As for the villain, not really sure I understand his motivations at all. Another human with a beef with humanity. Would have been better had he just been an alien with a grudge.
The previous two movies were "events". Beyond suffers from being "another Star Trek movie". But hopefully positive word of mouth and reviews will mean less of a drop-off after opening weekend.
If you piece everything together, Krall's motivations were ok. He was a soldier from the ENT era where life was more violent. He could not cope with the new reality of a peaceful Federation where instead of being a soldier, he was expected to be a starship captain conducting peaceful exploration all the time. He hoped that by killing everyone at Yorktown that he could force the Federation to go back to the conflict and struggle that he was comfortable with. Unfortunately, the movie does not really spend enough time explaining Krall's motivations. I think the movie wanted to keep the action going and therefore did not want to get bogged down with too many "talky" scenes that could have fleshed out the villain. The idea of an ex starfleet captain who cannot cope with a new reality and who was stranded on a planet that has driven him mad, is a good concept. In fact, we've seen the crazy/disgruntled starfleet captain before. It was a common trope in TOS and TNG. So I do think it was better than an alien with a grudge. It just needed to be explained better to the audience.
Entirely subjective, humour is always a subject of debate. I found his moments funny enough. As far as Pegg's accent, it sounds fine to me, and I've lived in Scotland most of my life.Could really do with less Simon Pegg as Scotty as almost none of his "comedy" moments were funny, and his accent is pretty poor too.
Entirely subjective, humour is always a subject of debate. I found his moments funny enough. As far as Pegg's accent, it sounds fine to me, and I've lived in Scotland most of my life.
Like the previous rebooted movies, it's a good action movie but not a very good Trek movie.
Like the previous rebooted movies, it's a good action movie but not a very good Trek movie.
He hoped that by killing everyone at Yorktown that he could force the Federation to go back to the conflict and struggle that he was comfortable with.
I don't think he wanted anything to do with the Federation. The way I saw it, the attack was because the Federation was encroaching on his space.
No, I think he was hunting all the time for the artifact the Enterprise-crew found and wanted to hand over to that alien race at the beginning of the movie. He was biding his time and searching for his ultimate weapon to punish the Federation.
I don't think he wanted anything to do with the Federation. The way I saw it, the attack was because the Federation was encroaching on his space.
- And of course the Abram's Stupidly Dense Combat Formations... Seriously? He really could not think of anything better than a ramming drones (without even shields!), which attack the starship in ridiculously dence formations? A few old-fashioned neutron blasts would just took out the whole swarm instantly, and I failed to understood, how could photon torpedoes - antimatter weapon, for Pete's sake! - be "ineffective" against such perfect targets.
Maybe they can show less previews? My goodness, after like the 5th or 6th trailer, I'm like get on with the damn movie already. This is already after the previews starting a few minutes late, and then having to sit through another damn Coke commercial after the previews. Sorry, needed to rant on how much time is spent on this stuff, lol.Well, the theaters are partners in these movies. They need to be able to show them multiple times a day. Hopefully, there is plenty of deleted scenes that can be added to the home release.
The torpedoes did not hit anything. They went right through the swarm.
You do realize J.J. didn't direct this movie, right?And what forbade to just detonate them with proximity sensors? Or command control? Or simply set time for detonation?
Please, it's impossible to put any sense in J.J. Abrams apparent inability to imagine space combat that wouldn't need hand-to-hand combat distances and zero relative velocities.
You do realize J.J. didn't direct this movie, right?
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