Star Trek: First Contact

1996 "Resistance is futile."
7.6| 1h51m| PG-13| en
Details

The Borg, a relentless race of cyborgs, are on a direct course for Earth. Violating orders to stay away from the battle, Captain Picard and the crew of the newly-commissioned USS Enterprise E pursue the Borg back in time to prevent the invaders from changing Federation history and assimilating the galaxy.

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Reviews

SnoReptilePlenty Memorable, crazy movie
Marketic It's no definitive masterpiece but it's damn close.
Senteur As somebody who had not heard any of this before, it became a curious phenomenon to sit and watch a film and slowly have the realities begin to click into place.
Zandra The movie turns out to be a little better than the average. Starting from a romantic formula often seen in the cinema, it ends in the most predictable (and somewhat bland) way.
Cory Myer There are so many good things about this movie, this is one of the best sci-fi movies ever. There are no slow moments, the dialogue and scenes are just right. The Borg are the creepiest, best villain in the Star Trek universe. The Borg queen was excellent.The anti-hero Cochrain was a nice different spin. Filling in the series plot gaps of where warp technology was discovered was an excellent device. Showing Captain Picard with weaknesses added depth. The acting was excellent. The ending makes you pump your fist.I have nothing but good things to say about this film.
Roark_0009 So much to love about this movie: - The wonder of space exploration and the fictional history of the first warp drive. Hearkens back to the Wright Brothers and the first ever flight - As the title suggests, an amazing theme to talk about the first time ever meeting other intelligent life - Time travel, the drama around changing historical events in the balance, and a great villain - Entire cast at the top of their form, plus great directing from Frakes - The music is epic and perfect for the themes around humanity, exploration, and wonderNo question the best TNG movie. In my opinion easily the best Star Trek movie ever. On the list for one of the best science fiction movies as well.
Eric Stevenson I feel bad for not having seen an episode of any "Star Trek" series. I especially feel bad for not watching what some people consider to be the most significant or sophisticated show, "Star Trek: The Next Generation". While "Star Trek Generations" did introduce us to them in film, its main problem was that it was too rushed. This, on the other hand, is just paced perfectly. I felt like the length of this film was just perfect. It went on just as long as it needed to. This is another movie to feature time travel. While I personally didn't like it as much as the fourth entry (which also featured time travel) this is still a film worth looking at.The best parts are probably how each of the characters gets a fair amount of screen time and they contribute well to the story. Maybe I would have to be more familiar with these characters to understand their struggles. We get some great scenes with Picard, especially when he shows such rage. The Borg are great villains in this. I simply love the effects in this movie. Everything is so wonderfully detailed and the costumes are so exact. The Borg Queen is also great as a singular villain. It's weird how the "Star Trek" villains aren't really that well known. I'm glad to be introduced to such a popular series of characters.For me at least, this was the first time I saw these guys as actual astronauts! You know, with how they actually used space suits. We even get a nice title drop, which seems pretty obvious for something so popular. I also love the idea of enemies who can adapt. I feel bad that the original series had a lot of better movies. I watched this as a marathon for the Star Trek franchise's 60th anniversary! Yep, you might as well call me a fan. ***1/2
MisterWhiplash First Contact is not simply as a great Star Trek film. It's wonderfully smart and sophisticated science fiction period. Here's the hook that I like about it, which may or may not have been intentional (but given that Ronald Moore is the co-writer, the beautiful mind behind Battlestar Galactica, I'll say yes): we often think about being from other worlds coming to our own and how we see them and their technology, and that's the point of view, of US seeing the OTHER. The power with this movie is that because it's Trek, we have a vehicle for characters who are from another time and place, though who are us (in some ways more than others, usually more), and in this story as the Enterprise has to go back in time to the year 2063 with on one side The Borg to grapple with again and to make sure that a one-day-important man Zephram Cochrane (James Cromwell), who is basically a drunk who loves to dance to old time rock and roll and has somehow created what will be the warp drive everyone uses in the future, the roles are reversed. In short, we get to have a pure science fiction story that is loaded with ideas that, because it's the Borg (again, not unlike the original series the movies do a good course correct with their sophomore outing), we get to see what attaining "perfection" really means on contrast with a character like Zephram on the other side. It's a terrific balancing act.I'm sure that for Trek fans, and the ones for TNG I think are a *little* more fanatical than even the ones for the original series, could be wrong on that, there are great callbacks and just by making it the Borg, which was one of the highlights of that show and how intense and psychologically profound it got (what would happen if you were stripped of your personality and "assimilated" by an entire collective consciousness - an analogy for political persuasion I suppose but could be anything). But for general audiences, i.e. those who may not watch Trek or only do occasionally, it works on its own terms. The writers and director Jonathan Frakes make this fast moving but loaded with character motivations and arcs and plot - even for Alfre Woodard, who at first appears to be a supporting player, is probably closest to an audience surrogate and all the better for it (she gets to play a lot of emotions here, the full spectrum for bad-ass to terrified to indignation and wonder and awe and so on). And I think the themes it's wrestling with are easy enough to grapple with, about how what it means when you're thrust with the reputation of being a MAJOR leader and figurehead in the future, or if there's a being that can turn on and off an 'emotion chip' ("Sometimes, I really envy you," Picard comments, rightfully so), but also has the goal to become more human and is given that chance... by the villain. I can go on and on.It's also extremely funny - the great comedic lines are sharp and witty, or they play on character stuff like when Zephram gets Marian Sirtis' character drunk on "this thing called Tequila" - and has beats that combine humor and satire and suspense with seemingly great ease: when Picard has to buy a moment or two from the Borg, he "brings to life", literally, a chapter from a book that's set in a 1930's style nightclub (he in a fedora and suit, Woodard in period clothes, surrounded by extras and so on) until he realizes he's in the wrong chapter, pushes it ahead and is in a white tuxedo, gets a Tommy gun and blows away the Borg (much as he can do). This is one of those moments that would be brilliant in any movie, that could pull it off well, and this does. And at the heard of it all is the villain of the "Leader" of the Borg, played with aplomb and delivish villainy by Alice Krige, who wants to turn Data as with all beings into this "perfect" consciousness that she's had for so long. But does she truly know what she is? Or care? Certainly to Data it matters for much of the run time.Such rich conflict in this movie! And characters talking out their problems, like Picard's issue about whether he should or shouldn't destroy the Enterprise in order to save his crew from the Borg. And throughout the writers weave in clever ideas and concepts and give full SCI-FI moments like, I couldn't even believe it, Picard and Warf and that other guy going out with Zero-G space suits on to the ship to stop some thing-a-ma-bob from going off that the Borg's setting up, and that transported me to a direct place in science fiction cinema too - that slow-speed and all the more intense for it act of doing something in space where if you lose your grip on the ground you'll float away to death. This may be the best Trek film of the modern day, on par if not superior(!) to 'Khan' as a blend of adventure, story, action, and deeper philosophical notions about how we see ourselves, our roles in shaping the future, the past, and being ourselves throughout it all.