Star Trek:Section 31 Premiere Reaction (ft Emily Inkpen) and Q&A with Michelle Yeoh and Rob Kazinsky [Spoiler-free mini-review]
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I didn't even know there was a premiere in London on Wednesday, but there we have it.
Highlights: the person who saw the movie described it as "fun," "silly," and "Guardians of the Galaxy meets Fifth Element meets Mission: Impossible".
There's also a full, recorded-from-the-audience Q&A with Michelle Yeoh and Robert Kazinsky.
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The Bard in Greenreplied to Value Subtracted last edited by
the person who saw the movie described it as “fun,” “silly,” and “Guardians of the Galaxy meets Fifth Element meets Mission: Impossible”.
I have a feeling I'm gonna be like "This was a good sci fi movie, but should it have been a Trek movie?"
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Value Subtractedreplied to The Bard in Green last edited by
Star Trek has certainly never shied away from "fun and silly" before. I think it's good to have different flavours available.
As long as I enjoy this thing, it should be enough for me.
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[email protected]replied to The Bard in Green last edited by
Of the previous Trek movies, we have:
A deliberately ponderous sci-fi epic
A submarine story fueled by revenge
A crew who risks everything to save one friend
A reunion special with a "save the whales" message front and center
An ego project with ambition
A political/spy thriller
A crossover for the fans
A zombie movie
A long episode of TNG
The second movie again but worse
A reboot with plot holes
A misunderstood action flick
A Fast & Furious movie
So how is this "not Trek" while all of those are Trek?
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[email protected]replied to Value Subtracted last edited by
My main worry is the glorification of illegal intelligence activities, contradicting the message of Deep Space Nine. If the movie can handle that barrier, fun and silly sounds great.
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Value Subtractedreplied to [email protected] last edited by
Yeah...I think a lot of that will depend on what the actual plot of the thing is, and they've been keeping a surprisingly tight lid on that.
The covert mission to destroy Cardassian weapons that Starfleet Intelligence sent Picard, Crusher, and Worf on in "Chain of Command" was probably illegal, but I never hear people complaining about it.