Isn't that kind of like saying "J.J. Abrams gave us Star Trek as Star Wars"?
Well, we already knew that.
I for one, never thought of that as a good thing.
Not a good thing, not a bad thing, just a thing. It was pretty much inevitable. I daresay any director who had been tasked by Paramount Pictures with the responsibility to reinvent a 1960s sci-fi franchise in a way that would fit modern expectations for a sci-fi movie blockbuster would base it on
Star Wars, because, like it or not,
Star Wars is what
created the modern expectations for a sci-fi movie blockbuster.
Heck, Trek movies have been trying to imitate
Star Wars since TWOK. Roddenberry intended ST to be an intelligent, sophisticated, literary SF franchise, and that's what TMP attempted to be, but TWOK threw all that out the window and embraced the SW-created notion that a sci-fi movie had to be about ships blowing up and cartoony melodrama. And since that's what worked at the box office, that's what every subsequent Trek movie has been expected to be, a larger-than-life action blockbuster (though TVH was admirably successful in varying the formula, but that just led Paramount to demand that all subsequent movies imitate its humor as well, with often inappropriate results).
So a Trek movie imitates
Star Wars? How is that remotely surprising? The question is not only "What else did you expect," but "What else is new?" It's a given that any sci-fi movie today is going to be influenced by SW. There's no point complaining about it. The question is how well it manages to tell a satisfactory story within that paradigm.
But if someone didn't like the way the character was at the beginning of the movie, can you blame them for not liking how he is at the end?
I'm not blaming anyone for anything. I'm merely refuting the specific point that a film's hero not growing over the course of the film is a storytelling error. That's a widely held assumption that's simply incorrect. Now, it's true that you may not like the particular hero, but that's a matter of individual taste. It's not a matter of fundamental story structure.
This is the part I don't understand. Abrams said he always preferred Star Wars, apparently said he couldn't identify with Kirk... Sure, he was the right guy to make Star Trek fiscally successful again, but I don't think he was the right guy to make it have any resemblance to the original (or, perhaps, even any respect for it, but of course those are both also purely subjective).
Paramount didn't hire him to make it have any resemblance to the original. Paramount's priority was not to pay tribute to a pre-existing creative work, its priority was to create a profitable new tentpole franchise.
Star Trek was merely the raw material they chose as the basis for that franchise. Abrams, Kurtzman, and Orci had been successful at turning another old Paramount television property,
Mission: Impossible, into a motion picture that brought profit and critical approval to Paramount, and so Paramount wanted to see if they could do it again. And what those filmmakers did with M:I III was to make something that paid enough tribute to the original to resonate with fans while still being distinct and new and engaging for the majority of the movie audience that had no prior investment in the original. And in the calculus of Hollywood, the latter is the crucial thing, while the former is simply a nice bonus.
My view is that we're lucky the new version of ST is as faithful to the original as it is. It would've been profoundly unrealistic to expect exact fidelity. The most likely outcome of a studio-mandated "reinvention" of ST would've been a complete restart that was drastically different from the original and possibly even repudiated its tropes (as Moore's
Galactica did) or made fun of them (as the
Land of the Lost movie and countless other film remakes have done). Instead, we got a film made by a team of filmmakers that recognized the need to create something new and fresh, but that incorporated a number of true, loyal fans who strove to keep the new incarnation of ST as faithful and reconcilable with the original as they possibly could within their mandate. That is far, far more than we had any right to expect from this. We should be grateful they even tried at all.
Sure, you can live with it, but don't you kinda wish that he had been depicted more like in the original episodes?
No, I don't. Because we've already had that. We've had nearly 45 years to get to know that version of Jim Kirk, to watch him in action, to write new stories about him. Now we have an opportunity to explore a new and different version of Jim Kirk, to approach the character from a fresh angle, and that's got a lot of potential. I'm saying this as someone who actually has experience writing that character, and the other Abramsverse characters, in
Seek a Newer World. It was an enjoyable opportunity to get to explore these familiar, beloved characters from a new angle, to write Kirk in a way that acknowledged the changes in his history but still explored his essential, underlying Kirkness.