


He clearly appreciates the value of the cerebral side of sci-fi, but is this strictly true?
“You can’t make a cerebral Star Trek in 2016. It just wouldn’t work in today’s marketplace. You can hide things in there – Star Trek Into Darkness has crazy, really demanding questions and themes, but you have to hide it under the guise of wham-bam explosions and planets blowing up. It’s very, very tricky. The question that our movie poses is ‘Does the Federation mean anything?’ And in a world where everybody’s trying to kill one another all of the time, that’s an important thing. Is working together important? Should we all go our separate ways? Does being united against something mean anything?”
How would this explain the success of 'Interstellar' and 'The Martian'?
Star Trek is expansive enough that it can be either adventure, or cerebral like 'Forbidden Planet' or '2001: A Space Odyssey'. It seems as if Paramount are obsessed with comparing Star Trek to works of sci-fi along the lines of Guardians of the Galaxy and Star Wars, when to my mind, Star Trek, whilst being capable of this type of story, warrants comparison to things like 'Interstellar' too - it is much more grounded in real space exploration than the other aforementioned action films.
So why can't we have a Christopher Nolan or Ridley Scott directed Star Trek, featuring a score by Hanz Zimmer? Just as an experiment? :-) Indeed TOS was directly inspired by the atmosphere of Forbidden Planet - 'The Cage' and 'Where No Man Has Gone Before' are both very cerebral pilots.