Why is this fine with you?

Why set the bar so incredibly low? Isn't it easier to enjoy entertainment that doesn't insult your intelligence?
There are two things I want to pose in response to this question:
1.)
Where is this deeply intellectual, grad school level philosophy exposition that Trek has done? That's hyperbole, I know...
Then why engage in it? You're committing the fallacy of the excluded middle. I say that that it should aspire to being more than just "a popcorn movie... made to entertain not to follow 'realistic' change of commands," and you respond by demanding past examples of "grad school level philosophy"? That's not what I'm looking for, as should be self-evident. What I want is smart, thoughtful action-adventure storytelling that respects the integrity of its characters, the logic of its plot and setting, and the intelligence of its audience. Nothing more nor less. I could easily rattle off a dozen movies and shows that deliver it, but Trek09 isn't one of them.
As for examples from within the Trek corpus alone? I'd point to "The Naked Time" and "Balance of Terror" and "Conscience of the King" and "Devil in the Dark" and "Errand of Mercy" and "City on the Edge of Forever" and "Trouble with Tribbles" and "Journey to Babel" and "The Tholian Web" and "Star Trek II: TWOK" and "Star Trek VI: TUC," and that's just off the top of my head from the original-crew era.
Withers said:
[Suspending disbelief] works in varying degrees for different people but I hardly think the newest film is somehow guilty of being dumber than other examples in the Trek film history or that the bar was purposefully set low and then they met it.
I do. The interviews about how Abrams was more a fan of
Star Wars than Trek communicated this, as did the past writing of Orci & Kurtzman, as did the way Paramount marketed it with a trailer full of hyperkinetic action, as did the myriad flaws of the film itself, of which this thread discusses only one.
2.) I'm with you, in a way, that the film could have been executed better... but at the same time that means more exposition, more dialogue, and subsequently less action.
Yes!
They've tried that formula a bunch of times now (while still trying to maintain the "action movie" status) and it hasn't turned out very well in more cases than not.
How on earth is "more dialogue and narrative depth, fewer explosions" equivalent to a "formula"? It's exactly the opposite, IMHO -- it opens things up for almost any kind of story. The problem with (some) past Trek films and shows isn't that they were too talky, it's that they were
badly written.
Not necessarily in the same way as this one, but badly nevertheless. Please don't think that by criticizing Abrams, Orci, and Kurtzman I'm somehow implicitly defending Berman or Braga or John Logan. Bad writing is bad writing, it's not hard to recognize, and I recognized it in this film.
(More details on how and why? Check out my
blog post about the movie, or
this fellow's longer and even more scathing series of posts.)
And since when has star trek insulted your intelligence? Stretched your imagination maybe, but not insult your intelligence, unless you think Sci-Fi isn't about imagination?
I'm a huge fan of SF (not "sci-fi"), which is one of the reasons I'm insulted when someone tries to pass off a superficial simulation of it rather than putting in the thought to create the real thing.
Past examples of Trek insulting my intelligence, besides this movie? They're easy to come up with.
ST V:TVH and "Thresholds" from VOY spring to mind, among others. Thing is, in the past they were always the exception more than the rule. But with this new film being a total reboot and a huge financial success, I'm concerned that it's reset the template, as it were: that going forward, Trek just won't be expected to be any more intelligent than this.