A
Amaris
Guest
I certainly agree that Nero was a fairly unremarkable villain, but poor Bana was up against a line of scene-stealers like Malcolm McDowell, Christopher Plummer and Christopher Lloyd. The character's motivations were rather veiled - aside from pure revenge, his justifications didn't make much sense.
I do disagree with the suggestion that the destruction of Vulcan and, particularly, the death of Amanda lacked an emotional impact. The former I can understand more, as the sudden loss of 6 billion people was not really explored. However, the line about being a member of an endangered species was particularly poignant, and I think Nimoy's Spock really did sell it when he said that he was emotionally compromised.
Perhaps, though, that is looking at it like a fan. A casual viewer may not care much about a race whose depiction in the film seemed to be little more than bullies and racists. They have to read into the impact it has on the Spocks to understand how devastating it was to good people. If time had been spent building up Vulcan as a place for new viewers to care about, it would have been a very different film. They rely on fans to care and new viewers to at least accept it as a major event.
As for Amanda, I think that had an emotional impact. Her last look, Spock staring at the empty pad in a rare moment of silence, Chekov's despair - I think that really hit hard. Then, I nearly cried at Data's demise in Nemesis, so perhaps I'm just a softie...
I suppose Ebert is not alone in finding fault with the introduction of Nimoy's Spock - an Australian reviewer made quite a point of that in his negative review - but I still enjoyed having him as part of the film. His inclusion and use was far from logical in some senses, but so was much of the film. Ebert has given good reviews to far sillier films.
I'm just bothered by his complete lack of understanding about the movie. It's almost like he wants to pan it but just can't go all the way. Even at 2 1/2 stars he seems to find the movie contemptible.
J.