Now that we've all pretty much settled into the film - either positive or negative -, I wonder if it's time to look at whether we sabotaged the film with our Trekkie-ness.
Here's what I mean.
Abrams did a lot of things his own way, but he bent over backwards not to completely alienate the old fans. Thus we ended up with time-travel, old Spock, Nero, speeches pointing out alternate universe instead of a replacement of Holy Canon, the begging of manlove for Kirk/Spock, the sidetrips into exploring TOS incidents, and on and on.
Had he not done so - had he completely done his own take on the show - we may have ended up with a very different film. No overpowered supership (perhaps), no old Spock pimping Kirk/Spock, no time wasted going through the whole Nero backstory and long-winded explanations about how this was not the original timeline (which was amusing, when you think about it - nobody seemed particularly put-out by the realization that they were essentially alternate versions of themselves.), no stranding Kirk and Scott on planet snowball, and, with no Nero, no special need to kick over Vulcan. No need to play Kobayashi Maru.
That leaves a lot of options open, a lot of time reclaimed for independent character development (more and more, the thing that pisses me off about the film is the way old Spock essentially replaced the need for Kirk and Spock to find their own peace with each other: "We're best buddies? Oh. OK..."), and all the plot points would have to have been sewn up by the new crew.
I placed this here, instead of in the film thread because this really is about us; whether or not our obsession with TOS and Abrams' desire to placate us made this a lesser film than it could have been. Even, in retrospect, in our own eyes.
Here's what I mean.
Abrams did a lot of things his own way, but he bent over backwards not to completely alienate the old fans. Thus we ended up with time-travel, old Spock, Nero, speeches pointing out alternate universe instead of a replacement of Holy Canon, the begging of manlove for Kirk/Spock, the sidetrips into exploring TOS incidents, and on and on.
Had he not done so - had he completely done his own take on the show - we may have ended up with a very different film. No overpowered supership (perhaps), no old Spock pimping Kirk/Spock, no time wasted going through the whole Nero backstory and long-winded explanations about how this was not the original timeline (which was amusing, when you think about it - nobody seemed particularly put-out by the realization that they were essentially alternate versions of themselves.), no stranding Kirk and Scott on planet snowball, and, with no Nero, no special need to kick over Vulcan. No need to play Kobayashi Maru.
That leaves a lot of options open, a lot of time reclaimed for independent character development (more and more, the thing that pisses me off about the film is the way old Spock essentially replaced the need for Kirk and Spock to find their own peace with each other: "We're best buddies? Oh. OK..."), and all the plot points would have to have been sewn up by the new crew.
I placed this here, instead of in the film thread because this really is about us; whether or not our obsession with TOS and Abrams' desire to placate us made this a lesser film than it could have been. Even, in retrospect, in our own eyes.