The comment JJ amde (or was it a tagline?) that "This sin't your father's Star Trek" made that quite clear. Of course, I am the father he's talking about. This wasn't made for me. It was made for the crowds of summer movie fans to park their brains by the door and watch the big explosions.
I've been a fan of
Star Trek since January 1974. Maybe I'm not in the original generation of fans, but I'm certainly in the one after that. And I feel this movie was made just as much for me as for the new audience. Yes, it's designed to be a stepping-on point for newcomers,
as it should be, but it's also very clearly a creation of people who know and love
Star Trek and have striven to balance the need for freshness and accessibility with respect and fidelity toward the original. It's made for both the old and new audiences, which is the right way to approach it. No, it's not made for purists, but no new version of anything is made for purists. There were TOS purists who loathed the TOS movies and TNG. There were TNG purists who loathed DS9. Purists never like change, by definition. But that doesn't mean that something that brings a fresh approach to a concept can't be faithful to it and satisfying to more open-minded fans of the original.
Star Trek has been turned into a movie much like The Transformers series. Sure, it'll make a bunch of money. For the first time in decades none of it will be mine. I'd prefer to have a bit more in a movie. Like plot.
The plot is full of holes, true, but it has something more important: strong characterization. Even as I complained about the problems with the story and the science and the logic, I still cared about the characters and believed they were really Kirk, Spock, McCoy, etc. Is there room for improvement? Hell, yes. But it is
Star Trek.
Watch TOS. Watch the murders of ones and scores and billions. Then watch them laugh.
Yep. Nomad exterminated the whole Malurian civilization, killed a horde of security guards, and wiped Uhura's mind, and by the end of the episode Kirk was joking about being its proud father. Talk about "too soon."
Conversely, in ST'09, the destruction of Vulcan is hanging over the characters for the rest of the film. Even though they have their moments of lightness, it's not long before we get a reminder that this is a tragedy and people are grieving or angry about it.
I don't mind the idea of gas giants to simulate the "submarine warfare effect" TWoK was going for (it worked in that DS9 episode pretty well), but wouldn't their gravity well be problematic? I don't know, but for loitering maneuvers wouldn't you constantly be having to counteract a strong, downward acceleration?
Indeed, and that would make it more interesting. Although it wouldn't necessarily have affected the action much, since even in the "two-dimensional thinking" scene, the ships were still portrayed as having a common up-down vector, "sinking" and "rising" relative to each other like aircraft in flight.
Though I guess it would change the bits where the ships had their engines knocked out, since then they'd begin to fall. Some adjustments would've had to be made. But overall, adding a gravity well would've made it even more dangerous and exciting. (Well, if you found it exciting in the first place. Personally I find the action in TWOK to be tediously slow-paced, and I'm saying this as someone who likes TMP.)