Any movie, any story has a fundamental conversation happening during it. There’s a fundamental argument; there’s a central question. And I didn’t have it.
I felt like, in a weird way, it was a little bit of a collection of scenes that were written by my friends — brilliantly talented writers — who I somehow misled in trying to do certain things. And yet, I found myself frustrated by my choices, and unable to hang my hat on an undeniable thread of the main story. So then I found myself on that movie basically tap-dancing as well as I could to try and make the sequences as entertaining as possible.
Thank god I had the cast that we have, who are so unbelievably fun to watch. And an incredible new villain in Benedict Cumberbatch…I would never say that I don’t think that the movie ended up working. But I feel like it didn’t work as well as it could have had I made some better decisions before we started shooting.
Another person has come forward to talk about the shortcomings of Star Trek into Darkness, this time J.J. Abrams. His comments come...
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Well I loved it enough for both of us, JJ. Although yes, the Khan thing as the worst-kept secret in recent movie history.
Fan gripes aside, the second half of that movie is just a mess, story-wise.
All I will say is this. It feels good to have the creative team behind the movie finally admit they didn't truly know what they were doing and ended up alienating a portion of the long-time trek fans.
Fan gripes aside, the second half of that movie is just a mess, story-wise.
True Trek fans would just retcon in-universe reasons for everything like we've done for every other mess-of-a-movie Trek has given us.
JJ Abrams said:...there’s a central question. And I didn’t have it.
Basically, if trekkies like something they'll make excuses for absolutely anything. If they don't like it, no explanation at all is acceptable.
While "admit they didn't truly know what they were doing and ended up alienating a portion of the long-time trek fans" may have been a somewhat exaggerated interpretation of the news item, your point could have been made satisfactorily by omitting the insinuation and using only your second sentence.All I will say is this. It feels good to have the creative team behind the movie finally admit they didn't truly know what they were doing and ended up alienating a portion of the long-time trek fans.
Is the new tactic now to put words in people's mouths? No one from the creative team said that in any way, shape, or form.
Basically, if trekkies like something they'll make excuses for absolutely anything. If they don't like it, no explanation at all is acceptable.
This is the only reason any oldTrek movie after number four is remembered fondly - and it goes for one or two before that.
Well I loved it enough for both of us, JJ. Although yes, the Khan thing as the worst-kept secret in recent movie history.
Same here.
Basically, if trekkies like something they'll make excuses for absolutely anything. If they don't like it, no explanation at all is acceptable.
Even if we don't like something we'll do backflips in order to justify something.
TFF was a dumpster fire of a movie, but how many explanations as to why there were 76 backwards numbered decks have we given ourselves in the past 30 years?
The A can make it to the galactic core in a couple hours but it would take Voyager a couple of decades? Here's some sciency sounding gobbledygook that makes that all right in our minds...
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