Sunday, July 31, 2016

Star Trek Beyond


I finally got around to seeing Star Trek Beyond this weekend and I would agree with the assessment that it is an improvement over the last NuTrek film, and possibly the most Classic Star Trek in vibe of the bunch. It's certainly as "trekky" as most of the Next Generation era films.

Things I really liked:
- Several Explicit references to Enterprise. Enterprise-era technology comes into play, we see Enterprise-era uniforms, and the Xindi War is referenced.
- The design of the Yorktown Starbase and the swarm nature of Krall's fleet are a departure from anything we've seen in Star Trek before, true, but they're good visuals and good sci-fi, expanding the possible of the Star Trek universe. They also would fit really well in Strange Stars.
- Shohreh Aghdashloo from The Expanse in a small role as a Starfleet Admiral. Perhaps it was a bit of stunt-casting given her role in another science fiction series or maybe not, but at any rate she was a good choice.


Things they continue to be solid with NuTrek films:
- All the main cast members get something to do, and the actors are good in the roles.
- Good action sequences (and better than the last film) and good pacing.
- If you've got to destroy the Enterprise, this film does it in a reasonably gripping and spectacular way.

Things I didn't like:
- I thought the uniforms in NuTrek were great. The change isn't terrible, but it's a step down for me.
- A whole bunch of aliens in multiple scenes but never any we've seen before. (Old Trek films are guilty of this same thing, though.) Would it kill 'em to show me an Andorian or Tellarite?

Dangling Questions:
- What is the "in story" reason that Krall and his cronies' true identities were obscured? Was it purposeful or a by-product of their life extension somehow?

2 comments:

Parvel Shunk said...


Did he say "I fought the Romulans.. I fought the Xindi!" or did he say "I fought the Romulans...I fought the Kzinti!"?

I thought it was the second and really geeked out. But my hearing isn't so hot these days.

Deadstop said...

Pretty sure it was the Xindi War and the Romulan War. Larry Niven might have something to say about a Kzinti reference.

I suppose the idea with Krall was to make him look like Generic Alien Villain for most of the movie. I do think the reveal of his identity and motivations should have come earlier so they could have done more with it. I love that they managed to invoke the classic TOS trope of "Starfleet captain gone space-mad," though.