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A Champagne bottle tumbles through space, slowly drifting towards its
intended target, the new U.S.S. Enterprise, NCC-1701-B. It is late in
the 23rd century, and the inauguration of the vessel is attended by
crew from the former starship of the same name James Kirk, Montgomery
Scott and Pavel Chekov. Reporters and onlookers clamor to interview
Kirk and the new U.S.S. Enterprise captain about commanding a
starship, as the crew begins to embark on its routine maiden voyage.
A short time into the flight, however, the starship receives a
distress call and is diverted to aid two El-Aurian transport vessels
which are caught in a strange, mysterious energy ribbon. Kirk,
falling back on his old instincts, quickly finds that not only is the
new captain inexperienced, but most of the ship's vital weapons and
functions have not yet been installed. While Kirk, Scott and Chekov
struggle to save the ship, the transporter room beams aboard
survivors, even as their El-Aurian transport vessels are torn apart
by the energy ribbon.
Kirk goes below deck to work on the deflector relays, but the ribbon
suddenly strikes the starship, tearing a large gash through the hull
and leaving only debris where Kirk was working. Scotty and Chekov
stare out into space, bewildered by the sudden loss of their friend.
Seventy-eight years later, in 2371, the crew of the U.S.S. Enterprise
NCC-1701-D join together on the holodeck for a ceremony to promote Lt.
Worf a Klingon officer to the rank of Lieutenant Commander. The
ceremony is conducted using a 19th-century sailing ship corresponding
uniforms. The merriment is suddenly interrupted, however, when Picard
receives an urgent personal message. Suddenly depressed, Picard leaves
the festivities to contemplate in privacy.
Meanwhile, officers Geordi La Forge and Data successfully install an
emotion chip designed by Data's creator, Dr. Noonien Soong, into the
android. Although La Forge questions the wisdom of the installation
as a potentially painful step in the growth of his friend, Data
ignores him. After installing the chip, Data quickly discovers the
vast array of emotions now available to him and believes he has the
necessary skills to integrate them into his programming.
Sent to the Amargosa Observatory to investigate a distress call, the
U.S.S. Enterprise finds two dead Romulans and five humans left alive
after a mysterious and brutal attack. One of these survivors is a Dr.
Tolian Soran. Data and La Forge later return to the starship's
laboratory and find traces of a volatile explosive which Soran has
secretly concealed in the lab. While Data watches in abject terror,
Soran kidnaps La Forge, taking him to a cloaked Klingon ship. When
questioning La Forge proves unsuccessful, Soran releases the starship
officer after modifying his VISOR to transmit its signals back to the
Klingon vessel.
Soran then fires a trilithium probe into the sun, which causes an
incredible shock wave. The Klingon ship, on which he is a passenger,
is commanded by the Klingon Duras sisters. In exchange for the
formula for Soran's trilithium explosive, they have agreed to take
him to the planet Veridian III, where he wants to conduct another
solar implosion.
On board the U.S.S. Enterprise, Picard learns that Soran is 300 years
old and, like Guinan, a survivor of the El-Aurian incident that
killed Captain Kirk. In an effort to understand what is happening,
Picard finally goes to Guinan. She tells him that the energy ribbon,
called the Nexus, is a temporal anomaly moving through space. To
anyone or anything inside the Nexus, linear time has no meaning and a
person can experience anything that he or she desires. There is an
overpowering feeling of joy so addictive, that once there, no one
wants to leave. Soran is desperate to return to the Nexus and
recreate that joy with the family he lost when his world was assimil-
ated by the Borg.
Picard, still depressed from his previous message, informs Troi of
his family lineage and that he never intended to have any children
because his brother had children who would carry on the Picard name.
However, according to the message he received, his brother and nephew
were killed in a fire on Earth. Therefore, Jean-Luc will now be the
last Picard.
In Stellar Cartography, Picard and an emotionally troubled Data plot
the course of the Nexus and the changes that have occurred since the
sun was destroyed. They conclude that Soran plans to destroy another
sun when the Nexus passes close to the Veridian system killing as
many as 230 million inhabitants on one of the system's planets.
Destroying the suns alters spacial forces, thereby changing the path
of the Nexus. With the Veridian sun destroyed, the Nexus will then
pass along the surface of Veridian III, allowing Soran to re-enter
the phenomenon.
Picard, learning of the situation, beams down to Veridian III to try
to dissuade Soran. In the meantime, La Forge has been returned to the
U.S.S. Enterprise in exchange for Picard; the Duras sisters watch
with great interest as La Forge moves about the ship. Finally they
see what they've been waiting for the U.S.S. Enterprise deflector
shield modulation. Seizing this information, the cloaked Bird-of-Prey
fires through the starship's deflector shields, severely damaging the
U.S.S. Enterprise. Ultimately, however, the U.S.S. Enterprise
succeeds in destroying the Klingon warbird, killing all aboard. Unfor-
tunately Soran has already beamed down to the planet Veridian III.
Due to damage sustained by the Klingon's attack, the Enterprise
suffers a warp-core breach and Riker orders the saucer section
separated. Before he can get the saucer away safely, however, the
battle section explodes, hurtling the saucer and its entire crew
toward the surface of Veridian III. After a terrifying ride, the
U.S.S. Enterprise saucer crash lands on the planet's surface.
Fortunately, most of the crew are uninjured.
Elsewhere on the planet's surface, Picard and Soran fight to the
death as the Nexus rapidly approaches. Soran manages to fire his
trilithium probe into the sun, destroying it as the ribbon engulfs
both men, taking them inside the Nexus. In their wake, the inhabit-
ants of the Veridian system, as well as the survivors from the U.S.S.
Enterprise, are engulfed in a giant cloud of fire.
For a time, Picard is bewildered but delighted to be spending
Christmas with his large, happy family a family he's never had the
time to start. But then, just as the captain gazes at a sparkling
ornament, he is suddenly reminded that this experience is not real
and that he must get on with his mission. Picard remembers that
Guinan had told him he would find someone in the Nexus to help him
defeat Soran. Just then, an "echo" of Guinan appears, telling Picard
that he can have anything he wants in the Nexus, but that he can also
leave and he can leave prior to when he came. There might still be
time to stop Soran's destruction, but Picard believes he needs help
if he's to be successful.
With Guinan's help, Picard finds a slightly puzzled but happy James T.
Kirk in the Nexus. Kirk wasn't killed 78 years earlier on the U.S.S.
Enterprise NCC-1701-B, but was drawn into the Nexus instead. Picard
meets a content Kirk who is now a happy farmer in Iowa, complete with
his life's loves "Antonia" and his horses. Picard is successful in
convincing Kirk of the spurious nature of the Nexus realities, and he
awakens Kirk's taste for adventure, duty, and the chance to "make a
difference again." The two Enterprise captains leave the Nexus and
materialize on Veridian III, just as Soran is preparing to set off
his solar bomb. This time, Kirk grapples with Soran while Picard
races to sabotages the probe.
Although Kirk wins the fight, knocking Soran off the edge of the
cliff, the diabolical doctor manages to cloak the launch mechanism
before Picard can disarm it. Yet Soran, hanging on for dear life at
the end of a rope, loses control of the remote after the line
suddenly gives. The remote control is thrown into the air, landing on
a nearby bridge. Kirk races to recover the remote, as does Soran, who
fires on Kirk and the bridge with his deadly disruptor. Although Kirk
is saved in the nick of time by Picard, the bridge is broken in two,
with the remote resting on the opposite portion across the void.
Picard urges Kirk to accept his help, yet Kirk, stubborn as always,
goes after the remote himself. With the second half of the bridge
about to give, Kirk jumps to the other side, escaping certain death
by seconds. Just as the remote is about to fall into the chasm, Kirk
miraculously grabs it out of thin air. With time running out and the
Nexus fast approaching, Kirk decloaks the launch mechanism. Suddenly
the second half of the bridge collapses into the chasm, carrying Kirk
with it.
Picard, now able to see the mechanism, races to the controls. Yet his
plans are seemingly cut short when Soran, frantic that he might miss
his last chance at gaining access to the Nexus, aims his disruptor
directly at the captain. Although Picard escapes, capitalizing on
Soran's distraction, the evil doctor doesn't care. His moment of
triumph is at hand. Soran's smile slowly fades, however, when realized
that Picard has secured the missile's locking clamps; although about
to ignite, the rocket will not launch.
The launch mechanism explodes into a giant fireball, killing Soran
and preventing the destruction of the entire Veridian system. Picard
runs to Kirk, where he stays until the former captain of the U.S.S.
Enterprise dies. "It was fun...oh my." are Kirk's last words. After
Picard has buried and mourned the loss of his new friend, a
shuttlecraft from the U.S.S. Enterprise finds Picard and takes him to
the ship's crash site where survivors are being rescued by the U.S.S.
Farragut.
Believing he has finally mastered human emotions, Data finds himself
wrong when he and Counselor Troi manage to find the android's cat
amongst the Enterprise wreckage. Data, bewildered, is overcome with
tears of joy. Riker is saddened as they leave the wrecked starship,
but Picard assures him that this is not likely to be the last ship
named "Enterprise."
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