We don't mind if Star Trek have become only a brainless action blockbuster movie anymore. Average Trek is better than no Trek. Sure the movie have many faults, but we dont care. Star Trek is alive and its a commercial success!
That's how we feel? I must have missed the meeting.
Okay, I must admit, I am very excited to see a Star Trek film achieving true major box office success. That hasn't happened in a very long time and it's nice to know that the Star Trek brand hasn't been so beaten into the ground by the sub-par crap we've gotten in the last few outings, both on the big and small screens, that it can't recover.
Having said that, though, does not mean that I will be satisfied with anything Paramount or CBS put out as long as it has the name 'Star Trek' on it.
I wouldn't go so far as to categorize the current film as 'brainless,' but I think we can all agree that it is definitely designed as a blockbuster action 'popcorn flick.' Fair enough. And I think that there's room for that in the Trek universe. Trek has certainly done its share of high octane action over the years, and it has most definitely had its fair share of stories that were brainless.
However, I will be very disappointed if this becomes the template on which all future Trek is built and we can never deviate from that formula. Trek has always been a mixture of story types and I hope to see that continue. In short, I'm willing to accept that a 'Star Trek' can be a viable part of the franchise, but I'd like it to also be accepted that a 'The Motion Picture' can too.
Well said, my negativity stems not so much that the movie was terrible (mediocre, yeah, terrible... I've seen worse) but that it will likely serve as the template for further movies or series. One installment of action packed Trek that is light on the substance by design (as it -is- a popcorn blockbuster movie) I can take, but if that becomes the whole of future Trek we will have lost quite a bit in transition.
I'm also bothered by a segment of the population that seems obsessed with the popularity of the fandom, as if that is a stable indicator of greatness or even stable to begin with. If the future installments we are given are popular but have a repetitive lack of substance and are merely the same formula as this movie I'm not quite sure how that is a positive development. Candy is well and good, but too much makes you sick. Having dessert as the first course is an interesting spin, for example, but if every single course is dessert the meal will quickly become tiresome.
There is also the matter regarding how much of the population will stick to Trek and make it a viable fandom in the future. Many of the indicators that I have seen suggest that while a small portion of the newcomers are attracted and will stick in some capacity, most will not and this is merely a passing thing. To provide an example: Out of eight of my friends who have seen it:
-One is an old school Trekkie from the beginning and likes it because, well, he never really stated why. He just thinks it is "good".
-One is a Star Wars guy and
thought he would like Trek after watching the movie, but upon renting a whole bunch of Trek series (Some volumes of TOS and TNG, AFAIK) his opinion on Trek quickly deteriorated. He remains optimistic that the future of Trek will be more of the same, but I regularly inform him that if Trek were to become Star Wars, I'd just switch to Star Wars.
-One saw the movie, thought it was OK, and asked me to direct him to a series. I suggested TNG (My favorite) and his opinion of original Trek improved while his opinion of the movie deteriorated.
-And the rest? Two thought the movie was mediocre, and the other three liked it immensely. All five have no attachment to Star Trek at the moment.
Extremely small sample, I know, and not particularly statistically relevant, but I think the hopes that this movie will bring in droves of dedicated fans is misguided at best, and if the results were to bring in droves, I doubt the Star Trek they will appreciate will be resemble what we appreciate in any but the most superficial level.