Years before joining huge franchises likeBatmanandMad Max, Oscar nominee Tom Hardy played Jean-Luc Picard’s mysterious nemesis in the 2002Star Trekmovie that marked the end of an era.

Having burst on the scene in 2001’sBlack Hawk Down, Hardy began an ascent that would see him become one of the most interesting – and volatile – actors in all of Hollywood. The full power of Hardy’s talent first became evident, it can be argued, in 2008’s prison dramaBronson.

tomhardy_odd_startreknemesis

Besides showing his skills in such hard-hitting prestige works, theHavocstar has more than made his mark in genre movies,particularly in the action film arena, and in some huge franchises to boot.

But before playing Bane, Mad Max, Venom or any of the others, Hardy joined another massive franchise, in a villain role that both called back to a classic bad guy of the 1980s, and weirdly anticipated Bane.

Star Trek_ Nemesis - Poster

Tom Hardy Was The Villain In Star Trek: Nemesis

Star Trek: Nemesisneeded an actorto play a younger clone of Patrick Stewart’s Jean-Luc Picard. Jude Law was originally considered,but the role finally went to the then-unheralded Hardy, who shaved his head bald, the better to resemble Stewart.

Nemesisreveals that Hardy’s Shinzon was created by the ever-shady Romulans from Picard’s DNA, with the hope of infiltrating Starfleet using the clone. The plan was abandoned, however, and Shinzon was discarded on the Romulan mining planet Remus, where he rose to become the leader of a faction of Reman rebels.

Shinzon’s backstory echoes that of famedStar Trekvillain Khan. Like Picard’s clone, Khan was placed in miserable exile, where he was hardened by the daily grind of survival. Khan emerged from that exile to confront Captain Kirk in a space battle, while Shinzon rose from the dilithium mines of Remus, and comes to confront Picard in a space battle.

Shinzon’s origin story is, coincidentally enough, also similar to that of Hardy’s laterBatmanvillain Bane, who grew up amid the horrors of The Pit, a setting similar in its miseries to the dilithium mines where Shinzon learned about the cruel realities of existence.

Nemesis Marked The Final Star Trek Movie For Nearly A Decade

The tenth film in theStar Trekmovie franchise,Nemesisunder-performed at the box office, grossing just $67.3 million ($131 million adjusted for inflation) on a budget of $60 million. Those numbers no doubt played a part in Paramount pausing the franchise, reviving it seven years later with a new cast, a new creative team and a new timeline.

TheTNGensemble enjoyed a solid movie run after taking over for the stars ofTOS,but there would be no transition from their era to the next, as Paramount went for a hard reboot with 2009’sStar Trek.

Matters left dangling at the end ofNemesis, including the fates of Data and his brother B-4, were not addressed untilStar Trek: Picardarrived on Paramount+ in 2020.