' reveals that he and Beverly went on to have a son, Jack Crusher, meaning the Picard line continues for at least one more generation (albeit with a different name).]]
** Similarly, this movie ends with Picard mourning the destruction of the ''Enterprise''-D. [[spoiler:''Star Trek: Picard'' revealed that Geordi would spend over 20 years restoring the ''Enterprise''-D, allowing her to fly one last time under her captain and save TheFederation from the Borg before being retired for posterity. You might say that she was the one who got to live forever.]]
* HilariousInHindsight:
** After meeting Demora Sulu, Chekov comments that "I was never that young" and Kirk says "no, you were younger". [[Film/StarTrek2009 Come 2009, everyone is younger]], [[Creator/AntonYelchin but Chekov in particular stands out]]. This sadly became HarsherInHindsight after Anton Yelchin died in 2016 at the age of 27, even younger than Creator/WalterKoenig was when Chekov first appeared on the Original Series.
** Guinan's description of the Nexus as "like being inside joy" has gotten funnier since Creator/WhoopiGoldberg has co-hosted ''Series/TheView'' with Joy Behar.
** Kirk's last words, "Oh, my...", have gotten funnier since "Oh, my!" has become Creator/GeorgeTakei's CatchPhrase, who notably was not on the best of terms with Shatner.
** Riker's line "Speak for yourself, Sir. I plan to live forever.", is this in light of [[WesternAnimation/{{Gargoyles}} one of]] Creator/JonathanFrakes' other roles.
** During the establishing shot of Worf's promotion scene, a few bars from the theme tune of ''Series/StarTrekDeepSpaceNine'' play. While this was presumably just composer Dennis [=McCarthy=] re-using and rearranging some of his prior material, it unwittingly foreshadows Worf's arrival on that series. [=McCarthy=] would later reuse samples from this movie in ''Deep Space Nine'', with the most obvious example being the theme for the Duras sisters being reused in ''The Way of the Warrior''.
** Data's humor chip causing him to laugh uncontrollably feels like foreshadowing his [[WesternAnimation/YoungJustice2010 role that actually would require that kind of laughter.]]
* HoYay: Spock isn't even in the movie and he and Kirk still manage to produce some, as thinking of Spock is the last push Kirk needs to leave the Nexus, and in the novelisation, as he jumps across, he wonders "if Spock is still alive..."
* HumorDissonance: Depending on how you interpret the scene, Riker is either a dick for making Worf fall in the water (if you think that it was intentional and not an accident like he says) and Data's pushing Dr. Crusher in afterwards is hilarious, or Worf's status as a ButtMonkey means his getting pushed into water is hilarious but Dr. Crusher getting pushed in and looking quite upset about it while Data looks on in what is probably too-happy a smile.
* JerkassWoobie: Soran. While his EvilPlan entails the deaths of millions, you can't help but sympathize with him for just wanting to return to the Nexus so he can be reunited with his dead wife and children.
* MagnificentBastard: Dr. Tolian Soran was once a peaceful man of the LongLived El-Aurian race whose wife and children were murdered when his planet was invaded and destroyed by the Borg. After gaining access to the Nexus, a dimension of pleasure where he could be reunited with his family, Soran becomes obsessed with getting back into it after he is pulled from it against his will. Realizing that the energy ribbon could only be accessed by altering the gravitational fields around it, Soran designed a star-killing probe to [[WoobieDestroyerOfWorlds make the Nexus come to him while destroying all other lifeforms in the vicinity]]. Soran is rescued by the ''Enterprise'' after Romulans raid his science station, deceiving the ''Enterprise'' crew before kidnapping Geordi [=LaForge=] with the help of his Klingon allies, the Duras Sisters. Soran modifies Geordi's visor to make him an unwitting spy which ultimately leads to the ship's destruction, proves himself immune to [[ShutUpKirk Picard's attempts to talk him down from his plan]], and eventually succeeds at everything he set out to do, embracing the Nexus as it sweeps him up, with only subsequent TimeTravel and the help of the legendary [[TheHero Captain James T. Kirk]] managing to undo it, [[HeroKiller at the cost of Kirk's life]]. And even then, the original Soran [[AmbiguousSituation may well still be]] inside the Nexus, [[TheBadGuyWins unaffected by the time travel and alteration]], given the nature of the place.
* MemeticMutation: Everything gets delivered on Tuesday.[[labelnote:explanation]]In the ActionPrologue ''Enterprise''-B isn't finished when it has to respond to a distress signal, being [[TheOnlyOne somehow the only ship in range]] despite the Sol system being ''the Federation capital and military headquarters''. In order, Kirk, Chekov, and Scotty ask Capt. Harriman for a tractor beam, medical staff, and photon torpedoes, all of which are due to be delivered Tuesday.[[/labelnote]]
* {{Narm}}: In the script, the ''Enterprise'' was supposed to fire a whole spread of photon torpedoes at the Duras Sisters' Bird-of-Prey after it cloaks, but the finished film changes this to just a single torpedo. Not necessarily a problem by itself[[note]](the effects do contradict Riker telling Worf to fire a full spread, but that could possibly be {{handwave}}d as the ''Enterprise'' being so badly beaten up that one torpedo was all that Worf could manage)[[/note]], but it creates a problem when it comes to the reactions of the sisters and their crew -- they've clearly been directed to look shocked at an unavoidable onslaught of torpedoes heading their way, but it instead creates the effect of them all standing around gawping at the sight of a single torpedo that they should be able to easily evade, even cloaked.
* NeverLiveItDown: After this movie, poor Counselor Troi was forever labeled not only an annoying CaptainObvious, but the person who crashed the ''Enterprise''-D. And this is despite the fact she managed to land the ship with light casualties. The ''Star Trek Expanded Universe'' line wouldn't even cut her a break in this regard.
* TheProblemWithLicensedGames
** The video game adaptation isn't ''bad'', exactly. It's just very distinctly... ''average''. If anything, it was probably hamstrung by an horribly outdated game engine: work on the game began in 1995, but it wasn't released until 1998, so the sprite based graphics and 2.5d gameplay meant it was simply outclassed by the games around it.
** There's also the issue of its release date, in 1998 we were coming up on ''Film/StarTrekInsurrection''. Maybe you should try to release your tie-in game at the same time as what it's tying into.
* SoOkayItsAverage: Depending on who you ask, ''Generations'' is either the second-best or second-least-worst TNG film after ''Film/StarTrekFirstContact''. While the film does ''finally'' give fans the meeting between Captain Kirk and Captain Picard, a lot of it is seen as being overshadowed by Data's subplot to discover his emotions being too tonally jarring, the ''Enterprise''-D's [[spoiler:destruction]] due to an aging Klingon Bird of Prey and the crew holding the IdiotBall to make said destruction possible, and the fact Kirk [[spoiler:had a bridge dropped on him instead of dying a more heroic death]]. On the other hand, it's far less polarizing than ''Insurrection'' and ''Nemesis'' since it doesn't have a BrokenAesop like the former, or seen as recycling ''The Wrath of Khan'' like the latter, and for what little time the two captain's have, it's still pretty memorable.
* SpecialEffectFailure: During the [[spoiler:crashing of the ''Enterprise''-D]], you can see Worf being tossed over the tactical console and he's clearly losing his ''baldric'' as he goes over, but when he flops to a stop, it's still strapped to him.
* StockFootageFailure: The film egregiously uses footage from the previous film, ''Film/StarTrekVITheUndiscoveredCountry'', at different points:
** Even though the USS ''Enterprise''-B was given a flared engineering hull to help distinguish it from other Excelsior-class ships, the film still uses footage of the original ''Excelsior'' warping.
** Most infamously, [[spoiler:the destruction of Lursa and B'etor's bird-of-prey is the destruction of General Chang's bird-of-prey with the coloring adjusted only slightly]].
* TheyWastedAPerfectlyGoodCharacter:
** After going to the trouble of bringing in the show's recurring villains Lursa and B'Etor, the film proceeds to use them as nothing more than generic henchmen before unceremoniously killing them off.
** Kirk gets to be with his one true love in the Nexus, the one woman who could tempt him into staying there forever against his duty. Is it Janice Rand? Edith Keeler? Carol Marcus? Nope, it's some woman we've never heard of before. [[note]] A scene with Carol was apparently considered during an early stage of development, but [[ExecutiveMeddling dropped due to demands from Paramount during the writing process]]. Many fans suppose that the death of David's actor, Merritt Butrick by the time the film was made resulted in everyone feeling uncomfortable bringing the Marcuses up again.[[/note]]
** Considering that TNG had already brought Montgomery Scott into the 24th century in [[Recap/StarTrekTheNextGenerationS6E4Relics "Relics"]] and he was a first hand witness to the Nexus, Scotty could have easily shown up in the present day to help out with the situation giving the film more of a TOS reunion.
* TheyWastedAPerfectlyGoodPlot
** Kirk meets Picard... in the last twenty minutes of the movie... and then he dies. [[note]] Shatner himself co-wrote [[ExpandedUniverse a series of novels]] that assumed he [[DeathIsCheap recovered from death]], got back together with Scotty, Spock, and [=McCoy=], and has a son with a Romulan/Klingon hybrid. It's very long-running and has Kirk meet up with Picard again more than once to confront fan-favorite elements like the Mirror Universe. [[/note]]
** With a film budget to play around with and a ''Enterprise'' to destroy, one would think we'd get treated to a battle sequence more exciting than what could be done on a television budget. Instead, the ''Enterprise'' is shot down in a one-on-one fight against a Bird-of-Prey, a ''scout ship'', in a shameless recycling of ''[[Film/StarTrekIITheWrathOfKhan three]]'' [[Film/StarTrekVITheUndiscoveredCountry previous]] [[Film/StarTrekIIITheSearchForSpock films]] in the series. To add insult to injury, [[Series/StarTrekDeepSpaceNine Deep Space Nine]] would go on to feature far larger and more energetic spaceship fights during its run, and do it with the limits of a television budget.
** They were going to destroy the ''Enterprise-D'' and to kill Captain Kirk in the same movie, and nobody thought maybe Kirk should die where he's always truly belonged -- on the bridge of a starship named ''Enterprise''?
** Also, rather than putting all their years of experience together to do something awesome or clever, Picard just needs Kirk to help him beat up a short, elderly man. Picard really could have brought anybody from the Nexus to stop Soran.
* TookTheBadFilmSeriously:
** Creator/PatrickStewart as always, most notably in the scene where Picard reacts to his family's deaths and opens to Troi. By extension, he makes Shatner try harder as well, Kirk sounding exhausted at how Starfleet has cost him so much, but he hasn't made a difference since being promoted.
** Creator/MalcolmMcDowell freely admitted that he thought the script wasn't very good. He also confesses that he does not really understand Trekkies, but he still gives it his all.
* SugarWiki/VisualEffectsOfAwesome:
** The ''Enterprise''-D gets some CGI treatment in this movie. The scene where the ship warps away from the Amargosa shock wave is ''gorgeous''.
** The destruction of the ''Enterprise''-D: first a saucer separation, followed shortly by the stardrive explosion, followed by the explosion's shockwave sending the saucer into the planet's atmosphere, culminating in several minutes of the saucer crash-landing onto the planet below. Even if you loved the good ol' ''Enterprise''-D, you have to admit the destruction SFX were ''really'' well done. By far the best bit? A lot of the film, including that iconic scene destroying the ''Enterprise''-D, was shot with ''very little 3D animation''. The ship in the final crash was a scale model.
** Followed up by the destruction of Veridian III. This film is very good at convincingly blowing stuff up.
** The one scene that got the most hype was the newly revealed Astrogation room. And it does look amazing.
** TheReveal of the ''Enterprise''-B shows her to be a huge, magnificent-looking starship (even if certain parts weren't going to be installed until Tuesday).
** The Nexus energy ribbon really does look like it could rip a starship apart just by passing by.
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