Because you asked: some thoughts on Star Trek Beyond

Star Trek BeyondThis poster, though, is fantastic.

I was asked on my Tumblr thing what I thought about it, because I didn’t like the trailer at all (I said something like “I just saw this trailer for a generic sci-fi action movie, but everyone was wearing a Starfleet uniform.”)


Before I get into Beyond, some context: I’m the guy who worked on TNG, but was a massive TOS fan growing up (and still is). When I watch Star Trek movies, I don’t watch them as someone who actually went to Starfleet Academy (class of 2389 REPRESENT!) but as someone who loves Star Trek and cosplayed as Spock before he knew what cosplay was. So, that said, to recap: I loved the first rebooted Trek movie. It had its flaws, but none of them were big enough to upset me, so I give it 4 out of 5 jars of Red Matter. I really enjoyed Into Darkness when I was in the theater, but the more I thought about it after, the more it fell apart until I now have to give it 2 out of 5 tribbles-on-a-stick.


Star Trek movies are always going to have a hard time with fans of the series, because when we think about Star Trek, we think about 79 episodes of the original series, or our favorite 30 episodes of TNG, or the last season of DS9. We take something that’s been spread out over days of on-screen time, spread out across years of releases, and then compare all that character development and nuance and series of individual moments with something that has to be a fully-told and completely self-contained story in 90 or 120 minutes, and it has to be accessible (as defined by risk-averse studio goons) to as wide an audience as possible. So I think it’s unfair and unreasonable to directly compare the film installments of a long-running TV series to that series. I won’t do that with Star Trek Beyond. I’ll just compare it to the two previous installments in this series.


Without holding Beyond next to the hundreds of episodes of Star Trek we can watch on TV, and just looking at it as part of this current film trilogy: I was really disappointed by it. Unlike Into Darkness, which was a lot of fun for me in the theater but fell apart upon reflection, Beyond just fell apart while I was watching it. You can read more if you’d like to know some of my reasons. There are spoilers.


Let me start out by saying that I enjoyed a lot of it, before I completely turned on the movie and checked out. The first act is great, and so were parts of the second act. I loved the relationship between Spock and McCoy, I thought the swarm of whatever those ships were was really, really cool, and the Dyson Sphere starbase thing looked amazing. All the performances were solid, and the effects look great.


But with just a few very small cosmetic changes, the story could have been any generic sci-fi action movie produced in the last 20 years.


I really didn’t like that there was this amazing female character (who could keep a fucking STARSHIP HIDDEN for years while she survived on a hostile planet) who turned into The Girl For Kirk To Save the instant the boys showed up.


Someone who read this post in its original form on Medium also observed that Uhura was reduced to Spock’s girlfriend in this movie, and all the amazing stuff she’s capable of doing just sort of … vanished.


I hated hated hated hated the whole Sabotage thing. Instead of laughing and enjoying “is that classical music?” I just rolled my eyes, because by that point, I had turned on the movie.


The whole film was massively overdirected. The camera moves were indulgent and distracting, totally unnecessary, more than one time to establish the ship being on its side, and disoriented me the rest of the time.


There were, like, three? climaxes in the thing and by the final one I just didn’t care and wanted it to be over.


When we got to the message about strength through unity, it felt tacked on and preachy and unearned.


Do we really have to keep destroying the Enterprise?


I could go on, but I’d probably get into nitpicky stuff. Maybe I’m outside the demo now, and it’s not the movie’s fault that it didn’t deliver what I wanted. I know that a huge number of my friends who saw it loved it, and felt like it was the most “Star Trek-y” of the new films. I couldn’t disagree me. I think that if it was a generic sci-fi action movie, it would have been fine (I still hate the way a strong, competent, ass-kicking female character becomes the damsel in distress when the boys show up, though). But it’s supposed to be a Star Trek movie, and just like we have expectations for a Star Wars movie or even a Fast and Furious movie, I think movies should fulfill the promise of their premise.


Beyond was a Fast and Furious movie in space, and that’s not what I wanted to see. I give it 1 out of 5 motorcycles that are on the bridge of a starship for no logical reason, and still work after not being used for an incredibly long time for even less logical reasons.




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Published on August 26, 2016 18:05
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message 1: by Joschua (new)

Joschua Mueller I agree on the confusion of the Siberian tiger girl saving the day. I am still quite confused about the whole enterprise destruction and reconstruction under the exact same registration... Also, how do you hide a starship from it's captain for so long? Other than that I really loved the film though! Illogical, but cool. Thanks for posting, Wesley.


message 2: by Laura (new)

Laura Agreed. You articulated all the things I felt were off but didn't necessarily have the words for. The constant destruction of the Enterprise is getting old. I was also annoyed that its destruction had little to no impact on the crew. They could have poured one out for the Enterprise, mentioned that she gave her life for them (because the ship is a character in its own right), but nooo, they just get handed a new one like nothing happened. It loses meaning.


message 3: by Packi (new)

Packi I totally feel you Wil. What you described was already true for me in the first reboot though. Stupid plot, unbelievable characters, irrational behavior, shaky cam madness, and destruction of the whole old Star Trek universe. I guess I didn’t miss much in the other two movies.


message 4: by Kay (last edited Aug 27, 2016 07:06PM) (new)

Kay It was a fun movie. Close scrutiny is a mistake. Just enjoy the ride. I did enjoy your insight, however.


message 5: by Sheri (new)

Sheri  Mallory Wil,

This has nothing to do with Star Trek, I just wanted you to know, if you didn't already, that you were in the New York Times Sunday Crossword Puzzle yesterday. Only the best of the best are in the NYT puzzle!


message 6: by Lizzie (new)

Lizzie I agree with your comments on Beyond, not that you need me to agree, but I fell asleep because by the middle I was bored. I love Star Trek. I have been watching it and reading the books since I was 12 years old. Yes, I am a TOS fan, but I love all things Trek to a certain extent. I took my daughter to a few Star Trek conventions when she was a kid (she won the costume contest in Vegas with the Horta costume she made). We went to the Star Trek Hilton when it first opened. I am not a crazy level fan; I am a big science fiction fan partially because of Star Trek.

The plot and presentation of this movie was a complete disappointment. I went in thinking finally a new plot and not a remake of an original episode (which I really resented in the last one). Sadly. they forgot to get a good story and good writer. Uhura's reduction to legs in a short skirt made me unhappy. Killing the Enterprise with no feeling made me angry.

My expectations for Star Wars was low and it impressed me. My expectation for Star Trek were higher and it was complete disappointment.


message 7: by Sandra (new)

Sandra I enjoyed it but totally agree with you Wil, at the same time. The hubby actually said he felt seasick in the Enterprise destruction scene.

And what is it with turning the ladies into damsels in distress???


message 8: by Peter (new)

Peter Ackerman In the end, I liked "Beyond," and consider myself a fan, including TOS where my mother co-starred on a key episode in the canon - Metamorphosis - but I digress.
I loved reboot 1 ,could not stand 2 (spoiler coming): if Nimoy had lived was he going to show up and save the day in every movie, and were they just going to trade roles in the same story and call it a "new" movie?
Yet, 3, for the positive reasons you site in your comments, I loved the franchise again. Admittedly by the final reel I had no idea what was going on, as it was all very confusing to me, but I enjoyed the ride. I even went back and watched 2 again, and because Beyond was "good" I appreciated it, and liked it better.
You do bring up good arguments about the "damsel in distress," and Uhura suddenly becoming a girlfriend only, but Star Trek Beyond gave me such hope for a reboot that I was planning to give up on, that my fingers are crossed for a 4, where hopefully the filmmakers will redeem themselves even more.


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