Yes, forgot to mention that. Though, I wasn't sure if these belonged in the context of those threads since those threads seemed more aimed at the Gala Premieres going around the world. Didn't know the press' independent reviews fell into that or not.
The criticism is valid and one hopes it will be addressed in the future, but it's not the movie Abrams was making now, and the reviewer is savvy enough (and fair enough) to differentiate between the two and appreciate what Abrams did on its face value. Obviously, this movie will never wear the label, The Motionless Picture.
but in a time when the United States is engaged in two wars, the failure to even acknowledge the issues arising from space imperialism and the Prime Directive is to flinch from battle.
Did anyone else find that a bit amateurish? It's like the writer sat down with a dictionary and tried to plop down as many fancy adjectives in there as he could.
I thought it was common freshmen English law that that was bad taste.
"Oh look, I'm just not just a movie reviewer, I'm a genuine wordsmith. Ol' Chucky D better watch out!"
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Actually, I thought it was very well-written.
ARE THERE SPOILERS IN THE REVIEW?
This has been asked multiple times, but not answered! How hard can it be to answer?
ARE THERE SPOILERS IN THE REVIEW?
This has been asked multiple times, but not answered! How hard can it be to answer?
in a time when the United States is engaged in two wars, the failure to even acknowledge the issues arising from space imperialism and the Prime Directive is to flinch from battle.
Save for the typically muddy motives of the modern bad guy — oh, for a truly Evil Empire —
but in a time when the United States is engaged in two wars, the failure to even acknowledge the issues arising from space imperialism and the Prime Directive is to flinch from battle.
Fuck off.
I took it to mean that the heroes are also morally ambiguous - they don't provide an allegory to current events (probably TOS's most deserving reputation), but simply run, jump and shoot.in a time when the United States is engaged in two wars, the failure to even acknowledge the issues arising from space imperialism and the Prime Directive is to flinch from battle.So in a stolid resistance to modernity, the heroes aren't morally ambiguous enough, but in a craven surrender to modernity, the villain is too morally ambiguous? Pick a line and stick with it, Empire...Save for the typically muddy motives of the modern bad guy — oh, for a truly Evil Empire —
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