Cary,
First, I find that the writing was very well done, especially in the context of what they were trying to do.
Second, the Enterprise, while sleeker, actually still has the same FUNCTIONAL design as other incarnations.
Phasers LOOK different, but they do what they have always done: project beams of Nadion particles to slice and burn opposing vessels or ordinance.
Obviously, you didn't read what I said. You just skimmed it and took a few key words and filled the rest in, in your imagination.
Look at the TMP Enterprise, specifically the top and bottom of the primary hull. There are three pairs of little silver spherical elements, at 90, 0, and 270 degrees, top and bottom. They are surrounded with a little mustard-yellow patch with a thin red outline.
In the TMP ship, those are the phasers.
In the ST'09 ship, those same details are present. But the phasers fire from a series of little pop-up turrets, not from these features.
I only saw turrets on the Kelvin.
THAT IS WHAT I WAS TALKING ABOUT. I never said one word about the appearance of the special visual effect intended to represent the beam, did I? You "filled in the blank" without reading what was actually said.
Granted. But the phasers were not FUNCTIONALLY changed. In fact, those balls were Turrets in an enclosed style, and the phasers actually came from those points, if one looks carefully.
It's generally a good idea to pay attention to what's being said, and if you don't fully understand, either ask or study before you try to counter the point.
Granted.
The "features" were kept, but purely for visual appearance, not for functionality. That is what I said. That is what I meant.
Incorrect. See above.
Oh, and by the way... "nadion particles?" Are you sure? Or are you applying your TNG-era preconceptions to this film? I don't seem to recall the term "nadion" being used at any point in this film. And if they can change other things, don't you think that it's a little... presumptuous... to assume that other things which YOU carry around as part of your own personal "Trek canon" have been retained?
Not in the movie itself, but the unofficial Intel site pointed to the Kelvin's turrets, explaining the principal, and nothing in the movie contradicted this.
As far as we know, in this movie, the "phasers" have nothing at all in common with the TOS, or TNG, era phasers we know except for the names. They certainly don't behave especially similarly to what we've seen before, do they?
Launched as beams from set points towards targets. Look like phasers to me. Did the same things.
Really? Having the same broad general shape, with two elements in the same general vincinity as another ship had them, qualifies as "no functional changes?"
Actually, it says nothing either way.
Again, you failed to properly comprehend the point I'd made (about features in the ship model LOOKING LIKE elements from the TMP model but without regard for what the function of those elements was intended to be, and in a fair number of cases which were established on-screen).
Incorrect. Look closely during the scenes where the Enterprise fired her phasers.
What I said was that I'd rather that they had omitted those TMP-copied feature entirely, rather than including them purely for appearance while ignoring the reason that they were there in the first place on the TMP ship. Andrew Probert and a few others actually thought the 1710(r) out, in pretty significant detail. While much was there for visual appearance, granted, it all at least made some semblence of logical sense.
They were there in TMP because they looked functional, and defined a source for the phaser beams.
With this ship, it was all done for appearance... but not even particularly creatively (since "make the saucer look like the TMP saucer" was one of Abrams' requirements for the design team).
Actually, those details were to make things visually recognizable, and I see no evidence that any of them performed different functions.
When "graphic arts" trumps "practical design" the production suffers, IMHO.Why is is that everyone who takes the "you're not allowed to fail to orgasm from this film" folks seem to want to tell people what they REALLY MEAN?
I can only speak for myself. I enjoyed the film, and saw nothing function contrary to the other movies or TOS.
Do you have any idea how OBNOXIOUS it is for you to tell me what I "really mean?" Even if you weren't totally full of shit on the subject, I mean, it would still be unacceptable.
So prove to me that the phasers are coming from another location.
Funny, you quote something that clearly says "A" and you somehow manage to "interpret" it to mean the exact opposite of what is said. Because you're so smart, right?
Still waiting.
Let me be blunt, in case you're really just having major reading-comprehension issues, though. I didn't care for the "set dressing" design of the movie, but could have accepted the movie anyway if the movie had been outstandingly well written and produced.
Which I believe it was. We disagree.
Why is it that the converse... that they could have given me a movie with "perfect" set dressing, but with a horrible script and production, I might not have liked that either... is so hard for you to grasp?
Actually, under those circumstances, the film would have bombed both critically and financially. Hence the changes. We agree on the obvious here.
There are two issues here... "set dressing" and "storytelling." They interrelate, but they are not the same thing.
We agree here too.
In the case of this movie, I didn't care for either aspect. For me to have LOVED the movie, I'd have had to have loved both sides of the production.And you can say that, with absolute certainty, this was the case, because you were there... AND because you have psychic powers (which you previously used to read MY "real intentions" obviously!).
I never claimed to be telepathic.
You may think that there was "a lot of respect for the source material" but I disagree. I think that what we saw was a series of "toss-off" surface-type things to pander to the fans, who were being underestimated at every turn.
I have seen a mountain of interviews and anecdodal evidence to the contrary.
My favorite example of this was the portrayal of McCoy. Now, I think the casting of Carl Urban was inspired, and I think he did an outstanding job. However, the character was used, in the film, mainly to toss out a few "for a laugh" lines. McCoy should have been a MAJOR PLAYER in the storyline, not someone used to get a nostalgic laugh by calling Spock a "hobgoblin."
He aslo was portrayed as a friend to Jim Kirk, and his arguments with Spock were also relevent commentary on the situation. Kirk and Spock were, by necessity, the focus of the movie.
(Oh, and "Bones" was a nickname given to McCoy by Kirk because McCoy liked to call himself an "old country doctor," and Kirk carried it a step further by calling him "sawbones" and, shortened, Bones. Yes, that's not something the average viewer would have known... but not knowing that does tend to put to the lie the claim that the writers were "major fans with massive amounts of knowledge.")Again, I'm glad you have that amazing psychic ability which somehow trumps everything else.
Tell me exactly which episode of TOS this was established. Who said that on screen?
Bob Orci read a couple of Trek novels... the other guys hadn't even watched the original series. Just because someone says "I'm the fan of the group" in repeated magazine-article interviews doesn't mean anything, except that he knows a little bit more than the rest of the team (who were quite vocal about having never even watched the original show in some cases... and that includes Abrams who BRAGGED about that.)No, it's logic. Either the setting, characterizations, and details really matter, or they don't really matter.
Actually, that is incorrect. Orci and Kurtzman were hardcore TNG fans, though they also loved TOS. They were also AVID readers of written Trek fiction. JJ Abrams was aware, and got up to speed, but he didn't write the movie. Orci and Kurtzman did.
If they DO matter... major deviations are problems.
Alternate Reality allowed for the changes in the same manner as the TMP Refit allowed the Enterprise to completely change.
If they don't matter... why use them, except to draw in audiences who are familiar with these things and expect to see things as they already know them?
The writers had to balance Star Trek continuity with introducing Star Trek to an uneducated audience. To make a movie that worked as a movie, they made the changes they made. They often contacted fans for their opinions on things, so they didn't work in a vacuum.
That's not "putting thoughts into your head." It's simple logic. If you have other thoughts in your head, well, then those thoughts may be there, but I'd argue that they're not logical. Which, really, was the point of my making this statement in the first place. To demonstrate the illogic of claiming that
"It matters, but it also doesn't matter... depending on my feelings at any given instant."
Which isn't the case here. This movie isn't dependent on "Star Trek canon" and even referring to "canon" is in direct contradiction to the argument most commonly used to abuse folks who didn't care for the film... that "canon" needs to be thrown out because it restrains storytelling creativity.
Lets see: Old Spock remembering Kirk's other reality, The origins of both Old Spock and the Narada. Critical to the story on an emotional and plot level, and obviously the deliberate intent of the writers. Google/Bing for interviews. TrekMovie.com has some good ones.
Again... you either need "canon" or you don't need it.And you, personally, think that this was a good story, well-told.
Yes. Canon is not needed to enjoy the story, but it is an essential part of the plot.
That's fine. You, and everyone else, is permitted to feel however they wish.
And that includes me. That you seem to be offended that I don't like the movie that you've made some sort of emotional commitment to is... odd. I'm not insulting your girlfriend, I'm not sexually abusing your mom, I'm not kicking your dog. I'm talking about my feelings about a movie, and explaining why I didn't like this movie. Sorry if you find dislike for a movie to be personally offensive.
I feel no offence.
I think it was a story with minimal, shallow characterization, hackneyed, cliche-ridden, storytelling, an excessive emphasis on "action sequences" which make very little logical sense, storytelling events which reflect little grasp on reality
It is not a reality-based picture, the characterizations were as deep as an action/adventure origin story should be, the action sequences were well executed and fun, and the drama was far more emotional than Star Trek has been before. The reality you wish for it to reflect is a little vague here.
I'm sorry, "Cadet (O-0) to Captain (O-6) in three days" is simply STUPID. No matter how much raw talent a junior officer may have, there is a reason that promotions take time... but then again, Abrams is a "hollywood connected wunderkind" who's been given legs-up at every opportunity and never had to pay "dues" and thus has no conception of some of the concepts that you can only learn with time and experience. Kirk, in TOS, got the Enterprise at approximately 34 years of age, and would have been a cadet at the age of 18 or so. It's entirely conceivable that you could go from cadet at 18 to academy graduate at 22 (as an ensign, O-1) and in twelve years of exemplary service end up promoted to Captain, having gone through every rank in-between in the process (Lieutenant JG, O-2, Lieutenant, O-3, Lieutenant Commander, O-4, Commander, O-5, then Captain, O-6), having served UNDER OTHER COMMANDERS (something nuKirk has never done, has he?), and had lower-level command positions (department head, and then First Officer, typically). Most likely, he would have had a command of a smaller vessel before being given command of the most powerful ship in the fleet. SEASONING takes time, regardless of "raw ability."But that's part of why I feel this movie was poorly written. These were NOT the characters I've known for 44 years. Spock would never have engaged in an illicit affair with a subordinate. Nor would he have given in to "affair blackmail" to give this subordinate a better assignment than she'd been given originally. THAT Spock would have made the logical choice, for the logical reason, without regard to emotion. Nor would he have been a "smart ass" with the Vulcan Science Counsel. Nor would he have tossed ANY crewmember out of the airlock into a potentially deadly situation (aren't there BRIGS on this ship???) No, this wasn't the Spock I first "met" 44 years ago.
The Spock you met was from 2266, not 2258, and had already found his balance. The Uhura romance was hinted at as a potential early in the series, but was not followed up on, and after the destruction of Vulcan and the death of his mother and most of his people, he was "emotionally compromized." Even Vulcans flip out.
Kirk's rise was a necessary conceit in order to create a 2 hour movie that did not have 2 year breaks between each of 5 or 6 scenes. It's an adventure franchise, not a biopic, and a movie done in a more pedestrian style would have bombed.
This Kirk wasn't the same Kirk, either. That Kirk was serious, driven, charismatic, and able to charm anyone, and absolutely self-reliant. On the other hand, THIS Kirk was someone who got lucky and got "special privileges" handed to him left and right because of nepotism, and when he DID "cheat" on an exam, wasn't an officer making a point, he was a cocky frat-boy smugly lording his "smartiness" over everyone. He should have been cashiered, and in anything remotely "real" would have been.It has no impact, because it was a "stunt." That's how I see it. In this movie, blowing up Vulcan was a pandering attempt to get cheap emotional reactions from the audience without having to EARN those emotion reactions through actual storytelling.
Kirk was also older, and had a different past. This kirk was deliberately incomplete, and had to earn his position in the course of the movie.
For me... seeing this simply reminded me that this isn't Star Trek, it's Abrams' egotism and (as far as I'm concerned) "cheating" and riding on the back of other, more talented artists."We" do?
It is Star Trek. Just not to your personal taste.
These aren't the same characters. They may look similar, but there is no depth to them, and they are fundamentally different on virtually every MEANINGFUL level.
This has nothing to do with the actors playing the roles. It has everything to do with the writing, and the directing. These aren't the same characters. They're entirely new characters who share only a few surface traits with the TOS characters. And I don't care... at all... about what happens to these new characters. So if Abrams decides to kill a major character in the next film (and I strongly expect that to happen), I will care about that no more than I cared about seeing "Vulcan" destroyed in this film. It may be a cool special effect, but it has no impact except to show that Abrams is saying "Screw you, I'm in charge now, so suck it up."

I'm curious if you think you can point out anyplace where I disputed... even one time... that this movie would be (as I've always said) a "moderate success." It's not a blockbuster on the same level of some other movies we've seen in recent years, but it was a box-office success... it made money and got passable reviews.
But "was loved by Star Trek fans and non-fans alike?" I'm sure that you can say the same about brussell sprouts. Unless you think you're making a BLANKET statement about "all fans" or "most fans" or similarly, most or all non-fans, in which case you'd be totally full of shit.
Some people liked it. Some didn't. I don't know anyone who "loved" this movie. "The Hangover" got better word-of-mouth reviews than this movie did in my experience, meaning "The Hangover" was a better movie as far as I'm concerned.
This movie was touted as a "blockbuster" and it got enough attention as such that people went to see it, and for the most part enjoyed it as a "popcorn movie." Which is fine.
But it's not great enough to justify attacking people who think that the Emperor's new suit is a bit sparse on the fabric...
This is the truth. Plain. Simple. Indisputable. Unchangeable.
Thank you, Moses. Get that from the burning bush, didya?
Gotta love it when people insist that you have to accept their position on an entirely opinion-related topic because it's "indisputable."


So go ahead and dislike the movie, it is your right, but be aware that you have a minority opinion of the movie.
In this forum, I'm well aware of that.
I'm more curious, now, why you feel so passionate about attacking those in this supposed "minority" and telling us that we shouldn't feel about this movie as we do.
I'm curious... do you apply the same "agree with everything I've ever thought!" perspective to other aspects of your life?
I've stated why I didn't care for the movie. Do you actually think that your "argument" as convinced me that I'm wrong about how I see it?
Oh, and by the way, I type fast... and I'm treating this exchange as an amusement. I'm by no means "emotionally involved" in this. I simply find it amusing that some folks, in this thread, feel it's either (a) necessary, or (b) really, really fun, to attack those who don't have sticky pants-legs from this movie.