I guess I could see that with Carol, but why would they expect the villain to recur in two consecutive films?
...because he spent 2/3 of STID not being a villain? And arguably wasn’t
the villain? And was probably in the movie more than Captain Kirk?
Also, he’s Cumberbatch. I am told that his presence alone tends to make certain members of the audience...eager, for his appearence.
Khan specifically aside, why is it so weird to expect not-dead franchise villains to return in a sequel? That’s ...very very normal. Sometimes in half a dozen consecutive movies.
Hell, even villain-murder-happy Marvel brings back a lot of their surviving villains for the direct sequels (Hi Nebula and Loki.) Though admittedly, usually for the purposes of being dealt with
very quickly (And a less-enthusiastic-Hi to you, Crossbones and Zola.)
Anyway, I have little sympathy for people who confuse "Not what I expected" with "bad." It's not the job of fiction to confirm our preconceptions, but to challenge them and expand our minds beyond them.
(1) I never claimed they said it was ‘bad.’ They said that they hated it.
(2) I don’t agree with that definition of fictions ‘job.’ It’s
a job, not
the job.
(3) If that
is the definition of what constitutes ‘good’ fiction, then I’m unfortunately going to have to change my judgement of Beyond to being a ‘bad’ example of it.
Because my major issue with it was that it
wasn’t challenging. It had all the stimuli of a good mac-and-cheese. Enjoyable, without ever really being truly exciting or provocative in even the mildest way.
And no, I don’t just mean ‘
It wasn’t hard sci-fi or a naval-gazing thesis exploring the entirety of human nature, pooh pooh.’ There’s other ways to be provocative and challenging.