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And the Next 'Star Trek' Movie Villain Is... 
Antagonists for consideration
By Robert Falconer | Monday, October 19, 2009
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Everybody's asking the question: "Who's going to serve as the villain or villains in the sequel to last summer's Star Trek?" Now that we're in an alternate Trek timeline, writers Roberto Orci and Alex Kurtzman are free to tell stories that incorporate familiar faces but combine them in new and interesting ways.


Which got us thinking: who's likely to make the short list, and what sort of possible stories/combinations might we see? Will the filmmakers choose to go the route of borrowing once more from canon...or will they elect to craft an entirely new story with entirely new antagonists?

Since new antagonists are impossible to predict, we decided to look to the original canon and have offered a list of possible villains from which Orci and Kurtzman could choose. We've divided the categories up into four groups:

THE HEAVY HITTERS
THE MIDDLEWEIGHT CONTENDERS
THE INDIVIDUAL NARCISSISTS

And finally:

IN A CLASS OF ONE

Basically, the less sarcastic our remarks, the greater the likelihood we see of said individual(s) appearing in a Star Trek sequel film. Simple, huh?

Well, let's see (and remember, we're anxious to hear your reaction to our thoughts, as well as offering any ideas of your own—we're sure there's lots of potentials we've missed)...


THE HEAVY HITTERS
These are perhaps 'Star Trek's' most recognized alien adversaries, three of which have already transitioned to the big screen, and one of which we've already seen in JJ Abrams' Star Trek last summer...

The Romulans
Knee-jerk reaction: been there, done that. While these "space Romans" are among Trek's two most famous protagonist groups (the other being the Klingons), they've never been the most colorful—full of potential that's never been fully realized. Abrams' Trek, and the truly forgettable Star Trek: Nemesis before it didn't really capitalize on the Romulans as effectively as they might have. The Vulcan's pointy-eared cousins have certainly been portrayed as having the intellectual chops, but we've never really been given a sense of the Empire's epic scale or intent. Perhaps Trek writers should extend the Roman inspiration further...

Meanwhile, we can't see the Romulans getting much more than an honorable mention or a support role in the next film...if that.

*      *      *

The Klingons
Here we have possibly the richest tapestry from which to draw. Far and away the most colorful and layered of Trek's villains; they're part Cold War Russians, part honorable Samurai Warriors...and a lot of Visigoth nastiness.

Any forthcoming 'Star Trek' film that utilizes them will, of course, have to find a way to integrate/reconcile the altered mythology from the original Star Trek to The Next Generation, which, of course, saw the Klingons get more money...and thus a more interesting physical look. By Next Generation's second season, the Klingons sported a more fully realized aesthetic first established in Star Trek: The Motion Picture, and a far more realized cultural mystique.

One answer might be to further explore the story background detailed in Star Trek: Deep Space Nine's episode, "Trials and Tribblelations", where Worf explained that the early, "non-turtle head" Klingons are, in fact, Klingons, but that they "do not speak of it." This could even be an interesting subplot of a larger Klingon story, though it seems unlikely that Orci and Kurtzman will get too caught up in the sort of canon esoterica that keeps fans up at night.

Overall, a society dominated by a gothic warrior caste is tasty stuff, however, and while many felt that the Klingon's rich culture — largely fleshed out by Ron Moore during his tenure at 'Star Trek' — was perhaps a bit overplayed (and overwrought), we tend to disagree. It rocked then and it would rock in a movie today, especially if the filmmakers created a truly mesmerizing Klingon lead character. A reinterpretation of Kor, anyone?

*      *      *

The Borg
Duh. Best...Star Trek villains...ever. (Even William Shatner agrees.) Of course, there is that little matter of canon, isn't there? Or is there? The recent Star Trek film wasn't shy about bending those rules, so why should the next film worry about it?

These folks can't be reasoned with, bought off or defeated in any conventional way. A pseudo-race of cybernetic organisms who's only purpose is to assimilate and absorb everything in their path would look fantastic for another outing on the screen, but there's a problem here—and it doesn't have anything to do with canon, either.

It has to do with a group of collective automatons not providing a very colorful antagonist for a one-to-one battle with Kirk and Co. Sure, they'd look great and be cinematically cool, but you have to have a single, central villain for the dramatic structure to work. Hence, why Q first introduced Picard to the Borg...and why a Borg Queen was created for Star Trek: First Contact. Star Wars' storm troopers looked very cool when first we saw them, but without Vader, a leader, to command them, they're narratively inert.

*      *      *

The Dominion
Very unlikely to happen since the writers would have to cross two gulfs: the timeline (Bajor isn't yet discovered by the Federation during the time of Kirk and Spock) AND the discovery of the wormhole to the distant Gamma Quadrant. And without access to the Gamma Quadrant, no-one from the Federation can have a first encounter with the Dominion shapeshifters or the Jem'Hadar—the ruthless shock troops who protect their changeling masters.

That being said, next to the Klingons and the Borg, the Jem'Hadar are terrific baddies, with their Komodo Dragon-like bodies and their addiction to narcotics (used by the shapeshifters to control them). More than a match in hand-to-hand combat for even the Klingons, they're tough, aggressive, fearless and possess advanced technology.

Sadly, they probably also won't appear in any Abrams-produced 'Star Trek' film.

Next up: The Middleweight Contenders...

Have Your Say: Commentary, debate and opinion
(10 Comments)
Peter
Posted by Peter on December 30th, 1:19pm
No, no no! No Khan, as the '09 Star Trek is already a remake of "wrath". The new villians should be and WILL be the Klingons. A little Gary Mitchel and Harry Mudd would be welcome!
Details, details
Posted by ken k on December 19th, 10:09am
Matthew, Nomad has already returned int a movie, only they called him V'Ger.
Money, the Eugenics Wars occur way before the timeline branched in the movies.*And the Eugenics Wars were explained within the 1990s timeline. The battles of the war were actually the small battles fought around the world as revolutions and terrorism at the end of the 1990 thru 2020.
Society did not revitalize until the end of the 21st century with Cochran's invention of the warp drive. (In Roddenberry's original production notes, this period was called the "Cold Peace" and is a reason why so much history of the late 1900s was lost.)
Nomad
Posted by Matthew on December 18th, 2:34pm
I would love to see a return of Nomad, in some manner.
The Original "Villains"
Posted by Kenneth Barr on December 8th, 9:32pm
I'm surprised you didn't mention the original "villains" of Star Trek. That's right, the mind controlling Talosians of the original pilot "The Cage" which became "The Menagerie" during the first season of TOS. The attraction here is that they were involved with Pike, Kirk and Spock, which makes the dramatic possibilities fascinating in the new Star Trek universe.
Q and Mitch
Posted by Voigt on December 2nd, 10:06pm
What about a blind passenger, a weak old man who turns out to be Q - banished for a first time long before the TNG meeting or once again after Voyager? The closer he comes to a special point in space, the more he regains youth and power. It could be Mitchell to stop him - not knowing, that one day his own hunger for omnipotence will seal his destiny. "Jim, if I´ll ever become like that - kill me!"; "You have my word on that!"
i_m_sparks
Posted by robert (Admin) on November 15th, 4:42am
Didn't forget about it...never knew it. Have only read a few of the Trek books.

Though now that you mention it, I do recall reading somewhere about a Trek novel where Trelane was an adolescent Q...so you've jogged my memory. Thanks.

Though if I'm honest, the concept of adolescent omnipotence seems problematic to me; an oxymoron, if you will.

Plus, Paramount has never considered the books to be official canon, and thus tend to avoid those entanglements.
Thanks Brambo
Posted by robert (Admin) on November 15th, 4:36am
Yep, you're right, never caught that episode, or more likely forgot it. Wasn't a big fan of 'Enterprise'. Once to the well too often, IMO.

But it's a good explanation; I'll go with that. :)
Q
Posted by i_m_sparks on November 13th, 6:27pm
Whoever posted this article may have forgotten that the Original Crew did tangle with a Q entity. From the Trek books, we have learned that Trelane (from "The Squire of Gothos") is an adolescent Q. So it's possible (though doubtful) he could be reused. Personally, I'm hoping for Kang to be the next villian.
Klingons' foreheads
Posted by Brambo on November 3rd, 5:28pm
It appears that Mr. Falconer never saw "Star Trek: Enterprise". Set a generation before the original "Star Trek", that series showed Klingons with fully protruding foreheads.
It also featured a story arc which explained the loss of those cranial ridges to a virus. The Enterprise's physician Dr. Phlox said the virus would last "about two generations" before the ridges would reappear.
Eugenics War
Posted by Money4Nothing on October 27th, 11:48am
Surely the timing of the Eugenics War would be the same in the 'new' Trek timeline. Remember that Nero effectively created a new branch in the original timeline rather than a whole new timeline. Therefore things can only be different from the chronology established in the original series if they happened after the date when Nero appeared in the past and killed Kirk's father. Mind you, the new Trek writers moved Delta Vega half way across the galaxy, so why would they obey other rules of logic??
 

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