She meant the 1701-A
I think that was the enterprise A they were talking about. Who knows it may have been originally called yorktown and renamed once they learned of the enterprises fate.
I see. That makes sense.
She meant the 1701-A
I think that was the enterprise A they were talking about. Who knows it may have been originally called yorktown and renamed once they learned of the enterprises fate.
We heard two guys leaving the theater in front of us comment that the first two Star Trek movies were better. They were age wise between 19-25 I'd guess.
I read (and God help me, don't ask where, all the interviews run into one after a while and it'd take me an hour to find it -- but trust me) that Lin said Pegg and Jung had enough script for two movies. They had an extensive backstory for Edison. Of course, the main characters come first, and time was a factor, so a lot of that must've been what was taken out.My only negative about STB was how fast everything was, no room to catch your breath and the Star Trek message not really being rubbed in.
I enjoyed it but I think for a lot of people who went to see a Star Trek film, it didn't feel like 'home'.
As I said earlier, 2 hours just went so fast that I'd have preferred another 30 minutes of dialogue, maybe a short pro-logue (Edison backstory) and an epilogue (away mission) to close it out.
However, I fully realised how little time Lin had.
An important part of STB is Kirk's age compared to his father.I think it's ironic that Chris Hemsworth is actually younger than Chris Pine (by two years)
I've seen this movie twice now. Somehow, I don't think we watched the same film, my friend. Each of the items you complain about is clearly shown.I read (and God help me, don't ask where, all the interviews run into one after a while and it'd take me an hour to find it -- but trust me) that Lin said Pegg and Jung had enough script for two movies. They had an extensive backstory for Edison. Of course, the main characters come first, and time was a factor, so a lot of that must've been what was taken out.
Yeah. The depth wasn't there. The message regarding Krall was not on as on point as it could've been. How everything related to Kirk apparently getting his groove back is also not easy to see. Was it something about Krall? Was this actually the best adventure he had been on in the three years (I hope not)?
But, I'm not sure if the movie wanted to be deep or not, which is also part of the problem. It was a nice romp that glossed over some potentially deeper moments.
Not to rewrite things (OK, I am), but get rid of the opening comic bit and make the first five or ten minutes Edison's backstory. A flashback prologue that maybe ends with him taping the message we hear late in the movie (ominous foreboding). OK, the surprise of the Franklin is gone for the audience, but that still doesn't take away from how it's used in the end. We still don't have to know Edison is Krall, either. Fast forward one hundred years to Kirk roaming the corridors. He hands off the rejected diplomatic gift to Spock (we need to establish that exists) and things go on from there.
And yes, maybe there should've been an epilogue where they discussed (no more than a couple of minutes) how tragic a character Edison really was -- that warriors who help create peace for all peoples should get help transitioning to be able to enjoy that peace, themselves. In other words, in a way, those he fought for used him then let him down. A comment on how vets were treated after Vietnam and even how some were treated after the Gulf Wars. Maybe Kirk realizes he has no business feeling bored by a world that allows him the luxury of star-hopping and not having to constantly be a peace keeper. Something like that.
But, not every movie needs to be trimmed to the 'magical' 2 hour length nor be none stop.
Well, the theaters are partners in these movies. They need to be able to show them multiple times a day. Hopefully, there is plenty of deleted scenes that can be added to the home release.
If there needs to be an extra 5 or 10 or 15 minutes to flesh things out a bit, no harm to do so.
An important part of STB is Kirk's age compared to his father.Kirk is now the same age George Kirk was when he died.
There's for damn sure a push by me. Much over two hours and I gotta pee.Though that means less daily showings. There is probably a behind-the-scenes push by theaters to keep these films around the two-hour mark.
I am going to see it again. I don't doubt I missed some things. I'll take what you've said under advisement.I've seen this movie twice now. Somehow, I don't think we watched the same film, my friend. Each of the items you complain about is clearly shown.
As a combat veteran, I understood clearly the message without a Picard-like sermon.
Much of the beginning is similar to Kirk questioning whether retirement or, (TMP) the Admiralty, is right for him in TOS films.
I think those who have said there is no substance... should, perhaps, watch it again.
The previous two movies were "events". Beyond suffers from being "another Star Trek movie". But hopefully positive word of mouth and reviews will mean less of a drop-off after opening weekend.Many, many fans are saying that STB is awesome, we have read positives reviews. It seems to be the best of three movies. But, I think box office is still low in USA.
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