Star Trek Generations has plenty of problems, but perhaps its most egregious error involves the way it utilized Captain Kirk in the 24th century.
Star Trek Generations is a film with plenty of problems, but perhaps its most egregious error involves its use of the time-displaced Captain James T. Kirk in his final adventure. After enjoying six largely successful feature films, the cast of Star Trek: The Original Series ended their legendary run with Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country. Generations was the first film to primarily feature the cast of Star Trek: The Next Generation, which had just ended a wildly successful seven-season run.
SCREENRANT VIDEO OF THE DAY Feeling that The Undiscovered Country was a fitting finale for their characters, Leonard Nimoy and DeForest Kelley declined to return as Spock and Dr. McCoy, respectively. Shatner, however, was happy to sign on for one more ride as Captain Kirk. After seemingly dying during the maiden voyage of the USS Enterprise-B, Kirk was pulled into a temporal ribbon called the Nexus, a timeless dimension that offered its inhabitants their personal version of heaven.
Seeing the time-displaced Kirk marvel at the holodeck or have a drink with Guinan in Ten Forward could have been amazing, giving Kirk a nice fish out of water story to go out on. Seeing Kirk interact with TNG luminaries like Lieutenant Commander Data or the Klingon Lieutenant Commander Worf could have enriched all of those characters and made for a more memorable movie.
How Star Trek Generations Could Have Still Killed Kirk Aboard The Enterprise Other than Kirk's death, the most memorable thing about Generations is likely the destruction of the Enterprise-D, which crash-landed on Veridian III after taking critical damage in a battle with Soran's Klingon allies.
Star Trek Generations is a movie so flawed that even the screenwriters have admitted there are massive narrative problems. Picard failing to use the Nexus to save his family makes no sense, and the destruction of the Enterprise-D was tone-deaf at best. And yet its shoddy treatment of Captain Kirk in his final adventure is likely its more enduring legacy.
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