Bah. I think later Trek's (including NuTrek) weakness is that it has become Battle Trek. Every storyline has to be about villains and photon torpedoes. I love TWOK with all my heart, but I think that the fact that it featured a strong villain convinced the TNG filmmakers that Trek movies need to be about the good guys versus the bad guys. In my opinion, TWOK was powerful because of its strong themes of intelligence versus experience, life and death, sacrifice, etc - not 'killing bad guys'. The TOS movies did it right - there's a fair amount of cool space combat, but that's secondary to the real themes and stories that were being told. TMP had zero combat, TSFS was about loss and sacrifice and what we hold important, TVH featured no weapons fire whatsoever, TFF ended not in the Klingon bird of prey being destroyed but a mixer and celebration between the two crews, and TUC was about the foundation of peace and a rejection of warfare and strife (even if they had to blow up someone real good for it).
Even DS9, which prominently featured a seasons-long all-out war, tendered themes of 'this is why war is bad and undesirable', not 'let's kill the bad guys'. War was a tragedy, the last thing anyone wanted, and the losses taken were taken seriously - we saw characters going over published lists of friends and family killed in the war and responding with mourning, etc.
The thought processes for the TNG films and NuTrek seems to be: who can the Enterprise fight and blow up? Picard turns into John Rambo. Kirk has devolved from 'give me your hand!' to 'I got your gun LOLZ!'
Instead of death and destruction as a centerpiece, the primary asset that any Trek film should hold central, to my mind, is a sense of wonder. I know I'm probably in the minority here, but TFF is my second favorite Trek film. Kirk, Spock, and McCoy are free of Sybok's mind control, but when given the decision on how to proceed - after a cut to the plaque on the ship's wheel in the observation lounge, written 'TO BOLDLY GO' - they decide to do just that, unwilling to pass on the opportunity to see Strange New Worlds...
...and now I'm ranting

Short version: These are not the James Bond films (which I also love). I go to James Bond to hear stories about the good guys killing the evil villains. I go to Star Trek for a different sort of medicine.