By Richard Early
NEW TITLE IDEAS
Instead of a quote of the week, I’m making a request. I need a better title for this blog. Please help.
Well, if you didn’t like last week’s blog, you won’t like this one. I’m going to review the Trek movies following up my review of the various series.
Even as a kid, I kind of liked this when a lot of my friends did not. It’s far more science fiction than Star Wars and that’s not what fans wanted. But it’s reintroduction of the original cast couldn’t have been done much differently. The movie captures the spirit of the original series but tries to broaden the character’s horizons. We see Spock on Vulcan and Kirk on Earth. We get conflict with new characters. In some ways, it’s not unlike “The Cage” in that respect, or “Where No One Has Gone Before”. There is a newer version with cleaned up visuals that’s pretty good.
Look, I’m not going to review this movie. What could I say that hasn’t been said? I just want to address the fact that there are fans out there who don’t consider this the best Trek film. In particular, I’m talking about you First Contact guys. I’ve got news for you. There would be no First Contact without Khan. In fact, there would be no franchise without Khan. Why? Because Nicholas Meyer and company actually did something fresh. Sure, they mined the original series for a villain, but after that they set in motion a new kind of story for Trek. We get character development on an unprecedented level. We get a more serious universe, not quite dark, but very dangerous. And we get a central theme about life and death that again is the sort of story that makes science fiction great. Plus, Spock’s death at the end of this film (spoiler) is fresh at the time the movie is released (1982). Now a story climaxing in character sacrifice seems trite. But Khan and Empire Strikes Back set the stereotype in motion. I could go on for blogs about this movie and maybe I will, but we have to move on.
An OK flick. I wish the franchise had not felt the need to immediately bring Spock back. I would have liked to see at least one movie without him. They could have really developed Kirk’s character by taking away one of his pillars, but they went right to the well. I think my big dislike in this movie is protomatter, the plot McGuffin to explain how things went wrong with Genesis. David, Kirk’s son, used an experimental substance called protomatter to make Genesis work. That just doesn’t work for me. It seems implausible since he was not working on Genesis alone and although we know he’s a hot head in the previous film, I just don’t buy his motive or opportunity. I don’t care for the unstable Genesis planet that is created. Sure, Genesis rewrites existing matter into a livable world, but how does it create different climates? Aren’t climates going to be based on the poles, the tides, and the sun? It’s bad science and thus an incredible story. Anyway, a flawed film with good things in it. Love the ending on Vulcan.
One of my favorites. Those of you who hate it usually do so because there aren’t any space battles. But there is ship-to-ship combat between the Klingon Bird of Prey and a 20th century whaling vessel. Anyway, remember, sci-fi doesn’t mean sci-action. This is a message movie done well. It’s ultimately about the extinction of humped back whales but with the fate of the world on the line. The time travel element is brilliant because the actions in the present are shown to have consequences in the future. A great lesson. Modern earth seems like an alien world from the perspective of Kirk and crew which is a brilliant twist. Customs and cultures that are every day to us are foreign to members of our own race who visit from a different time. This movie reintegrates Spock in the same way I would have thought a movie without him could have served Kirk’s character. Good film. Fun.
Ugh. Unnecessary. Self-serving. All I really want to point out is how silly the central character development is. See, this movie tries to tell us that our characters, and therefore us, are shaped and defined by one single event in our past. But that’s just not true. Even in Khan, Kirk evolves as a character from where he starts the movie but is not solely defined from that point on by the events of the film. It’s just bad story telling. Shatner was allowed to direct this movie and the franchise paid the price. Sorry, Shatner. I never, ever meant to say anything bad about you.
A movie most like more than I do. We’re back to allegory sci-fi which is great, but it’s too heavy handed here. The movie is about the fall of the Soviet Empire after
Here’s where it all starts going wrong for me. This movie just sucks. And I hate to say it Next Gen fans, but I think this movie starts to reveal the underlying problems with your guys. See unlike TOS, TNG’s characters are just vanilla and obvious. Only Data and Worf have any real potential, but with Worf already mined to death in two TV series and in this movie, Data is ruined irrevocably with the emotion chip. The overall problem is that the characters in TNG are not based on any archetypes that matter. In TOS, McCoy is emotion and Spock is logic and they battle in Kirk’s conscience for superiority. In TNG, you just have a bunch of stereotypes who fight for screen time. A little harsh, but not far off. It’s why the TNG movies aren’t very good for the most part. This is one of the worst. The Kirk stuff is awful. And the time travel stuff is more awful. So, you have a chance to stop the villain and you can control going back in time to do so. Would you A. go to the moment the villain is about to strike or B. go to a point where the villain is helpless. This movie picks A. Did you? Plus, Kirk is reduced from being at all serious to a complete humorous characterization of himself, complete with the last words “It was fun” and lines like “The odds are against us and the situation is dire – sounds like fun”. I really don’t like this movie.
Here’s my Simpsons reference for the day: I call the movie “Blirst Contact”. Brownie points if you know why. Let’s see, I hate the Borg Queen. A lot. She doesn’t make any sense based on our prior understanding of the Borg and the fact that the Borg have been around for over six years at this point and we’ve never even had a hint of her existence caps it off for me. Previously, Borg ships were sterile. Yet now they convert the
Not much to say. It’s a two hour TV episode for some reason made into a movie. I don’t get it. Mediocre at best. The main aliens are a race of people who claim to be non violent. They will not take up arms to defend themselves. We’re supposed to find this morally impressive. Yet they are more than willing to let the TNG crew take up arms on their behalf. This seems more than a bit hypocritical to me and is a big problem with the movie.
What can you even say about this thing? It’s bad. The actors and creators have sunk to the very bottom of the derivative tank. Anything that was ever fresh or exciting about TNG is gone, replaced by junior high school nature vs. nurture philosophizing and self-serving action sequences. I think it’s good that this part of the franchise has come to a close. When you have Star Trek dune buggies, you’ve run out of ideas. Oh, plus the Data sacrifice is a total rip off of the Spock sacrifice in Khan. He dies saving the crew but downloads his memories into a new android similar to Spock moving his katra to McCoy to later be reintegrated into a new body. Ugh. It was the only Trek movie I had only seen once until I was dumb enough to rent it again.
I’m going to hold my review of the reboot movie from this year because we’ve gone pretty long here and I’ve got lots to say about the new one.