The problem that I have with the altered timeline is that it allows them to tell the origin story of Kirk and Spock and Kirk's taking command of the Enterprise in the same film.
This is actually an ADVANTAGE. The film had to be an origin story in standalone form, and needed both of these events to occur at the same time to work well for a movie.
Nooo, because there is NO origin for the Enterprise crew. They're a crew on a military/exploration fleet. They simply got assigned to a ship over the time. An origin exists only as the first creation of something, or a single person, or some mythological/fate created group. A crew that over time got assigned to one ship amongst many, and transferred off again, there is no origin.
The crew complements reason for being: they got assigned, others got transferred, or promoted off.
For everyone to be present on the Enterprise we have to swallow some amazing coincidences.
Or fate, or destiny, or the idea that it may have happened in a similar way in TOS, so may not have changed much.
No, you see, there is no fate, nor any destiny. We simply are here. This is the premise of secular humanism, which is the very foundation of Star Trek. It's us that did things, we, not some imaginary, invisible force or entity that came to save and steer humanity from on high.
The idea of fate and/or destiny is a betrayal of the very essence of Star Trek.
By the time Kirk gets command, he's saved the Earth, and possibly prevented billions of lives lost.
Uh, no, he didn't. He was a-hole bastard who mucked things up and got lucky, lucky those amongst his crew were far better than he was and brought up solutions when he got none... and oh, yeah, that both the villain and the rest of Starfleet are a bunch of complete morons.
The fact that he could be beamed off of the Narada proves the idiot Nero didn't bother raising his shields. And the fact that the first salvo of planetary defense batteries didn't blast - with its shields down - the Narada to smithereens is because apparently the people manning them were too stupid to fire back.
Moron1: "Duh, there's a big ship firing at Earth, rather close to Starfleet Headquarters, maybe we should fire back."
Moron2: "Duh, no order, no firing."
Moron1: "But the big ship may have destroyed command."
Moron2: "So?"
Moron1: "Duh... you're right, no order, no firing."
Gah, how I hate this movie.
If Starfleet wasn't staffed by morons the movie would have gone:
Kirk: "Where's the Narada?"
Spock: "No sign of it-wait... there's a debris field."
Chekov: "It's what's left of the Narada, sir."
Kirk: "What? Contact Starfleet."
Admiral: "Enterprise, where's Pike?"
Kirk: "He was on board the Narada, the attacking ship, what happened to it?"
Admiral: "Then Pike is lost, we blew it out of the sky." (At the crew's disbelieving face.) "It didn't raise its shields, apparently they assumed we were like the pacifist Vulcans and wouldn't fire back or something. For a ship not having raised its shields, it lasted pretty long against a full scale planetary defence grid bombardment - all .4 seconds."
Kirk: "So me being a shouting arrogant ass that performed insorbination was all for nothing then?"
Admiral (darkly): "If that's what you did, then yes."
Kirk: "Well, fu-"
Again, to work as a single movie, this actually HAD to be done. The story is not complete until Kirk takes command.
It shouldn't be a single movie, there shouldn't even be a movie. If you want the movie where Kirk proves he's captain material and gets command of the Enterprise because of it, the movie shouldn't be occurring while Kirk is still a cadet. And as far as I'm concerned, shouldn't even be occurring on the Enterprise.
You mean the young Lt. who managed to prevent a disaster?
A lieutenant is a. not a snot-nosed kid, and b. a man who has already had several years of experience in the fleet, and multiple command experiences, either of landing parties or command of the ship while the captain is indisposed.
Kirk is a cadet, only just out of the academy, not even given the official rank of Ensign yet. He may have been promoted straight to lieutenant for what he did, if you even count as him having done anything but being an a-hole, but not captain.
The circumstances in the movie worked well enough dramatically. This aspect of the movie is necessary, for reasons I've already outlined.
No, it didn't. And it is not necessary, the origin isn't something that should be told to begin with. The origin of a crew, is that 390 of the crew were already on the ship, ten got transferred off, and 10 new ones got transferred on. That's the origin of the latest 400 crew complement of a ship.
Then no single movie can make Kirk becoming Captain dramatically satisfying. He is credible enough under the circumstances.
Sure there's a movie that can make Kirk becoming captain dramatically satisfying. It just won't occur on the Enterprise and maybe one or two of the rest of TOS crew are present; especially if they Kirk work well together so he may have requested them as part of his crew once he gets assigned he captain of the Enterprise.
Kirk's rise in rank I assume? The Alternate Reality has nothing to do with that. The Alternate Reality is a gateway to allow for changes needed to update Trek and make an origin story work dramatically in one movie.
An origin story for the Enterprise crew did not work dramatically in one movie, that's because it CAN"T work dramatically in one movie, that's because there is NO origin for the Enterprise crew, apart from there was an opening and a new crew member got assigned to the crew.
This isn't the fellowship of the Ring, it's a crew a starship of military/exploration fleet.
Well, Starfleet isn't the Navy, although it closely resembles one.
Only in the strictest sense that they don't sail the seas.
Erm, this isn't reality. Dramatic necessity trumps realism. Always has.
Only in so far as there is enough realism left for your suspension of disbelief to remain over the drama. What happened in this movie, did not have realism left. (My god did ever not!)
Or simply chose the course necessary to make it work in a 2 hour movie.
It didn't work, and can't work.
The alternate timeline magic wand is being waved to force us to accept poor creative decisions in the new Star Trek film.
Remove the word poor, and this is correct. Just like the Refit in ST:TMP was necessary to accept a complete change of visual style.
Which is not a poor decision. The idiocy that is this story in every way shape and form, is.
The actual REASON for the rapid rise in ranks is to solve the puzzle of how to get Kirk to be Captain by the end of the movie.
Which if you start with Kirk as a cadet, and you have just one adventure, not multiple short adventures with years of time between them, can't be done believably, and thus can't be done with satisfying drama. And thus shouldn't be done. It is an idiocy, one, of so many.
I see it as TECHNICALLY incorrect, but form a Dramatic an Emotional point, it's the best choice.
No, it is not, for it is idiotic, there is just no drama or emotion, it's just laughable, throws you of the movie, and makes you say, this shit is bad.