Really? Berman spent twenty-five years watching fans be all over the place when discussing what they want Star Trek to be.
Oh, come on. We all know what the fans want
Star Trek to be.
We want the new movie to be exciting but also measured; we want it to be graceful and delicate, while also explosive and energetic. We want it to be thoughtful and reflective, without losing speed or a galaxy-spanning ambition. We want it to touch on and update the many loose ends of earlier Trek work, while standing on its own. We want it to be comfortable and familiar while opening up new conceptual directions for the Trek universe. We want it to be immediately accessible without being obvious and rote; we want it to be magical to the hardcore fans and hypnotizing to the mass audience. We want it to be humorous and serious and heart-wrenching and whimsical, stirring and soothing, exotic and humane. We want it to make us feel like we did the first Halloween we realized would be anything we could imagine, without losing the feeling that it is what we would wish was our testament to a long and fruitful life well-lived. We want it to be experimental and daring and accomplished and refined. We want it to be short enough we wish it were longer, but long enough we couldn't imagine trimming a moment from it. All we want is for it to be the perfect movie. Why is this so hard for them to make?