It's a stronger premise to go with than the "bad man with a big gun" storyline the last three movies have clung to.
Well, to be fair, STID was trying for a deeper message about whether security justified compromising liberty and undermining your society's values. It just got kind of lost amid all the action in the third act.
And I feel Nemesis actually had a pretty good Trek-philosophy core to it; the Picard-Shinzon conflict was an examination of the question of whether our nature is predetermined by birth or shaped by experience and choice, and how we can use the former notion to evade responsibility for our actions or use the latter notion as an impetus to correct our mistakes and better ourselves. The "big gun" angle did kind of get in the way of that, but that's more the fault of the feature-film industry in general and the insistence on big, cataclysmic threats.
Master & Commander is the best Star Trek film that isn't a Star Trek film.
*watching trailer and disliking it - you're a nerdy bellend given to outrageous leaps of assumption*
Fair points. Maybe I should have clarified that better. There were some interesting ideas in those movies that got lost in favor of a "irrational bad man with a big gun" storyline.
As much as I liked the 2009 Star Trek, the Countdown comic did a much better job of explaining why Nero was so pissed off at Vulcan than the movie.
"It's a real post-9/11 view of conflict (although it's also post-Vietnam, it's just that the Cold War overshadowed the lessons there) in that it's about asymmetrical warfare. The little guy can take down the more advanced big guy by attacking in ways that are both surprising and overwhelming. Yes, the Enterprise could blow up any one of those ships, but there are 40,000 ramming into the hull. Yes, we can take out terrorists with drone strikes, but there are always hundreds more."
-Lin
So... we're just going to get preached to with paper thin analogies about terrorism... in Star Trek... again?? Terrorism was covered almost entirely throughout Into Darkness and certainly influenced also Star Trek 2009 [Nero nuking Vulcan, etc]. I know it's not going to play like a public service message but please, message received.
There are other contemporary commentaries to make other than terrorism. Isn't this obvious to most? What is it about exploring the stars that dictates we must only reflect on our current failings as a society ad nauseam. Escapism!! Dammit11
- Lin
"We want to push it further, introduce new species and have new adventures, but"
Yep. Rather have motorcycles, got it. Star Trek = motorcycles.
^^
Depends on their limb count and general posture, a Horta on a bike would look silly.
It put me to sleep the times I've tried to watch it.
It put me to sleep the times I've tried to watch it.
...I don't even know how that's possible. Great story, amazing visuals, fantastic acting from the leads, two intense "roll out the guns" naval battles, and a heart pounding score.
I suppose some of it depends on whether you find the setting interesting to begin with or not.
During the long drought of no new Trek worth watching, I was hooked on the Hornblower miniseries that ran from 98 to 01(03?). That was also pretty great.
"It's a real post-9/11 view of conflict (although it's also post-Vietnam, it's just that the Cold War overshadowed the lessons there) in that it's about asymmetrical warfare. The little guy can take down the more advanced big guy by attacking in ways that are both surprising and overwhelming. Yes, the Enterprise could blow up any one of those ships, but there are 40,000 ramming into the hull. Yes, we can take out terrorists with drone strikes, but there are always hundreds more."
-Lin
So... we're just going to get preached to with paper thin analogies about terrorism... in Star Trek... again?? Terrorism was covered almost entirely throughout Into Darkness and certainly influenced also Star Trek 2009 [Nero nuking Vulcan, etc]. I know it's not going to play like a public service message but please, message received.
There are other contemporary commentaries to make other than terrorism. Isn't this obvious to most? What is it about exploring the stars that dictates we must only reflect on our current failings as a society ad nauseam. Escapism!! Dammit11
.
Master & Commander is the best Star Trek film that isn't a Star Trek film.
Not at all what he said, is it? His complaint concerns the use in this movie of the Modern Trek interpretation of the Prime Directive, as opposed to the Original Series model.So the "Bermanites" aren't part of our community?Trekcore's post from today is a nice roundup of Lin's interviews lately:
http://trekcore.com/blog/2015/12/justin-lin-on-star-trek-beyond-trailer-and-more/
So the Bermanites have their damned philosophy in the movie. The director said so. Can the rest of us get back to having some fun Star Trek now?
Trekcore's post from today is a nice roundup of Lin's interviews lately:
http://trekcore.com/blog/2015/12/justin-lin-on-star-trek-beyond-trailer-and-more/
So the Bermanites have their damned philosophy in the movie. The director said so. Can the rest of us get back to having some fun Star Trek now?
But seriously, given that Lin is of Taiwanese birth and heritage, I'm thinking he might have a different perspective on the colonialism/cultural-imperialism question than we're used to seeing from Trek filmmakers of European ancestry. He might be able to bring a fresh take. (I also see that the first film he directed starred John Cho. That makes me hope this film will finally give Cho something meaty to do.)
Not at all what he said, is it? His complaint concerns the use in this movie of the Modern Trek interpretation of the Prime Directive, as opposed to the Original Series model.So the "Bermanites" aren't part of our community?Trekcore's post from today is a nice roundup of Lin's interviews lately:
http://trekcore.com/blog/2015/12/justin-lin-on-star-trek-beyond-trailer-and-more/
So the Bermanites have their damned philosophy in the movie. The director said so. Can the rest of us get back to having some fun Star Trek now?
Honestly, I don't have any use for it, either, and it tends to fuck up threads. If we could all just be Star Trek fans and get on with talking about trailers and stuff, that'd be great.I don't see the point in othering people by labeling them as Bermanites.
Shaka, you know better than that. Please don't let me see it again.Trekcore's post from today is a nice roundup of Lin's interviews lately:
http://trekcore.com/blog/2015/12/justin-lin-on-star-trek-beyond-trailer-and-more/
So the Bermanites have their damned philosophy in the movie. The director said so. Can the rest of us get back to having some fun Star Trek now?
Especially considering that most of the people who are Bermanites most likely hated Berman & Braga and accused them of 'wrecking' Star Trek in the first place, but now love the Berman & Braga Star Trek due to nostalgia.
These people are nothing but moon-faced assassins of joy.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.