Going into the theaters, I was excited to see this movie. Finally, a Star Trek on a budget that could do it justice. Unlike many hardcore trekkies (and I proudly count myself amongst their ranks), I did not mind the 'reboot'. That's part of the literary process, and the longer you go, the more bogged down you become in canon. So I was looking forward to see what Abrams could do with it, especially since he could really re-write canon as he saw fit.
It started off with great promise, the first scene of the movie amongst the best in the film - pure action that gets your heart racing. When the Star Trek logo came on after the first scene, I was on the edge of my seat.
Unfortunately, the excitement quickly died off. The first moment came when Pike was describing what Starfleet was - and consipicously excluded exploration from the description. An oversight perhaps? Fine.
The question is not what they did to canon, but how they fundamentally changed it. If you look at the corridors of places like NASA, and science departments across the countries, you'll find many more Trekkies than Star Wars fans. Why? Because Star Trek was about ideas, Star Wars about action. It made you think - it was not merely a utopian vision of a future, but it was cerebral. The action complemented the ideas, and it meant something.
Most reviewers are treating this as a summer action flick, which it is, and it succeeds well. You'll go, and if you're looking for action, it'll be money well spent and you'll come home happy. But it's not going to make you think at night - and that's a tragedy. There are no moral dillemas, no pushing the boundaries, nothing to make you think once the credits roll. The only thing missing was a lightsaber.
It started off with great promise, the first scene of the movie amongst the best in the film - pure action that gets your heart racing. When the Star Trek logo came on after the first scene, I was on the edge of my seat.
Unfortunately, the excitement quickly died off. The first moment came when Pike was describing what Starfleet was - and consipicously excluded exploration from the description. An oversight perhaps? Fine.
The question is not what they did to canon, but how they fundamentally changed it. If you look at the corridors of places like NASA, and science departments across the countries, you'll find many more Trekkies than Star Wars fans. Why? Because Star Trek was about ideas, Star Wars about action. It made you think - it was not merely a utopian vision of a future, but it was cerebral. The action complemented the ideas, and it meant something.
Most reviewers are treating this as a summer action flick, which it is, and it succeeds well. You'll go, and if you're looking for action, it'll be money well spent and you'll come home happy. But it's not going to make you think at night - and that's a tragedy. There are no moral dillemas, no pushing the boundaries, nothing to make you think once the credits roll. The only thing missing was a lightsaber.