One of the many things that bothered me about the latest Star Trek movie is that it couldn't make up its mind whether it wanted to be a reboot. Rather than just start with a clean slate, they gave us the alternate timeline thing, which comes across as something that was meant to appease fans who were worried that a reboot would invalidate everything that came before. But are Star Trek fans really such big babies? Do you think fans of Batman can't enjoy Tim Burton's Batman now that Chris Nolan rebooted the series? What about James Bond? Does Casino Royale make Goldfinger invalid? Or how bout the upcoming Spiderman reboot?
The filmmakers claimed they felt weighed down by having to adhere to the continuity of 5 shows and 10 movies, which is why they went back to the beginning. Then why not do a true reboot? Instead, they came up with a plot that ties itself to everything that came before. We get Ambassador Spock. We get time travel, as if we haven't seen that enough times already. We get a villain with a contrived and implausible motivation. And we couldn't get William Shatner because his character had already been killed off. I think the producers missed a great opportunity. Reboots give you the chance to do things right that were handled poorly the first time. The Batman series is a perfect example of that. But this movie, for its claims about wanting to start over, actually ties itself to what came before. And as someone who loathed Enterprise, it's scary to think this movie actually says that awful show happened in not, but two timelines. Ugh. Now there's a show I wouldn't mind seeing invalidated.
The filmmakers claimed they felt weighed down by having to adhere to the continuity of 5 shows and 10 movies, which is why they went back to the beginning. Then why not do a true reboot? Instead, they came up with a plot that ties itself to everything that came before. We get Ambassador Spock. We get time travel, as if we haven't seen that enough times already. We get a villain with a contrived and implausible motivation. And we couldn't get William Shatner because his character had already been killed off. I think the producers missed a great opportunity. Reboots give you the chance to do things right that were handled poorly the first time. The Batman series is a perfect example of that. But this movie, for its claims about wanting to start over, actually ties itself to what came before. And as someone who loathed Enterprise, it's scary to think this movie actually says that awful show happened in not, but two timelines. Ugh. Now there's a show I wouldn't mind seeing invalidated.