I suppose I
should follow Internet convention and announce the following: ****SPOILERS
ALERT****
Why I Watched This
Movie
I was a huge Trekkie in my
youth.
Admittedly,
these days I’m somewhat of a lapsed Trekkie.
(I stopped watching the TV shows in 1996.) But I still show up for the
big events like a new movie. And I still
have nostalgia for the old show.
To check up
on my Trekkie credentials, you can see my review of the 2009 Star Trek here. And you can see my fourth grade report on Star Trek here.
Because I’m
going to be reviewing this movie from the perspective of a Trekkie, I suppose I
should start out with what seems to be the big question:
Is It Sacrilege to
Reboot Star Trek as an Action Franchise?
I’m in agreement with Ron Moore
[LINK HERE] who makes a distinction between the Star Trek movies and
the Star Trek TV shows.
The
original Star Trek functioned, as Gene Rodenberry famously described it, as a Wagon Train to the Stars. (Or a mobile Twilight Zone if you like.)
Every week
the Enterprise
crew would explore a new planet.
Something strange would be going on.
The mystery would slowly boil for about a half hour, and then the
strange twist would be revealed at the end.
This works
fine as a TV show because your expectations and your level of investment are
different for TV. You don’t have to
leave your house. You’re not expecting
anything special because you know it’s a weekly TV show and whatever happens
the same characters will all be back next week.
And if the
episode is slightly disappointing, it doesn’t really matter because you’ll get
another episode next week. (And let’s face it, these “strange planet of the
week” episodes could be quite hit or miss. It’s not always easy to write an intelligent
storyline, and a number of the old Star Trek episodes were underwhelming.)
Now imagine
the movie. You get yourself all hyped up
months in advance. The Hollywood
marketing machine is doing everything it can to milk the excitement. You call your friends, put on pants, drive to
the cinema, buy your big size popcorn and soda…..Imagine if after all that you
got another slow boiler “mystery planet of the week” type Star Trek.
It just
doesn’t work as a cinema release. You need
something more exciting. Hollywood
understands this 100%, and I don’t disagree with them.
Of course
the J.J. Abrams Star Trek movies have taken the adrenaline up a notch from even
the old Star Trek movies, but things have changed since the 1980s and each
generation demands more intense cinematic thrills than the last one. And if you’re going to make an action movie,
you might as well try and make it a good one.
Someday
Star Trek will probably be back on the small screen, and then we can do more
intellectual stories.
But as far
as the movies go, I’m totally okay with this being all action.
The question is: as an action
film, is it any good?
The Review
I have a number of friends and
co-workers who absolutely hated this movie.
I actually
liked it. I thought overall it was an
entertaining action film— albeit one with some very serious flaws. There were a couple of very poor decisions in
the script, but I’ve decided they didn’t spoil the whole movie for me.
The action
sequences in this film were solid. It
didn’t break any new ground, but there was enough chasing, jumping, running and
shooting to keep me happy.
The
characters also worked well for me.
At some
point in the future, this rebooted Trek may run into awkwardness because the
actors can’t play organic characters, and are locked into imitating caricatures
previously established by other actors.
(That is, assuming this new crew gets a lot more future outings, which—given
how long it took them to make just one sequel—they might not.)
However for
the moment, the writers are showing skill at keeping these characters
interesting. The new writers expertly
milk the classic conflict of Spock’s cold considered logic and obsession for
following the rules versus Kirk’s rash impulsiveness and fondness for rule
breaking. This is not new of course—it’s
part of what gave the original series its charm. But if we’re going to reboot the original
characters than we are also rebooting the old personality conflicts, and I thought
the new movie writers handled this well.
They also adopted it to the structure of the movie by having the characters
develop over the course of the story. At
the beginning of the movie Kirk and Spock are at loggerheads, and by the end of
the movie they both come to appreciate the benefits of the other’s position.
I was
entertained, and I thought the movie was respectful to the series, and that’s
enough for me to give it a cautious thumbs up.
(Other Trekkies will disagree of course.
Passionate arguing about Star Trek is what being a Trekkie is all
about.)
Things I Didn’t Like
And now I get to my complaints.
This FAQ article [LINK HERE] does a good job of pointing out all the plot holes in the
movie. I agree with almost all of it with
some minor exceptions. (I’m not sure if
it was Khan’s plan all along to put the 72 torpedoes on the Enterprise, or if this was what Admiral
Marcus did, and Khan was just reacting to the situation. The movie
got a little bit confusing on what exactly Khan’s master plan had been. Also I didn’t mind that the movie stuck with
Trek canon about the Eugenics wars in the 1990s. I just accept that Star Trek is taking place
in a different timeline than our own universe.
And I actually liked Leonard Nimoy’s cameo. But all the rest of their criticisms I agree
with.)
Fortunately
for this movie, the pacing is fast enough that you don’t get time to think
about most of these plot holes as you get rushed from one action sequence to
another.
The other point is that if you wanted to get
nit-picky, you could do this kind of FAQ with just about every movie and TV
episode from the Star Trek canon. Most
of Star Trek won’t hold up to this kind of close scrutiny, and the further back
in time you go, the worse it gets.
(If,
hypothetically, you could somehow wipe the memory of all the original episodes
from the minds of Trekkies, and then re-introduce these 1960s episodes as New
Trek, how much do you want to bet they would be complaining that these new
episodes were ruining the franchise? I
can think of more than a few original Star Trek episodes that just don’t make a
lot of logical sense.)
Star Trek
fandom is an interesting phenomenon. The
fans are often more intelligent than the show. And although the original series
was very cheesy, the fans have expected the show to move on and mature as they
have. And neither of these are bad things.
(As much as the writers hate being nit-picked by the fans, it helps to
keep the standards high.)
But at a certain
point you either have to give up and just wash your hands of the entire
franchise, or accept that from time to time there will be stupid plot points,
and I’m choosing the latter.
The one
thing that I am really upset about, and it’s the same thing that every other
reviewer is upset about, is the decision to replay the ending of the Wrath of Khan by killing off Kirk and
then bringing him back to life.
The idea is
so terrible, it’s difficult to see how it ever got into the movie. Who could have possibly thought that this was
a good idea? And how did this get passed
the whole studio process?
The lesson
really should have been learned from the Star Wars prequels. George
Lucas thought it would be a good idea to have scenes in the Star Wars prequels that paralleled
scenes in the original Star Wars trilogy. It was an interesting idea, but it fell
completely flat and everyone hated it, and I naively assumed the lesson had
been learned.
I can kind
of understand what was in George Lucas’s mind, because it seems like the kind
of literary theme that your high school English teacher really loved—one scene
foreshadowing a future scene, another scene calling back to a previous scene.
But the
thing is there’s an art to this kind of stuff, and it doesn’t work if you do it
clumsily. There needs to be a certain amount
of subtlety. And ideally the way to do
it would be to have things subtlety foreshadowed in one movie which pay off in another
movie. (Which is impossible to do in a
franchise that spans 30 years, so it probably just shouldn’t even be
attempted.)
Also you
should probably have a larger thematic point and not just repeat scenes just
for the sake of repeating them.
And, like a
lot of ambitious literary techniques, they have to be pulled off exactly right
or they end up looking really stupid.
And that’s what happened to George Lucas, and what happened to J.J.
Abrams.
(Lucas I
can forgive, because he didn’t know any better.
Abrams really should have taken a lesson from the failed Star Wars prequels. I agree with the avclub’s reviewer [LINK HERE] that this kind of thing makes me really nervous about how Abrams
plans to do the new Star Wars movies
now.)
And I have
more complaints. It’s one thing to
replay an action scene, but J.J. Abrams attempts to replay a tragic scene. This was never going to work. Tragedy simply cannot be replayed. You can’t use the same emotional punches
twice and expect the impact to be the same.
I may have gotten teary-eyed at the original Spock’s death, but I’m not
going to cry over the same scene twice.
And even
worse, by reversing the roles of Kirk and Spock, and then even re-using and
reversing the original dialogue, J.J. Abrams decides to try and milk pathos
while simultaneously wink at how cute he’s being. You can play this scene for tragedy, or you
can play it for cuteness but you can’t do both.
The whole
thing culminates in the worst decision of all—to have Spock yell out “KHAAAAAN!” This was Kirk’s most memorable line from the
original Wrath of Khan, but it’s
memorable in part because people love to make fun of it. The line is a parody of itself. Attempting to force this line into a tragic
scene is a terrible idea.
Once again
I have to ask the question—how did a scene this bad manage to make it into the
movie? Aren’t whole teams of people
involved in making a big-budget studio film like this? Did they all sign off on this scene? Wasn’t there one voice of sanity in the room?
The best
defense that can be given of Kirk’s death is that it is quick. Once I realized what J.J. Abrams was doing, I
was scared this was going to be a long drawn out death scene like in the
original, but Abrams doesn’t allow the scene to linger or slow the movie down. We’re given a quick death scene, and then
immediately treated to more explosions, running, jumping, and fist
fighting. The scene is quickly
forgotten, and it’s almost forgivable.
Almost. Except that killing off a main character and
then bringing him back to life is such a desperate story-telling technique that
it should only be used with extreme caution.
In life, death means something, and death is supposed to mean something
in fiction as well. The possibility of death is what gives any fictional story
its stakes. If death can be reversed,
the story loses all sense of stakes.
(After
decades of abusing this narrative technique, this is precisely the problem
American comic books have written themselves into. They kill off a major character now, and
absolutely no one cares anymore.)
I know it’s
part of classic Trek now, but it was a questionable move the first time they
killed off a main character only to immediately bring him back in the next
movie. But at least they had the sense
to make the death seem meaningful, and wait a couple years before
bringing the character back to life.
Here they kill a character off for no apparent reason, and then just
immediately bring him back to life.
And at
least in the original, the writers put in the effort to give us a good reason
why Spock’s body could be brought to back to life. In this movie, Kirk is just brought back to
death by magic blood, a very lazy solution if there ever was one.
Things I Liked About
the Movie
Alright, now that I’ve gotten that
out of my system, here are a few more positives about the movie.
Benedict
Cumberbatch did a great job as Khan.
(Once you get passed the fact that it’s a little
strange to re-cast a British man as Khan, and I’ve already decided I’m going to
cut the new re-booted Trek a little slack when it comes to visual
representations of old characters.)
And I know it
didn’t really add much to the plots, but I really liked the fact that they
brought Leonard Nimoy in for a quick cameo.
It helps to remind us that this new Star Trek universe is still
connected tangentially to the old Star Trek continuity.
(Many people
have already pointed out that old Spock completely contradicts himself, saying
essentially “I know I said I was never going to tell you anything about the
timeline, but in this case I’m going to make an exception.” It works if you
accept that people can be inconsistent in real life, and can make exceptions as
circumstances warrant.)
Given the
huge antagonism between Kirk and Khan in the original series, I thought it was
kind of cool that Kirk and Khan teamed up for a while in this movie against a
common enemy. And I thought the script made
it believable, giving them each ample motivation to attempt to use the other.
Also, once
I got passed how stupid Kirk’s death scene was, I liked the switch-up at the
end of the movie where it was Spock who fought the final battle against Khan
instead of Kirk.
Although
Kirk and Khan traditionally had the grudge match against each other, it does
almost make more sense for Spock to take down Khan in the end. Khan is genetically engineered to have
super-human strength, and in the original series Vulcans are also portrayed as
having super-human strength. So when it
comes to hand to hand combat, Spock is really the one who should be fighting
Khan.
(Although actually,
if you watch the original Star Trek closely, the super Vulcan strength is
something they’re very inconsistent on.
Sometimes Vulcans are portrayed as much stronger than humans, sometimes
they’re not. Also, since Romulans share
the same genetic make-up as Vulcans, they should also in theory have the same
super strength, but the show is also very inconsistent about this.
For that
matter, I’m not sure Khan’s powers are consistent with his portrayal in the
original series. I’m going to have to
re-watch Space Seed to be definite on
this, but I think originally he was just a slightly stronger than average human
in the original incarnation, not superman.)
And while I’m
nitpicking on these little details, what would a Star Trek review be without
continuity nitpicks? (As I said above, I’m
not going to let these ruin the movie for me, but I’m still going to point out
what I caught.)
Continuity Nitpicks
Since J.J. Abrams created a new
tangent universe, he’s bought himself a fair amount of flexibility as far as
established continuity goes, but everything that happened before Nero created the new universe is still in continuity, which means Khan’s
origins are still in continuity, and Star
Trek: Enterprise is still in continuity in this new universe.
In their
fourth season, Star Trek: Enterprise actually went through the trouble of doing a 2 part storyline
explaining once and for all why Klingons in the original series don’t have the
ridges on their foreheads as a result of genetic engineering gone wrong..
Since the
J.J. Abrams movies take place in the time period of what would have been the
original series, the Klingons should look like they do in the original series
with no forehead ridges.
(Remember
now, this is not me being more geeky than the show. The show itself went out if its way to
establish this continuity point. I would
have been content to just allow the show a certain artistic license when it
comes to visual representations of characters, but now it’s an established part
of Star Trek continuity that Klingons during the time frame of the original
series are suffering from the results of genetic experiments and therefore do not
have forehead ridges.
Although admittedly
I think you could find an easy way out of this by just positing that in the
alternate universe the Klingons somehow found a cure quicker.)
* In his review, Locke Peterseim points out [LINK] that when Khan was originally defrosted from suspended animation, he
wasn’t so angry. It was being marooned
on the planet for 20 years that drove him insane.
This movie
did attempt to give Khan another reason for vengeance—anger that he was being
used by Admiral Marcus. It’s a judgment
call whether you think that this was enough to drive him to extremes or not.
* And back to the thing about Khan’s blood: Nowhere in the
original Star Trek were we given any
hint that Khan’s blood could bring people back to life from the dead. And since Khan was created by genetic
engineering, it doesn’t even really make sense.
(A genetically engineered human being would have the best of whatever
DNA was available in the gene pool, but there’s no regenerative blood gene.) Plus, in the original Wrath of Khan, Khan is driven to vengeance because in part because
his wife died. Why didn’t he just bring
her back to life with his magic blood?
* Technology, what it can and can’t do, is always very
inconsistent in Star Trek. So it’s
almost pointless to mention this stuff, but in past episodes it was difficult
for them to use communicators across long distances. Here Kirk calls Scotty all the way back on
earth
The fact
that Khan is able to transport himself all the way to Klingon space also seems
inconsistent with the Star Trek universe, but at least the movie addressed this
head on by reminding us that Scotty had created a new transport technology in
the 2009 Star Trek.
Other Notes
* Put me in the group of people who think the title for this
movie is really awful.
* Whether you love this latest Star Trek movie, or hate it,
it’s worth remembering that at this point the franchise has already seen much,
much worse. (Nemesis, for example.) So
although some reviewers are complaining about how the franchise is being
ruined (this Salon.com review, for example), it’s important to keep things in
perspective. In 30 years’ time, this
movie will just be another footnote in the franchise’s history, and in the
years to come I’m sure we can expect more good Trek and more bad Trek as well.
* Before I saw this movie, I heard people were mocking J.J.
Abrams for his overuse of lens flares. I
thought people were just being hyper-critical but, wow, he really does use lens
flares a lot in this movie.
I don’t
mind lens flares per se. They can kind
of produce a cool dramatic effect when used sparingly at the right time. But you don’t need them in every shot.
* Whisky’s review is here with further thoughts
here. Many of the links above
are stolen from Whisky.
* And one last Star Trek related link before I close out
this review. I’m a big fan of the Star
Trek reviews at sfdebris.com.
They’re not
perfect—the humor is corny and often forced—but he does a good job of editing
each Star Trek episode down to 10 minutes and, once you get passed the bad
jokes, often has some intelligent commentary as well. It’s perfect for the Trekkie with short
attention span.
To see why
Khan made such a great villain in the original Star Trek universe, see SF
Debris’s review of Space Seed [HERE]
and The Wrath of Khan [HERE].
Link of the Day
“Future of the Euro Zone Looks Pretty Dim”
Link of the Day
“Future of the Euro Zone Looks Pretty Dim”
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