Greetings all... long time lurker finally posting. With this new movie out now, I felt I had to.
I really didn't like the movie. I know a lot of people did... and that's fine. Rather than get into the details and start arguing and complaining about it, I wanted to just voice two quick things:
1) Why am I upset over a movie?
I really didn't like the movie. I know a lot of people did... and that's fine. Rather than get into the details and start arguing and complaining about it, I wanted to just voice two quick things:
1) Why am I upset over a movie?
Because I care. I love Star Trek... have since I was a kid watching TOS in syndication and TNG when it first aired. I'm 29 (turning 30 on Friday actually). Again, not wanting to get into the details of this movie, I'll just say that... to me, it just wasn't a Star Trek movie. I feel like something that I've grown up with and loved has just been bastardized. It's not the details.. not the dorky trivial munitia that I'm talking about. It's the heart of it (or lack there of).
The analogy that I've used with my friends is this:
Imagine your favorite food is pizza. Lots of people love it! Let's say though that as the years go by, for whatever reason.. pizza goes away. Maybe it's not profitable anymore to sell pizza. Maybe people ate too much of it over time and kind of lost their taste for it. Whatever. It's gone. Time passes..
Five years of a pizza hiatus later, someone gets the bright idea to re-release pizza. They want to make money and it's just so darn hard to come up with original new ideas for food... so lots of companies just re-hash foods that faded from the public eye. So a new product is made called "pizza." But, it comes in a can in liquid form instead of the traditional pie. It has all the most up-to-date and trendy packaging. When you open it, it sort of smells like pizza... kind of tastes like pizza at first. But it is most certainly not pizza. Oh and it's all nutritional fluff, so you have to eat like 10 cans of the stuff to get any substances from it.
2) What am I doing about it?The analogy that I've used with my friends is this:
Imagine your favorite food is pizza. Lots of people love it! Let's say though that as the years go by, for whatever reason.. pizza goes away. Maybe it's not profitable anymore to sell pizza. Maybe people ate too much of it over time and kind of lost their taste for it. Whatever. It's gone. Time passes..
Five years of a pizza hiatus later, someone gets the bright idea to re-release pizza. They want to make money and it's just so darn hard to come up with original new ideas for food... so lots of companies just re-hash foods that faded from the public eye. So a new product is made called "pizza." But, it comes in a can in liquid form instead of the traditional pie. It has all the most up-to-date and trendy packaging. When you open it, it sort of smells like pizza... kind of tastes like pizza at first. But it is most certainly not pizza. Oh and it's all nutritional fluff, so you have to eat like 10 cans of the stuff to get any substances from it.
I'm trying to focus my frustration over this whole thing in a positive way. I know some fans are unhappy with or dislike Rick Berman... but personally, I really enjoyed ALL of the Trek that he produced after Gene passed away. Yes, even Enterprise.
I really feel bad about the way that the movie reviewers keep spouting the tag line "Trek needed a reboot." As if something was wrong with it in the first place? Now, I know that what they really mean is "Trek needed be made mainstream so that the masses could enjoy it and it could make more money." But at any rate, I find the statement (and this movie) to be disrepectful to the people that worked so hard to create Star Trek episodes that stayed true to what Star Trek was.
So, although it's I'm sure it's completely unnessary... I'm chosing to focus my frustration in a positive way and write Rick Berman a thank you letter for his lifetime of hard work and dedication to the Star Trek that was.
I really feel bad about the way that the movie reviewers keep spouting the tag line "Trek needed a reboot." As if something was wrong with it in the first place? Now, I know that what they really mean is "Trek needed be made mainstream so that the masses could enjoy it and it could make more money." But at any rate, I find the statement (and this movie) to be disrepectful to the people that worked so hard to create Star Trek episodes that stayed true to what Star Trek was.
So, although it's I'm sure it's completely unnessary... I'm chosing to focus my frustration in a positive way and write Rick Berman a thank you letter for his lifetime of hard work and dedication to the Star Trek that was.