Saw it over the weekend, finally.
I'm not offended, I'm not disliking this.
I mourn the things we've lost.
I'm not entirely sure the differences we've seen can be totally blamed on Nero's changing the past. This may be a reality that was always different from "our" Trek to begin with. Nero may have just made it even more different.
This movie also has a very different "feel" to it than anything we're used to under the banner "Star Trek". It moves almost TOO fast, maybe in more than one way, but that's the way it is.
This may be the only way ANY new Trek will have to be from now on to survive and be enough of a money-maker for them to do more onscreen stories. (The books may NEVER die, but would we want the only new Trek to be in printed form from now on?)
I'm just about ready to say that this is NOT our universe. In a way that's good, since maybe it never got changed at all, and even its older Spock is still alive in the 24th century. Maybe there never was a Nero, a supernova, the destruction of Romulus... We may never see it again, but at least it's still there.
This, however, is the only onscreen Star Trek there is now. Can't see they'll ever go back to how it was. I know people. This fed the masses. Not in an entirely bad way, certainly in a different way, but that's what it's aiming to do because it wants to live. It's buttering up to people.
That may mean it's going to make it.
I mourn what we've lost, but I'm not opposed to seeing this new universe unfold. Star Trek lives. Kirk and Spock (YES! KIRK AND SPOCK!!!) are out there doing what they've always done, and they're in their prime!
...And we get to see more of that!
Star Trek lives. It's not the Trek we knew, but Star Trek lives.
I'm not offended, I'm not disliking this.
I mourn the things we've lost.
I'm not entirely sure the differences we've seen can be totally blamed on Nero's changing the past. This may be a reality that was always different from "our" Trek to begin with. Nero may have just made it even more different.
This movie also has a very different "feel" to it than anything we're used to under the banner "Star Trek". It moves almost TOO fast, maybe in more than one way, but that's the way it is.
This may be the only way ANY new Trek will have to be from now on to survive and be enough of a money-maker for them to do more onscreen stories. (The books may NEVER die, but would we want the only new Trek to be in printed form from now on?)
I'm just about ready to say that this is NOT our universe. In a way that's good, since maybe it never got changed at all, and even its older Spock is still alive in the 24th century. Maybe there never was a Nero, a supernova, the destruction of Romulus... We may never see it again, but at least it's still there.
This, however, is the only onscreen Star Trek there is now. Can't see they'll ever go back to how it was. I know people. This fed the masses. Not in an entirely bad way, certainly in a different way, but that's what it's aiming to do because it wants to live. It's buttering up to people.
That may mean it's going to make it.
I mourn what we've lost, but I'm not opposed to seeing this new universe unfold. Star Trek lives. Kirk and Spock (YES! KIRK AND SPOCK!!!) are out there doing what they've always done, and they're in their prime!
...And we get to see more of that!
Star Trek lives. It's not the Trek we knew, but Star Trek lives.