This is good discussion.
I will say that I personally enjoy the high action aspects of the two recent Star Trek films. For me, they were the movies I'd waited 40 years for as far as Trek went.
No, you do
not want to start off a high action movie with a dialogue heavy scene. As Campe mentioned before, you don't start a James Bond movie with Bond getting a lengthy briefing from M. He's right in the action...or at least in the moments which lead almost immediately to the action. And sometimes, said actions are somehow connected to the movie that follows.
I've always said that when most folks go to the movie to see blockbuster films, they want
bang for their bucks. ST09 and STID delivered them in spades. In both cases, audiences were treated to very WOW factor opening sequences, and there was plenty enough drama in between other action beats to satisfy most movie goers who were looking for story, and for most Trek fans and lovers of Trek. The previous films did serviceable box office, but not stunning box office.
Campe, I completely agree. The opening of First Contact was really a lot lower key than I'd hoped for. We only get to see about two minutes (at best) of what should be an epic, eye-popping, mind blowing space battle between the assembled Starfleet and the one Borg cube. Worse than that, I felt that the movie had blown its wad in those first moments. Any and all other action scenes after that in the film just felt like aftershocks. I didn't feel a real payoff. I had always heard that the space battle in FC was supposed to run quite a bit longer than it did on screen. Sadly, we got what we got, and as usual, it played off more like an episode of TNG than it did a big-screen epic.
I mean, that's what Star Trek was on TV whenever there was space action.... in a five minute space battle, four and a half minutes of it was descriptive dialogue ("Shields down to 52 percent." "Incoming weapons fire.", "Brace for impact!".....Insurrection was pointedly guilty of this.) and bridge shudder shots with a few panels exploding, and maybe a crewman or two getting thrown about. The other thirty seconds, if we were lucky, actually had space battle footage.
Action and drama are not mutually exclusive and can serve each other well. I thought this was done exceptionally in ST09 and STID.
When I undertook the quickie project to try and see if I could strike a balance between what some old school Trek fans wanted to see, and still try and satisfy those who were much more invested in the JJ Abrams' takes, believe me, it was wholehearted (as much as my limited time would allow). But, I still prefer ST09 and STID as they are. There's a reason that those guys have jobs in film, and I don't.
Jedi Master, the Edited for Goats version of STID will be strictly for bleating hearts. (Oh, boy, I'm liable to be lambasted for that one, so I'll stop before I rack up too many goat/lamb/sheep puns.)
