Star Trek Insurrection Full Movie In Hindi Free Download Mp4

Star Trek Insurrection Full Movie In Hindi Free Download Mp4

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Star Trek: Insurrection Full Movie In Hindi Free Download Mp4

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Engage! Captain Jean-Luc Picard and his Next Generation crew are back. From the beginning of the Federation, the Prime Directive was clear: no Starfleet expedition may interfere with the natural development of other civilizations. But now Picard is confronted with orders that undermine that decree. If he obeys, 600 peaceful residents of Ba'ku will be forcibly removed from their remarkable world, all for the reportedly greater good of millions who will benefit from the Ba'ku's Fountain of Youth-like powers. If he disobeys, he will risk his starship, his career, his life. But for Picard, there's really only one choice. He must rebel against Starfleet... and lead the insurrection to preserve Paradise.
When the crew of the Enterprise learn of a Federation conspiracy against the inhabitants of a unique planet, Captain Picard begins an open rebellion.
(some spoilers follow) <br/><br/>I&#39;m sad to say that &quot;Star Trek: Insurrection&quot; is, to me, the weakest of the 10 Star Trek films produced to date. I really want to like it, because it at least attempts to have a sophisticated philosophical and moral component, but ultimately I find it to be preachy and - worse yet - rather flat.<br/><br/>The beginning of the film shows some promise. The sequence when Data goes berserk, though hardly thrilling, is pretty exciting and it rouses the audience&#39;s curiosity about what&#39;s going on. Unfortunately, I think the screenwriters &quot;chickened out&quot; a bit and failed to really explore Data&#39;s potential as an antagonist (if only a temporary one).<br/><br/>There&#39;s also some good character development and even some decent humor moments early on. I enjoy the romance scenes between Troi and Riker, and I wish their subplot was given some more screen time and development. (It sure is more interesting than watching Worf re-develop his adolescent acne troubles!) <br/><br/>The film starts to fall apart in the second act, when the moral dilemma is introduced. Picard makes a lot of big speeches about how the forced relocation of the Ba&#39;ku is a huge crime - but the film, and its villains, are so tame that I never really feel like the Ba&#39;ku are in any great danger. Also, the Ba&#39;ku society is simply unconvincing; it all seems too idyllic, too perfect. Their village doesn&#39;t look like a place where people really live - it&#39;s more like a superclean Hollywood set, isn&#39;t it? <br/><br/>Speaking of the villains, they&#39;re unusually weak here, especially by Star Trek standards. F. Murray Abraham may have been great in &quot;Amadeus,&quot; but he&#39;s awful here as Ru&#39;afo, the putty-faced bad guy. Great Star Trek villains of the past were usually either tough and over-the-top (like Khan), or cunning and dignified (like General Chang), but Ru&#39;afo possesses none of these qualities. He&#39;s basically a whiny brat. At one point, he even emits a thoroughly childlike and embarrassing shriek of defeat - why should I respect this guy? <br/><br/>The film also has other, production-related problems. It&#39;s the first Star Trek film to rely exclusively on computer-generated (CGI) special effects, and while some of the effects shots are pretty, others already look rather primitive and cartoon-like, by contemporary standards.<br/><br/>Adding to the list of woes, the space battle scenes are distinctly lacking in verve. Part of the problem is the repetitive music, which fails to generate tension. There&#39;s also a lot of boring medium and long shots in the battle scenes. By contrast, &quot;Wrath of Khan&quot; and &quot;First Contact&quot; generally used close-up shots that were far more effective (the photon torpedoes in those films tend to shoot right toward the viewer&#39;s face, for example).<br/><br/>I also really hate the fact that Riker needs to contrive a weird gimmick to defeat the Son&#39;a ships, which somehow involves a joystick and lots of incomprehensible techno-babble. Why can&#39;t the Enterprise just tear into an enemy ship for a change? Why does there always have to be some stupid angle to the fights? <br/><br/>Lest I sound entirely negative, I&#39;d like to point out that Jonathan Frakes&#39; direction in this film is still pretty solid (he also helmed the previous, far more successful Star Trek film, &quot;First Contact&quot;). He includes lots of lovely panoramic shots of the countryside that occasionally give the film a very poetic and attractive feel. But, by contrast, the interior sets - and I&#39;m thinking chiefly of Ru&#39;afo&#39;s ship here - are really ugly and crude-looking.<br/><br/>On balance, then, I really believe this is the worst film of the Star Trek stable. There&#39;s no way I can accept that Star Trek V could be called worse than this! (Shatner at least had a clear vision for that film, even if its execution was flawed.) Even the often-tedious Star Trek I is better than &quot;Insurrection&quot;, if only because it has more dignity...
I went to the theater last night expecting the usual dreg known as Star Trek ever since Rick Berman took over. I was pleasantly surprised! The movie was, in a word, fun. Good action, great effects, and one liners up the ying yang. I might even consider seeing it again, and it will definitely be a DVD in my collection.<br/><br/>I gave the movie a 7 out of 10 because of three problems I found with it. 1. Way too much technobabble. Too often, now, Star Trek resolves its problems by coming up with some new technobabble to throw at it. 2. The Enterprise is treated in the same way that most movies treat 1982 Ford sedans--just fodder for the car chase scenes. A long time ago, the Enterprise used to be a character on Star Trek. When the Enterprise died in Star Trek 3, I cried. When the Enterprise was near destruction in First Contact and Insurrection, I shrugged it off. 3. Who on earth came up with the &quot;Manual Steering Column&quot;?!?! This had to be the most incredibly stupid thing I have ever seen in a Star Trek movie. Luckily, it was only there for a second (making me ask again why it was needed), so it didn&#39;t grate me like other stupid ideas (like Star Trek 5&#39;s elevator shaft)...<br/><br/>All that being said, I felt that those issues were minor in comparison to how much fun the movie was. I&#39;d say it broke the odd number curse, but I never believed in such a thing, since I felt that ST8 was trash, and ST1 and 3 were some of the best films ever made. So, get your ticket, check your brain at the door, set your phaser on stun, and get a good seat!
That's the moral nut of this highly unexceptional episode, a midlife production in which each Enterprise crew member does his or her vaudeville act.
Tricked by a race of aliens called the Son&#39;a, Starfleet has ordered the Enterprise to conduct a stealth surveillance of a peaceful, almost medieval race known as the Ba&#39;ku. However, a malfunction in Lieutenant Commander Data&#39;s (<a href="/name/nm0000653/">Brent Spiner</a>) circuitry causes him to expose both himself, the surveillance team, and duckblind operation set up by Starfleet. Admiral Dougherty (<a href="/name/nm0001875/">Anthony Zerbe</a>) orders Captain Jean-Luc Picard (<a href="/name/nm0001772/">Patrick Stewart</a>) to stop Data and leave the planet, but Picard rescues Data and intervenes with the Ba&#39;ku to explain their presence. To their amazement, they discover that the Ba&#39;ku are not a pre-technological race, rather that they rejected technology to live a simple life, and that the Federation and the Son&#39;a plan to remove the Ba&#39;ku from the planet in order to tap the &quot;metaphasic radiation&quot; being emitted by their planet&#39;s rings, Picard decides to defend the Ba&#39;ku in direct violation of Starfleet orders in order to uphold the principles upon which the Federation was founded. The Enterprise-D crew is back: Besides Captain Picard and Lt Commander Data, look for Commander Will Ryker (<a href="/name/nm0000408/">Jonathan Frakes</a>), Lieutenant Commander Geordi LaForge (<a href="/name/nm0000996/">LeVar Burton</a>), Lieutenant Commander Worf (<a href="/name/nm0000373/">Michael Dorn</a>), Dr Beverly Crusher (<a href="/name/nm0000533/">Gates McFadden</a>), Counselor Deanna Troi (<a href="/name/nm0000642/">Marina Sirtis</a>), and <a href="/name/nm0000854/">Majel Barrett</a> (as the voice of the Enterprise computer). Insurrection is the act of rising in revolt, rebellion or resistance against civil authority or an established government or, in the text of this movie, Starfleet Federation. It takes place in the year 2375 A.D. Geordi discovers memory engrams implanted in Data&#39;s neural net. He believes the damage was caused by a Son&#39;a weapon that was fired before Data malfunctioned, not after—as the Son&#39;a claim. In the movie, metaphasic radiation as generated by the rings around the Ba&#39;ku planets has regenerative properties. It prevents adults from growing old. For example, Anij (<a href="/name/nm0614220/">Donna Murphy</a>) and Sojef (<a href="/name/nm0446298/">Daniel Hugh Kelly</a>) claim to be over 300 years old. Dr Crusher finds that those who have been on the planet for even a short time show increased metabolism, improved muscle tone, and high energy. Troi and Beverly find that their boobs are starting to firm up. Geordi gets his eyesight back. Troi and Ryker resume a relationship they left years ago. Picard&#39;s facial skin begins to tighten, although he doesn&#39;t begin to grow hair again. Basically, Ru&#39;afo (<a href="/name/nm0000719/">F. Murray Abraham</a>) was getting a face lift. His facial skin was being stretched and re-attached to his head. In order to stop Ru&#39;afo from unleshing the radiation collector, Picard has a replica of the radiation collector ship set up in the holoship, and Gallatin (<a href="/name/nm0001344/">Gregg Henry</a>) disables the ejector assembly. When Ru&#39;afo goes to eject it, everything goes exactly as they planned, until they notice no change in the metaphasic flux level. Realizing he has been tricked, Ru&#39;afo transports to the collector ship and overrides the new sequence. Unfortunately Gallatin cannot override Ru&#39;afo&#39;s new sequence without his access codes, so Picard beams over to the collector ship himself. While dodging Ru&#39;afo&#39;s phaser, Picard manages to reset the manual control. Seconds before the collector is set to eject, Picard ignites the exhaust and blows up the ship, just as Riker beams him back aboard the Enterprise. With only three minutes of air left on the Son&#39;a ship, Picard beams over Worf, the Son&#39;a crew, and the captive Ba&#39;ku.. Later, after everyone has returned to the Ba&#39;ku planet, Picard, Anij, and Sojef watch Gallatin reuniting with his mother. Picard and Anij say goodbye, but Picard promises to take his 318 days of shore leave and return for a visit. In the final scene, Data is shown playing in the haystacks with Artim (<a href="/name/nm0919616/">Michael Welch</a>). The two &#39;children&#39; say goodbye to each other, and the Enterprise crew beam back to their own ship. Yes, a novelization of the movie by American science fiction writer J.M. Dillard (pen name for Jeanne Kalogridis), was released in 1998. So far, there are 13. Star Trek: Insurrection is preceded by <a href="/title/tt0079945/">Star Trek: The Motion Picture (1979)</a> (1979), <a href="/title/tt0084726/">Star Trek: The Wrath of Khan (1982)</a> (1982), <a href="/title/tt0088170/">Star Trek III: The Search for Spock (1984)</a> (1984), <a href="/title/tt0092007/">Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home (1986)</a> (1986), <a href="/title/tt0098382/">Star Trek V: The Final Frontier (1989)</a> (1989), <a href="/title/tt0102975/">Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country (1991)</a> (1991), <a href="/title/tt0111280/">Star Trek: Generations (1994)</a> (1994), and <a href="/title/tt0117731/">Star Trek: First Contact (1996)</a> (1996). It is followed by <a href="/title/tt0253754/">Star Trek: Nemesis (2002)</a> (2002), <a href="/title/tt0796366/">Star Trek (2009)</a> (2009), <a href="/title/tt1408101/">Star Trek: Into Darkness (2013)</a> (2013), and <a href="/title/tt2660888/">Star Trek: Beyond (2016)</a> (2016). Worf was having a nightmare about his deceased Trill wife Jadzia Dax, who was killed by Gul Dukat in Deep Space Nine episode <a href="/title/tt0708610/">&quot;Tears of the Prophets&quot;</a> (1998), which takes place shortly before Insurrection. a5c7b9f00b

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