Re: Will Star Trek 3 be a Kirk & Spock centric film or An Ensemble fil
Kirk and Spock are the most interesting TOS characters, so it makes sense that any reboot would focus on them.
I do agree that the nuTrek McCoy is really an impersonation, but Deforest's style and mannerisms are so distinctive that any actor inheriting the role would have no choice but copy him almost completely.
Why? The same claims can be made about Nimoy and, especially, Shatner yet neither Pine nor Quinto go to the lengths Urban does (much to their credit).
I don't know. I have been rewatching TOS recently, and both Shatner and Nimoy, in my opinion, actually had more depth and subtlety in their performances than Kelley. Not to say that McCoy wasn't a great character, but overall McCoy is more tied to the popular perception of a country curmudgeon who loves metephors than Kirk is tied to the overacting and Spock to the raised eyebrow and "fascinating".
Urban is also from New Zealand, which means he is having to force a Deep South American accent. That takes concentration and focus, which may restrict him from being more subtle and avoiding a more overt imitation of the original "Bones".
I dunno, either. I seem to remember Urban himself saying back in 2009 that he deliberately played McCoy close to Kelley's McCoy, but I can't find the reference. I did find that Nimoy said in an interview in 2009 that Urban's performance moved him to tears, and was, ..."so moving, so touching and so powerful as Dr. McCoy, that I think D. Kelley would be smiling, and maybe in tears as well."
The thing is, McCoy is the "vent" among the characters. He's the one allowed to let off steam and sometimes speak truth to reason. A character like that has memorable moments and neat lines, but he must also be taken in small doses or it wears thin.
Even in TOS and the movies, Kirk can get tired of McCoy's rants and cut him off, or he'll just dismiss them.
I've always seen him as an outside observer, who's job it is to point out when something seems ridiculous. He's needed. Imagine Kirk and Spock having a serious discussion about time travel to go back and get some whales without McCoy saying what everyone in the theater is thinking: it's an outlandish, dangerous, stupid, and crazy scheme.
His rant about Genesis in TWOK basically crystalized the ethical and philosophical problems of such a device in a couple of lines.
He's a very needed character, but I would say he's been less inclined to drive any action as he has been to comment on it and become a sometimes reluctant participant.
I guess the bottom line is McCoy is so set in his cynical but humanistic ways that it is probably hard to find multiple angles for playing the character.