posted on Dec, 16 2002 @ 03:44 AM
This is a SPOILER. Do not read if you haven't seen the movie!
By Sav.
Star Trek: Nemesis, the latest installment of the highly successful movies staring the cast of the prime-time hit show Star Trek: The Next Generation,
tackles many critical issues facing our modern society while repeating, and trying to augment through, age-old motifs found in mankind�s ancient
myths.
Jean-Luc Picard (Patrick Stewart), the Captain of the infamous Starship Enterprise, faces off with Shinzon (Tom Hardy), a clone of Picard who has a
beef with the Romulans (who created him), Earthlings (who most Star Trek villains hate), and Picard himself. The dialogue between Picard and Shinzon
and about Shinzon by other characters raises some critical questions poised by our own modern society about the morality, and possibilities, inherent
in cloning.
One of these questions is whether a genetic duplicate will look identical to the original being. Star Trek scriptwriters decided that nurture might be
a more powerful indication than nature of an individual�s mental and physical characteristics: Shinzon, far younger than Picard, physically appears
much different than his donor in more ways than age. He describes being constantly beaten by his Romulan overseers and that his broken nose and
bludgeoned face have healed, and scarred, forming the familiar-yet-different face.
Another question poised by our society is: will a clone share its donor�s intelligence, personality and emotional makeup? Shinzon proves to be an
intellectual match for Picard. He is a tactical genius, besting both his Romulan enemies and Picard at almost every turn, secretly constructing a ship
that can destroy starships and entire worlds, and galvanizing the people of Remus (slaves of the Romulans) into a coup of the Romulan Senate. He
shares Picard�s confidence, charisma, wit, and war tactics. However, he is proven to be very unlike Picard in his lack of sympathy, morality, or
honor. He is a vengeful, over-confident, and altogether evil villain eager to impose his will on the Romulans and, eventually, the Federation.
Shinzon represents our current questions of whether it �can be done�. He has been created with Picard�s genes and has grown into a younger,
near-replica of his donor, but he suffers pangs of pain and it is soon explained that he is dying. It seems the Romulan Senate responsible for
creating Shinzon �programmed� his genes so that he could undergo �accelerated aging� later on in his life cycle. This was replaced by another Senate
that decided it didn�t need Picard�s clone anymore and decided to send Shinzon to Remus to mine dilithium as a Romulan slave. The plan forgotten by
the current leaders of Romulus (the Romulan home planet), he was never treated for this condition and is now dying. The only way he is to survive is
to bleed Picard dry of �good blood and genes� and put these originals in his own, cloned, body.
The writers surely took pains to ensure the audience knew Shinzon was an unnatural, if not unholy, abomination by settling the matter, and ending
Shinzon�s life, with an Arthurian motif, replicating the scene from Le Morte d�Arthur where King Arthur stabs Mordred (the bastard son of the
incestuous union between Arthur and his sister Morgana LeFey) with a spear. Mordred then pulls himself, hand over hand, up the spear to deliver
Arthur�s death-blow. Shinzon dies as Mordred did. And where Arthur survives and is taken away to the mythical island Avalon, Picard is delivered
haphazardly to the bridge of the Enterprise.
The finding of the parts of the android B4/Before (Brent Spiner), the prototype, and physical replica, of Commander Data (Brent Spiner) alludes to the
Age-old Egyptian god Osiris. Osiris, murdered by Typhon, or set, was cut into pieces that were spread along the Nile. The goddess Isis then collected
Osiris� body parts and she reassembled him. He is reborn and becomes the god of the underworld.
B4 is reassembled by Doctor Crusher (Gates McFadden) who comments to Data, standing nearby, that she prefers Data�s eyes to B4�s: an allusion to
Osiris� symbol in hieroglyphic text � the eye. Commander LaForge (Levar Burton) conveniently downloads all of Data�s memories into B4 in the hopes
that the rediscovered, �newborn� android might better be able to function in the interstellar community if it has access to Data�s experience. After
Data is killed off, Picard hears B4 sing a song earlier sung by Data and it seems inevitable that Data will arise from the ashes in the next
installment of the series. Sigh�
-�-
[Edited on 16-12-2002 by Savonarola]
[Edited on 16-12-2002 by Savonarola]
[Edited on 16-12-2002 by Savonarola]