Spoilsport Stonny, on 22 October 2013 - 04:44 PM, said:
A decent article, but I personally think it's not really looking at the big picture.
First and foremost, in 2013 Trekkers/Trekkies are not even remotely the backbone of the film franchise (If there is another TV franchise, then absoltuely), if only because mainstream audiences enjoyed the first and 2nd film in a generic Sci-Fi way. When it comes down to sheer numbers, I'm thinking there just aren't enough Trek-fanboy/girls to make them the weighted end of the stick. I could totally be wrong, but I doubt it.
For the rest of the article, I'll break it down by their own headings.
Have Kirk Grow Up Already
I don't get that POV. Why can't this growth happen organically? He's certainly still hot-headed and emotional in STID, but not a scratch on the untested jerk he was in the first film...but I don't see anything wrong with having a character progression where everything isn't just "fixed" in Film 2. He can't go from childish emotion-man in Film 1 to tried, tested, stalwart commander in Film 2...it makes no logical character sense. It has to be gradual. So by the time he's got 5 years under his belt, he's grown to be the commander everyone loves and knows will do the right thing. He has nowhere to go if he's all grow'd up in Film 2. That's my opinion anyways.
Quit Trying So Hard To Be Sexy
Meh, sex sells. I don't see any reason why it can't stay sexy in the way it has. Aside from the gratuitous underwear scene in STID, the rest of the sexiness is just fine to be present.
Come Up With A Plot That Isn’t About Some Guy Seeking Revenge
This is where the article goes off the rails for me. STID plot isn't really about a guy seeking revenge. That's the facade that's been painted over the real plot, which is about warmongering, and power trips. Khan is a part of the story, but this really is just basically the Space Seed ep of TOS (barring the ending cribbed and flipped from TWOK), and in that vein, this is not remotely the last encounter Starfleet will have with Khan, it's an opening salvo. The main thrust of STID plot is that of Colonel Marcus and his warmongering, and that's been liberally sprinkled with Khan's revenge/genetic supremacy plotline. If the article author was going for "This is the same plot as the first movie", then they have failed. It's really not if you look at it even remotely closely. The author of the article also chooses to vocalize comparisons to TWOK, and that's KIND of unfair when this film only borrows a couple of items from that film and mixes them up into a new bowl that is actually mostly SPACE SEED anyways. We haven't really arrived at the Khan VS Kirk moment in JJ's Star Trek Universe.
Try Something New
I get why they think this is an ideal thing to strive for plot-wise, but a fun part of having a skewed/alternate universe with these characters is getting to see them make a few of the same mistakes with a few of the same people populating things in different ways. I'm strongly of the belief that as they now start their new 5-year mission we will see some new plotlines arise out there...but I don't see anything wrong with having Khan established early on like this...since everyone was going to expect it at some point anyways, why not get it out of the way early? It's not as if they were never going to have Kirk's greatest nemesis not show up in Alt-verse. Personally I'd have been annoyed if he showed up in two movies time or something. Plus, we got to see the magnificent Benedict Cumberbatch play a really beloved villain. He chews all the scenery in STID and steals the show.
Discover Strange New Worlds
The first bit of the paragraph complains that STAR TREK is not an action franchise. No, not historically it hasn't always been...but the movies have always had scads of action in them. Not one of the Star Trek films in the whole franchise has ever really been like (for example) one of the thinker or scientific episodes of the TV show. That's because you don't really have the time to do that in 2hours that is also going to entertain the masses at large.
Look, there is a reason that Star Trek movies were failing at the Box Office (with GENERATIONS and FIRST CONTACT being the only real drops into the success bucket, Post-TOS films) since probably STAR TREK IV...people got tired of the same old tropes from the show being trotted out, polished up with a bigger budget and effects. That's not what they'd hoped for from a movie version of TV characters. They hope for something fresher and move movie-experience-like. That translates to a good story, lots of action, and lots of strange worlds, species and such. The exploration scientific angle/conceit of the show worked because they had a season of 24 episodes of breathing room to do that. A 2hour film has no such luxury. Case in point: One of the major plot points of STAR TREK: INSURRECTION was about violating the Prime Directive when investigating a primitive world and how it's not a good thing to intrude on them as a a futuristic space-faring species...unless you HAVE to to save them...right? It was a bad movie, and spent the better part of two hours telling that story. Why was it so bad? Because STAR TREK INTO DARKNESS achieved the exact same point in a much slicker and efficient way in the clean 10 minute opening to the film with the volcanic eruption planet and its prehistoric species.
So yeah, let's get on with the exploration angle now that they've ventured on their 5-year mission. Absolutely. Tell new stories, and see new species ect. But we can't forget that whatever this franchise was in the past, it's changed now and has more of an action quotient because audiences like that sort of thing in their Sci-fi in 2013. And there is nothing wrong with a franchise organically growing and morphing from its roots. If Star Trek continued to stagnate in the same rules and regulations it had as a show in the 1960's (or hell, even the 1990's) it would have become something to bemoan, instead of something to celebrate with freshness and vitality.
I get WHY Star Trek fanboys/girls are upset. This is never going to be the same franchise they grew up with, but that's kind of like asking the band you loved as a teen to never do different things, and continue releasing Pearl Jam - Ten over, and over, and over again.
JJ is doing STAR WARS next (and that's always been my fave), but I fully expect it to be a totally different beast filmicly to what's come before. I expect it to grow and mutate into his vision of what STAR WARS is in 2013. I'm cool with seeing what he brings to the table to freshen it up.
"When the last tree has fallen, and the rivers are poisoned, you cannot eat money, oh no." ~Aurora
"Someone will always try to sell you despair, just so they don't feel alone." ~Ursula Vernon