lawman said:
Besides, in terms of sheer creative talent, JMS is to Orci and Kurtzman as Led Zeppelin is to the Bee Gees or Robert Altman is to Joel Schumacher.
Uh-huh.
Yes, "uh-huh." I gather you don't agree, but I don't actually see you defending O&K's body of work.
JMS, meanwhile, is one of a handful of writers whose work I will buy a ticket to or a copy of sight unseen, based strictly on his name. (A couple of others are Joss Whedon and Neil Gaiman.) It's not that he
never misfires, but his hit-to-miss ratio is better than almost anyone in the business.
A two hour movie, with sufficient time devoted to space battles and splosions, is not going to be able to get beyond the "simplistic and shallow" level. We'd need a TV series for that.
...Don't blame Abrams for not being able to supercede the limitations of the medium.
That's funny: it's never been hard to find people who will argue that the creative constraints of a one-hour (really, 45 minute) TV show produced on a weekly basis limit one to "simplistic and shallow" material, and that to really "open up" the potential of a story you need the additional time, space, and money of a feature film.

The grass is always greener, I guess.
Besides which: even within the genre boundaries of action-adventure material (which Trek has always been, I don't deny that), it's also not hard to find entries (in film, not just TV) that manage considerably more sophisticated levels of plot coherence, character depth, clever dialogue, emotional resonance, and thematic integrity than Trek09 had to offer. Are you seriously suggesting that Abrams' picture is at the same level as (say)
Dark Knight or
Casino Royale or the
Lord of the Rings trilogy or
The Matrix or
Die Hard or
Aliens or even
ST II-IV, among countless other films? Or, reaching back in time,
Butch Cassidy or
Spartacus or
North by Northwest or
The Day the Earth Stood Still? C'mon, it's not
remotely in the same league.