Hi,
@Corylea, thank you so much for posting such a detailed review of this film! I appreciate reading your thoughts before I see the film at Star Trek: Mission New York in September.
You're welcome! And thanks for your reply.
I understand that the film wasn't made for Trekkies.
I'm not sure who it was made for then, if it wasn't made for us. Who else would pay to see a documentary about Spock?
As for the last third, your summary sounds a lot like Adam's book. I don't know if you read it; it's called My Incredibly Wonderful, Miserable Life. It includes a few anecdotes about life with his dad, most of which are not positive.
I did read Adam's autobiography. And in fact, when Adam began the Kickstarter for this project, I told him that while I sympathized with the challenges involved in being the son of a celebrity (really, it must suck bigtime), his book was rather bitter, and I gently suggested that perhaps he wasn't the right person to make a movie celebrating Spock.
He jokingly thanked me for being one of the twelve people who'd read his autobiography and went on to say that he and his father had had a rapprochement since that book was written, and they were in a very different place now.
And it IS true that the movie's tone is not bitter, the way the book's tone was. It was more matter-of-fact than bitter about the bad part of their relationship, and it did seem as if he had more positive feelings towards his father now than he'd had in the past.
So, no, the movie doesn't portray Leonard in an awful light, and it doesn't portray Adam as an angel. I do think, though, that it doesn't give Leonard enough credit for the things he did do. For example, during the movie, Adam shows us a letter that Leonard wrote him sometime in the 70's. It's a long, multi-page, hand-written letter, written on what looks like a yellow legal pad. It's a sweet and thoughtful letter that's trying to heal their relationship. Adam said -- I forget if this was during the movie or during the talks he gave before and after it -- that he found this letter while going through some stuff while preparing the movie, and he had no memory of it.
He forgot that Leonard had ever sat down and written him a sensitive and understanding multi-page letter to try to heal their relationship. So it seemed -- to me, at least -- that Adam wanted to hang onto his bitterness during that era, so much that he didn't even
remember the good things Leonard did for him.
From your comments, the title seems sarcastic to me now. As in, the film was not made out of the creator's love of Spock (this is how I originally interpreted it), but the title is like an exasperated person exclaiming, oh, for the love of Spock!
*laugh* That's cute!
I don't think the title is meant sarcastically, though. I think when Adam began the Kickstarter to fund the movie, he genuinely meant to make a movie celebrating Spock and his dad. And the movie DOES do some of that, yes it does. It's just that it clearly wasn't made by someone who adores Spock the way that WE adore him and that it has this other part, too.
I remember in his autobiography, Adam talks about being dragged to see his father on Broadway in
Equus. He didn't want to go, but his mother made him, and the whole family trooped off to see the play. And Adam was sitting in the audience, fuming because here was his father's goddamned career taking precedence AGAIN, but by the time the play was over, all he could think was, "God, Dad was
brilliant."
I think both things are there. I think Adam knows his father was brilliant, but he didn't get as much of his father's attention as he wanted, and it still rankles. He's allowed! But I wish he'd told his therapist about it and not fifty million Trekkies.
Adam's life was so much easier than his father's life, and Adam's father gave him so much more, emotionally, than Leonard's father gave HIM that I think Adam's complaining about it in public makes him look like a smaller man in every way. I figure
giving better parenting than one received makes a person a hero, even if one falls short of perfection.