@ Northstar.
You have a point.
First-
Perhaps my comments about Axanar's producers are out of date (Pre-Burnett?).
In an IO9 article from July, I do think Burnett did take a swipe and the Big E being built on Earth, (gravity well) but otherwise, perhaps (AKAIK) they've toned down the negative stuff both about JJ Trek and other productions. Perhaps the producers in general are less defensive here, and elsewhere. I hope so.
Second-
As to Kim Fitzgerald's portrayal of T'Lar (Not sure if the character is an homage to character from the Strangers from the Sky novel) I felt that she was just an American woman dressed and made up as Vulcan. Watch her face carefully- there is emotion there- frustration, consternation, etc. I also have some trouble with her cadence. I am not nitpicking. Go back to TOS and listen the style of Vulcan intonation/enunciation. Contrast it with how McCoy and Kirk speak with one another. Perhaps in Amok Time some of it was over the top formal (Thees, and thous and so forth) but there was more- There was an established Vulcan speech pattern- Pauses for the exact word, an absence of contractions, etcetera. There was an economy of speech as well- nothing was said that didn't need to be said. This is a deliberate people.
In general, for the past 10-15 years, I've had issues with many of the Vulcans we've seen since Enterprise. (Yes I know there was some (re)growing the Vulcans had to do to get back to Surak's teachings) But regarding Axanar specifically, we are now much closer to the Sarek brand of Vulcan. (Now that's a Vulcan!) So lets hear it.
I choose to ignore the Robert Foxworth over the top performance in ENT. I half expected him to rip off his ear appliances and order an attack on the Defiant. No one on Vulcan should have been fooled - at all. Are the Vulcans stupid? WTF Manny Coto?
To continue, recently, few (fan films and pro) have been able to get these folks portraying Vulcans to really pull it all the way back- So, given Prelude (which I very much liked!) I had hoped that we would see the various races act as they once did (near TOS and beyond)
Examples for the specific "Vulcan style" include Nimoy, Lenard and Russ for the men, Arlene Martel and Celia Lovsky for the women. On the fan side, Todd Haberkorn of Star Trek Continues does a marvelous job. He carries himself like a Vulcan, and sounds like a Vulcan- the manner, the speech pattern are each spot on. As to the professional production (Enterprise) when he was written more in keeping with the Vulcans we know, Graham pulled it off as well.
Perhaps it comes down to direction- I don't know.
So let me be more both more clear and diplomatic-
As seen (and directed here) Kim Fitzgerald's T'Lar didn't seem Vulcan to me, not that she isn't a good actress, and hasn't done good work elsewhere.