I appreciate that, but I have seen the movie in the theater, I just haven't bought the DVD for home viewing yet. I keep meaning to.Tigermegatron wrote:I decided to use the Spoiler space tags below because you said you didn't see the movie yet & I didn't want to spoil anything for you.
I have mixed feelings about the movie myself, some of which mirror yours, though overall I did enjoy it. I think the time travel device they used to reboot the movie is one of the positives, honestly. They don't try to pretend that 40 years of Trek never happened, and indeed the whole motivation for Nero's actions comes from things that happened in the original continuity. Old Spock shows up from that timeline as well, and at one point relates to Kirk some of the differences. Honestly, I think the writers did about as well as they could have in both respecting what came before while also starting over so they could (hopefully) tell some new stories as well.I have both positive & negative mixed emotions about this newer Trek film. I don't like how they basically did a time travel erase where some stuff got re-written. I'm dure Gene Roddenberry would have never approved this had he been alive. I'm sure he's rolling over in his grave right now.
There's time travel all through Trek, so I'm not all that bothered by another use of it considering why the writers took the approach they did. Uhura flirts a bit with Spock in Charlie X and maybe one or two other episodes, so the writers took that and ran with it. It doesn't bother me one way or the other, honestly. It all depends on the writing and how the characters are treated, and so far it's been decent if nothing terribly compelling.I found it extremely cheesy/fan fank & just lame-o that this 2009 newer star trek movie borrowed heavily from the "un-liscensed fan created movies called " of gods & men." stuff that got borrowed was Uhurra having a realationship with spock. time travel interference effecting present time. Kirk being at the center of the time travel shifted events & the list goes on.
I've been watching Trek since I was a kid in the 70s, and I don't feel insulted. I do think the original show and actors are better in just about every way than the rebooted movie and actors, but that's just personal preference. And it may not be entirely fair since we have 79 episodes and seven movies (counting Generations) with the original cast, while we've only got one with the new cast.I personally think this time travel partial erase of events for the 2009 Trek movie is a huge INSULT to the established devoted Trek fans from decades ago. It just sends a wrong fandom message from the creators/writters that their invested time does't matter because stuff they knew got a partial erase.
It's hit and miss, really. Of all the new actors, Karl Urban does the best job in capturing the attitudes and essence of DeForest Kelley's portrayal of McCoy. Kirk is a completely different character, and Pine is nothing like Shatner. Quinto does a decent job as Spock, probably because he had Nimoy coaching him, though I miss Nimoy's baritone. It helps give the character more gravitas. The modern Uhura has the required equality with the men and higher billing than she did in the past, but Zoe Saldana lacks the charm that Nichelle Nichols had in spades. Chekov and Sulu honestly need more time to develop to really get a handle on them, but again I prefer the original actors for both. The only character that really has been done badly is Scotty. He's become the comic relief character, something Scotty certainly was not in the old series. All the characters had moments of humor or silliness, but Scotty was not a joke. In the new Star Trek, he is, and I don't care for that approach at all.
All that being said, different actors will take a different approach to the characters, and they should. I just feel that some of the approaches work better than others, and I prefer the originals. The biggest problem with Star Trek are the massive plot contrivances where Kirk gets marooned on Delta Vega in almost the exact same spot as Old Spock, and then both are only a few miles from the Federation station where Scotty is assigned. It shatters the suspension of disbelief. And then of course they beam back to the Enterprise, which is traveling at warp and has been for hours? Transporters have a range of hundreds of light years? I don't think so. That particular section of the film badly needed some rewriting to iron out those problems.
