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As such, trying to find a movie that can replicate the appeal of Star Trek: The Next Generation is a fairly tall order. The most logical approach is to find various titles that each replicate part of the show’s appeal, even though this means the resulting list of movies will vary wildly in tone. Dark Star and Galaxy Quest share the character dynamics and warm comedy of the series, Dune and Arrival replicate its refreshingly serious approach to sci-fi, and Serenity nails the sense of adventure that brings viewers back to Star Trek: The Next Generation.
Dark Star

Released in 1974, Dark Star is a fairly surprising debut for director John Carpenter and screenwriter Dan O’Bannon. Although Carpenter soon went on to direct the classic horror movies Halloween and The Thing, and O’Bannon penned Alien only a few years later, Dark Star is a far sillier, more surreal space-set adventure that leans into satire and absurd comedy rather than horror.
However, with its philosophical musings on the existential implications of deep space exploration, Dark Star calls to mind some of Star Trek: The Next Generation’s more comedic episodes. Eccentric and offbeat, Dark Star still manages to capture something real in the increasingly frustrated interactions between the movie’s astronauts. At their best, this dysfunctional crew resembles the USS Enterprise’s crew at their worst.
Serenity

A spinoff of Fox’s two-season classic Firefly, Serenity sees the show’s cast reprise their original roles in a new adventure. Set in 2517, Serenity follows the titular spaceship’s crew as they continue to eke out an existence as smugglers after the Unification War. More morally ambiguous and darker than Star Trek: The Next Generation, Serenity still captures the same sense of adventure and peril as the Star Trek spinoff.











