To be fair the producers meant for Spock to stay dead.
Where've you been galaxyX?
RAMA
Hey man. Haven't been frequenting too often, but I still pop in here and there
The reasons why someone might appreciate ("enjoy" really isn't the right word) a character death are far more complex than your "nonsense".
But what the general pubic may or may not want has nothing to do with what I was saying.
We are not the general public, we are Trek fans, and decently "hardcore" ones since we're here on this message board. The issue is whether or not Data's death in NEM, and the scenes at the end of that movie following his death, are significantly darker or more depressing than Spock's death in TWOK, and the scenes at the end of that movie following his death. And when examining that issue, TSFS is irrelevant.
And besides... ok, so seeing a movie that ended on a generally "good" note is what the public wants to see. Even if that's true, and even if it WERE relevant to what I was saying, consider this: what would Paramount have lost by NOT making TSFS at all? There's no risk to not doing a third movie (and thus leaving Spock dead); TWOK had already been made, and Spock's death didn't stop it from being a generally successful movie, critically and financially. TWOK was intended to be a single follow-up to TMP, and then that was going to be it; no more movies were planned. The public didn't just go "You killed Spock, we want him back!", they also said "We want more Trek!" The former would not have been enough on its own for them to make another movie. If the decision to make more Trek hadn't been made, Spock WOULD have stayed dead. And that decision was made in large part BECAUSE TWOK was received so positively; again, Spock's death didn't have a negative effect on the popularity of the movie.
But that remains a tangent I indulged in for curiosity's sake; what the general audience wants still has nothing to do with the point I was trying to make, which was that Data's death is no more "dark and depressing" than Spock's in their respective movies.
Ok then, let's take it in chunks. First let's talk about the general public.
The general public liked TWOK because it was made like a slightly lower budget action film. We get the set up where the villain shows up, does some dastardly deed, and escapes by stealing a vehicle from the good guys. Then the hero pieces together the puzzle, chases after the villain, and they duke it out mano a mano (High Noon style). The villain is defeated and the hero is victorious, but sometimes at a heavy cost, and this idea is intertwined heavily with the ending scenes.
This seems like a pretty generic plot when you think about it. Probably every 80's Arnold/Stallone flick follows this formula.
What made it sell in the case of TWOK though? I believe it was the acting of the main characters, particularly the villains. As we all know, a superhero can only be as good as the supervillains he fights. Ricardo Moltalban played Khan with such realism, that he became his character. The things he said and did resonated with pure vengeance toward Kirk. He was willing to torture innocents (I still cringe at the ear bug scenes) and to kill them.
The other thing that worked in favor of TWOK was the musical score. It sounded like naval warfare, all thoughout. It went along great with the whole "submarine fight" angle. It had the right mystical sound when it was needed, and it had the right amount of tension at the right parts.
These are all subconscious things that most of the public won't "know" they are looking for, but when they are there, they give the movie a "thumbs up".
The fact that the movie was nice to Trekkies by giving us a bit of continuity (picking up from Space Seed. Showing us how Kirk's life of being a bold and dashing buccaneer is now starting to catch up with him, etc. etc) was simply icing on the cake to an already well made story.
Nemesis on the other hand, tried to copy the pattern of TWOK, but missed on practically every single nuance of the original. Kirk is a fighter, and he was afraid that Khan could outfight him. Shinzon is just a whiny bitch of a kid who got his hands on superduper weapons.
Speaking of superweapons, the whole fanboyish idea of the Scimitar was laughable (22 something torpedo launchers? 58 phaser banks?)
Anyway, in what psychological way was Shinzon a menace to Picard? If I understood the movie correctly, it was supposed to be the fact that Picard was afraid he would have become Shinzon if he had let such a hard life.
I think this fails right away because anyone in their right mind knows that your life is what shapes you. Picard certainly would have become Shinzon were he in the same shoes. So the first idea the movie tries to convey is shot down right there.
Even if Picard is unsettled by the idea, how exactly is this a major threat to him? Khan by himself was scary, and with the small Reliant took on the mighty Enterprise and almost won the battle.
Shinzon is only "scary" because he's got a superdooper ship with all its guns pointed at you. A 2 year old would be scary if he grabbed a loaded handgun and started pointing it at people.
Picard would probably feel confident (and rightly so) that he could outsmart this crybaby and pull him away from the trigger.
Kirk and Khan never actually meet face to face, and for half the movie Kirk isn't even aware of Khan at all. When they do meet up, it's pretty much mind on mind action.
Shinzon? Not so much. He presents himself to the crew in a very "dramatic" way (make sure the lights are off, then "slooowwly brighten them up.....") only to show us a character which insulted our intelligence. He looked nothing like Picard, sounded nothing like Picard, and frankly looked ridiculous in that costume he was wearing. Then they sit around for 1hr of movie time doing nothing but discussing the "situation" with Picard. Then we learn he's dying and needs Picard's blood to survive, so, why the waste of time then? You had a supership staring at the Enterprise the whole time! Why not just blast away?
And who could forget the cringe worthy wedding scene? Which was only there to make fun of our favorite characters. Picard looks embarrassed giving his speech, then makes comments about "going to the gym" to be ready for the nude reception on Betazed. Data sings a tacky song. Worf gets drunk, again.
And the dune buggy scene to introduce us to B4. It seems to me this was a lot of filler because they didn't have an actual story that could fill 2hr of movie time.
Then of course the end battle. There aren't any strategic moves as in TWOK. No near misses, no suspense! It's just 2 ships shooting each other point blank until one goes down. It would have been the Enterprise if the Romulans hadn't lent a hand. And do they send a couple of the majestic D'eridex cruisers? Nope. They send these little anemic skinny birds of prey. Might as well have been seagulls of prey.
The music is horrid. It bores you to sleep. It's all tribal drums and shit. Not suspenseful at all. The lighting is horrid, and the ending with Data's "courageous" (and stupidly contrived) death and the aftermath is so depressing, that it puts the final nail on the coffin for this movie, no matter how many times they show B4 whistling blue skies.