DavidBanner wrote:Eric, that was a very thoughtful post, and a very interesting read.
Thanks.

That's been kind of building up in me since I saw the movie. I think you can see that this all means something to me.
I pretty much agree with your conclusions. I hadn't thought about how badly Spock does in this film, but yes, he has a lot of egg on his face by the time this is done.
I wish it were just that. This is epic tragedy to the nth degree. It's downright unfathomable and especially for a truly legendary character to have to endure for the rest of his life in his clear twilight. This beloved icon of a character is left saddled with an impossible, dreadful burden.
This Spock, "our Spock", the Spock of the last 40 years, deserves a better end than that.
It was also shocking to me to realize that it's actually been 18 years since Nimoy played the character before. (Both Nimoy and Shatner are almost 80 now...) Shatner would have been completely out of place here, and I can't see any reason to use him or any of the other cast from the other series in these films.
Agreed and I think it was kind of a reach to even get Nimoy to work in this but they did...I guess.
I'll add that the basic idea of this film was proposed twice before.
Back in 1989, Harve Bennett wrote a "Starfleet Academy" movie that would have used Shatner and Nimoy in a framing sequence built around a flashback to their academy days, which would also somehow include the other characters. The idea was rejected, partly because it was obviously an attempt by Bennett to completely usurp the original cast by recreating it himself, and because the heads of Paramount wanted to just have an original cast film. (The sad part of this is that Bennett really did a lot of good work in the 10 years he produced the Trek movies, from II thru V, but he never became part of the "family". Some of this is due to Roddenberry's open hostilitiy to him, some of this is due to his workstyle - which could be pretty hardnosed, some of this is due to his fallout with Nimoy. But it's still unfortunate - and he has commented on this, saying that it was a real shock to realize that after 10 years of his life, he was considered to have just been "jobbed in.")
I've read and heard a lot of these stories and while I was never big on the Academy movie idea...I daresay Bennet knows more about what "real Star Trek" is than a lot of other people out there.
I sure missed him in a hurry once Berman and that bunch really started taking Trek into soap operish and mediocre directions not too shortly after Roddenberry passed away.
I missed Bennet on every Trek film starting with Generations right on through the abomination called Nemesis.
I also missed Bennet watching this new Trek film. Bennet "gets it." Bennet gets Trek.
I also credit Bennet for basically saving Trek. He deserves huge credit for it and he probably shares it with Nick Meyer and some others.
I'm sure you know the story after TMP was made and Paramount's heads at the time saw how expensive that picture was and its mediocre box office returns and yet there was demand for the sequel.
Bennet told the story like this: They looked around and saw him working on TV. He was making good shows and was very budget oriented. They interviewed him at some point, felt him out, saw he had interest, and the line from one of the big execs to Bennet was: "Do you think you could make a Star Trek movie for less than (TMP's budget here) @#$%ing dollars?" and Bennet's response was: "I can make you 5 pictures for that kind of money."
Even before Bennett's failed Academy movie, Greg Strangis wrote up a treatment for Star Trek: TNG that would have been at least partly based out of Starfleet Academy, albeit not with the original characters.
This would be cool. I'd have no problems with this.
That's really what they should have done with this movie. A new cast, a new crew, move us forward maybe at the beginning of the 25th century. Start us right at the Academy and we move up and grow up with these new characters, so to speak.
Make your own thing. Something new. Something fresh.
Heck, most of the ideas executed in this film could easily have been transposed on to a completely new crew of characters. It didn't have to be Kirk, Spock, and that bunch again to make this concept work.
Of course, once Roddenberry found out about it, the whole thing was toast - and Roddenberry was able to pull together a lot of his original series staff to create the TNG we came to know and appreciate. (As a sidenote, David Gerrold has really never been appreciated for the work he did to create TNG and make it workable. He actually claimed a co-creator credit via the WGA, but settled the claim rather than unseat Roddenberry. Based on the work he did on the show, and the various concepts from his book THE WORLD OF STAR TREK that wound up in the series, I think he had a legitimate claim and was treated pretty shabbily by Roddenberry. One of my favorite scenes in the pilot episode of TNG was written by him as an audition piece for actors playing Picard and Riker - the discussion of why Riker wouldn't let another Captain go down to a dangerous planet.)
Yup, Gerrold is definitely another casualty of sorts. His biggest claim to fame arguably is the TOS episode Trouble with Tribbles, an absolute gem.
In watching the original series, the basic impression I get of the setup is that we're looking at a group of professional military officers running the ship. Kirk in the series was a younger captain at 36, but still one who had served on other ships as a lower officer before getting a ship of his own. Spock was a capable officer who didn't seek command but had served under two captains of the Enterprise. (It seems clear in the original series that Kirk and Spock met when Kirk took over command from Pike, with Spock getting promoted to First Officer in addition to the Science Officer duties he already held.) Scotty and McCoy were older officers who had been around the service for a bit before Kirk or Spock got in the service. (This was enhanced by having those characters played by slightly older character actors with more mileage - both Doohan and Kelly were ten years older than Shatner and Nimoy.
Roddenberry played with the casting of the doctor over two pilots and then the first episode, saying that he wanted the doctor older than his captain, but not SO MUCH older that he couldn't share the adventures - if you look at the original two doctors, they were considerably older.) Sulu and Uhura were young lieutenants in the service likely on their second assignments each to ship duty. Timeline-wise, they would have come out of the academy after Kirk and Spock had already gone through a couple of tours of duty - which is why they are two steps in rank lower down the food chain. Chekov was an ensign nearly fresh out of the academy, which accounts for a lot of the rookie mistakes his character would regularly make.
Looking at the movies, the first two films make the most sense in terms of the ranks and experience of Kirk and his officers. We see in the first film that it's only 2 1/2 years after the end of the original mission (although the actors look MUCH older than that!), so it's not unreasonable to see Scotty supervising the refit, and Lt Cmdrs Sulu and Uhura still at their post, along with Lt. Chekov. Even the second film does okay with this, with Spock promoted to Captain (albeit of a training vessel), Sulu promoted to Captain but agreeing to go on the Enterprise one last time, Uhura promoted to Commander and Chekov promoted to Commander and made the First Officer of the Reliant. (There's an interesting sidenote in Vonda N. McIntyre's novelization of Trek II, in that she has the opening simulation not only staffed by the usual Enterprise officers, but also by trainees that the officers are supervising at their stations.)
McIntyre's novelizations take a few liberties that are mostly fun but really a ton of nice detail in them. I've read those books a sinful number of times.
Once you get to the end of Trek IV, the realism idea starts to go out the window - there's no reason for all these senior officers to happily go back to low-level positions on the Enterprise again.
Unless it goes along with Kirk getting demoted from Admiral to Captain. That's the kind of detail that McIntyre covers in her book. There's a great scene in there where Sulu gets into an argument with Kirk about how unfair it is that they're still even on trial after saving the Earth and how he knows it basically cost him his command of the Excelsior.
At this point so many extenuating circumstances had happened including a three month exile of sorts on Vulcan that breaking this crew up wasn't in Starfleet's best interest and for them it had become more of a personal thing vs. career ambitions. That's how I saw it anyways. I know I'm reaching with that.
These are the kinds of details that would be great to have in the movies but then it would make them three hours long. I personally wouldn't mind that but we all know that isn't realistic.
Trek V makes no sense in terms of what the crew is doing on the ship at this point. You might see Kirk and Spock still on the bridge, but, really, they'd be telling the other officers still hanging on to their consoles to "Get a life!" Trek VI at least addresses this by making Sulu the Excelsior's captain, and by showing that the other officers are about to retire anyway. (I always liked the idea announced for an introduction to the film, showing the characters bored in retirement and therefore happy to come back for one last run around the block, but this couldn't happen due to the really tight budget constraints.)
That was in the novelization for Trek VI by JM Dillard, another excellent author. I think that opening really makes a lot of sense. If they'd had the budget there was also a scene where Kirk and Carol Marcus were basically together and some other neat continuities like that.
This new crew in the film is exactly what Eric has said they are: It's a new group of characters who happen to have the same names as the people we've gotten to know over the years. It's a world where Uhura outranks Kirk, when you think about it. A world where Scotty doesn't even seem to be in Starfleet until he's discovered by Kirk. A world where Spock can simply order people to eject Kirk from the ship (rather than confining him to quarters or the brig) and the crew HAPPILY SHOVES KIRK OUT THE AIRLOCK! It's a world where McCoy gets his nickname not because of the old "Sawbones" idea that Roddenberry loved, but because his divorce has left him with "nothing but my bones". (????) On the other hand, the presence of Chekov makes sense, in that there seems to be so much of a crisis that a 17-year old gets pressed into service. And it will be nice in sequels to see Bruce Greenwood as Admiral Pike giving the guys their orders.
But now that they're done with the origin story, please let us have a coherent storyline and some coherent direction.
Yes. The sequel to this thing has a LOT riding on it. I don't think that point can be overstated. They've won over lots of new fans and probably the majority of the core Trek base although again I'm noticing how now some time has gone by, people are digesting this thing, letting it settle, and now they're reckoning with it both good and bad and it isn't just "fanboys" voicing some issues anymore.
I think you can see by my posts that I've had a lot of mixed feelings about this since day one and I still have them now. I'd like to think I'm not a "fanboy" but maybe I am.
I've never put the ears on or worn a costume, though.
For all this, I'm interested and looking forward to the sequel of this new Trek film. I really want to see what this bunch can do cut loose and free.
BTW the destruction of Vulcan changes some elements of the series, but not that much.
There's a lot that happened in Trek directly or indirectly that had to due with that planet. For me personally, it's huge.
The idea that there's only 10,000 Vulcans left in the galaxy or something like that (did I remember this right?)...HUGE paradigm shift in Trek there.
Sarek is still around as the ambassador, and Spock points out that there will be a new homeworld for what remains of the Vulcan people. The major change would appear to be that there's no more Amanda.
Amanda was important in a lot of ways that we never directly saw but it was more implied or mentioned in dialogue across TOS and TNG.
The destruction of Romulus, however, HAS NOT HAPPENED YET in this alternate timeline and in fact MAY NOT HAPPEN due to the events of the film. So there would still be Romulans aplenty in this new series of films...
Indeed, however I can turn that around on you and say that the Romulus we always knew is gone and the loss of Vulcan is just tremendous any way you cut it although this was a "different" Vulcan than the one we always knew.
These are huge happenings.
This new timeline's Romulus will probably be just fine because everything and everyone else is completely different now.
The end result is: It's a completely blank, empty slate for them to do whatever they want. That's both a good thing and a bad thing depending on your point of view. This is what I mean when I say the jury is out for me until I see what they do free of the origin story in the next film.
Eric Paddon wrote:Truthfully, this notion of everyone being just about the same age coming together all at once is one reason why I'm not keen on seeing it, because just from a distance I keep getting the feeling that the core group of Enterprise regulars has been reduced to a glorified Scooby-Doo gang, and that the sense of military professionalism that David talks about that was a key part of the original series (and I agree the movies started going backwards on this starting with IV with its ending that put everyone back aboard an identical looking old-Enterprise) and which evidently is not here.
Yeah, the professionalism is virtually non existent in this new movie. It's really implausible how loose and care free the lag of regs and protocol are.
Again the aforementioned public display affection between Spock (?!?!?!) and Uhura says it all.
I have already had the spoilers revealed to me regarding what's going on and what happens, and I think ultimately I will pass on this as I've done on just about all current movies now (just as the rebooting of the Bond franchise has made me bail out on them too).
Casino Royale was good. Give it one shot. Quantum was something you could probably take a pass on, though.
DavidBanner wrote:
For me, I rarely go to the cinema anymore. I have a home theater setup that works just fine for me, and when I watch a movie, I don't have to be subjected to 30 minutes of commercials for TV shows (HUH????) while sitting in the theater. If I ever get to the position in my life where I can open my own movie theater, I guarantee that the only ads anyone would see would be a few previews for upcoming films. In seeing the Trek movie, I spent over 20 minutes before the film deleting phone messages and reading, just to avoid the barrage of advertising screaming from the screen. (Also, the screen itself was damaged and I could see large rips whenever the image became halfway bright...)
I'm basically like you. My home theater and Blu-Ray and other high def sources have forever spoiled me. This Trek film was the first time I'd bothered to return to a theater since the third LOTR film. I'd probably go to the theater more if it were of better quality than what I have available to me.
This is before we get into cleanliness, ads, rude crowds, kids, cellphones, cost, etc.
I hadn't missed going to the theater. A new Trek film was pretty much the only exception I was going to make and I did that and even that was somewhat begrudgingly.