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  4. Star Trek: First Contact Full Movie In Hindi Free Download
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  38. It is the 24th century and the Borg (cybernetic lifeforms) have spread across the galaxy with one sole purpose: to assimilate and conquer all races. Under the command of their seductive and sadistic queen, the Borg are headed to Earth with a devious plan involving time travel to alter history. After an epic battle against the Borg, Captain Jean-Luc Picard and the Enterprise-E crew follow the Borg sphere back into the 21st century, and must battle the Borg Queen before she assimilates mankind. Meanwhile, Picard and his crew must make sure that Zefram Cochrane makes his famous warp flight, and makes Earth's first contact with an alien species (the Vulcans).
  39. The Borg travel back in time intent on preventing Earth's first contact with an alien species. Captain Picard and his crew pursue them to ensure that Zefram Cochrane makes his maiden flight reaching warp speed.
  40. Star Trek the Next Generation mirrors the classic when they take to the big screen for the second time to combat their greatest enemy from an original episode. Star Trek First Contact has everything the Next Generation fan needs: action, suspense, star battles, introspection, a reference to classical literature, the original series ... and the Borg. The Borg have attacked Earth and the Enterprise D sails into battle. Picard uses his former assimilation to stop them, but a band of Borg escape to the mid 21st Century in order to stop First Contact. Apparently, this is the time when Zeframe Cochran makes his maiden warp voyage, triggering Earth's first contact with alien intelligent life forms. Now, it is up to Picard, Data, Riker and the rest of the crew to make sure the warp voyage happens, and that the Enterprise D is not assimilated into the Borg collective. Probably the best thing about First Contact is the action and star battles, handled well by director Jonathan Frakes. He is also able to go on an even keel in telling three stories at once. One is Picard's conflict with himself, a 21st Century Woman, and his crew. The second is Riker, Troi and Geordi making sure the reluctant Cochrane makes his flight. They deal with their shattered image of a 23rd century hero. The third is Data's dilemma as the Borg queen tempts him with humanity. Most Next Generation movies tend to favor two, three or maybe four characters over the rest. However, Frakes is able to work with story master Rick Berman to make sure every character is well motivated, characterized, and makes the plot work. This is my favorite of the Next Generation movies.
  41. Okay folks, let me state one thing first...I side with the Next Generation series over the older one. The older series has a sterility and/or blandness that prevents it from being totally engrossing. I liked the old show, but TNG is so much better, and its movies follow par in that suit.<br/><br/>Generations was a great film that handed the movie reins to TNG, and First Contact shows how well they can pilot the movies. Wonderful action mixed with drama in a well paced movie. This is one that I can watch over and over again. <br/><br/>You don&#39;t have to be a fan of the series to enjoy this one. Among all the movies, it can stand on its own two feet, without any support from the others.
  42. The excitement comes from Frakes's direction -- his liveliness, and his pleasure in looking at, and showing us, events and images.
  43. After the Borg attack Earth in the 24th century, the Enterprise-E follows them back to the 21st century in order to stop them from altering Earth&#39;s history specifically, preventing Zefram Cochrane from making his famous first attempt traveling at warp speed (faster-than-light), which resulted with the Earth&#39;s first contact with alien life. While Riker, Troi, and Geordi are on Earth ensuring that Cochrane makes his flight, the rest of the Enterprise crew is faced with protecting the ship from a Borg invasion and installment of a Borg Queen (<a href="/name/nm0000481/">Alice Krige</a>). All of the Enterprise-D crew is back: Captain Jean-Luc Picard (<a href="/name/nm0001772/">Patrick Stewart</a>), Commander Will Ryker (<a href="/name/nm0000408/">Jonathan Frakes</a>), Lieutenant Commander Data (<a href="/name/nm0000653/">Brent Spiner</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. In addition, it features the character Zefram Cochrane (<a href="/name/nm0000342/">James Cromwell</a>), who was introduced in the Star Trek original series episode <a href="/title/tt0708436/">&quot;Metamorphosis&quot;</a> (1967). The Holographic Doctor (<a href="/name/nm0000585/">Robert Picardo</a>) from <a href="/title/tt0112178/">Star Trek: Voyager (1995)</a> also makes a short cameo appearance. It takes place in the year 2373 A.D., six years after Picard was captured and assimilated into the Borg and given the name Locutus in TV series episode <a href="/title/tt0708786/">&quot;The Best of Both Worlds: Part 2&quot;</a> (1990). It is one of the things that Captain Picard could only know due to having been assimilated by the Borg. He shared the Borg&#39;s thoughts so that they learned all his knowledge about Starfleet and Earth&#39;s defenses. However, during his assimilation, he also learned a lot of information about the Borg and their ships. He was never supposed to be freed from the Borg Collective and able to use this information against them. It justifies his remark that &quot;no one knows the Borg as I do&quot;. Obviously, these experiences have taught him that there is a hidden vulnerability on the Borg cube, although the Borg have disguised it or made it seem non-vital. Given the fact that this area is located on the outside suggests that it is something connected to the cube&#39;s weapons or shields system; vital areas would ideally be built in a ship&#39;s interior for better protection, but weapons and shields are located at a ship&#39;s surface by necessity. It could also be a weak power node, something that can be easily overloaded, causing an energy cascade fatal to the ship. Since they were to avoid contact with 21st century Earth until they could be rescued by Starfleet, they were sent to Gravett Island, a fictional island somewhere in the Pacific Ocean. When the Phoenix has left Earth&#39;s gravity, Ryker and Geordi engage the warp drive while Cochrane sits back to enjoy the ride. Meanwhile on the Enterprise, the Borg Queen orders Data to destroy the Phoenix. Data fires off three torpedoes but, at the last minute they miss the Phoenix. The Queen realizes that Data has betrayed her just as Data breaks a coolant tank, releasing corrosive vapours into the atmosphere. Picard grabs a hose and attempts to crawl above the vapours, but the Borg Queen grabs onto his leg. Data grabs her leg and pulls her back down. The vapour has the effect of eating away the biological components of the Borg, leaving them non-functional. It also eats away the skin grafts that the Queen had given Data as a &quot;gift&quot;. In a voice-over, Picard begins to describe how the Phoenix was eventually spotted by the alien vessel. Their ship lands on Earth and opens to reveal three Vulcans. &quot;Live long and prosper&quot;, they say in greeting; to which Cochrane replies, &quot;thanks&quot;. While the Vulcans are welcomed by Cochrane, Picard says goodbye to Lily (<a href="/name/nm0005569/">Alfre Woodard</a>). Then he, Ryker, Troi, Crusher, and Geordi beam up to the Enterprise. Picard orders the recreation of the vortex that plunged them into the past, and the Enterprise disappears from view. In the final scene, Cochrane and the Vulcans are enjoying drinks together in his makeshift tavern. Yes, a novelization of the movie by American science fiction writer J.M. Dillard (pen name for Jeanne Kalogridis), was released in 1996. So far, there are 13. Star Trek: First Contact was 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), and <a href="/title/tt0102975/">Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country (1991)</a> (1991), all of which feature the Enterprise captained by James T Kirk (<a href="/name/nm0000638/">William Shatner</a>). In <a href="/title/tt0111280/">Star Trek: Generations (1994)</a> (1994), the crew of the Enterprise captained by Jean-Luc Picard was introduced. Star Trek: First Contact was followed by <a href="/title/tt0120844/">Star Trek: Insurrection (1998)</a> (1998) and <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) harken to an alternate reality in which Kirk was just beginning his career with Starfleet Academy. No. The Queen should be seen as the manifestation or personification of the Borg collective mind, not the &quot;brain&quot; which normally houses the entire collective and commands all drones. The Queen is a female drone that can be used when the Borg feel interaction with other species needs to be through a more personal approach, such as the temptation of Data and Picard. The writers have admitted that the Queen was a plot device for this purpose, as a disembodied voice alone would not have been very persuasive. If the Queen in First Contact was indeed the controller of all Borg, that would mean that the Borg in the 24th century would immediately be without a consciousness as soon as the Queen travels back in time and doesn&#39;t return. However, this doesn&#39;t happen, as the crew of the Voyager also has several run-ins with the Borg and the Queen, and the Queen can be resurrected each time. It is interesting to note that when the Queen is destroyed in the plasma, the other Borg drones immediately malfunction and power down, suggesting she had taken total control over those drones when they were separated from the rest of the Collective. However, in the <a href="/title/tt0244365/">Enterprise (2001)</a> episode <a href="/title/tt0572230/">&quot;Regeneration&quot;</a>, which takes place a century after First Contact with the Vulcans, a few Borg drones are recovered from wreckage of the Borg Sphere that ended up on the North Pole. After thawing out, they quickly regenerate and form their own mini-Collective, seemingly without ill effects from the Queen&#39;s destruction 100 years earlier. In the Voyager episode <a href="/title/tt0708872/">&quot;Dark Frontier&quot;</a>, in order to escape, Captain Janeway destroys a Borg power node, which (temporarily) disables the Queen&#39;s command interface and thereby her control over the Collective; however, this does not stop the Borg from laying in a pursuit moments later. These examples all illustrate that the Queen is an important, but by no means essential part of the Borg Collective. Some writers of non-canon Star Trek novels have even suggested the Queen is a separate program within the hive mind and can be implemented as the need for a single-acting drone arises or even as a signal booster to connect Borg that are spread out over many light years. In the episode <a href="/title/tt0708732/">&quot;I Borg&quot;</a>, the Enterprise crew found a single Borg drone that was severed from the Borg Collective. They named him &quot;Hugh&quot; and taught him the value of individuality. Hugh was eventually returned to the Collective by the Borg, but his ideas of individuality spread throughout his ship and caused a lot of Borg drones to reject their collective mind and revert to their original individuality. This group is subsequently encountered in <a href="/title/tt0708701/">&quot;Descent: Part 2&quot;</a> (1993), raising the question as to why not all Borg have been &quot;freed&quot; this way by the time Star Trek: First Contact takes place, since all Borg are connected by a subspace network. The reason may be a combination of factors. For one, it is known that that the Borg&#39;s collective consciousness will reject anything that would threaten their hive mind, as was demonstrated in Voyager episode <a href="/title/tt0709003/">&quot;Unimatrix Zero: Part 1&quot;</a> (2000). Also, the idea of shared consciousness is particularly deeply rooted in the Collective and fiercely defended by older drones, especially when separated from the Collective (such as Seven of Nine displayed in Voyager episode <a href="/title/tt0708974/">&quot;Survival Instinct&quot;</a> and in her later life). And even after successful separation, some freed individuals still long to a form of collective mind (Voyager episode <a href="/title/tt0709005/">&quot;Unity&quot;</a>). Consequently, Hugh may have introduced his radical idea of individuality into the entire Collective, but it can be expected that many drones, and therefore the hive mind, would largely resist this idea. They would even take measures to eliminate this dangerous thought from their consciousness and destroy drones that have embraced the idea and continue to spread it. Therefore, it is more plausible that Hugh had to introduce the idea subtly, perhaps one drone at a time, to see if the idea would stick and, at the same time, remain undetected. Of course, the rest of the Borg would inevitably find out at one point that drones were breaking off from the Collective and would take measures against it, which explains why the Borg Collective is still largely intact. a5c7b9f00b
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