Articles, Star Trek

STAR TREK FIRST CONTACT

Star Trek: First Contact

Roger Ebert November 22, 1996

https://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/star-trek-first-contact-1996

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“Star Trek: First Contact” is one of the best of the eight “Star Trek” films: Certainly the best in its technical credits, and among the best in the ingenuity of its plot. I would rank it beside “Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home” (1986), the one where the fate of Earth depended on the song of the humpback whale. This time, in a screenplay that could have been confusing but moves confidently between different levels of the story, the crew of the Enterprise follows the evil Borgs back in time to the day before mankind made its first flight at warp speed.

That flight, in 2063, was monitored by an alien race, the Vulcans, who took it as evidence that man had developed to the point where it deserved to meet another race. But now the Borgs, starting from the 24th century, want to travel back through a temporal vortex (how I love the “Star Trek” jargon!), prevent the flight and rewrite history, this time with Borgs populating the Earth instead of humans.

The latest edition of the starship is the “Enterprise E” (and there are plenty of letters left in the alphabet, Capt. Picard notes ominously). It is patrolling deep space when it learns the Borgs are attacking Earth. The Enterprise is ordered to remain where it is–probably, Picard (Patrick Stewart) notes bitterly, because he was a prisoner of the Borgs some six years ago, and “a man who was captured and assimilated by the Borg is an unstable element.” These Borgs are an exciting race.

They are part flesh, part computer, and they “assimilate” all the races they conquer into their collective mind, which organizes their society like a hive. There is even a queen (Alice Krige), although she is not fat and pampered like an ant or a termite, but lean, mean, and a student of seduction. One of the movie’s intriguing subplots involves Data (Brent Spiner), the Enterprise’s android, who is captured and hooked up to a Borg assimilating machine–which fails because it can’t crack his digital defenses. Then the Queen tries some analog methods all her own.

The central plot takes place as the Enterprise follows a Borg ship back through time to Earth, which, the Trekkers are dismayed to learn, is now populated by Borgs. To turn history around again, they need to be sure man’s first warp flight succeeds. Earth is recovering from World War III, and a brilliant inventor named Cochrane (James Cromwell, the tall farmer from “Babe”) has adapted a missile for this historic flight.

He leads a commune that seems to be part hippie, part survivalist, and spends much of his time listing to rock ‘n’ roll and drinking to the despair of his associate Lily (Alfre Woodard). These two do not believe the weird story they get from the starship crew, and at one point, Lily nearly fries Picard with a stolen gun. (He: “Maximum setting! If you had fired, you would have vaporized me.” She: “It’s my first ray gun.”)

The plot moves deftly between preparations for the Earth launch, Data’s assimilation tortures on the Borg ship, and a fight against a Borg landing party on the Enterprise, which Picard personally directs, overruling doubts expressed by his second-in-command, William Riker (Jonathan Frakes) and their own assimilated Klingon, Worf (Michael Dorn).

Some of the earlier “Star Trek” movies have been clunky in the special-effects department; the first of the series came out in 1979 and looked pale compared to “Star Wars.” But this one benefits from the latest advances in f/x artistry, starting with its sensational opening shot, which begins so deep inside Picard’s eyeball, it looks like a star-speckled spacescape and then pulls back to encompass an unimaginably vast Borg starship. I also admired the interiors of the Borg probe and the peculiar makeup work creating the Borg Queen, who looks like no notion of sexy I have ever heard of but inspires me to keep an open mind.

“Star Trek” movies are not so much about action and effects as they are about ideas and dialogue. I doubted the original Enterprise crew would ever retire because I didn’t think they could stop talking long enough. Here the story gives us yet another intriguing test of the differences between humans, aliens, and artificial intelligence. And the paradoxes of time travel are handled less murkily than sometimes in the past. (Although, explain to me how the Earth could be populated with millions of Borgs who are expected to vanish–or never have been–if the Enterprise succeeds. Isn’t there some law of conservation of energy that requires their physical bodies to come from, or be disposed of, somewhere, somehow?)

“STFC” was directed by Frakes, who did some of the “ST Next Generation” shows for television and achieves excellent energy and clarity here. I always knew where we were in the shuffling of timelines and plotlines. He also gets some genial humor out of Cromwell, as the inventor who never wanted fame but simply enough money to go off to a “tropical island with a lot of naked women.” And there is such intriguing chemistry between Picard and the Woodard character that I hope a way is found to bring her onboard in the next film. “Star Trek” movies in the past have occasionally gone where no movie had gone or wanted to go before. This one is on the right beam.

SCIENCE FICTION

ADVENTURE

ACTION

Roger Ebert
Roger EbertRoger Ebert was the film critic of the Chicago Sun-Times from 1967 until he died in 2013. In 1975, he won the Pulitzer Prize for distinguished criticism.

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The Enterprise and its crew follow a Borg ship through a time warp to prevent the Borg from taking over the Earth in a past era. Stuck in the past, Geordi La Forge (LeVar Burton) helped a pioneer of space travel (James Cromwell) in his efforts to create the first warp drive while Capt. Picard (Patrick Stewart) and Cmdr. Data (Brent Spiner) battles the Borg Queen (Alice Krige) as she tries to take over the Enterprise.

Top cast

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Patrick Stewart

Patrick Stewart

Jonathan Frakes

Jonathan Frakes

Brent Spiner

Brent Spiner

LeVar Burton

LeVar Burton

Michael Dorn

Michael Dorn

Gates McFadden

Gates McFadden

Marina Sirtis

Marina Sirtis

Alfre Woodard

Alfre Woodard

James Cromwell

James Cromwell

Alice Krige

Alice Krige

Michael Horton

Michael Horton

Neal McDonough

Neal McDonough

Marnie McPhail

Marnie McPhail

Robert Picardo

Robert Picardo

Dwight Schultz

Dwight Schultz

Adam Scott

Adam Scott

Jack Shearer

Jack Shearer

Eric Steinberg

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