Star Trek: Nemesis Reviews
Nemesis looks as anonymous as it feels, a project that almost resembles an unrelated sci-fi movie with the Star Trek brand hastily plastered on for added brand value.
| Apr 5, 2023
It's not bad, really. It is also the tenth Star Trek movie, which means an awful lot of celluloid featuring grown men wearing children's stretchy pyjamas and standing behind plasterboard consoles looking purposeful.
| Jan 3, 2018
Lots of sci-fi action mixed in with messages about peace.
| Original Score: 3/5 | Dec 28, 2010
| Original Score: A- | Oct 29, 2008
Reasonably entertaining if utterly familiar.
| May 19, 2008
The outcome is as professionally crafted as ever, but the material feels learnt by rote.
| Jun 24, 2006
A movie that blandly goes where too many Star Trek pictures have gone before.
| Original Score: 2/5 | Nov 2, 2004
It doesn't deliver anything new to the series, and even fans might find parts distinctly slow, but it finally hits most of the right buttons.
| Original Score: 3/5 | Aug 1, 2003
There is a point in Star Trek: Nemesis that I could not help but start to think of The Muppet Movie.
| Original Score: 2.5/4 | Jun 19, 2003
Hardy's pout and baldie glare are high-quality stage-trained British Hollywood fiendishness and, like the Borg Queen, he seems to have taken his fashion tips from Clive Barker's Cenobites.
| Feb 4, 2003
While there's nothing to fault in the performances or even the storyline, it's forgettable the moment the credits roll.
| Original Score: 2/5 | Jan 6, 2003
This will test fan loyalty to destruction.
| Original Score: 2/5 | Jan 6, 2003
As lo-fi as the special effects are, the folks who cobbled Nemesis together indulge the force of humanity over hardware in a way that George Lucas has long forgotten.
| Original Score: B- | Dec 23, 2002
This tenth feature is a big deal, indeed -- at least the third-best, and maybe even a notch above the previous runner-up, Nicholas Meyer's Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country.
| Dec 23, 2002
John Logan clones Enterprise skipper Jean-Luc Picard (Patrick Stewart), geek-relatable android Data (Brent Spiner), and -- less successfully -- 1982's Star Trek: The Wrath of Khan.
| Dec 17, 2002
Full Review | Original Score: 4/5 | Dec 16, 2002
It's all very convoluted this time out, and awfully silly to boot.
| Original Score: 2/5 | Dec 16, 2002
Star Trek: Nemesis stands alone as an engaging intergalactic thriller with a lot of spirit-and some rousing action scenes.
Full Review | Dec 16, 2002
This is the fourth film to feature the Next Generation crew, and everyone is still off-track after the ideologically unsound, sparsely entertaining Insurrection.
| Original Score: 2.5/4 | Dec 13, 2002
The cheesiness so endemic to the Star Trek franchise ... is back in full force.
Full Review | Dec 13, 2002