No. He put in familiar references. He did not recapture any of the flavour of the original. He threw away any semblance of substance and nuance in favour of mindless caracitures and cliches.
Gotta agree with this. I didn't loathe the film the way you did, Warped, but this is definitely a point I agree with.
A lot of us feel the same way.
It's clear that the movie did what it was supposed to do.. put "popcorn movie" butts in the seats. And that's a good thing, from the standpoint of the vast majority of the moviegoing population and from the standpoint of the studio (short-term, at least).
It also... largely for the same reason that it seems some folks 'round here seem to take an inordinate amount of glee in mocking other fans... appealed to the "trek-hating press." Those who see Trek fans as being inordinate nerds... who, for all practical purposes, hate Trek fandom and by association the Trek that these fans like... love this movie at least as much because they think it'll piss off the "geek-boy fan base" as for any other reason. It's almost like the glee some little boys take from running over cats with a lawn mower... an undeniably PERVERSE form of pleasure they feel from knowing someone else is gonna be hurt.
Had this movie not had the name "Star Trek" associated with it... if the names of the characters weren't the same names we already know... or if there had never been any prior Trek... how would people be treating this film?
Think about it.
Was this film REALLY all that great? Not so much. The ONLY impact of "destroying Vulcan" was to shock the fans. People who've never heard of Star Trek would just say "cool special effect" and go back to munching on their jujy-fruits.
The characters weren't well-developed... not really. The villain was particularly 2-dimensional, but only Spock got ANY actual character-development. Everyone else got "moments." Just like with all the prior Trek movies, where everyone gets a "moment in the spotlight." Granted, an "Uhura Fan Dance" in this movie might've been somewhat more enjoyable than the last time we got one, but still, the character was (from a pure storytelling standpoint) TOTALLY USELESS. As were Chekov, Sulu, and McCoy.
That Urban actually wanted to play McCoy right makes HIM good. It doesn't make the character, as written, worth the screen time.
Fact is, this entire movie would have been better without ANY of the "leads" except Kirk, Spock, and Pike. None of the others were there for any reason except as a "ticket punch." Supposely (in the thread of the OP's original point) as a "sop to the fans," because "we expect them all to be there."
But... here's the thing... WE DIDN'T CARE IF THEY WERE THERE. Not really. Did we? Would we, the fans, have been happier if instead of giving every "second banana" their moment in the sun, more time had been spent giving us more depth of character for the leads?
As far as "the ship" is concerned... if Abrams really thought that he was giving the fans what they wanted... "he don't know us vewwy well, do he?" He didn't give Classic Trek fans what they wanted, and "non-classic" Trek fans didn't care all that much either way. And the "general audience" wouldn't have cared. The ONLY people that the "new ship design" influences in any way are the "hardcore fans," and most of us don't care for the changes much. It didn't help the movie in any way.
No, what was done wasn't "for us." Even those who really loved this movie with a burning passion would have loved it every bit as much had the ship looked like the classic ship, I suspect, or if the uniforms, sets, props, etc, had been left essentially indistinguishable from the original concepts (if executed with a bit more flair and money). Those changes were done "because we can."
All the set-dressing changes weren't done for us. And they weren't done for the general audience, either. They were done for the production team.
But if the story had been compelling, deep, meaningful, all that... we would be able to forgive that. The problem is... the story was remarkably AVERAGE, POINTLESS, "ROLLER COASTER THRILL RIDE" fare, with a few "shock moments" thrown in for prurient interest and some "do this because we think that's what the fans expect" sops.
The movie made about as much money as we were expecting. And the studio will, as a result, greenlight future Trek projects (not just any potential Abrams-Trek movie sequels, but other TV-based projects as well) since they now know that the "franchise fatigue" they'd been led to believe was behind recent failures was pure myth.
But the movie wasn't a GREAT movie, or even a particularly good movie. As a pure, stand-alone movie, it's pretty average fare. On a similar level as, for instance, "The Fifth Element," I'd say. Take away the "sops to casual fans" and the "glee in watching the look on geeky fanboy faces when they see Vulcan blow up real good" and most of the reason for the super-positive reviews sorta fades, I think.
WE weren't "what was wrong with this movie." The problem isn't that, at all. The movie was pretty much what it was intended to be. It's just not Star Trek. It's something else, something entirely new, which "fakes it" by pretending to be Star Trek. Take away that veneer, and you've got a remarkably average cheesy adventure flick.