I was talking with a friend earlier about a different friend of mine who has hated every Legion of Superheroes incarnation since the 70s, yet he's been reading them since the 70s. Sure, you could say "He's a collector," but he's not: he buys them and then loses them. This is not rational behavior. But we are rarely rational when it comes to things we hate - or things we love, I guess. Hate or love, it could be that there's comfort in retreading the same ground. Maybe this behavior is imprinted on our psyches from pre-verbal history.
Whatever the reason, I'm usually in the why-hatewatch camp, but I give myself an eternal exception when it comes to Trek. My Trekrage is just another facet of my overall Trek fandom. It's fun to hate the Trek I hate and to tell anyone who will listen why. I learn as much about what I love about Trek when I see it done badly - or what doesn't appeal to me, I should say, less a statement of being done badly and more Here's-how-they-got-Trek-wrong nitpicking - as I do when I see it done well.
With that in mind, let's jump into the rest of the Bigscreen Treks.
8.
1989 |
If The Motion Picture is the TOS series finale that we never got, The Final Frontier is the bloated mash-up of "By Any other Name" and "This Side of Paradise" that we really never needed. With fandancing and a little (but nowhere near enough) "Way to Eden" thrown in.
Gene Roddenberry (according to Susan Sackett in her Trek memoir) didn't participate much in the making of the film. "More than anything, it was the story that distressed him. His own script ("The God Thing") had been turned down by the studio years before, and he was still smarting from that rejection. He felt that Trek V did a much poorer job of portraying an encounter with God than his own story * that it was less imaginative, limited in scope and depth. (...) He found the raw footage so depressing that he stopped attending screenings."
As Nimoy put it sympathetically in I Am Spock, Bill was riding a bad script. Not much you can do when that's the case except get a better one, which is not always possible.
Gene Roddenberry (according to Susan Sackett in her Trek memoir) didn't participate much in the making of the film. "More than anything, it was the story that distressed him. His own script ("The God Thing") had been turned down by the studio years before, and he was still smarting from that rejection. He felt that Trek V did a much poorer job of portraying an encounter with God than his own story * that it was less imaginative, limited in scope and depth. (...) He found the raw footage so depressing that he stopped attending screenings."
* Also, 100% less nude-oil-wrestling. |
As Nimoy put it sympathetically in I Am Spock, Bill was riding a bad script. Not much you can do when that's the case except get a better one, which is not always possible.
9.
2016 |
I don't have much to say about this one. I don't like it much, but it's just kind of there. I have in theory no qualms with Trek going its own way, I just don't know who this movie was meant to satisfy. To bring in new fans? Some international marketing gamble? Kids? Teens? Adults on dates? Adults by themselves? This last one, maybe, I could see, but surely this is not an effective use of resources, is it? It sure wasn't what the franchise needed in 2016.
Not that I know what it needs. It must be an annoying job, dealing with the studio and with Trek fans like me, or Trek fans like anyone. But hey: we all have annoying jobs. The only thing anyone should expect from Star Trek is an enjoyable Star Trek movie. Here we have lots of wigs, Idris Elba at his mumbliest, big CGI chases, and warmed-over plots and arcs everywhere you look. Some of it might be fun, but you can get it anywhere. (The wigs are fantastic, though. I mean this sincerely. A proper blog would give you screencaps here to demonstrate this, but alas, I disappoint you.)
Not that I know what it needs. It must be an annoying job, dealing with the studio and with Trek fans like me, or Trek fans like anyone. But hey: we all have annoying jobs. The only thing anyone should expect from Star Trek is an enjoyable Star Trek movie. Here we have lots of wigs, Idris Elba at his mumbliest, big CGI chases, and warmed-over plots and arcs everywhere you look. Some of it might be fun, but you can get it anywhere. (The wigs are fantastic, though. I mean this sincerely. A proper blog would give you screencaps here to demonstrate this, but alas, I disappoint you.)
10.
2013 |
I remember the bad reviews this got when it came out and thinking meh, it wasn't so bad. Had I never sat down and watched it a few more times, I might still think that. But each subsequent viewing revealed its contrivances.
Here's where the Kelvin timeline went fatally off course and never got back onto it. It's not that the movie itself is specifically responsible for it; it's more what it represents. I mean, for starters, they had a big hit with the reboot, then took six years off to come out with this one. I don't care about any of the various reasons for this; it just never should have happened. Secondly, the overall plan of Abrams (such as he had one) was to flesh out the rest of the timeline in a variety of tie-in media, particularly the comics featuring the Lens Flare Trek published by IDW which would revisit each and every episode of TOS. Good idea - but hampered terribly by various factions and never properly realized. (I read most of them. See? Trekrage gluttony.)
Third, this film is a collection of bad ideas, from conception ("let's sort of remake Wrath of Khan! But pointlessly! And pretend these new actors with whom the audience has no decades-long investment can just allude to harder-won investments by the original cast and it'll have the same impact.") to execution. It looks and sounds fine - production design is rarely Trek's weak spot - but there's just nothing to hang it on. A story where Starfleet is making illegal weapons and sowing chaos and resurrecting genetically-advanced "supermen" who somehow can create weapons superior to those of people with technology centuries-superior to them is just neither Trek nor edgy. And a weird step for people trying to rekindle the energy of a well-received reboot six years in the past at the time of its release.
Star Trek as a franchise occasionally suffers from Bad Idea disease. It astounds me what ideas advance all the way from the writers room to test screenings without being nipped in the bud. Michael Piller's unpublished Fade In (which was available as a free pdf for awhile, not sure if that's still the case) gives a great insider's view of the behind the scenes process for Insurrection, which again is a film I kind of love but objectively recognize has problems. His book neatly demonstrates how those not-making-sense things evolved from overlapping concerns of the cast and studio. Maybe Into Darkness had something similar, but it was with this film that fans started getting yelled at by the screenwriters on Twitter and then Abrams was off to do what some felt he wanted to do in the first place: Star Wars.
From the first reviews I read of the rebooted Trek, there were concerns it was too Star-Wars-y, too sci-fantasy not enough Trekian sci-fi. I think these complaints are valid. This only became clearer to me after Into Darkness. I began wondering if this whole thing was, after all the sizzle and on-screen zap and zoom, just an elaborate cosplay.
Here's where the Kelvin timeline went fatally off course and never got back onto it. It's not that the movie itself is specifically responsible for it; it's more what it represents. I mean, for starters, they had a big hit with the reboot, then took six years off to come out with this one. I don't care about any of the various reasons for this; it just never should have happened. Secondly, the overall plan of Abrams (such as he had one) was to flesh out the rest of the timeline in a variety of tie-in media, particularly the comics featuring the Lens Flare Trek published by IDW which would revisit each and every episode of TOS. Good idea - but hampered terribly by various factions and never properly realized. (I read most of them. See? Trekrage gluttony.)
Third, this film is a collection of bad ideas, from conception ("let's sort of remake Wrath of Khan! But pointlessly! And pretend these new actors with whom the audience has no decades-long investment can just allude to harder-won investments by the original cast and it'll have the same impact.") to execution. It looks and sounds fine - production design is rarely Trek's weak spot - but there's just nothing to hang it on. A story where Starfleet is making illegal weapons and sowing chaos and resurrecting genetically-advanced "supermen" who somehow can create weapons superior to those of people with technology centuries-superior to them is just neither Trek nor edgy. And a weird step for people trying to rekindle the energy of a well-received reboot six years in the past at the time of its release.
As is the inversion of the whole "KHAAAN!" and death/ resurrection. |
They could've had something here with Kirk and Marcus - she and Chris Pine had okay chemistry. She should have come back for STB. |
Star Trek as a franchise occasionally suffers from Bad Idea disease. It astounds me what ideas advance all the way from the writers room to test screenings without being nipped in the bud. Michael Piller's unpublished Fade In (which was available as a free pdf for awhile, not sure if that's still the case) gives a great insider's view of the behind the scenes process for Insurrection, which again is a film I kind of love but objectively recognize has problems. His book neatly demonstrates how those not-making-sense things evolved from overlapping concerns of the cast and studio. Maybe Into Darkness had something similar, but it was with this film that fans started getting yelled at by the screenwriters on Twitter and then Abrams was off to do what some felt he wanted to do in the first place: Star Wars.
From the first reviews I read of the rebooted Trek, there were concerns it was too Star-Wars-y, too sci-fantasy not enough Trekian sci-fi. I think these complaints are valid. This only became clearer to me after Into Darkness. I began wondering if this whole thing was, after all the sizzle and on-screen zap and zoom, just an elaborate cosplay.
11.
1991 |
This is probably a lot more enjoyable film to watch for most people than either of the Kelvin timeline ones above. Not because it's any better but for the same reason the last gig a particular line-up of a band played is memorable. Doesn't matter how well they played or if the gig was any good, it's just historic for being the last time they all suited up.
Long story short: nothing makes sense, and the characters don't act like themselves or even competently motivated human beings. Aspects of the future that define the franchise are tossed aside with abandon. Granted this is something true of pretty much every Trek motion picture, but there's a way of doing it and a way of botching it. Necessary filters have been removed. Compare Khan's quoting of Melville in Khan to Chang's constant quoting of Shakespeare in Undiscovered Country. Same idea but something's missing.
Almost everything I just said is true of what's coming up next, but before I go, the saddest anecdote in Trek history. Roddenberry suffered an intense stroke around the time they were wrapping on TUC and was confined to a wheelchair and unable to say much beyond yes or no. He was wheeled in to a screening. While the assembled suits for whom the screening had primarily been arranged talked to themselves about how great everything looked, Roddenberry, limited in speech but having one of his more lucid days, could only whisper "No... no... no..." over and over again.
I don't begrudge Undiscovered Country fans this; I enjoy it myself. I can't, however, hang with any "It's just nice to see the TOS characters all together one last time" sentiments. It's one thing to say it about the cast; it's another to sanction the disfiguring of the actual characters and core Trek conceits in service to a bad script.
Long story short: nothing makes sense, and the characters don't act like themselves or even competently motivated human beings. Aspects of the future that define the franchise are tossed aside with abandon. Granted this is something true of pretty much every Trek motion picture, but there's a way of doing it and a way of botching it. Necessary filters have been removed. Compare Khan's quoting of Melville in Khan to Chang's constant quoting of Shakespeare in Undiscovered Country. Same idea but something's missing.
Almost everything I just said is true of what's coming up next, but before I go, the saddest anecdote in Trek history. Roddenberry suffered an intense stroke around the time they were wrapping on TUC and was confined to a wheelchair and unable to say much beyond yes or no. He was wheeled in to a screening. While the assembled suits for whom the screening had primarily been arranged talked to themselves about how great everything looked, Roddenberry, limited in speech but having one of his more lucid days, could only whisper "No... no... no..." over and over again.
I'm sorry, but good lord the parallels. |
12.
Picard and Data both struggle with the literalization of the imperfect-reflection trope in a world gone green, which drives them to suicidal tendencies. Is it suicide if you kill your own clone? Is it survival if you're haunted forever? Nem-e-sis.
Does no one comment on how green everything is? Seriously. |
Same deal with the last-suited-up business:
Skaal. |
And unfortunately same deal with the cast and concept being mangled in the process. Nothing makes sense here. Everything is overdone. Troi - psionically violated again? Shinzon's ship - totally overwhelming to everything in its path? The ennui - driven to Wagner levels but lacking the actual Wagner? And what the hell did they do the damn Romulans? Stop rebooting the concept/ race everytime you use them.
Maybe if it was just a different, stand-alone sci-fi film I'd be more forgiving, but I dislike Nemesis as a Trek film. As the last TNG-cast film, I dislike it even more, and as the "corrective" for Insurrection, I flat-out hate it. Aspects of the script are fine, and the cast plays to this alternate world where this isn't a Trek movie okay enough. (Patrick Stewart in particular, who seems to be channeling the existential angst of some dark 70s western).
It's Citizen Kane, though, compared to the worst bigscreen Trek of all:
13.
1994 |
The Nexus - some kind of dream nebula tripping wildly through the cosmos, ensnaring all within its path into an eternal replay of self-realization fantasies, until those ensnared just decide they kinda want to leave and then (poof) back to reality - captures Captain Kirk. Later it captures Captain Picard, and the two ride horses. Then they leave, and Captain Kirk gets shot in the back by some guy.
I still cling to the idea that this whole thing is some huge metaphor for drugs. Everything kind of resembles the before, during, and after of a drug binge. And at the end of it all, the Enerprise is destroyed, and Captain Kirk lies dead at your feet.
... |
... |
Time to sober up. |
I go on at great length about Generations here. But I feel more comfortable just bullet-pointing all the things I hate about it. Here we go. I hate:
- The Enterprise-B set-up at the beginning. Everything about it. They're headed on a quick trip around the solar system but are the only ship in range? Its captain and crew are this incompetent?
- Everything about Data's emotion chip. Literally everything. Don't get me started.
- Soren. Soren is a guy who will slaughter billions so he can get back to something he can easily re-enter without - okay, let's not even get into the absurd mechanics of how people enter the Nexus, especially Soren's whole Rube Goldberg set-up. As with how people exit it, it falls apart immediately under questioning. Soren gets a couple of good lines, but a) he gets way more bad lines, and b) his character is so poorly motivated that it doesn't matter. The complete nonsense of his set-up top to bottom cheapens what should be among the most powerful farewells of the whole Trekverse. It's a crime in plain sight where the murderers still walk among us. If only Shatner would press charges.
- Kirk's death. WTF. That this actually went through all the drafts it did and took a test audience to change compounds the initial offense considerably.
- The offscreen deaths of Picard's brother, his wife, and his nephew. (Not that it'd have been any better had they been onscreen.) This is clearly here to motivate Picard's momentary temptation inside the Nexus to live out his days with a surrogate family freed from Starfleet obligation. But you could have just had the conversation with Troi do that, or any conversation he's ever had. He breaks free of this temptation after like thirty seconds. They shot the man's family for that?
That speaks to the script's big problem: everything is absurdly overdone. How can we make this the worst villain of all? HE KILLS BILLIONS! How will the audience ever buy Picard even for a moment being taken by the Nexus (although there's considerable precedent for this already with "The Inner Light" FFS) ? SHOOT HIS FAMILY! Spiner's complaining about not having anything to do. BIG EMOTION CHIP SCENE! Captain Kirk? SHOT IN THE BACK!
I could even go on! There's a close-up of a dropped baby doll for God's sake. It's all so much worse because these are the cinematic waters where TOS and TNG meet. TNG's "Unification" or "Relics" did a much better job mixing these streams; my disappointment is all the more profound for having the chance, and the tools, and the background to pull it off and instead, choosing all the paths they chose.
The only positive takeaway is that without the events of this movie, we never would have gotten the Shatnerverse. (Which should probably be called the Shatner-and-Reeves-verse.) As much as I enjoy those, though, it in no way compensates for or justifies all the Trek tomfoolery in Generations.
~
And there we have it, folks. See you in the comments.