
What can I say?
It works.
J.J. Abrams and his collaborators have pulled off something remarkable – make that astounding and perhaps unprecedented – a reboot that not only respects the continuity of the franchise, but still comes up with a way to throw it all out the airlock without actually compromising it.
I'll try to keep spoilers to a minimum, but I will mention some plot points, so if you want to see the movie completely fresh, you may want to wait and read this after you've seen the film.
Here's the big spoiler, and the only one that I plan to reveal, because it's necessary, if I'm to discuss my reactions to the story overall: the whole plot hinges on one of the classic
Trek tropes – time travel and the dangers of changing the past through one's actions. But this time the cast doesn't – and cannot – fix everything by the end of the episode. This creates a whole new
Trek timeline, an alternate universe where the original characters can have all new adventures and the future is unwritten. It also introduces to the series the concept of Fate with a capital "F"– that this particular group of characters are meant to be together, and that even when history is changed and their paths are different, that somehow, the bridge crew of the
Enterprise is destined to adventure together.
Now, "fate" and "destiny" aren't very
Gene Roddenberry-esque concepts, but they are appealing (at least in a fictional context), and solve the filmmaker's biggest challenge – making a new
Star Trek that will appeal to a wider, more mainstream audience, without pissing all over the loyal fanbase that kept the franchise alive for forty years.
For this to work, the film does have to trot out a few scenes that, upon reflection, are almost ludicrously contrived, but, they are handled so well and fly by so quickly, that they don't hurt the film at all.
And there are some surprises here, BIG ones, things that will knock old school Trekkies for a bit of a loop. I know, I'm one of them. This is absolutely a new continuity, and
nothing is set in stone. At the same time, there are numerous call-outs to various past
Trek adventures, subtle and not-so-subtle references designed to warm fan's hearts.
Star Trek is a fast-paced, almost fully satisfying adventure story that is not only recognizably
Trek, but
Trek with a scope and budget and filmmaking acumen that we've never seen before. This one does not look like a two-hour TV episode. It's loud, bright, sexy and funny – like the original show was before all the spin-offs and sequels bled away the humanity. Like TOS, these characters get angry, get drunk, get laid, and take incredible risks and make giant leaps of faith. There's no sitting around conference tables endlessly debating courses of action, no retreats, no surrenders. Our hero may look different and his path to the center seat may be considerably different, but in the end, he's still James Tiberius Fuckin' Kirk.
And that brings me to the elephant on the bridge; how do the new guys live up to the legends? For the most part, very well.
Chris Pine doesn't imitate
Shatner (wisely), but he's got much of the swagger, the humor, the sly glint in the eye.
Zachary Quinto doesn't have the gravitas of
Nimoy, but then, he gets to play a slightly different Spock than the one we're used to. This is a young Spock, still struggling with the emotions seething within him, and Quinto handles the role well.
In fact, almost everyone plays their roles well. I think
Zoe Salanada's Uhura is too skinny, but she gets considerably more to do with the role than
Nichelle Nichols ever did.
John Cho's Sulu is suitably professional – and delightfully swashbuckling, when required.
Simon Pegg is a bit more Simon Pegg than Montgomery Scott, but he's fun to watch. Unfortunately,
Ben Cross and
Winona Ryder, as Spock's parents, didn't quite do it for me. Cross is no
Mark Lenard, and Ryder is definitely no
Jane Wyman. I was also underwhelmed (as usual) with
Eric Bana as Nero, the villain/plot device that drives the story. He simply doesn't play it "big" enough. He's just sorta there.
The real standouts among the players are
Karl Urban as Doctor McCoy, and
Leonard Nimoy as Spock Prime. With Urban, he's so perfectly Leonard McCoy that it's almost as if he's been temporarily possessed by the spirit of the late
DeForest Kelly. And Nimoy is the heart and soul of the picture, the one who makes it all hang together and assures us longtime Trekkies that this is, indeed, truly
Trek. If the
real Spock recognizes these kids as his friends, then, really, who are
we to argue?
Any complaints? Well, I don't like the interior
Enterprise sets at all, but it didn't ruin the movie for me. I do have a few minor quibbles with the story, but no deal breakers... and, well, that's about it.
Oh yeah, the effects work is pretty spectacular; Industrial Light and Magic really pull out all the stops, and give us outer space as we've never really seen it before in
Trek. Even though the
Enterprise has been slicked up, I still got that warm feeling in my gut when we get our first good look at it – she's
still the most beautiful starship around.
I haven't seen a movie more than once in the theater in years, but I'm going to make every effort to see this one again as soon as I can. It's good. Maybe great.
Star Trek lives!