I've yet to see an adequate explanation as to why this movie is so good, not a single adequate comment from any of the gushers. You people need to face it: You like the movie because you simply like the movie. As I said in a previous thread, most people just like things without a clear reason why, rendering them unable to utilize their critical thinking abilities to render a proper judgment on the object of their enjoyment. Their love is a simpler kind, an emotional attachment instead of a rational kind. This is the norm, it appears, don't don't be deluded into thinking that frequency makes it any more valid. So yeah, I do question the critical thinking skills of most of the gushers: The movie is simply not as good as they are making it out to be.
Where I HAVE seen the compelling arguments regarding the attributes of this movie are from the non-crazed critics and those who are a more nuanced or mixed opinion. Just because you like the movie does not make you simple, it's how you like the movie and why. If you can identify specific and real reasons why you like it that are consistent, you are obviously not an idiot. If you like the movie because you "Like it" there is no rational process behind that.
So, prove me wrong. Make a rational appeal for the film that is both consistent and based off of well considered observations.
What a sad, limited life you must lead. One destined for many bitter disappointments, I should think.
No one needs to "prove" anything to you, you supercilious twit. Apart from professional film critics, no one is obligated to "make a rational appeal" to justify enjoying ANY movie. It's entertainment. WHY someone likes a film (or a piece of music, or a painting, or any form of art) neither requires a "rational" reason NOR does lacking such a reason represent grounds for considering someone as lacking "critical thinking skills".
Do you really spend your time examining every piece of art you encounter--whether the simplest of commercial pop art or a canvas painted by a Renaissance master (or anything in between)--looking for "rational reasons" to enjoy it? Is your enjoyment of any of those incomplete and invalid if you cannot articulate those reasons? If so, then I repeat, you must lead a sad, limited life full of bitter disappointment.
Of course one can examine a film critically and evaluate it against a set of criteria that is generally considered a valid measure of the quality of a film (cinematography, screenplay, set design, character development, plot coherence, acting performances, visual effects work, musical score, direction, etc.). In the end, though, even these criteria contain a subjective element in terms of one's appreciation. Does the new film fall short of perfection against these criteria? Of course it does. Feel better now?
Of course, what constitutes an "objectively good movie" and what constitutes a "good movie to an individual viewer" often differs.
Casablanca is revered as a classic, even "perfect" film. It is one of my personal favourites. However, measured against the "checklist", it is full of flaws. If I only applied "rational" reasons to it, it would be hampered by its many flaws and I would be forced to conclude that it is "not good". I don't enjoy
Casablanca for merely "rational" reasons. I enjoy it because it evokes a number of strong feelings--feelings that compel me to watch it at least once (if not twice) a year. I don't have to "prove" to you that
Casablanca is a film I find "fantastic". That I do is its own justification--it's entertainment, not an engineering proposal for a safer airframe on jetliners. The same applies to this new Trek movie. WHY I like it is irrelevant to judging my intelligence or the quality of my "critical thinking skills". To believe otherwise is to be insufferably boorish, as well as foolish (to make such a sweeping conclusion about a person's intellect based on such a narrow set of data is, frankly, rather poor reasoning).
You are free to require that your "art appreciation" be "rational". It is a limited and stifling approach, but that's your choice. I (and most people) look to be entertained by our entertainment--and the hows and whys are entirely self-justified. They need no approbation from the likes of you. IF such entertainment also happens to stimulate our intellect AND we find such stimulation enjoyable, so much the better. But seeking such stimulation in escapist fun is not a requirement for one to be considered intelligent. To borrow one of those famous "deep" lessons from Trek--(I paraphrase as I have not memorized every line of dialogue ever uttered in Trek--my "intellect" is not sufficient to the task, I guess): "the more advanced the species, the greater the need for play" (that's from Shore Leave in the first season of TOS, for anyone not familiar with the reference). "Play" need not tax one's intellect to be legitimate. And Trek has never been intellectually taxing--why expect it to be so now?