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What’s the Story?

Reviewed by Nell Minow

The latest installment of the Star Trek franchise, continues the adventures of the Next Generation crew and their captain, Jean-Luc Picard (Patrick Stewart). A clone of Picard's younger self, Shinzon, has somehow overtaken the Romulan senate and wants to make peace. Picard and his crew don't trust this sneaky "clone," and are suspicious of his origins and what they portend. Of course, treachery is afoot and the crew must stop the Romulans before they destroy or conquer, well, pretty much everything.

Is It Any Good?

4

Star Trek has a language and following all its own. For those who are not devotees of the series, the way the characters speak often needs to be decoded, causing the viewer to spend more time trying to figure out what the characters are saying rather then why. After a while, if the story doesn't make itself clear somehow, the viewer loses interest. Such is the case for STAR TREK: NEMESIS.

The series has had its up and down moments, ranging from excellent, ("The Wrath of Kahn"), to overly silly ("Star Trek V"). It has also had its share of "we're running low on new ideas," and Nemesis skirts the edges of that territory. There are a few good action sequences, and some solid acting from Stewart, Brett Spiner as the android Data, and Tom Hardy as Shinzon. Hardy's performance carries the movie in many of its otherwise sub-par scenes, and he and Stewart give the dialogue a lot of help. But the film is too muddled in "Trek talk" and way too overdramatic at times. Its conclusion is not just easy to predict, but laughable. Star Trek: Nemesis is not a bad film, but one that will most likely only leave the ever-devoted Trekkies as the only completely-satisfied customers.

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