I should say first that I am not a big fan of the movies. I have usually been at least somewhat disappointed, and the times I wasn't disappointed was because my expectations were quite low. They weren't high this time either, despite the hype - and perhaps that's why I came away fairly well satisfied. I'd call it one of the better Trek movies, but as I say that, keep in mind my general opinion of Trek movies. Which is: Not high.
Like Praetor, I enjoyed it, and the reboot concept actually worked fairly well for me, which is pretty amazing considering what a canon-junkie I am. Some of the redone characters worked very well - Quinto was fab, considering whose shoes he had to fill (Spock has been my favorite since, like, 1967, so I am a very demanding audience), and the new Sulu and Uhura were good, too. Personally I think Uhura was kind of wasted (too much love interest and not enough Starfleet officer), but the actor did very well. Sulu and McCoy didn't have as much to do, but they did fine, I thought. Scotty and Chekov...well, they were mostly comic relief. They did well at that, but I personally think Scotty should have been more than comic relief and I also think Simon Pegg deserved better, too. Oh, well. (The friend I went with
loved the Scotty sequences, though - those were her favorite parts.)
Kirk...not quite as successful, IMO. I don't think this was Pine's fault. Kirk was written as such a arrogant little punk - OK, with some likable qualities, but still - that I couldn't imagine him applying to Starfleet, much less succeeding there, and if he did apply and succeed, he should not have continued to be such an arrogant punk. I utterly loathed the
Kobayashi Maru scene.
And I thought the villain...kind of boring. I mean, he looked nicely evil, and the ship was very cool and evil and weird looking, but he turned out to be pretty much Standard Issue SciFi Bad Guy. He wasn't even really recognizable as a Romulan, and I am not referring to his appearance (I mean, I was prepared for that). He just didn't do anything Romulan
ish, which was a huge disappointment. He was so indistinguishable that he could have been any bad-guy alien race, including a brand new one. Waste of a Romulan, if you ask me.
But the big problem was with the plot - way, way, way, way too many coincidences for me. If this had been Star Wars or a Terry Pratchett book, we could have chalked this up to the Force or the Lady, but since this was Trek, that doesn't work. At all. And the need to sort of justify all those coincidences forced the characters into doing stupid out-of-character stuff too. I mean...throwing a crewmember off the ship onto a frozen planet because he'd pissed you off? Please. I happen to know they have a brig on the Enterprise, after all.
And while I know they had to introduce these characters to us and to each other...golly, that didn't leave much time for actual plot. And so what was meant to feel epic - what should have
been epic, given that this was Trek, that it was the first of the reboot movies, that it had this great cast including Nimoy and so on - ended up kind of mooshed into too short of a time frame. It kind of reminded me of TMP in that one way.
But I did enjoy it, and I might even see it again in IMAX, if only because seeing the NCC-1701 on the big screen again was such a thrill. And all the fun Trek geek references were great, too. But I cannot imagine how anybody can go and watch it over and over and over again and still enjoy it. Yet clearly some people are doing just that. Huh.
And by the way, I still think those damn miniskirts are silly. I was fine with them when everybody was strolling around the academy campus - the costumes managed to be really retro-fun for a while - but retro-fun is out of place on a battleship. Jeez, get those girls some pants.