There's an interview with Lucas doing the rounds. He talked about doing something new and had started drafting something. Then Disney bought him out and wanted to hark back to the original formula.JJ Trek films are two FX overweight sprawling messes with villains who are one or two dimensional. Full of lazy writing,. Kirk wakes up after dying after a couple minutes - that kind of stuff.The Star Trek movies and TFA were extremely similar in every way, Abrams is one of those directors who does certain things certain ways & you either like it or not, like Tim Burton, or Michael Bay.
Star Wars is good fare, FX mostly under control and proportionate, very few silly scenes whilst still being effective with a genuinely wrenching plot twist that compensates for the typical death star battle. That's far tighter quality of filmmaking overall.
You couldn't have a starker gulf as to how JJ & Co have treated the two franchises.
Opinion can vary here, too. While they liked the movie, Variety still called Abrams' treatment of TFA "too reverential," making it in places almost a riff on the original SW rather than anything truly original. A few other reviews, while positive, cited parts that seemed derivative of SW rather than fresh.
The thing is, Abrams went the nostalgic and romantic route with TFA, not repeating the turgid and slow story-telling of the three previous installments. His feeling may have been that SW wasn't broke, it just needed to be put back on the right track. In ST09, he took a fresher approach in reinventing the truly broke and moribund Trek franchise.
I think for what each franchise needed, he did a fantastic job. Maybe even better in Trek given how irrelevant Trek had become.
Link to the Variety review:
http://variety.com/2015/film/reviews/star-wars-review-the-force-awakens-1201661978/
And that's what they did.
You had a Death Star 2.0.
A Sabotage Strike Team 2.0
Spacefighter things to destroy the core of Death Star 2.0
Robots!
Vader 2.0
A Solo/Skywalker hybrid in Rey
A Sabotage Strike Team 2.0
Spacefighter things to destroy the core of Death Star 2.0
Robots!
Vader 2.0
A Solo/Skywalker hybrid in Rey
.....and so on.
Nothing new there. If they had just produced that I would've been very dismissive of the TFA film. But what made this film for me though was that gut wrenching scene on the bridge. That's what made this film. Many people left that cinema genuinely grieving. No "nanites" revivin' people from the dead after a couple minutes with this film.
Maybe I was having a bad day watching the Nero film. But afterwards I had to zap home and flick on wiki and figure out who on earth "Nero" was and what was his beef with our heroes. I know people who otherwise enjoyed the film but said they were also perplexed as to who Nero was. When I watch a film, if the protagonist isn't well defined, a film is someway amputated for me.
For me, strong filmmaking uses simple devices to disturb and unnerve the audiences when they leave the cinema. Reviving people from the dead using nanites that happen to be lyin' around before the credits roll doesn't do it for me. I don't care whether TNG, TOS, TWOK or whatever acronym you care to list does it, when I see it in the cimema, it's an approach that leaves me very underwhelmed.
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