I watched this again last night with some of the criticisms heard here in the back of my mind.
I still like it, but the weakness (such as it is) is in the writing).
The reveal of what Kirk and McCoy are experiencing comes too soon. Some of what Kirk says at the campfire the night before the battle struck me as going a bit too far and a bit too emphatic given he believed he might really be back in time. Then again if some part of him thought he was possibly hallucinating then he just might vocalize his thoughts the way he did. And some of what Kirk says strikes me as a bit too lofty or simplistic in terms of how he seems to view the Civil War. Then again that isn't uncommon with people in terms of how they might view events in history.
One can make a case the danger to the ship was resolved too quickly. This left Spock and the rest to stand around fretting over Kirk and McCoy until they find a solution.
It needs more meat to the story. No, it doesn't have to be a message story, but it should be more clear in terms of what it's about. And with a bit more meat as well as punching up and polishing the writing we would also have had a bit more running time. Even on first viewing I thought it was over too soon.
Story Editor.
Star Trek Continues impresses with production values, music and so forth- but is a bit ham-handed when it comes to grace and elegance and that all too elusive "light touch/less is more" brand of storytelling.
Take us
almost there. So hard to describe- but so easy to recognize when you see it.
The ideal- Start with a great story told through the vessel of great actors. A great A story, and if needed, a supporting, complimentary B story. A tale that would that would work on a pitch black stage.
Then add great direction - with an eye/ focus first on assuring that each actor- expressions, inflections, jibe with a well written script.
Then add Continues' great music-
(At this point we already have something compelling- Albeit a Doctor Who/Big Finish BBC audio drama)
THEN add the practical (on site) visual production values, costumes, props, make up, lighting, camera angles, explosions and so forth-
THEN add the Post production Special effects. Edit carefully, and edit well.
Then set the Star Trek logo on fire
No, please don't set the logo on fire.