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Star Trek: Nemesis (2002)

Star Trek: Nemesis poster

Star Trek: Nemesis (2002)

Overview

En route to the honeymoon of William Riker to Deanna Troi on her home planet of Betazed, Captain Jean-Luc Picard and the crew of the U.S.S. Enterprise receives word from Starfleet that a coup has resulted in the installation of a new Romulan political leader, Shinzon, who claims to seek peace with the human-backed United Federation of Planets. Once in enemy territory, the captain and his crew make a startling discovery: Shinzon is human, a slave from the Romulan sister planet of Remus, and has a secret, shocking relationship to Picard himself.


Starring Cast


Where to watch

Paramount+ logoParamount+
Apple TV logoApple TV
Google Play logoGoogle Play
Powered byJustWatch

Rating & Dimensions

Bias Rating
Analyzing...
Center
Political: Center
Diversity: Moderate

Viewer Rating
5.4

Overview

En route to the honeymoon of William Riker to Deanna Troi on her home planet of Betazed, Captain Jean-Luc Picard and the crew of the U.S.S. Enterprise receives word from Starfleet that a coup has resulted in the installation of a new Romulan political leader, Shinzon, who claims to seek peace with the human-backed United Federation of Planets. Once in enemy territory, the captain and his crew make a startling discovery: Shinzon is human, a slave from the Romulan sister planet of Remus, and has a secret, shocking relationship to Picard himself.


Starring Cast


Where to watch

Paramount+ logoParamount+
Apple TV logoApple TV
Google Play logoGoogle Play
Powered byJustWatch

Detailed Bias Analysis

Analyzing...
Center

Primary

The film focuses on a classic good vs. evil conflict, emphasizing universal themes of duty, sacrifice, and the defense of an established order against a personal, tyrannical threat, without explicitly promoting or critiquing specific left or right ideologies.

Star Trek: Nemesis features a visibly diverse main cast, consistent with the established ensemble of the Star Trek: The Next Generation series. The narrative maintains a neutral to positive framing of traditional identities, with white male characters in heroic roles and the antagonist's villainy not tied to his race or gender. The film does not explicitly critique traditional identities or center DEI themes in its plot.

Secondary

Star Trek: Nemesis does not feature any explicit LGBTQ+ characters or themes. The film's narrative focuses on its primary cast and plot without incorporating elements of queer identity, resulting in no direct portrayal.

Star Trek: Nemesis does not include any identifiable transsexual characters or themes. The story centers on Captain Picard's personal conflict with his clone, Shinzon, and the broader political tensions with the Romulan Empire, without addressing gender identity issues.

The film features female characters such as Deanna Troi and Beverly Crusher, but neither participates in direct physical combat. While female Starfleet crew members are present during action sequences, no specific instances show a female character defeating one or more male opponents in close-quarters physical combat.

Star Trek: Nemesis features the established crew of Star Trek: The Next Generation, all of whom retain their canonical genders. New characters introduced in the film do not replace existing characters with a different gender.

All established characters in Star Trek: Nemesis are portrayed by the same actors who originated their roles, maintaining their established racial depictions from prior canon. New characters introduced in the film do not have a pre-existing racial baseline to be swapped from.


Viewer Rating Breakdown

5.4

Viewer Rating

Combines user and critic ratings from four sources

User Ratings

IMDB logo
6.4
The Movie Database logo
6.3

Critic Ratings

Rotten Tomatoes logo
3.7
Metacritic logo
5.1

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