See that's the thing. I knew this would have to be the kind of film it was to really restart this whole thing.
I see the sequel to this being the Dark Night..
I felt the same way about Batman Begins as you do about this film.
What does 'this kind of film' mean?
A reboot of the franchise. Granted, stuff like
Batman Begins and
Casino Royale are far more unapologetic about being reboots (even if the latter keeps on Judi Dench as M, but hell, if you could have Judi Dench in your movie wouldn't ya?), but all three basically fit this label.
Star Trek's rather odd way of going about it can be chalked up to how the franchise evolved in the previous decades. With the future of the franchise entrusted to a different set of characters with each series - making the universe the one consistent element in
Star Trek, not the characters - a reboot that shifted us back to the original crew and focused on them, these characters, as the headlining concept of the
Star Trek brand, felt it needed to genuflect towards those whom the universe had become important. They did so by way of re-emphasizing the original characters - through the original, Prime Universe version of Spock.
The Batman and Bond pictures, since they've always been about Batman and Bond, and not Nightwing, the Birds of Prey and whoever the crap else is tangentially related to Batman (or Bond's nephew Jimmy Bond), have never had the problem of reconciling universe and the original characters. The Batman films have also tended to distance themselves from the DC Universe canon, avoiding the sticky issues that would ensue from that entanglement. So for them Leonard Nimoy was unnecessary, although we can all agree if Christian Bale's Batman had met Leonard Nimoy as Spock
Batman Begins would be a better movie.*
Trying to please the implacable Trekkies and a general audience is no easy task, and I think Orci & Kurtzmann navigated this Scylla and Charybdis of overwrought metaphor surprisingly well.
True. TOS purists didn't feel betrayed by Nemesis in the way they do with Trek XI. The emotional connection to the material just wasn't there.
Eh. I've rarely felt like that, and yet I felt exactly this way about
Star Trek: Generations. Say what one will about Simon Pegg as Scotty, but at least they did not have Scotty spout reams of technobabble.
As a TNG fan, though, I was pretty pissed at NEM, but this is neither here nor there.
*This could work for any film: Add Spock and it becomes better.
The Seven Samurai and Mr. Spock? Make it so.