Star Trek Bridge Commander Kobayashi Maru

Bridge Commander; Bridge Commander 1.1 Patch; Kobayashi Maru 2011.10; Installation instructions: Copy the folder 'scripts' inside 'Brex to Engineering' to your Bridge Commander folder. Overwrite if you have a older version of this mod. Don't forget to activate the 'Brex to Engineering' Mutator inside 'Configure' - 'Customize' - 'Mutators'.

Running time118 minutesCountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishBudget$35 millionBox office$118 millionStar Trek Generations is a 1994 American directed by and based on the franchise. It is the seventh film in the, and brings together cast members from the 1960s television show and the 1987 spin-off show. In the film, Captain of the joins forces with Captain to stop a villain from destroying a solar system.Generations was conceived as a handoff from the original television series cast and their movies to The Next Generation. And wrote the script concurrently with their work on the final season of The Next Generation; production of the film began while the television series was still being made. Parts of the film were shot at the,. The film uses a mix of alongside. The film was scored by regular Star Trek composer.Generations opened on November 18 in the United States.

Paramount promoted the film with a number of merchandising tie-ins, including toys, books, games, and a —a first for a major motion picture. Grossing $118 million, it was a box office success despite receiving a mixed critical reception. Generations was followed by 1996's, exclusively featuring the Next Generation cast. Contents.Plot In 2293, retired Starfleet officers, and attend the of the. During the, the Enterprise is pressed into a rescue mission to save two refugee ships that have been snared by a massive, unknown energy ribbon. Enterprise is able to save some of the refugees before their ships are destroyed, but itself becomes trapped by the ribbon. Kirk goes to engineering to help Enterprise escape, and is presumed dead after the trailing end of the ribbon hits the ship's hull where he was working.In 2371, the crew of the is celebrating the promotion of shipmate to Lieutenant Commander on the holodeck when Captain learns his brother and nephew were killed in a fire.

Picard is distraught that the Picard family line will end with him. Enterprise receives a distress call from an observatory where an El-Aurian, Dr. Tolian Soran, launches a trilithium probe at a star. The probe causes the star to implode, creating a shockwave that destroys its solar system. Soran kidnaps Enterprise engineer and is transported off the station by a belonging to the.Enterprise crewman tells Picard that she and Soran were among the El-Aurians rescued in 2293 and that Soran is obsessed with reentering the ribbon to reach the 'Nexus', an extra-dimensional realm that exists outside of normal space-time.

Tropico 5 cheats. This page contains a list of cheats, codes, Easter eggs, tips, and other secrets for Tropico 5 for PC.If you've discovered a cheat you'd like to add to the page, or have a correction, please click. The best place to get cheats, codes, cheat codes, walkthrough, guide, FAQ, unlockables, trophies, and secrets for Tropico 5 for PlayStation 4 (PS4). The best place to get cheats, codes, cheat codes, walkthrough, guide, FAQ, unlockables, tricks, and secrets for Tropico 5 for PC.

Picard and determine that Soran, unable to fly a ship directly into the ribbon, is altering the path of the ribbon by removing the gravitational effects from nearby stars. He plans to destroy another star to bring the ribbon to him on the planet Veridian III, killing millions on a nearby inhabited planet in the process.Upon entering the Veridian system, Picard offers himself to the Duras sisters in exchange for La Forge, but insists that he be transported to Soran directly. La Forge is returned to Enterprise, but unwittingly transmits Enterprise 's defense details to the Klingons. The Duras sisters attack, and Enterprise sustains critical damage before destroying the Bird of Prey. Commander evacuates the crew to the forward saucer section of the ship, which separates from the engineering section and crashes onto the surface of Veridian III.Picard fails to stop Soran from launching another probe and both men enter the Nexus. Picard finds himself surrounded by an idealized family, but realizes it is an illusion. He is confronted by an 'echo' of Guinan, and after being told that he may go 'wherever and whenever' he wishes within the Nexus, Guinan sends him to meet Kirk, also safe in the Nexus.

Though Kirk is at first entranced by the opportunity to make up for past regrets in the Nexus, he likewise realizes that nothing there is real. Picard convinces Kirk to leave the Nexus and return to Veridian III shortly before Soran launches the probe.Working together, Kirk and Picard distract Soran long enough for Picard to lock the probe in place, causing it to explode on the launchpad and kill Soran. Kirk is fatally injured in the effort, and Picard buries him in a makeshift grave on the mountain. Three Federation starships arrive to retrieve Enterprise 's survivors from Veridian III. With Enterprise declared un-salvageable, Picard muses that given the name's legacy, the ship will not be the last to carry the name Enterprise.Cast The starring cast of reprise their roles in Generations.

Plays Captain, plays Commander, plays Lieutenant Commander, plays Lieutenant Commander, plays Chief Medical Officer Commander, plays Lieutenant Commander, and plays ship's counselor Commander. Recurring characters from the series also return, including and as the villainous Klingon sisters Lursa and B'Etor, as Enterprise nurse Lieutenant, and as Enterprise bartender.plays, the film's antagonist. McDowell had previously worked with Stewart on stage decades earlier, and relished the chance to be the one to kill Shatner's character. He liked his character's spiked hair and black ensemble, and requested that he not play an alien; 'If I’m going to play this part, I don't want a scar. I don't want to look like a mutant. I’m not getting up at four in the morning to get in makeup.' Plays Enterprise-B captain John Harriman.

When approached for the role, Ruck assumed he would play an alien, saying, 'Look, when I shave every day, I don't look in the mirror and say, 'Hey! There's a starship commander.' ' Producer informed him that the character was from a wealthy and connected family, and was placed in command as a stepping stone to a political career. Plays Enterprise-B helmsman. Kim consulted with art supervisor to make sure her hand movements and manipulations of the ships' controls were consistent and accurate. Played an Enterprise-B navigator; he apologized to director for a poor first rehearsal of his scenes, because as a Star Trek fan he had to get used to playing alongside his idols.: 5'50'Initially, the entire principal cast of The Original Series was featured in the film's first script, but only three members appeared in the film: as Captain, as, and as.: 17 and declined to appear as. Nimoy felt that there were story problems with the script and that Spock's role was extraneous.: 17–20 The Next Generation Rick Berman said that 'Both Leonard Nimoy and DeForest Kelley felt they made a proper goodbye in the last movie '.

Nimoy and Kelley's lines were subsequently modified for Doohan and Koenig. The news that not all of the Original Series cast was in the film was not passed to all of The Next Generation actors. When Goldberg arrived on set on her first day, she immediately asked to see, who portrayed in The Original Series. When told that Nichols was not in the film, she said to Koenig, 'The fans have been waiting for years to see Nichelle and me and Uhura and Guinan on screen together.'

Patrick Stewart said that he had made an effort to ensure that the original cast were involved in the film, saying 'I've been passionate about that from the first time that a Next Generation movie had been mentioned; I didn't want us to sail into the future just as The Next Generation cast.' Many of the background players throughout the film appeared in different roles in the television series., who appears as an Enterprise-B bridge officer, played a terrorist in ' and a Klingon in ', and later joined the cast of as the Vulcan.: 318 Various background roles were played by the main cast's stunt doubles. Production Development Four months before the official announcement of a followup to in late 1992, executives approached The Next Generation producer about creating another feature film.: 308 Berman informed and that Paramount had approved a two-picture deal: 308 around midway through The Next Generation 's sixth season. Moore and Braga, who were convinced Berman had called them into his office to tell them The Next Generation was cancelled, instead found Berman asking them to write one of the Star Trek films.: 308 Berman also worked with former Next Generation producer Maurice Hurley to develop possible story ideas.

Executive producer turned down the opportunity to develop ideas, objecting to what he saw as a 'competition' for the job.: 308 Ultimately Moore and Braga's script was chosen; the writers spent weeks with Berman developing the story before taking a working vacation in May 1993 to write the first-draft screenplay, completed June 1.: 309Moore described Generations as a project with a number of required elements that the film 'had to have'. Berman felt that including the original cast of the previous Star Trek films felt like a 'good way to pass the baton' to the next series.: 308 The studio wanted the original cast to only appear in the first minutes, with Kirk only recurring at the end of the film. Other requests included a -like antagonist, Klingons, and a humorous Data plot. At one point, the writers toyed with the idea of pitting the two crews against each other. 'We were obsessed with the poster image of the two Enterprises locked in combat: Kirk vs. Picard, One Must Die!' Said Moore.In the initial draft of the screenplay, the original series cast appeared in a prologue, and Guinan served as the bridge between the two generations.

The opening shot would have been the entire original series cast crammed into an elevator aboard the Enterprise-B, happy to be back together. The Enterprise-D's end also appeared—the saucer crash had first been proposed as the cliffhanger for Moore's original seventh-season finale 'All Good Things.' , which eventually became the series finale.: 309 Kirk's death was initially developed in Braga, Moore, and Berman's story sessions.

Moore recalled that 'we wanted to aim high, do something different and big. We knew we had to have a strong Picard story arc, so what are the profound things in a man's life he has to face? Mortality tops the list.' After the idea of killing off a Next Generation cast member was vetoed, someone suggested that Kirk die instead.

Moore recalled that 'we all sorta looked around and said, 'That might be it.' ' The studio and Shatner himself had few concerns about the plot point.: 309Refining the script also meant facing the realities of budget constraints. The initial proposal included location shooting in Hawaii, Idaho and the Midwestern United States and the total budget was over $30 million.

After negotiations, the budget was reduced to $25 million.: 309 A revised version of the script from March 1994 included feedback from the producers, studio, actors and director; the writers changed a sequence where Harriman trained his predecessors in the Enterprise-B's operation after Shatner felt the scene's joke went too far. Picard's personal tragedy was written as his brother Robert's heart attack, but Stewart suggested the loss of his entire family in a fire to add emotional impact.: 310 The draft script's opening sequence took place on the solar observatory with two -influenced characters talking shortly before the Romulans' attack; Next Generation writer suggested that the opening should be something 'fun', leading to the switch to a holodeck promotion-at-sea.: 311Nimoy turned down the chance to direct the feature as well as reprise the role of Spock.: 309 The producers chose. The British director had no feature film experience, but had directed several episodes of Star Trek, including the popular Next Generation episode ' and the double-length pilot episode '. The enchanted worlds gameplay pc. Design and costumes Generations 's was Star Trek veteran, who had worked on previous Star Trek films, The Next Generation and Deep Space Nine. Zimmerman collaborated with illustrator for many designs.: 312 Zimmerman's approach to realizing a vision of the future was to take existing and familiar designs and use them in a different manner to express living in the future. Taking cues from director 's approach to, Zimmerman noted that even in the future humanity will still need life support and have the same furniture needs, so a logical approach was to start with what would remain the same and work from there.: 52Transitioning from a television screen to a movie meant that sets and designs needed to be more detailed, with a higher level of polish to stand up on the big screen.

Zimmerman felt obliged to improve on the sets fans had watched for seven seasons, especially the bridge.: 52–53 Zimmerman repainted the set, added computer consoles, raised the captain's chair for a more commanding presence, and reworked the bridge's ceiling struts; Zimmerman had always been unhappy with how the ceiling looked but had never had the time or money to rework it previously.: 53The script called for an entirely new location on the Enterprise, stellar cartography. According to Zimmerman, the script characterized the location as a small room with maps on one wall.

Finding the concept uninteresting, Zimmerman designed a circular set with three stories to give the impression the actors are inside a star map. Zimmerman's previous work designing a crisis management center influenced the design, dominated by video screens.: 54 Before the rise of large-format inkjet printers and computer graphics software in the few years before the film was made, the backlit starmaps that covered three-quarters of the wall would have been infeasible to create.

These starmaps were removed and replaced with a for scenes where the static images would be replaced by computer-animated star maps by Santa Barbara Studios. The set's size made it one of the largest sets ever constructed on a Paramount lot.: 27The film marked the first appearance of the Enterprise-B.

The ship model was a modification of the Excelsior vessel, designed and built by Bill George and effects house (ILM) for a decade earlier. Coproducer Peter Lauritson, illustrator John Eaves, and Zimmerman designed the Enterprise-B with additions to its hull, some of which were added so that they could depict damage to the ship without harming the underlying model's surface, and to improve the look of the ship when it was filmed from angles called for in the script.: 319 The ship's bridge was based on previous designs for the Enterprise-A and Excelsior sets he had created for The Undiscovered Country, using pieces from each. The surrounding spacedock for Enterprise 's maiden voyage was a modification of the model created for (1979),: 319 refurbished and modified by removing a row of lights to fit better into the anamorphic screen frame.: 79Like Zimmerman, George also took the opportunity for the Enterprise-D's screen debut to touch up its exterior.: 79 Because Generations featured the Enterprise-D separating into its saucer and engineering sections, the original 6-foot (1.8 m) model built by ILM for the television series was hauled out of storage. The ship was stripped, rewired, and its surface detailed to stand up to scrutiny of the silver screen.: 320 George changed the paint job, as he recalled they had been in a rush to prep the model for television and its green-and-blue color scheme did not properly read on film. The paint scheme was shifted towards a 'battleship grey', with glossy tiled areas reminiscent of the original feature film Enterprise.: 79While the feature film made use of new sets and props, set decorator John M. The USS Enterprise-B enters the Nexus energy ribbon.

November 29, 1994. From the original on May 8, 2014. Retrieved May 22, 2013. ^. May 26, 2007. From the original on May 11, 2009. Retrieved March 18, 2011.

Adams, Sam (June 12, 2011). Retrieved November 19, 2019. Staff (June 13, 2018). CBS Entertainment. Retrieved November 18, 2019. Harris, Will (July 8, 2018).

Retrieved November 19, 2019. Lin, Sam Chu (December 9, 1994).

Pan Asia Venture Capital Corporation. Archived from on September 24, 2015.

– via (subscription required). ^, (April 30, 2013). Star Trek Generations; Audio commentary (Blu-ray). ^ Beeler, Michael (1995). 'Star Trek Generations; Two Captains; Trek Memories; Spock Speaks; El-Aurian Heavy; Feature vs. Series; The Star Trek Curse; John Alonzo;'.

26 (2): 16–27. Voedisch, Lynn (May 19, 1994). ' 'Star Trek' Clears Deck for New Generation'. Chicago Sun-Times. From the original on March 5, 2016. Retrieved August 12, 2011. Nichols, Nichelle (1994).

The Buffalo News. December 11, 1994.

Archived from on September 11, 2016. Retrieved July 27, 2016 – via. ^ Nemecek, Larry (2003). Star Trek: The Next Generation Companion (3rd ed.). Pocket Books. ^ (September 28, 2004). Star Trek Generations; Text commentary (DVD; Disc 1/2).

^, (September 28, 2004). Star Trek Generations; Audio commentary (DVD; Disc 1/2). Marc Shapiro (January 1995). 'Rick Berman: Executive Producer'. Star Trek Generations: Official Movie Souvenir Magazine. Titan Magazines.

^ Housley (December 1994). 'Keep on Trekkin '. Pp. 92–95. Marc Shapiro (January 1995). 'David Carson: Director'.

Star Trek Generations: Official Movie Souvenir Magazine. Titan Magazines. ^ Edgerly, Philip Thomas; Herman Zimmerman (December 1994). 'Architrek: Designing Generations'. ^ Magid, Ron (April 1995). 'ILM Creates New Universe of Effects for 'Star Trek: Generations '. 1 (76): 77–88.

^ Jose, Maria; Tenuto, John (December 23, 2013). From the original on February 17, 2017.

Retrieved December 25, 2013. ^ Svetkey, Benjamin (May 6, 1994). ' 'Generation' Ex'. (221): 16. Staff (May 12, 2011).

SciFanatic Network. Retrieved November 18, 2019.

^ Bond, Jeff (1999). The Music of Star Trek.

Lone Eagle Publishing Company. Archived from on April 21, 2015. Retrieved August 21, 2013. Paramount Pictures. Archived from on February 27, 2009. Retrieved July 2, 2005. Staff (December 10, 1994).

'Paramount Pictures uses Timeslink'. Pp. 18–19.

McCarthy, Michael (October 17, 1994). 'Jack in the Box Arms Promo Torpedoes'. P. 8. ^ McCarthy, Michael (April 11, 1994). 'Kmart Gets Licensed to Trek'. P. 8.

Staff (August 8, 1994). 'Magazine Plans Trekkie Issue'. P. 10. Finley, Larry (January 29, 1995). ' 'Star Trek' Honored With Guyana Stamp'. Sun-Times Media Group. Staff (August 31, 1996).

'Beam me up, Scotty'. P. 108.

Broida, Rick (October 1, 1997). Computer Shopper. Archived from on June 10, 2014. Retrieved December 25, 2013.

(subscription required). Archived from on February 19, 2014. Retrieved December 25, 2013. Horn, Jordana; Thomas Jaffe (September 12, 1994). 'Generations gap'. CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list.

Groves, Don (January 1, 1996). 'Bond, 'Babe' light up o'seas B.O.' From the original on October 23, 2018. Retrieved January 5, 2019. From the original on July 9, 2018. Retrieved January 5, 2019. Archived from on December 20, 2018.

Retrieved January 5, 2019. (November 17, 1994).

Retrieved November 18, 2019. ^ (1994). From the original on November 16, 2019. Retrieved February 2, 2009. ^ Novak, Ralph (December 5, 1994). 'Star Trek Generations'.

P. 18. Carr, Jay (November 18, 1994). The Boston Globe. Archived from on September 11, 2016. Retrieved July 27, 2016 – via. ^ (November 18, 1994).

From the original on October 23, 2018. Retrieved February 2, 2009. ^ (1994). Chicago Sun-Times.

From the original on July 9, 2014. Retrieved November 3, 2013. ^ Marriott, Michel (November 21, 1994). 'When time stands still'. P. 88.

Schwarzbaum, Lisa (November 25, 1994). Retrieved November 19, 2019. Jeremy Conrad (November 1, 2001). From the original on June 24, 2018.

Retrieved February 2, 2009. Ordway, Holly (September 13, 2004). Internet Brands. Retrieved November 19, 2019.

Galbraith, Stuart (October 4, 2009). Internet Brands. Retrieved November 21, 2019. Wright, Matt (September 26, 2009).

SciFanatic Network. Retrieved November 18, 2019.Further reading. (1994). Hughes, David (2008). The Greatest Science Fiction Movies Never Made. (1995). The Art of Star Trek.

(1998). Star Trek: The Next Generation: The Continuing Mission (2nd ed.). New York: Pocket Books.External links Wikiquote has quotations related to:. on. at.

at (a ).

BigBob 2018-02-16 4 pointsThere are plenty of spaceship sims that allow you to fly in space. Some newer ones, like Rebel Galaxy at Good Old Games, let the player command his own ship in third person perspective. But if you want to experience commanding a large space naval vessel, Star Trek Bridge Commander is the only game to suit.

Here the player sits in the command chair and issues orders usually through a convenient menu system. This is the opposite to most spaceflight games where you zip around in one-man craft or pilot a cargo ship from outside. For added immersion, Star Trek Bridge Commander lets you captain a Starfleet spacecraft as yourself, not as a character from television or the movies. The in-game tutorial is part of the campaign's first mission and helpfully introduces the player to the basics.