To understanding the movie's philosophy, that is. The red matter of the movie looks llike like nothing so much as red gumballs (particularly in that one delightfully surreal sequence where the screen is filled with out-of-focus globules of the stuff), signalling us that this movie is a bubblegum entertainment, nothing more.
Those of us trekkies who were fans of TOS as a somewhat cerebral and self-serious presentation of solid pulp SF in a serious dramatic format (easy to forget, in this post-NuBSG world, just how groundbreaking that was) were right to dread this movie and many of us, with good reason, will despise it. In many ways, it is a betrayal of what we looked to Star Trek to be. But mainstream media science fiction has grown a great deal since 1966 and, in a world that has given us 2001, The Man Who Fell to Earth, Blade Runner, A Scanner Darkly, eXistenZ, Children of Men and even Robo-Cop (shrewd and devastating satire, there), do we really need Star Trek to be brainy? Yes, this new movie is a travesty in the truest sense of the word but it is an infectiously enjoyable travesty, with a heart that fills the space where its brain should be and a delightfully sophomoric sense of whimsy. (Plus, the old canard about Kirk romancing green women has finally been made real.)
In short, and in spite of it being everything I feared it would be, I liked--no, loved--this movie. seems I still have taste for the red matter after all.
Those of us trekkies who were fans of TOS as a somewhat cerebral and self-serious presentation of solid pulp SF in a serious dramatic format (easy to forget, in this post-NuBSG world, just how groundbreaking that was) were right to dread this movie and many of us, with good reason, will despise it. In many ways, it is a betrayal of what we looked to Star Trek to be. But mainstream media science fiction has grown a great deal since 1966 and, in a world that has given us 2001, The Man Who Fell to Earth, Blade Runner, A Scanner Darkly, eXistenZ, Children of Men and even Robo-Cop (shrewd and devastating satire, there), do we really need Star Trek to be brainy? Yes, this new movie is a travesty in the truest sense of the word but it is an infectiously enjoyable travesty, with a heart that fills the space where its brain should be and a delightfully sophomoric sense of whimsy. (Plus, the old canard about Kirk romancing green women has finally been made real.)
In short, and in spite of it being everything I feared it would be, I liked--no, loved--this movie. seems I still have taste for the red matter after all.
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