I like the digital clocks. It's a logical idea for a starship, but I'm sure it was a nightmare for the editors and continuity people to keep the readouts correct for each scene.
I disagree. I like the scene precisely because it's morally ambiguous. Meyer really liked giving the
Enterprise crew definite flaws to overcome. It makes them more interesting characters, IMO.
I don't really read it that way. I think any romantic vibes you're picking up were probably intentional misdirection so we didn't immediately suspect the new character.
The technical term for those is "jokes."
Yeah, I can't disagree with you there. Starfleet suddenly having Colonels was also weird. I know they're a combined service, but the rank structure was pure Navy up until this. Mixing in ranks from other services is just odd, especially when you're just doing it for an in-joke.
I'm of two minds about it. I kind of liked the idea of a Klingon being the actual shooter ("They conspired with us to assassinate their own Chancellor. How trustworthy can they be?"), but the Col. West reveal does give a payoff to the pink blood thing. (Which I really wish other
Trek productions had continued with, personally.)
I totally missed Spock palming it on to Kirk's shoulder on my first viewing. I might've noticed it during the Klingon trial scene, but I probably just thought it was a costume error like Valeris' mismatching uniform (Now THAT really bugs me). I appreciate that Meyer was playing fair with his audience and showing the patch before its purpose was revealed. Mysteries are more fun if the audience has a genuine chance to solve them.
I really disagree with this. Yes, the film has plot holes that reveal the haste with which it was written, but visually, I think it's one of the best
Trek films. I think all the alien extras at Rura Penthe and the Khitomer Conference, as well as the second unit footage from Alaska all give the film a lot of scope. It's one of the more expansive
Trek films out there, and I think it's too bad they didn't have a little more money to give it even more spectacle.
Yeah, some of those they could've redressed a little more aggressively. It's horribly obvious that the banquet hall is just Picard's conference room. That shape was too distinctive to disguise.
I took me a while to pick up that the President's office was a redressed Ten-Forward, so that one I think they disguised better. And on the Paris backdrop... c'mon. Paris probably isn't going to change all that much, and the painting was partially obscured by curtains. All they needed for that scene was something that established "futuristic Paris" and they already had a matte painting that did that. It would've been stupid to do an entirely new one.
Hell, TWOK used a painted backdrop of San Francisco from
The Towering Inferno with a couple of model buildings added for the view outside Kirk's apartment, but I never hear complaints about that the way I do about them reusing something that was actually created for a
Star Trek production.
Spending money designing & installing an entirely new lighting scheme for something that would be seen onscreen for literally seconds would've been a stupid waste of budget. As dumb as building an entire three-story Stellar Cartography set in
Generations for a simple exposition scene.
100% agreed. The first requires him to put on his party manners for a few hours (which he also tried to do in TUC, btw). A bit unpleasant, but not a big deal in the grand scheme of things. Permanent peace with the Klingons means an entire change of life for Kirk, and possibly even Klingons becoming Federation citizens. That was scary to Kirk. The older you get, the more conservative and set in your ways you tend to become. It happens.
And it's a much more dramatic arc if Kirk learns to overcome his prejudice over the course of the story, which he did.
Agreed! Look at how guilty Valeris looks in her final scene on Khitomer. She's pretty shattered.

Great point!
Exactly. That line got a big laugh from anyone who remembered the 1970s.
Star Trek isn't a documentary of life in the 23rd century, it's a drama/adventure series made for viewers of today. Too many fans forget that.
Sounds needlessly slow. It's much more dramatic to just have Spock abruptly pull Valeris to him and you don't know
what he's going to do. Remember that he was angry enough in the previous scene to actually
slap the phaser out of Valeris's hand. We've never seen Spock this angry and betrayed before. And this wasn't a dumb temper tantrum like the Zachary Quinto seems to have at least once per movie now. This is controlled fury. Like Meyer told Montalban when he was directing him in TWOK, you never show an audience your top, because then you have nowhere to go. The small things that Nimoy did as Spock had much more impact than Quinto's screaming did.
Sorry for going on a bit, but TUC is one of my favorite
Trek films. (It's neck & neck with TWOK for me, actually.) I'm not unaware of its flaws, but it still works like gangbusters for me.