Psion,
Not to put a fine point on it...but what things would you nitpick? Just simple curiosity.
I have been a fan of Tobias' work since the days of the Amiga, and I have no qualms with the execution of his work. He's an artist, and calling him "talented" undersells what he can do. Please consider the following in the context of what it is: actively straining to find something that *I* feel might need tweaking. As such, it's all highly subjective.
00:00 - 00:13. I don't like really dense asteroid fields. They're a trope in science fiction since
The Empire Strikes Back and they simply don't look like that. The rings of Saturn are less dense. Our solar system has a significant asteroid field between Mars and Jupiter, and if it was as dense as what's seen all the time in SF productions, it would look like a great arc cutting through the night sky -- and would probably be visible in daylight, too. Asteroids have mass. With mass comes gravity. When you have enough asteroids that close together, they will condense into a planet in very little time.
00:14 - 00:17. Gorgeous. Simple, understated, but I like it. It hearkens back to the opening of
Star Trek: The Motion Picture.
00:18 - 00:20. Good, but I think the cinéma vérité camera shake looks a little artificial. It could use more fine jitter. I'm also not a fan of starships hanging so close to the ground. I'm old-school on this and don't think they belong in an atmosphere without lots of special engineering. Still, it's a dramatic shot.
00:21 - 00:27. Tony Todd as Ramirez. Nice angle, nice contrast and lighting.
00:28 - 00:30. Exquisite model work on the Ares and space dock. But the dock itself looks a little flat. There isn't enough variety and texture. I also think there's a little too much ambient occlusion shadow wash over the bridge superstructure.
00:31 - 00:34. More Tony Todd. But the backdrop with Earth and the starfield looks wrong. Take a look at close photos of the Earth sometime and you'll see that the planet is so bright that it washes out the stars. It's a mistake we see all the time in
Star Trek productions, and just one we have to live with ... like sound in space. The closeup on Todd also shows a
huge number of stars behind him that just looks distracting.
00:35 - 00:38. The
Ares in dock. I love the design and execution, but the hull looks dull and lifeless here. Maybe it's the lighting. Maybe, since there's an Aztec pattern, I keep expecting the hull to glisten in subtle hues the way the
Enterprise did in ST:TMP. At the same time, the nacelles look great. And I wish the
Ares had those three little round window things up front the way the original
Enterprise did.
00:39 - 00:50. J.G. Hertzler -- damn that guy was great in DS9! I have the same shrugs about the background.
00:51 - 00:53. The
Ares in a nebula or atmosphere. No complaints ... the ship looks much nicer here.
00:54 - 00:57. Khaaaaaaaarrrrrnnnn! Nice makeup on Richard Hatch. He's not a sneering caricature of evil, either, but obviously an intelligent man. It's a welcome take on Klingons. My wife thinks his ridges are too subtle, but there's tons of variety in Klingon foreheads. Besides, the Augment virus might have had subtle effects on Kharn.
00:58 - 01:09. Ambassador Soval. I loved this character. I assume that's Vulcan outside the window. It's odd that the stars are all tinted amber -- is that the result of color correction?
01:10 - 01:11. Wreck of the (Kelvin?). Billowing fireball in space. NASA has some footage out there of what fire in a micro-g environment would look like, even if someone can figure out how to get the oxygen the fireball needs in a vacuum. Yeah, yeah, I know. It's beautiful anyway. It'd be boring my way. Leave it.
01:12 - 01:14. Nice. Simple, no distracting background (see that JJ?!) Kate sells the scene in just two seconds of acting.
01:14 - 01:16. Kate again, different scene. Same problem with starfield. Seriously, is that even a problem? It looks nice anyway.
01:17 - 01:20. Shush, I'm drooling. And look! The three round things on the front of the ships! I wonder what they do.
01:21 - 01:26. Kate and Richard. I like the hilt on his sword. Good detail work on the prop.
01:27 - 01:30. The
U.S.S. Leonov unleashes a fusillade of energy bolts. One of the things I did like about J.J.'s movie was the introduction of new weapon designs on Starfleet vessels. There isn't a thing wrong with this shot that I can see.
01:31 - 01:35. Richard interrupts Tobias' work again, dammit.
01:36 - 01:50. Wow. WOW. WOW! Alright, wait a minute, let me think, I'm supposed to be nitpicking. Ah! Do the ships have to be so tightly packed together? Shouldn't they be tens of miles away from each other at the very least? This is something that started with DS9 ... pack in the ships really tight and make it look more dramatic. I wish someone would break this trope and try to find a way to dramatically depict battles at realistic ranges.
01:51 - 01:52. That yammering Klingon interrupts the action again!
01:53 - 01:55. A nice cityscape. I agree with Duane's CG artist friend. There is something a little cartoonish about them. Maybe more variety in building texture? Most of them look like they're made out of the same batch of poured concrete. But I love the homage to TOS city architecture.
01:55 - 01:56. Those phasers hitting the city are like a gut punch. But I get the feeling that they look like they should be doing more damage. Buildings should be actively crumbling as the beams draw near ... heat shimmers should be coming off of them ... blast shimmers, too, like you see off big bombs. Those beams should be hitting the city with a force that dwarfs lightning they're twin fingers of God, sowing destruction.
01:57 - 01:58. The aftermath. I buy it.
01:59 - 02:10. Garth of Izar. My biggest fear for this production revolves around this man. Is he any good? Will he actually be able to carry the production or is the producer's desire to depict himself as the hero putting the whole thing in jeopardy? I ... still don't know. He looks sincere. And I like the slightly wide-eyed delivery. So far, so good!
02:11 - 02:21. Gorgeous. Works well with Todd's voice over.
02:22 - 02:26. "... I do not fear the Klingon Empire!"
Alright, I elaborated on my nitpicks, but that's ALL they are. Honestly, this is brilliant work, through and through. And most of my complaints are either subjective or based on a different opinion about
Star Trek canon. At that, for a number of shots, I had to work to find a complaint.