I liked STV for many of the same reasons the original poster said. It was a far better film than Star Trek: Nemesis!
No, they really weren't. They were substandard by 1989 standards. To prove that, just look at the effects work that Doug Trumbull, John Dykstra, and their respective teams did an entire decade earlier for TMP and compare it to TFF. Or the work that ILM did for the following three films which, while I consider them below the standard of TMP, were none-the-less far and away superior to TFF.Really the effects in STV weren't the problem at all. They were good at the time and certainly still are fine today.
Sybok is probably the strangest villain ever. So he brainwashes people by sharing their pain? What the heck does that even mean?
Well, I admit I never thought about it before, but it means Sybok is essentially a goal-oriented, non-mute, bearded version of Gem from "The Empath." Which sheds light on why he's a very strange "villain" indeed.
I thought "God" didn't end up dying but simply remained trapped...?
All in all, this discussion gives me another excuse to mention (as I probably do about once a year on one thread or another) the absolutely great two-word headline given to a review of ST V in the alt-weekly City Pages (Minneapolis): Dammit, Jim
The whole "mutiny" storyline is a mess. Shatner wanted to have Kirk stand alone as the crew betrayed him, yet wanted to keep Sybok a more complex character than just a straight villain.
So he doesn't brainwash, he just performs therapy. So it just makes the crew look like voluntary traitors instead of brainwashed victims.
An obvious compromise would have been revealed that Sybok's technique DOES brainwash, but have him be unaware of that, and think that his followers are joining him voluntarily.
Except Spock and McCoy's resistance to it would ruin that, too. Ah well.
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