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Star Trope, Up Ours [Jun. 3rd, 2009|12:04 pm]
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Events after my youngest brother's wedding have been a blur of depressurization and the whirlwind descent of the preparations for my own nuptials in The-Year-Of-Our-Lord-Two-Thousand-And-Ten. Can there be such a thing as preparations for the preparations to a wedding? It's looking more and more like this is the regular run of things when speaking of the impending merger of two people and two families. How can people have more than one of these things? It boggles the mind.

As usual, in the face of enormously important things looming over the horizon, I have chosen to break my silence by speaking of enormously unimportant things-- specifically, my opinions on movies professionals are paid to have opinions about.



Star Trek was an enjoyable movie experience, but a markedly poor Star Trek story. I can't call myself a Trekkie, but I've lived around them, and the series is firmly in the background of my makeup. What I saw in the theater was a big, transparent RESET button for the franchise, but a shiny, understandable one. I only wish that they'd offered a better tale while they were at it.

Basically, I now see that what they (by which, I mean the writers/producers/source) had set out to do was to breathe new life into the old, familiar characters of the series' inception, at which they have succeeded admirably; every name was given a new face and a new dynamic, especially effected through the contrivance of forcing the 'original' crew together in the context of just having emerged from the academy. I particularly enjoyed the new hook of Young Spock being romantically involved with Young Uhura (missed her first name, how ironic).

What I didn't appreciate was seeing old cudgels of lazy science fiction being used for the purpose; black holes, planetary destruction, time travel. I acknowledge their usefulness in evoking emotion and thought-pictures, but they are quick fixes and cop outs for the most part. I had imagined that the Star Trek franchise might start adopting a more mature approach to science fiction and thus shed some of the disdain it's accrued as 'McScience Fitcion' over the years, but I guess I'll have to wait a little longer.

Sadly, these are the least of my problems with it-- what prickles me more than the pseudoscience involved (which I am not a qualified authority on by any means) are the botched narrative opportunities littered throughout the film (which I am still not a qualified authority on by any means!). Most disappointing to me was the revelation of the nature of their primary antagonist; the captain of one of the most fearsome starships ever designed for the big screen turns out to be nothing more than an angry Romulan miner out for revenge. While I cannot reasonably hope for another favorite pulp SF villain, it almost makes one wish for the Borg again.

Finally, we get to the elephant in the room, the eye-popping moral conundrum that the writers seem to flit blasely through and about (and I'm not even talking about how easily Green-Skinned Girl was forgotten after her ship was presumably destroyed in the Federation fleet that was wiped out)-- how it can be considered, by any stretch, that the day was 'saved' when an entire planet of souls was completely and utterly annihilated. Now, I have no great love for Vulcans; to my mind, they are the Star Trek equivalent of Tolkien's elves, and you all know how I feel about that lot. No, my bigger problem is the implied attitude that as long as the planet destroyed wasn't Earth, it's perfectly okay to carry on without it.

Seriously, you guy? Seriously??

The sequential beginning of the events portrayed have an older Spock seeking to save planet Romulus and failing, subsequently earning the eternal ire of one of its survivors, with the additional complication of them both being thrown back in time to different temporal points. So far so good. And then we have the irate fellow swearing revenge on the Federation older Spock represents, starting with the ship that lay conveniently just outside the black hole he emerges from into the past, which just conveniently happens to carry James T. Kirk's father.

Somehow, despite the drastically different circumstances of James growing up with no father, not to mention the other, myriad changes to the universe presented by an extra-temporal visitor, Kirk largely grows up unchanged and the universe is still a perfect place for the crew of the original Star Trek tv show to appear together like family again for the first time. O... kay. Fine. I can accept that.

So now Irate Fellow means to destroy the Federation, starting with planet Vulcan, and following with planet Earth. He succeeds in destroying Vulcan in the first half; the rest of the movie is about saving planet Earth (which is, of course, saved in the end).

Alright, so a new alternate reality rife with future franchise possibilities is born; a Federation universe minus Vulcan, plus two Spocks, and an extremely young and plucky revivified crew of the Enterprise. All perfectly acceptable, but they didn't have to rub it in my face.

The dialogue and mood of the story were at odds with each other at very critical points, particularly when Older Spock speaks warmly to Young Kirk about 'cheating' being sometimes acceptable to solve no-win problems, 'cheating' being in reference to time travel.

... but they didn't mean to travel back in time! And the cure was worse than the disease, in any case-- Vulcan remains destroyed, Irate Fellow killed and gloated upon for all his trouble, with Romulus faring no better in the other reality. I kept expecting them to plunge into a black hole and through time again to bring Vulcan back, but then the credits started rolling, and I was all like wtf?

Seriously, you guy? Seriously??

I look forward to more jaw-droppingly beautiful rendered pew pew in the future, but damned if I'll ever forget that they murdered a planetful of people and casually told us all that it's perfectly alright.

I'm always sorry when I have more to say about things I didn't like than I do about things I did like, because I did like Star Trek (as a net gain anyway). However, I liked Pixar's Up a great deal better, and thus I will probably speak about it exponentially less.

Aside from the fact that I watched this one with [info]allisino this time whilst nomming on some decadently chocolatey brownie melts, it was the first 3D film I'd ever been to, and the effects are wholeheartedly recommended (if you're not prone to siezures or bouts of vomiting in the face of overwhelming visio-sensory assault, that is). I didn't even mind sitting way up on the very first row; may have enhanced the experience, really.

And of course, it was Pixar, from which I've come to expect lackluster publicity but great filmmaking. If I hadn't seen the trailer to Up, I'd have been better off; as it was, I still had a swell time. As such, I don't really want to give too much away, but I will a couple of general impressions.

I have an extraordinary respect and admiration for Pixar's commitment to perfecting the art of expressing motion and emotion without words. They're no slouches when it comes to narration, dialogue, and banter either-- their previous films, particularly The Incredibles and, my favorite, Ratatouille, establishes that-- but I take an exquisite appreciation for the times when they put the microphone down and let the reel do the talking. As with Wall-E, my favorite sequences in Pixar's Up were all in the first few minutes of the movie-- if wishes could be granted, I would have wanted for both movies to be entirely speechless. But alas, as with Wall-E, Up is, first and foremost, a children's movie (so no smart-alec 'What's Up?' jokes anymore, hmm, k?), and they have children to please.

That's the movement I perceive in Pixar's last three feature-lengths; perhaps Ratatouille's comparatively poor reception was due to the fact that it was a more cerebral comedy, with some very nuanced, eccentric dynamics carrying the bulk of the chemistry. Both Wall-E and Up start off with subdued scenes and situations, which suddenly-- almost jarringly-- segues into a lot of rollicking action sequences and a lot of physical comedy. Happily enough, Pixar blends both to their purposes masterfully, but with marked contrast comes a marked preference-- I enjoyed the fast-paced sections well enough but I dearly loved the quiet parts.

Oh, and so daring! Pixar deftly and subtly tackles extremely sensitive issues in Up as well, and again does them justice without dwelling on them too much to be depressing. They remind us that some of these things are real, as any storyteller should. But they do not lie to us and say that it is all perfectly acceptable-- something better is always possible and within reach, and you always leave their movies with a sense of hope and a smile.


These two movies amount to my total expenditures for media-based entertainment in forever. Has it really been more than a year since I last bought a videogame for myself? The times, they are a-changin'. More on this when I return.

God bless!



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Comments:
[User Picture]From: [info]lirazel
2009-06-03 08:40 pm (UTC)

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Not that I'm advising you to have a second wedding any time at all...

But I can tell you that my second was much more fun than the first*, precisely because I didn't have to care or worry about all the "oughts" -- the fifty or so people (I kid you not) who had to be invited even though they wouldn't come because if they weren't invited my mother would hear about it; the list my mother apparently was keeping in her head of every gift she'd ever given any relative for 23 years to see if what they gave us was equivalent; my dad's sister who had to be invited to read something; ad verbum nauseum.

So, my advice to you is to limit the "oughts". Especially the "ought" that says you ought to get blasted out of your minds a day or two before the wedding. You will both be pale and shaky enough! ^^;

*The very different character of the groom was an added plus.
[User Picture]From: [info]mads
2009-06-04 12:39 pm (UTC)

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If by getting blasted you mean getting sloshed, soused, and otherwise stupefied by sparkling spirits, you don't have to worry on our account-- we both wish to remember the wedding when it happens. XD

As for the rest, I suppose we're trying to minimize the fretting by getting it all over with as early as now; the sooner we know what we want, and whether we can get it or not, the more relaxed we can be about it all by the time crunch time actually rolls around. Funnily enough however, we've actually made it something of a game to find and hit all the 'oughts' we could, as long as they sounded reasonable.

I suppose I am fortunate in that, by my nature, I don't have a gaggle of names I want to jump up and add right off the bat, as, coming from a Filipino background as I am, my family and relatives already outnumber's Allie's side right off the bat. As for gifts, we're thinking of skipping the registry or implied necessity of gifts, as long as people can actually just be there.

We're both trying to be prudent about this, but at the same time, we see the fun in trying to get everything we can on the first go; whatever we miss, I guess there's always the renewing of vows. :D
[User Picture]From: [info]demota
2009-06-03 10:15 pm (UTC)

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I'm fine with the guy being a miner. Mostly because it makes him NOT a crazy mastermind. He's just an extremely disgruntled guy with a very very powerful ship.

As for the day being saved... I think it kind of was. The loss of Vulcan was terrible, but the bad man was stopped before he could take out Earth, Qo'NoS, Ferengar, -...

How the hell am I able to name those planets off the top of my head?

Anyway, point being, the day was saved, even if a big tragedy did occur. Sort of reminds me of a comic book I read about a super hero being all regretful and helpless that he could only save one of the World Trade Center Towers. The damage was seriously mitigated, and if not for an act of heroism, things could have been a lot worse.

Oh, before I forget, do you still draw? I don't meant that in a "POST MOAR ART" sorta way. I'm just wondering if it's something you still do.
[User Picture]From: [info]jakeexperience
2009-06-04 12:37 am (UTC)

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The thing is, by going back in time Nero could save Romulus by first nuking the nova-in-100 years star with red matter, and he could then sell the technology to the Romulan Star Empire, which would go on to conquer the galaxy. Problem solved.

Another issue is the limited number of Vulcans. While the planet itself was destroyed, they engage in space travel -- it's likely that there are many Vulcans who were offworld when the attack happened.

With 10,000 left they could conceivably set up cloning farms to rapidly increase the Vulcan population, if one has a spare M planet to share.

If you've read Star Trek Countdown, you got a more complete version of Nero's backstory, and got to see the Next Generation crew (Admiral Picard, Captain Data, etc. ) race against the clock to save Romulus and Vulcan. I am sure you'd enjoy reading the book.
[User Picture]From: [info]demota
2009-06-04 12:48 am (UTC)

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I read Countdown. Looked pretty interesting.

The thing is, Nero's a miner, not a mastermind. He's angry, and he's looking to take out that anger. Plus the timeline split created an alternate universe, not replaced his own history. Anything he'd do to save Romulus wouldn't save it in his own timeline. So, he's just lashing out at Vulcan and the Federation.

Admiral Pike was awesome though.
[User Picture]From: [info]mads
2009-06-04 12:53 pm (UTC)

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That's pretty much all that keeps me from frothing in the mouth about the heroes choosing not to go back in time to save Vulcan-- in this story, it is established that all time travel does is create an alternate reality, so going back would be largely pointless and needlessly complicated.
[User Picture]From: [info]demota
2009-06-04 01:37 am (UTC)

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oh, before I forget. The Narada didn't have the red matter. The Jellyfish did. You have a point about the "sell tech to the Romulan Star Empire" though. They could enact his revenge real easy. Though he's just a dumb miner.
[User Picture]From: [info]mads
2009-06-04 12:51 pm (UTC)

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As my brother keeps saying, "The Ishimura (Dead Space) looks more like a mining ship than THAT thing."

All I'm saying is that the production was misleading-- if they were serious about having an Irate Miner be this movie's Big Bad, they could have rigged together a more 'mine-y' ship easily enough; say, a mobile asteroid dotted with jutting, angular structures. As it was, it seems more like they designed something that would look fearsome for the big screen, and then copy-pasted a disposable villain archetype onto the helm.

BECAUSE MINERS KNOW ALL ABOUT SPINE-BURROWING MIND-CONTROL SLUGS, AM I RYT

But they weren't regretful and helpless! I may be being a little unreasonable about my demands, but for goodness' sake, the dialogue and mood should show a little more regard for the loss? Besides, I'm not really even talking about the characters in the story, who, to their credit, did seem to be making the most of a bad situation; as I said, the fault rests solely on the heads of the writers, who destroyed the planet more as a matter of convenience than as a matter of necessity.

And, yeah, I do still draw, but only recently getting back the inclination to do so again. It's really more of a lack of opportunity sort of thing, as I seem to prioritize other uses for my downtime-- I hope I'm not saying the same thing years from now, in a house I own with a brat on my knee. Or maybe I do. XD
[User Picture]From: [info]gabriel_dreams
2009-06-04 02:59 am (UTC)

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I randomly came across your livejournal and was reading the entry about throws and chest hairs. I was wondering the same thing, I will have to ask my instructor, "What if you're naked?"

That sounds horrible but honestly?

Can I add you?
[User Picture]From: [info]mads
2009-06-04 12:56 pm (UTC)

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Add away! Although I'm afraid you'll get nothing from me for a while but spew about my real life concerns, dotted here and there with penny musings on what little mass media I consume nowadays.

And, if you're naked, there's always UFC grappling!
[User Picture]From: [info]gabriel_dreams
2009-06-06 02:48 am (UTC)

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Yeah but in the event someone is choking you, and you desperately wanted to do that throw, for curiosities sake, I would like to know how that would work, if at all...lol
[User Picture]From: [info]jaeai
2009-06-08 01:16 pm (UTC)

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The germs currently enacting a mutiny on Joyce just wanted you to know.

Biscuit and Gravy wrestling is back in my town.


That is all. ~Germs.