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One of the best reviews I have seen so far

He lost me with his comments on Bana. Granted, his performance here wasn't the best, but there also wasn't much to work with.

It's really hard to believe that anyone who's seen a fair sampling of his work could call him a bad actor.

Yeah, thats' one of the faults of the movie. The one dimensional villain. But I could live with that as he wasn't that important, character wise, to the personal developments of Kirk and Spock.
 
I think Bana loved his part; he called the Narada his set -- and he said with obvious pride that the set was just huge.
 
All I can say is that, if I am trapped on a desert island, and I can bring only four "Trek" movies with me, this would definitely be one of them.

Come on. There are plot holes, monumental coincidences, questionable character motivations, and re-hashing of previous stories in EVERY "Trek" film. Compared with the utter non-stories of "Star Trek: The Motion Picture" and "Insurrection," I thought this was a pretty good script. (Obviously, some important scenes were lost in editing, but I don't blame the writers for that.)

I seriously can't understand how anyone who saw "Star Trek: The Motion Picture" can say with a straight face that this new movie isn't about anything. (I'll take Nero over V'ger any day of the week.)

To the contrary, this is one of the first "Trek" films that shows time travel having real consequences, rather than having a big reset button at the end that removes all possibility of drama and suspense.

Unlike the "Star Wars" prequels, where we already know how everything will turn out, this new timeline enables us to see familiar characters again, but we can't say, "I know that character will be around 10 years from now, so he will never be in any jeopardy," or, "I know Vulcan is still around 100 years from now, so there's no chance of it being destroyed."

Had this movie been that kind of literal prequel, there would be much less drama or suspense, since we'd already know that nothing dramatic can happen to change the course of history.

This plotline was the only way to use these popular characters again, while at the same time giving them actual threats and jeopardy to overcome.

It doesn't matter whether we use a "red matter" black hole to go back and get the screenwriter of "Casablanca" to script the next film. A vocal minority of "Star Trek" fans will ALWAYS find SOMETHING to complain about.
Perfectly put. If anything, this film raises the bar for Star Trek in general and these writers in particular. I think they're up to the task. We shall see.
 
This is easily one of the best reviews for the movie that I have seen. Detailed, but not too nitpicky, and scathing without being unnecessarily brutal. It also sums up my experience: Fast and entertaining (well, I wasn't entertained at all, but I'm a Seventh Seal and Andre Rublev guy) but completely and utterly lacking in substance.

Also, very poor screenwriting. Very, very poor screenwriting. Star Wars prequel level of bad screenwriting.

http://expectyoutodie.blogspot.com/2009/05/special-guest-post-star-trek-xi-no.html

I agree with a lot of this, but I'm not as critical.

I consider this movie a stimulus package for the Star Trek franchise. It's a bright, colorful surge of energy to violently take a stagnant series off life-support and thrust it back into the mainstream. It was effective, but yes, somewhat shallow and I think we can all agree that Nero is the least interesting nemesis to ever grace the world of Trek.

Having said that, I actually really enjoyed the movie and most of it quirks. How I ultimately feel about the reboot will depend on where Abrams and company take the next movie... if it's as shallow as this one, I can guarantee that we'll see Trek, once again, fade into obscurity.
 
This is easily one of the best reviews for the movie that I have seen. Detailed, but not too nitpicky, and scathing without being unnecessarily brutal. It also sums up my experience: Fast and entertaining (well, I wasn't entertained at all, but I'm a Seventh Seal and Andre Rublev guy) but completely and utterly lacking in substance.

Also, very poor screenwriting. Very, very poor screenwriting. Star Wars prequel level of bad screenwriting.

http://expectyoutodie.blogspot.com/2009/05/special-guest-post-star-trek-xi-no.html

I agree with a lot of this, but I'm not as critical.

I consider this movie a stimulus package for the Star Trek franchise. It's a bright, colorful surge of energy to violently take a stagnant series off life-support and thrust it back into the mainstream. It was effective, but yes, somewhat shallow and I think we can all agree that Nero is the least interesting nemesis to ever grace the world of Trek.

Having said that, I actually really enjoyed the movie and most of it quirks. How I ultimately feel about the reboot will depend on where Abrams and company take the next movie... if it's as shallow as this one, I can guarantee that we'll see Trek, once again, fade into obscurity.

Agreed. I enjoyed the movie for what it was. Like a nice piece of candy.
Except the stimulus was more like a sugar rush. The problem with a sugar rush is when you come down from it, there's that empty feeling. It doesn't deeply satisfy.
Still, dessert is the favorite course of a meal for many people, so starting the meal with dessert isn't such a bed attention getter. But now that everyone's at the table, here's hoping the next course is a little more substantial.
 
This is easily one of the best reviews for the movie that I have seen. Detailed, but not too nitpicky, and scathing without being unnecessarily brutal. It also sums up my experience: Fast and entertaining (well, I wasn't entertained at all, but I'm a Seventh Seal and Andre Rublev guy) but completely and utterly lacking in substance.

Also, very poor screenwriting. Very, very poor screenwriting. Star Wars prequel level of bad screenwriting.

http://expectyoutodie.blogspot.com/2009/05/special-guest-post-star-trek-xi-no.html

I agree with a lot of this, but I'm not as critical.

I consider this movie a stimulus package for the Star Trek franchise. It's a bright, colorful surge of energy to violently take a stagnant series off life-support and thrust it back into the mainstream. It was effective, but yes, somewhat shallow and I think we can all agree that Nero is the least interesting nemesis to ever grace the world of Trek.

Having said that, I actually really enjoyed the movie and most of it quirks. How I ultimately feel about the reboot will depend on where Abrams and company take the next movie... if it's as shallow as this one, I can guarantee that we'll see Trek, once again, fade into obscurity.

Agreed. I enjoyed the movie for what it was. Like a nice piece of candy.
Except the stimulus was more like a sugar rush. The problem with a sugar rush is when you come down from it, there's that empty feeling. It doesn't deeply satisfy.
Still, dessert is the favorite course of a meal for many people, so starting the meal with dessert isn't such a bed attention getter. But now that everyone's at the table, here's hoping the next course is a little more substantial.

Everything makes more sense when we speak in culinary metaphor :cool:
 
Give me a break, he more or less delineated everything wrong with the movie.
No -- what he did was miss the point of the movie.

Reviewer's quote:
...This film isn't "about" anything, except putting the band back together, or together for the first time, or whatever...
Yes -- the film is "about" Kirk and Spock (and the others, but less so) and their journey towards friendship. It doesn't need to be about anything else.

This film is about the TOS characters, plain and simple. So, yeah -- as the reviewer said: it's about getting the band together. What's wrong with that?
 
I agree about Kirk's behavior during K-M. It was flat out smug.

It was supposed to be. He wanted everyone to know that he altered it, it couldn't have been more blatant. The entire point was that he disagreed with the purpose of the test. His performance was a protest, a stunt, from the very beginning.

Agree about Earth too. It was an insulting, ethnocentric plot twist to destroy Vulcan but not Earth.
Ethnocentric, eh? Yes, I'm sure all the space aliens watching ST09 are so offended.

Agree about the red matter McGuffin. I hate that kind of deus ex machina garbage.
McGuffin - yes. Deus ex machina - not in the slightest. I think you don't know what that term means.

Yeah, definitely some flaws in the film. I don't deny it. Still think it stacks up pretty well with other Trek.
Here at least I agree.
 
Wow - I loved the review and finally got a chance to read Orr's insightful comments. Yes, the review was full of sarcasm - so what? It's a blog and that's the wonderful thing about blogs - you can let go.

I really liked this part of Orr's review:

I'm not going to describe the rest of the story in any detail because, if I did, you wouldn't believe me. It is not without reason that the movie itself withholds its explanations until about the 90-minute mark and, even then, delivers them by expository Vulcan mind meld, presumably to avoid the otherwise inevitable "You have got to be kidding me" response. Suffice to say that the script (by Roberto Orci and Alex Kurtzman) may be the most preposterous since Lex Luthor decided to take over the world by way of kryptonic real estate: This is a film with, literally, a black hole where its plot should be. There were moments when I couldn't help but wonder whether George Lucas had somehow gotten his cinematic butterfingers on yet another iconic movie franchise.

I think this movie is doing so well because it is just another summer blockbuster - not because it is Star Trek. People love it because it's a fun popcorn flick that doesn't really get serious about anything. The effect of the destruction of Vulcan (and Romulus) is treated as shallowly as Alderaan on Star Wars. Wait, Ben Kenobi sensed it and treated it as a tragedy. Spock just kissed Uhura and that made it all better. (Whoops, sorry I used sarcasm and we're not supposed to do that here..)
 
The effect of the destruction of Vulcan (and Romulus) is treated as shallowly as Alderaan on Star Wars... Spock just kissed Uhura and that made it all better.

You must have missed the whole "emotionally comprimised" thing and Spock giving up command after he loses it.
 
...I think this movie is doing so well because it is just another summer blockbuster - not because it is Star Trek. People love it because it's a fun popcorn flick that doesn't really get serious about anything. The effect of the destruction of Vulcan (and Romulus) is treated as shallowly as Alderaan on Star Wars. Wait, Ben Kenobi sensed it and treated it as a tragedy. Spock just kissed Uhura and that made it all better. (Whoops, sorry I used sarcasm and we're not supposed to do that here..)
I know I felt at least a little emotional over the loss of Vulcan. Perhaps this film just pushed different buttons in me than it did in you.

I don't think there is a need to overtly show a bunch of people on screen lamenting the loss of the planet to give that loss an emotional punch. I thought a lot of the understated silence that accompanied the aftermath of the destruction of Vulcan was powerful enough -- I didn't need someone on screen demonstrating how badly I should feel about it.
 
Funny how these bits of Orr's review get ignored:

Still, for all its faults--and it has plenty to go around--Star Trek is nearly impossible to dislike. In his daft, dizzy reinvention of a moribund franchise, Abrams has found a way to be referential without being reverential, to conjure nostalgia without being constrained by it. He may play fast and loose with the world he's been bequeathed, but at least the movie he gets out of it is itself fast and loose.

and

But if he had, there's little chance Star Trek would have proven such a gas. Sharp casting deserves much of the credit. In the central roles, Pine brings a wry magnetism to the impetuous Kirk, even if he takes a while to settle into the role, and Quinto, who was one of few bright spots on "Heroes," makes his Spock rather more human and decidedly more ironic than Leonard Nimoy's. Touring the bridge: Zoe Saldana is pleasantly assertive as the lovely Lieutenant Uhura, even if her miniskirt has grown no more military-appropriate; John Cho adds a spot of swordplay to his helmsman duties as Sulu (though anyone who's followed his Harold & Kumar work would have to conclude he's the last person in the galaxy to be trusted piloting a trillion-dollar starship); and, as whiz-kid Chekov, Anton Yelchin has more fun with a cartoon Russian accent than anyone since John Malkovich in Rounders.
Karl Urban, who played an assassin in The Bourne Supremacy and Eomer in the Lord of the Rings movies, is oddly cast as Dr. McCoy--he still looks as though he'd be more comfortable administering injuries than healing them--but the gamble pays off neatly (though the inevitable, inside-joke "Damn it, man, I'm a doctor, not a physicist," might've been a tad more creative). Bruce Greenwood brings a stoic likability to the mentor role of Captain Pike. And Simon Pegg, who shows up a bit later than the rest, is every bit as amusing as one might hope as the excitable engineer Scotty. The only obvious misstep is the genuinely peculiar choice of Winona Ryder in the (small) role of Spock's fiftyish mom.
source

(Ryder as Amanda would have seemed less peculiar, I think, if the scenes with the infant Spock had not been cut)

Orr raises some valid criticisms (though I think he's also suffering from the nostalgic "Star Trek was more cerebral than..." a little bit). But he also doesn't argue that anyone who likes it is "lacking critical thinking skills" or is "an idiot". Certainly not the most persuasive of supplemental evidence that the movie is not worth watching.
 
I liked Star Trek. It's a fun summer flick BUT deeply flawed, espeically in terms of plot and story. The screenplay is a mess. And Nero and his ship are horrible villains.
Mere placeholders, really.
 
I agree completely with the review - not only its criticisms, but also its observation that, despite its flaws, it's very watchable. It's a fun, action-packed piece of popcorn cinema, and if it's not Star Trek as a result, well, there are a lot of fun popcorn movies that aren't. Personally, I was hoping for a smart film, in addition to an action film, and even though I agree that it was a really stupid script about nothing real - sorry, but "it's about the fundamental relationships of Kirk and Spock, as well as the rest of the crew" still doesn't make it about anything at all - it's still mostly watchable. Its biggest hindrance wasn't even the utter lack of a story - it was the utter lack of restraint in the cinematography! It's physically difficult to watch, even more than it is intellectually.
 
The lens flare and "shaky-cam" thing? I guess I can understand how it could be bothersome (but I've seen far worse examples of the latter--the former didn't really register all that much, except that I noticed it was there) but I had no issues with it (was refreshing after watching a very statically shot film--Becket--the night before).
 
The lens flare and "shaky-cam" thing? I guess I can understand how it could be bothersome (but I've seen far worse examples of the latter--the former didn't really register all that much, except that I noticed it was there) but I had no issues with it (was refreshing after watching a very statically shot film--Becket--the night before).

It was difficult fo me to try to focus on details when the camera was either moving frantically or the angle kept switching.
That said, was it just me, or did the amount or severity of the camera movement seem to decrease as the movie progressed? Or maybe I was getting used to it. But I think it's the former, really.

As it stands now, I'd have to say somewhere in between the depth of the story, the pacing, and the cinematography of TMP and those same aspects of ST09 lies the perfect Star Trek movie.
 
I agree completely with the review - not only its criticisms, but also its observation that, despite its flaws, it's very watchable. It's a fun, action-packed piece of popcorn cinema, and if it's not Star Trek as a result, well, there are a lot of fun popcorn movies that aren't. Personally, I was hoping for a smart film, in addition to an action film, and even though I agree that it was a really stupid script about nothing real - sorry, but "it's about the fundamental relationships of Kirk and Spock, as well as the rest of the crew" still doesn't make it about anything at all - it's still mostly watchable. Its biggest hindrance wasn't even the utter lack of a story - it was the utter lack of restraint in the cinematography! It's physically difficult to watch, even more than it is intellectually.
I don't understand what makes a film a "Star Trek Film" to some people. This film had characters who were very recognizable as their TOS counterparts, it certainly had the feeling of adventure and hope that accompanied most good Star Trek films, and -- most importantly -- was a vehicle that allowed those recognizable characters to interact in a witty manner.

I believe that character interaction is in fact what makes a film a "Star Trek Film".

You may say it wasn't "smart enough", but two of the best-liked Star Trek films (TWoK and FC) weren't any smarter. Those were also full of plot holes, questionable science, not-too-original plotlines, and a little bad dialog -- but they were "fun" films that allowed the characters to interact in enjoyable ways, just like this film.
 
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The effect of the destruction of Vulcan (and Romulus) is treated as shallowly as Alderaan on Star Wars... Spock just kissed Uhura and that made it all better.

You must have missed the whole "emotionally comprimised" thing and Spock giving up command after he loses it.

Actually, I'm referring to the fact that the "emotionally compromised" thing is dismissed completely by that unVulcan like kiss. Another poster somewhere talked about how the destruction of a Vulcan ship elsewhere in the series so disturbed the telepathic Spock that he showed it as visibly. In the movie, Spock is just human and is treated that way. There is little trace of "Vulcan" in him.
 
I agree completely with the review - not only its criticisms, but also its observation that, despite its flaws, it's very watchable. It's a fun, action-packed piece of popcorn cinema, and if it's not Star Trek as a result, well, there are a lot of fun popcorn movies that aren't. Personally, I was hoping for a smart film, in addition to an action film, and even though I agree that it was a really stupid script about nothing real - sorry, but "it's about the fundamental relationships of Kirk and Spock, as well as the rest of the crew" still doesn't make it about anything at all - it's still mostly watchable. Its biggest hindrance wasn't even the utter lack of a story - it was the utter lack of restraint in the cinematography! It's physically difficult to watch, even more than it is intellectually.

I absolutely agree with your assessment about Orr's review which is spot on, giving words to my sentiments about the movie, and with especially your comments about the cinematography.

I watched it today for the second time - the first time on a big screen, today on a smaller screen... and still, I couldn't really watch the beginning and the scene on that drilling machine (and the flying down to get there) on Vulcan without getting dizzy.

It was difficult fo me to try to focus on details when the camera was either moving frantically or the angle kept switching.
That said, was it just me, or did the amount or severity of the camera movement seem to decrease as the movie progressed? Or maybe I was getting used to it. But I think it's the former, really.

I think, too, that it did decrease a bit after the Vulcan scene. From then on out I had no problems any longer. Well, but there were no such intense scenes in the rest of the movie, so perhaps it's a bit of both, a decrease and me getting used to it.

Strangest thing though, a friend of mine complained of dizziness right at the end during the "hommage" to the TOS credits when the camera moved quickly between the planets, and she didn't have problems at all during the movie - I didn't feel dizzy at the end credits at all...
 
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