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  • THURSDAY MAY 14 2009 6:00 AM

Star Trek Has Been Reborn, and It Is SPECTACULAR

Since I saw Star Trek a little over a week ago, I’ve struggled to write an adequate review of the movie, and what it meant to me, as someone who was part of the first effort to make Star Trek relevant to the, uh, next generation of fans. I’ve started and abandoned a few thousand words, mostly because I can say everything I need to say in just six:

It was awesome. I loved it.



I realize that a column about the movie, and what it meant to me, is going to need to elaborate on that just a little bit, and that’s where the trouble begins. See, I keep feeling like I’m just rewriting what I wrote about Watchmen, which could also be reduced to six words:

It was awesome. I loved it.



I've tried to stay away from Watchmen, but I keep coming back to that comparison because they both played significant roles in my life as I came of age during my teens. I feel a deeply personal connection to them, and I was – I think understandably – worried that these movies would leave me feeling the way I felt when I walked out of Phantom Menace.

In fact, to explain why, I'm going to quote myself, from my review of Watchmen:

...we live in a world where we've endured Ang Lee's The Hulk, Spiderman 3, both Fantastic Four movies, and Indiana Jones Gets Raped Repeatedly While We Are Forced To Watch In Horror, so I think it would be really strange if we weren't worried and apprehensive about something that already means so much to us...



And that's the thing, isn't it? Star Trek has meant too much to too many people for too long for those of us who love it to blindly accept that whoever makes it will treat it with the same love and respect that we believe it deserves. I think it was normal and natural for all of us to have reservations, especially about Star Trek.

It turns out, I think, that a lot of our fears, while well-founded, were unnecessary. JJ Abrams may not be one of us in the convention-going sense, but I think he has something in common with us, and I think it's a big reason why Star Trek made so many of us so very, very happy.

A lot of Trekkies got worked up when JJ Abrams seemed to say that he didn't even like Star Trek, and was more of a Star Wars fan:

Well, I'm just a fan of Star Wars. As a kid, Star Wars was much more my thing than Star Trek was.



The usual blogs and geek punditry picked up on that, and freaked out that he clearly didn't care about Trek, and was going to make something that had more in common with Star Wars – and possibly its disastrous prequels and special editions – than the Star Trek we've loved for so many years. I think, living in our post-Phantom Menace, post-ET-with-Walkie-Talkies, post are-you-fucking-kidding-me-with-X-Men 3 world, that's an understandable response. The funny thing is, I never heard anyone bother to add the very next thing he said:

"The challenge of doing Star Trek -- despite the fact that it existed before Star Wars -- is that we are clearly in the shadow of what George Lucas has done.



Let's think about that for a moment, because it could mean a couple of different things. It could mean that Lucas made Star Wars movies that were bigger spectacles than the Star Trek movies, and we need to somehow top that ... except JJ immediately says it isn't:

The key to me is to not ever try to outdo them because it's a no-win situation. Those movies are so extraordinarily rendered that it felt to me that the key to Star Trek was to go from the inside-out: Be as true to the characters as possible, be as real and as emotional and as exciting as possible and not be distracted by the specter of all that the Star Wars film accomplished.



I think this means that JJ Abrams, self-professed Star Wars fan, left the Special Editions and prequels feeling the same way a lot of us did. That is the shadow George Lucas cast over science fiction movies, especially remakes and reboots and re-imaginings. That could be why he made sure that, even though he doesn't love Star Trek as much as we do, he surrounded himself with people who did, and listened to them when he made his movie.

I could be completely wrong, of course, but I think the story in Star Trek supports this: Spock Prime says, "Listen, I know that I've messed with the timeline in your universe, and things are never going to be the same. But the universe that existed before I traveled through time is still there, and now it's up to you to explore this universe."

It's like JJ is simultaneously telling us, "I respect you. I respect the people and starships and adventures and universe that you've loved for 40 years. I'm not going to tell you that it doesn't matter. I'm not going to tell you that you were wrong to love it, and now it's all gone because I have shiny new effects and actors. It's all there, and it's yours to continue exploring as long as you want to.

"But I do have this new starship and a new crew, and we're going to go explore some different places where no one has gone before. If you want to come along with us, you're welcome to aboard. If not, bon voyage. If you treat her like a lady, she'll always bring you home."

This is the fundamental difference between what JJ Abrams did with Star Trek, and what George Lucas did with Star Wars. Lucas told us, "Hey, you know all that stuff you love so much? That stuff that's been a huge part of your life? Well, you're stupid for liking it because I didn't mean it. These are my toys, always have been, and now I'm taking them back. Ha. Ha. Ha. Fuck you, now give me more of your money."

I hope that Star Trek's legacy is two-fold. I hope that it leads to more movies with these actors and this creative team, and I hope that it encourages more studios and film makers to follow the example laid out by people like JJ Abrams, Zack Snyder, and Peter Jackson.

I mean, can you imagine Michael Bay's Star Trek?

Sorry. Sorry. That was cruel, and I shouldn't have put that image into your head. According to some quantum physicists, though, just thinking about that created a universe where it happened, and I'd like to apologize to everyone in it.

I want to talk about something else from Star Trek, but it contains spoilers, so...

I loved a lot of different things in Star Trek. I thought the casting was perfect. I thought the story was brilliantly paced and executed. I thought the photography, editing, sound design, and visual design was superb. But I especially loved...

SPOILERS! (Click to view)
...all the subtle nods to those of us in the theater who have loved Star Trek for up to 40 years, among them: Kirk eating an apple when he beats the Kobayashi Maru, the Red Shirt heading down to the drilling platform with Kirk and Sulu, oblivious to his fate, Sulu fencing, and McCoy spitting at Spock, "Are you out of your Vulcan mind?!" In my theater, each time one of these things happened, there was spontaneous applause, because we got it, but also...



...because it let us know that JJ Abrams got us. I, um, was also really happy to see a teenager on the bridge again, but I doubt there is another person in the known universe who shares my precise reasons.

In other words: I loved it. It was awesome.

When Wil Wheaton buys a camel, it will wear a Fez.


 

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Comments
Paisley

Paisley

USA
September 2006

JUN 02, 2009 08:42 PM

lil_tuffy said:
Enough with the trolling, all of you. Trek or GTFO.


Tee hee! Yesss!

motorfirebox

motorfirebox

Pittsburgh, PA
March 2004

JUN 03, 2009 06:16 AM

holy shit did Karl Urban nail Bones. if i hadn't know it was him, i wouldn't have recognized him from his previous roles.

this movie was a great addition to Star Trek. that doesn't mean it was, y'know, War and Peace, but how much of ST really is? i mean, space whales? space jesus? space 80s? space heaven that you get to come back from? sure, you can say that II and VI were better, but other than that, are you really going to argue that space parachuting is the nadir of Star Trek?

malkav11

malkav11

Saint Paul, MN
July 2003

JUN 03, 2009 04:59 PM

Star Trek is so much more than just the movies (many of which are indeed pretty bad).

motorfirebox

motorfirebox

Pittsburgh, PA
March 2004

JUN 03, 2009 05:51 PM

true.

there was one thing that did bother me about the new movie, now that i've thought about it. one of the tensions that ran through the film was the antagonism between Kirk and Spock--the whole "omg they're supposed to be bestest friends but they hate each other" thing. the resolution on that didn't feel very solid--yes, they teamed up for a few minutes to shoot many mans together, but there was very little bonding. i dunno, maybe there wasn't supposed to be a real resolution? maybe they want to continue that tension into the next film in the new franchise? or, hey, maybe it was bad writing.

regardless, overall, this is still a really fun movie.

WyldeSage

WyldeSage

I'm lost
June 2008

JUN 06, 2009 09:07 AM

I have a question. I am in the process of watching ALL the original Star Wars episodes, and when im done I want to watch TNG. I found a site that has all the original series, but not TNG, anyone know where I can find them?

gdarklighter

gdarklighter

San Diego, CA
August 2005

JUN 06, 2009 09:18 AM

WyldeSage said:
I have a question. I am in the process of watching ALL the original Star Wars episodes, and when im done I want to watch TNG. I found a site that has all the original series, but not TNG, anyone know where I can find them?


Netflix.

Rivera

Rivera

USA
June 2008

JUN 06, 2009 10:16 AM

WyldeSage said:
I have a question. I am in the process of watching ALL the original Star Wars episodes, and when im done I want to watch TNG. I found a site that has all the original series, but not TNG, anyone know where I can find them?



torrent.

WyldeSage

WyldeSage

I'm lost
June 2008

JUN 06, 2009 11:43 AM

Ok, so im going to admit im a doof, and I dont know what torrent is.

...and I dont want to sign up for netflix.

Hedy

Hedy

SUICIDEGIRL

Illinois, USA

JUN 06, 2009 08:17 PM

i watched pretty much all of every series of star trek on loan from the library. it took awhile to find a semi-local library that had the ones i wanted and would lend them to me, but lo and behold i've worked my way through them all. even enterprise, for some unknown reason.

if your library doesn't have them and you can't get them through interlibrary loan, you'll hafta sign up for netflix at least for a month or two.

WyldeSage

WyldeSage

I'm lost
June 2008

JUN 07, 2009 01:33 PM

I didnt even think about checking the library..that a good idea, thanks!

AvarvS

AvarvS

USA
August 2010

JUL 27, 2011 01:01 AM

You're right, I really liked this film. I always thought after "Nemesis", any film would be total bull. I grew up with TNG (It came out when I was 17 and had actually met James Doohan at the premier of The Motion Picture in 1978 in my home town of Port Huron, MI). That was my brush with TOS, since it aired before I was born.
But I also felt like "..WTF!? How can you change the past without interfering with TNG, VOY, DS9 and all 6 films proceeding TNG?!" The only timeline I thought that would survive this revamp was "Enterprise" and I really, to be honest, never liked it too much. I have heard through the proverbial grapevine that the reason Nemesis was the last film for TNG was that Brent Spiner said that he was starting to show his age and Data was an android, so put two and two together and... biggrin So does anybody know if this is true?
Sorry I am posting so late on this thread/story. smile

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