If you had “criticized” any part of the franchise, there would’ve been defenders to comment on your thoughts. Kinda what fans do.
I disagree. There is more defensiveness toward the first Abrams film than any other slice of the franchise. Been there from Day One, still there eleven years later.
This thread is a perfect example. I'm literally the only one critiquing it -- in a thread that, yes, admittedly is meant to be about a different ST film in a different "universe" -- and yet I have no less than
six other people lashing back against me. If you don't see that as defensiveness, that might be because you're amongst that same cohort. People have a hard time noticing their actions or taking responsibility when part of a multitude.
To be fair, after a spirited fight, Kruge was defeated and hanging from the edge of a cliff. In typical Kirk fashion Kirk stopped fighting and offered mercy to his opponent.
Kirk only killed Kurge after Kurge tried to continue the fight. I saw no bitterness on Kirk's part, exasperation would be more accurate.
I guess the police also get "exasperated" when they murder a combative person in their custody. I thought you could get behind a more negative epithet like "bitterly". Apparently, not.
So, yes. I acknowledge that Kirk has performed dark actions prior to ST 09. Although, in fairness, in ST III, Kruge had just had Kirk's son executed, and he was literally trying to pull Kirk off a cliff.
The Narada wasn't imperilling the Enterprise in that manner. And if the defence is, "Well, Nero caused the death of Kirk's father", that would be interesting -- if only because Kirk usurps Spock on the basis he is "emotionally compromised" and apparently clouded by what Nero just did to Vulcan and his mother. So: Being emotionally compromised is only wrong when it happens to a Vulcan? The film has twisted, psychotic logic, simply to allow Kirk to become "captain" at any cost.
That was after he executed Kruge’s crew with a false surrender.
It was a war/combat scenario where Kirk was literally breaking orders (he had stolen the Enterprise, if you recall) and trying to survive. There was no outside help; no-one coming to his aid. He also loses the Enterprise in the process. In ST XI, Nu-Kirk commits mass murder/genocide and gains everything.
Simple. No other Trek film has to have it's Trek card status reassured. The Kelvin films do and get treated poorly and as lesser class of Trek than others. Calling them "filth" is just one example of it. Saying that Abrams committed "blasphemy" (not here-please note this is just my experience) against Trek is another.
I don't like a lot of Trek films but not one would I consider "lesser" or "filth" in the Star Trek world. Just different interpretations of the material.
When they stop getting treated like garbage I'll stop defending them. Pure and simple.
For some people, the Abrams films tremendously coarsened the brand. That's why you might occasionally see the films getting called blasphemous. Unlike the other ST films that preceded the 2009 film (which, yes, could be dark and violent), the Abrams film presents itself as a complete do-over (don't give me that "alternate timeline" crap). It therefore merits extra criticism and extra suspicion as a "new beginning" for the franchise.
And the 2009 film is very seedy and violent in general. Kirk and Spock even come to blows and Kirk physically attempts to mutiny. He is thrown off the ship in a questionable outburst by Spock, and then, when he improbably returns at warp speed, he mutinies again -- this time, he is successful, and has been encouraged to overthrow Spock by his older self! I'm not sure how the older Spock thought Kirk was going to accomplish this. And he almost doesn't. The film has to contort itself to allow him to succeed. For instance, Kirk is apparently fine after provoking Spock's fury, despite the fact he is choked half to death and everybody just lets it happen, standing around like lemons (even Spock's own father). McCoy doesn't even check him over afterwards (or Spock for that matter). And Spock is now disgraced in front of his own bridge crew. Great way to show the budding "friendship" between these people.
How Kirk was ever allowed to get in Spock's face in the first place (he's literally close enough to bite him) is also never explained. Kirk is a prisoner. There's a security team. Even with Spock ordering Kirk to the bridge, those security people do nothing to protect Spock, despite Kirk's blatant insolence and obvious signs of aggression and insubordination. Kirk is right in Spock's face the whole time! Is there *ever* a situation, anywhere in life, where a person would be allowed to do that by a security force? That one security officer even still hates Kirk ("Come with me, cupcake!"). It is not remotely realistic or believable. I offer this as another example. The whole film is like this. Some find the writing and general delivery of the film to be an offence to the name of Star Trek, and I can't say I blame them. Although I'm not sure what you're worried about. I'm the only person criticising it here -- everyone else (in predictable fashion) is attacking
me.