All 3 films have the same plot: terrorist has grudge against the federation, commits a terrorist attack, enterprise gets messed up, bad guy reveals plan with super weapon, fist fight with bad guy at the end.
And within Star Trek itself, all three are lame rehashes of Wrath of Khan. All three villains are people who were screwed over and want revenge™️, *always* with a prototype superweapon.
When the film started with Spock unironically explaining that he can stop the volcano from erupting by using "cold fusion", I knew immediately that this was no longer Star Trek.
This. A hundred times, this. When I first watched it, I honestly didn't catch it. It was too stupid for my brain to even register anything. I can remember seeing a review of it where that was mentioned and I thought they were joking! They played the clip. I had to go back and see it for myself again. I just could not believe it. The biggest travesty is that they try to associate any of this with Star Trek.
With Abrams, Kurtzman, and Lindelof writing; I don't know why I expected better. And why in Hell are they paid so much, when they're too incompetent to Google a phrase they don't understand?
Why? Seriously, I don't get why that's the deciding factor you're going with. I think the crew of the Enterprise trying to save an entire civilization from disaster is in-keeping with their characters. Heck, I remember an episode of the OG series when - after being contracted by a mining company to _kill_ a dangerous alien creature, they instead have Spock mind-meld with the creature, decide that it is just an innocent animal defending it's territory, and work to find a way to preserve it's life, and find a way for the miners to co-exist with the thing. What I'm saying is, the Enterprise crew usually goes out of their way to save _everyone,_ be it human or alien.
Apparently in JJ Trek, Khan is as commonly remembered as Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldren and Zephram Cochran. In the original Space Seed that was a bit muddled as they seem oblivious in Act1, but by the awkward dinner party in Act 2 Scotty and Bones know a about him. The best explanation is waking up a guy named Patel and finding out Ohhhhh THAT PATEL.
@@deltafire5058 the President of the pasty white Englishman club, cast to play the Sikh, Noonyan Khan was worse than black Cleopatra. He was just auditioning for his Doctor Strange role the whole film.
And with that, "May name...is...KHAN!" remark, Ricardo Montalban's Khan beams over and beats the dog snot out of Benedict Cumberbatch's Khan on account of embarrassment by association.
- Alright his name is Carl. Write it down! - Not Carl! It's KHAN!!! - K what? - KHAN!!! - Khan? - KHAN!!! - Okay so it "k" and "a" or "h"... how do you pronounce it? - k, h, a, n. KHAN!!! - Khan that's it, aaand this is your family name? Yes? Yes. We kinda need your name to the report soo...
Oh gods, interstellar transporters. And worse than that, a portable one you can pack in a suitcase. It was bad enough Scotty inventing transwarp beaming in the first JJDrek movie. I mean with that technology why would you even need a starfleet. Want to attack someone? Just beam the warheads directly to their planet. Makes a mockery of Voyager. With that tech they would have been home in a couple of weeks. Months at the most.
Nero was bad too: "A natural disaster has destroyed my planet and then I time traveled 25 years in the past to a time when my planet was safe." "So, you'll warn our planet about its impending doom?" "No, I'm going to risk all of our lives by attacking Vulcan and Earth. Because they failed to save us from our sun going nova." "Ummm....you realize that, even if you succeed, Romulus is still fucked, right?"
Thank you! I always wondered about that and I realize that there's a deleted scene with the capture by the Klingons, but that's a deleted scene, and it's not in the movie. So basically Nero and the Narada are just sailing around for 25 years and do nothing?! Yeah, if that's the best they can do I wished it'd have ended back then too.
Actually it's worse than that. The Romulan sun sploded after the TNG-VOY era and the time travel bit took Spock from that point in time way back to the birth if Kirk! He could have given Romulus nearly 2 centuries of warning!
I believe this isn't actually a plot hole though; as he explains it, Romulus exploding was of course his triggering point, but he blamed it all on the Federation. In his eyes, if Romulus hadn't grown "dependant" on the Federation they wouldn't have died, but likely either have fixed it themselves or evactuated. To him, the Federation is the whole reason why it was able to happen in the first place. I believe he also might have believed that it was intentional, and just incompetence. "Spock didn't help us, he betrayed us." Either way, he's still a genocidal maniac due to his grief and rage, but at least not for a plot hole-y reason. Full quote for context: "My purpose, Christopher, is to not simply avoid the destruction of the home that I love, but to create a Romulus that exists free of the Federation. As only then will she be truly saved. That is why I will destroy all the remaining Federation planets, starting with yours."
I hated the trope that the later Star Trek movies like this one and Nemesis fell into of "Bad guy has a ship thats so much bigger and better than the Enterprise!" one of the best things about the original Wrath of Khan was that the Enterprise and Reliant were closely matched so it was a battle of wits and skill not just who had the biggest guns. Also it makes no sense in universe that Star Fleet can just build a ship in secret thats like 3 x more powerful than whats meant to be their best ship. Star Fleet and the Federation in the original series and TNG era felt real and somewhat grounded - all thrown away in the reboot movies and Discovery Trek era.
Especially as it's right there in the Admirals office! I mean the model ship is just sitting there and the Admiral just looks at the Vengeance and Kirk and Spock just seem to blow it off and not wonder what that new model ship is?
Into Derpness featuring Dr No-onien was peak lens flare by Jar Jar Abrams. At least until he made the Cinematic abortion that was 'The Rise of Palpatine'.
I recently watched Wrath of Khan for the first time since I was a kid, and while it still isn't my favorite TOS film it is miles better than this. The iconic scene of Kirk screaming "KHAN!" makes sense in that context because he's talking to him over comms. He's literally shouting angrily at a man who seemingly just defeated him. Secondly, Spock's death is treated with weight and drama, Kirk looks utterly helpless and broken as he is watching his best friend die, and just kind of slumps to the floor beside him in stunned silence. Into Darkness treats it like a cartoon, like what a child _thinks_ a dramatic death scene should look like, followed by ridiculous screaming at someone who isn't even there to hear it.
There is an argument to be made that Kirk shouting "Khan" is Kirk overacting as ruse to fool Khan that he is broken, as afterwards it is revealed that Kirk is completely unworried about being trapped in the Regula asteroid as he and Spock have a plan with their "hours become days" cipher.
Spock's Death in Wrath of Khan is a cinematic touchstone. It was legendary as soon as the first audiences saw it. It had the most gravitas of anything in the entire franchise up to that point (and still may be the defining moment of the IP).
The silly fight on the Klingon homeworld reminded me of the lover's spat between Spock and Uhura which Uhura ddcides to have during the mission, in front of the captain, as if this were a sitcom. One of the things about watching TOS is the professionalism displayed by the crew while on duty. Uhura could do things like tease Spock in the recreation room while on downtime, but she would not do so on the bridge in a crisis.
Imagine how brilliant Jar Jar Abrams thought he was for having Captain Kirk deleted instead of Spock... He must have picked up his Bud Light and sipped it down while hearing the song playing in his head... "REAL MAN OF GENIUS!!!"
Admiral Robocop: “can you build me a more advanced starship?” Smaug Khan: “naturally, my intellect has no limitations” Admiral Robocop: “perfect, this will be the dawn of a new age…” Smaug Khan: “just one question” Amiral Robocop: “and that is?” Smaug Khan: “what is a Starship?”
Kahn: my starship will go warp....2! I know they haven't invented warp drive yet but I'm so smart that I can give you warp 2. Admiral: bro, we're doing warp 9 now
There was this Board Game in the early 90's called Grape Escape. It was like Mousetrap with obstacles and traps, except the Grape characters were molded by you because they were made of clay. That way they could get squished and beaten and nothing would really happen since you could just remold them and make more. That's how the characters feel when you're watching a JJ Star Trek movie.
The reversal of the Spock death from Wrath of Khan and Kirk’s subsequent super recovery just made me groan inside. Conscious subverting of the brilliance of what had come before. The needs of the few, or the one, outweighing the needs of the many 🤷♂️ Thing is, I cared about Spock and Kirk in the Wrath of Khan, I didn’t give two hoots about these imposters.
No, as Star Trek III and IV made clear, Spock was wrong; the rights of the one DO outweigh the needs of the many. What kind of f-cking world do you want to live in, communist China or North Korea, where the needs of the many outweigh the rights of the one... or the Anglosphere, where the rights of the one outweigh the needs of the many? The needs of the many outweighs the needs of the few or the one has been used throughout history to justify the most horrific violations of humanity.
Adding to Dave's comment about McCoy being able to use Khan's blood to cure death, it's amazing how much Abrams casually dismantles the carefully built-up Trek universe just to make his plots work. "Sir, interstellar beaming is a thing now!" "OK, start mothballing Star Fleet, we don't need it anymore!"
why build start ship if you got interstellar beaming ... Honestly. problem with a race beam a bomb into the capital., shipyards, anywhere that allow beaming which is nearly 100% of star trek as no place keep shield on 24/7.
You described the plot of Demolition Man! 😂 I remember watching all 3 of these movies. After being distracted by the visuals, you're left feeling empty as it's not really Star Trek. It's like a Fast & Furious version of Star Trek 😕
In Demolition Man bringing back old brutes actually makes sense as society has been neutered and pacified to the point where no one is capable of violence or rebellion. Jar Jar Treks are far more stupider films than Demolition Man that is now a cult classic, if not a legit classic movie. Mostly due to development of actual society mirroring it. Now enjoy owning nothing and eating bu... Taco Bell.
I have literally never heard anyone ever say Into darkness was the best of the rebooted movies. I've heard the third one is actually okay but it wasn't made by JJ abrams, and the first one is considered a kind of guilty pleasure, but into Darkness has been basically reviled by everyone I've ever spoken to about it.
Never cared about any of these Kelvin Star Treks. The 2009 movie is a very nauseating shaky camera garbage fest. Just utterly forgettable every one of them. Even Valerian was a more entertaining garbage than any of them.
One simple fix that would have the Khan's arc and plot making much more sense: they woke Khan up for his military strategic genius. That would make sense. Would a modern general want to talk to Sun Tzu? Or Napoleon? Probably. Tech changes, but the as Sun Tzu's writings prove, military strategies at their core remain timeless. Of course, then the writers would actually have the burden of writing him as a strategic genius, which given the writing quality would have probably been insurmountable. However, the plot was terrible anyways, so it does not fix the overall problems.
That makes sense, if no starfleet officer has ever had even the most basic combat training. Or there aren't libraries full of books on the subject of military tactics. The whole plot is utter b.s.
Yes, exactly, they claim Admiral Marcus needed Khan to design weapons, but plenty of the most destructive weapons weren't designed by warriors. Oppenheimer wasn't a warrior, and he made the nuclear bomb. Khan being used to orchestrate plans to fight the Klingons, maybe using his own super-men, would have also provided Khan an opportunity to cooperate as it would allow him to take the whole Federation after secretly using it as his own strike force.
@@chrisbaker8533 Having books doesn't mean you understand the concepts, or can implement them effectively. There's a book series called _The Lost Fleet,_ about a 100-year long space war. Over time, so many officers have died that tactics have degenerated into headlong charges, while strategy is "whatever lets us kill enemy ships and populations". Both sides have access to tactical and strategic guides, but they don't _understand_ them. As the series goes on, the enemy tries to implement old tactics, but have no officers trained to control multiple formations in four dimensions, so they can't properly pull them off. They also don't know why the tactics are the way they are, so they do things like "If X is good, then doing even more X must be better", not realising how that could go wrong. Basically, Khan knows how to fight a war, and he's intelligent and adaptable enough to change his way of fighting to use newer weapons. Starfleet had lost the institutional knowledge.
8:16 I cried at this scene when the real Spock died. I felt nothing when fake Kirk "died". Those people don't know how emotions work because they are robots themselves. ffs, JarJar's company is named "Bad Robot". How on the nose can you get!?
I was fully expecting him to be one of Khan's followers, setting the stage for Khan in a later movie by showing how capable just one of his supermen were first. I guess this obvious setup was STILL too smart for the knuckle-dragging JJ.
In the original “Wrath of Khan” film, Khan entrapped Kirk and a few crew in that planet as “a tomb”. That famous scene when Kirk desperately and angrily screams, “Khaaaaaan!!!” (as Khan’s ship slowly drifts triumphantly from the planet), my jaw dropped in shock! “The Khan won and Kirk will die!”, I thought to myself. Now that is superb script writing, plot twist, and heightened fear of a villain! (At that moment, Khan scared the hell out of me like Darth Vader did in “Empire Strikes Back”.) When, Kirk and crew found a way to survive and re-establish communication, that was an against-the-odds scenario. (Wow, that’s amazing storytelling, script writing, and world-class acting!) And then, Spock’s ultimate sacrifice…!!! Absolutely, brilliant and memorable classic film😎👍🏾 Sorry, JJ, your version was just a high-octane, high fructose corn syrup nothing burger that elevated my blood sugar and numbed my brain cells!😝 Thanks Dave Cullen for your critique and reflection on this “Jar Jar” Abrams film-its unbelievable that he gets entrusted with these mainstay and generational franchises (Star Trek and Star Wars), and makes them hollow not hallow, all-carbs with no protein, and microwaves not bakes them.😕
Hilariously, Kirk knew that the Enterprise would be repaired in mere hours. The iconic scream isn't one of a beaten man, just Shatner committing really hard to a bit 😂
They had to wake Khan up to help infuse a little violence for the same reason they woke John Spartan. Check the Enterprise heads for 3 seashells. Adding Demolition Man type humor would have made In To Darkness a much better movie because it was too hard to take seriously
I had to verify what you said about Krull. They just don't know how to leave well enough alone. The Glaive was just one of my favorite weapons. Jar Jar can only ruin a classic... again. smh
@@DaNinja60 No I haven't, I was never really that interested in Star Trek, and especially the older ones just didn't aged well from my perspective. But I can really see how older fans of the series can feel insulted by those movies. Especially second one...
@@WwZa7 Just watch the original movies from Star Trek: The Motion Picture. You'll see the magic the new ones lost including the revelation of Khan (from Space Seed) up to their final retirement. It's an epic adventure that many of us grew up with.
@@joshualandry3160 Even people who are NOW quite negative towards what JJ did were very positive after seeing those first movies. I was most surprised how highly people rated the Force Awakens.
As Dave mentions towards the end, all the flashy action scenes, and fast pace really does hide a bad movie. It is standard operating procedure for a Jar Jar Abrams film. A slow burn like Hunt for Red October could not be made today unfortunately.
Can you imagine a TOS or TNG movie made around the plot of Red October? Like, I think it was called "Balance of Terror" episode of TOS, which was based on the WWII movie, "The Enemy Below". I can see that being an amazing ST movie.
The Abrams Star Trek is lacking in so many ways... for one, if Kirk nearly destroyed the Enterprise after every movie... do you know how many crew members would have died? There is a lack of honor for the ship too. Remember seeing the Enterprise in space dock and being so amazed by it, then seeing Kirks reaction... the music. The ship became a character in the movie and something you cared about. Now its just a plot device that you can blow up and rebuild with no consequences.
I've always been so confused as to why "Into Darkness" Khan bears no resemblance to actual Khan. The Botany Bay crew went into stasis well before the Kelvin timeline split, so there should be no difference in how they dress, talk, etc. I could deal with a Khan recasting, but they made zero attempts to make it fit. It's bizzare... I've always thought such an easy fix could have been to have Cumberbatch play a different superman that we'd never met before. An enhanced engineer from WW3, and Khan himself remains in stasis as the twist. Even the movie's title is a meaningless jumble of words. What a waste.
Exactly. Have him play the #2 lieutenant. As bad as this guy is shown to be in the film, elude that there is a greater threat still waiting to wake up.
Thanks a lot Dave, great video. I love the way you - and the Critical Drinker - continue to point out just how far modern culture and society have fallen. The original 'The Wrath of Khan' and 'The Voyage Home' would be my fave movies with the old cast.
Transwarp Beaming killed Star Trek, as did the many other things they did to make space seem so incredibly small. Star Wars has the same issue since the sequels.
I let it slide in the first movie because it kind of aligned with the TNG episode _The Wounded_. But if they have the ability to beam something 112 light years away then why do they need anything else? Just transport a bunch of photon torpedoes into the major Klingon military or government structures and be done with it.
Discovery killed it further by introducing instant travel. No longer is there any need to actually travel anywhere. Just fire up your space bear drive and, seconds later, you can be on the other side of the universe.
Star Wars had that problem on Day One. Start at the back-end of galactic nowhere, jump in a ship, and be at the #2 most prosperous and important planet before you need to shave again? And they have real-time hyperspace comms, too. I've always wondered how the Outer Rim stays so Wild West-like, when business and politics can be done galaxy-wide faster than it could be done in the US in the 1950's.
Funny how the Klingon homeworld is so very unprotected from infiltrators. I guess Starfleet isn't alone in that stupid policy of leaving Earth unprotected.
Khan being 300 years from the past but capable to build weapons and ships in the current time reminds me of Howard Stark telling Tony how he was limited by the technology of his time. That's my only way to argue how it can work here.
I don't understand how Kirk was given the captain's chair after several months in the academy. Since this is a new timeline, it would have been really interesting to see the roles reversed where Kirk becomes the first officer and Spock is the captain. But i do think they couldve made Spocks temper tantrum at the end work... if the audience was involved and IF they suggested that he couldnt control himself, even after he got back to the ship. It would be an incite into the mind of a Vulcan. We would finally be able to see how wild and dangerous they really are without logic
It's a trademark of JJ Abrams' style of writing these movies that the whole plot falls apart if he allows the audience even a second to think about what was just said by the characters Truly one of the filmmakers of all time
When I saw it in the theaters, initially I enjoyed it for what it was. But just like the force awakens, into the darkness has not aged well. In fact, the older gets the more glare in the parent. The films plot holes and flaws are glaringly obvious.
As a long term Bab5 fan, all throughout this movie, I was somehow waiting for a plot ‚twist‘ of some sort. Like they had Khan’s crewmen’s brains hard-wired to the torpedoes to give them superior agility or aiming and tracking. Maybe the writers even played with that idea and forgot about it along the way XD
the moment khan killed the klingons... my response was. Oh, he's an augment. They had khan moving like the Augments did in Enterprise. Which had me wondering which augment he was, which batch, and if the torps were more of the augments
Near the start of the movie there's a scene after the archives get bombed when all the senior staff are assembled. Kirk asks why anyone would blow up an archive, then realizes that in the event of a terrorist attack all the most important leaders would be gathered in that room. Then Khan attacks that room. I thought it was a brilliant twist. Khan was maneuvering pieces on a chessboard. He hit a low security, unimportant target to compel the behavior of his adversaries and put them right where he wanted them to be so he could take them all out at once. Oh, but then it turns out the archives WERE actually a high value target because Section 31 was secretly operating out of them and Khan NEEDED to attack them... I really felt like they took too scripts and smashed them together without thinking about how they contradicted each other.
I should think if you went back 300 years and asked someone's advice on wifi it'd be a hell of a lot better than asking Jar Jar how to make a good movie.
I must say, I audibly laughed/groaned/mockingly said "OK" in the theater when Kelvin Spick yelled out "Khaaaaaaaaan!" I try not to be rude, particularly in public, but it just came out.
You are absolutely correct. The cherry on the cake was that awful shoehorning in of Leonard Nimoy for that poorly scripted scene in which he warns them about Khan, Utter nonsense. I like to pretend this trilogy of films never existed.
Yep. They had a great cast to remake the Gary Mitchell incident, and chose to do a butchered remake of Wrath. Just look at the scene with him in the force field brig and ...Kirk Spock and Alice Eve in her Sally Kellerman hairdo or wig.
Thanks for telling us about Star Trek Continues. I binged the whole 11 episodes in one sitting that very evening. THE best new Star Trek I've seen since 1969! (Yes... I saw TOS during its original run. Not much of the 3rd season, though, as they moved it into a time-slot that was past my childhood bedtime) Why couldn't Paramount have done something like CONTINUES in all these decades?
What is with the obsession of Star Trek to turn augments into superheroes? In the Original Series and Deep Space Nine, they where just the peak of what humans can be. But starting with Enterprise, they could move like they where in the Matrix and in this movie, Khan can literally resurrect the dead.
I remember they are like the people in the movie Gattaca. Nothing special, just the best possible genes you could have, some people are lucky to have that, now we all can be lucky.
Most of the opinions I've heard have ranked Beyond as the best. I kinda tend to agree. The first two were packed with references, and there was a lot of effort put into making sure people noticed them. Beyond, on the other hand, in spite of everything else, at least focused more on the story, instead of trying to impress the audience with references. It had plenty wrong with it. They all had their flaws, but I at least felt like the story was original, and it placed before us, to accept or reject. The way I see it, one of JJ's problems is that he tends to be passive & doesn't stick up for his ideas. When describing Into Darkness, there were a few times, where he said that he had been over-ruled. It sounded like Into Darkness might have been less of a parallel to Trek II at one point. I laughed when Spock yelled Khan's name. It had no where near the weight of the scene from the original film, and it sounded ridiculous to me. I do like that JJ stuck up for fans, when it sounded like the studio was set on going after fan productions. In general, I found the movie series mostly harmless, compared to what they're doing with the property, now. Aside from Spock leaving the original universe, there was really no real impact on the classic stories, you could pretty much go back & add on to where Nemesis left off, if you wanted to ignore the Kelvin films. I didn't mind the films. I kinda liked the story that the first film had, as far as Pike being a mentor to Kirk. They're not strong films, though, and I wouldn't try to defend them to anyone that disagrees.
While I detest this film, The one scene I did like was Khan dropping two platoons of Klingons like they were nothing, We have been told much of the Superior Intellect. However the superior strength was only shown when moving battle damage debris on the USS Reliant bridge. We saw a bit of the Augment combat prowess in Enterprise, so I thought it was a nice add. I know it was an action segment solely to keep your attention and in the writes mind 'move the plot' forward but I still liked it for the reason stated. Excellent work as always Dave, see you next time.
I must admit. I enjoyed it. Thing is i'm a massive Star Wars nerd, with very little knowledge of Star Trek. Super casual, at best. But as a Star Wars guy, I now feel your pain. I get it.
I’ve thought about this particular sequel a lot, being an absolute fan of the original. While they missed a ton of opportunities, one that just jumps out is having the crew stumble upon Khan with no knowledge of who or what he is and having young Spock talk to old Spock about who this is and what risk he poses to the galaxy. Would have been a sweet and interesting moment in the movie and like not having the original Star Wars characters back together in episode 7 is a major miss that can never be fixed. We truly live in an age of some really stupid film makers. Oh almost forgot, it’s the same stupid film maker.
I remember being so bothered by the idea in this film that Khan's blood could cure death and how, since they have this technology figured out, no one would ever die again... and then it's all but forgotten by the next film. If they wanted a gimmick to bring Kirk back, I wish they had just thought of something, anything, that wouldn't lend itself to future replication, like some technology Khan had that was used on Kirk but in the course of the film was destroyed. But whatever, the film was just a complete mess.
If Khan's blood worked like that, none of his people would've even aged in Star Trek 2. All that Khan was supposed to be is genetically advanced - along the lines of Captain America - a physically perfect human being, not some kind of god with healing blood.
Explaining a computers to someone from 1723: "So you see the lighting up there? We learned how to make it, control it, and use it. So we make some lightning and we add a bunch of math and put the mixture into a box. From there we have a tool that has more knowledge in it than the whole of the Library of Alexandria. We largely use it to argue with people and look at pictures of naked people."
Great video! I liked the 2009 movie enough to watch it more than once. I watched Into Darkness. I know I did. I remember none of it and even some of the plot points you had here aren't sounding familiar to me. That's how gawdawful it was. And Benedict Cumberbatch is a great actor so I can't/shan't blame him. I have seen nothing past Into -Idiocy- Darkness and I don't miss it in the slightest.
I didn’t hate that movie. My expectations were low for all of the reboot movies, so they were all a big “whatever” for me. Strictly fan fiction. And I fully expected the memberberries they gave us in the climax.
What you said there about intelligence being useless without knowledge is exactly the crux of Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan. It is a battle of Khan’s intelligence versus Kirk’s experience as pointed out by Spock. Kirk is able to rely on that to win against the seemingly invincible Khan. This is something that appeared to straight over the head of GayGay Abrams.
When I think about this movie I remember that it was the first time a studio outright lied and tried to deceive fans. The fans had sussed out that this was a Khan remake and were asking about it to producer, actors, even the director. And they all said no. I remember realizing that the producer were treating fans like they were stupid. And after watching the movie all doubt was gone.
I didn't mind the 2009 movie. Hated Into Darkness, left the theatre thinking it was just stupid. I really enjoyed Beyond whether it was a good movie or not I had a fun time with it at the theatre and left with a smile wanting to go watch it again.
@@EbalosusSure and I don't like those shows besides the final season of Picard. I'm just stating my feelings on these movies when they came out, not how I feel about the state of where Star Trek is now.
If they just wanted Khan as a tactician I could understand. Remember when TNG covered this exact situation with Scotty not understanding how the ship worked? Even in the short period of time he was gone it advanced so far.
It's been a long time since this film was out. And I gone a long way towards blotting it out of my memory. Thanks for reopening an old wound for me. LOL
At least Trek 09 and Beyond actually made good use of the ensemble cast, showcased good teamwork, stunning visuals, and had a fundamentally adventurous, optimistic tone (especially 09). Getting sick of seeing these films lumped in with everything from 2017-onward. I get it, made by the same company and people, blah blah blah…Kelvin timeline isn’t as bad as what we got afterward (some exceptions of course, like Picard s3). And look, Into Darkness IS the worst of the bunch, sure, I’ll stipulate to that.
@@breadmoth6443If it was then JJA had nothing to do with it LOL ! Although his name is on it like KK'S name is on many things she had absolutely nothing to do with !
@@user-gk4jd1jv4k huh? last i checked kk if you are referring to kathleen kennedy has had her hand into star wars which drove it into the ground. as for fringe , i would consider this a one-hit wonder , you do know what a one-hit wonder is right? it is not always applied to just bands and a song.
How would the torpedoes even work? 80% of the internal space is taken up by a cryogenic container, there is no room for fuel, explosives or control systems.
I remember thinking, why all the panic to catch Khan at the end for his blood, when they had all this crew is the missiles which all had the same magical blood... Oh yes, and the cured death from then on!
I will admit that Khan's John Harrison alias did fool me while I was watching in the theater. I kept wracking my brain wondering how the captain of the Enterprise-B was involved, if it was the character from the Prime timeline (somehow) or if it was the Kelvin version of the character, somehow born earlier in this timeline than he was in the series proper. I remembered the Enterprise-B's captain was John Harriman, not Harrison, right when Khan revealed his identity in the brig. Oh well. Sauron-Saruman.
All three films were dumb. Dumbed down versions of Star Trek. Sulu holding a baby with his spouse, Kirk on a motorcycle with rock music, Spock kissing Uhura.... it's all like a bad dream. No real soul or logic.
I remember seeing this in the theaters, and they lost my already at the part where Kirk had his command stripped from him for violating the Prime Directive, being reprimanded by Pike for having no real drive and an aversion to authority (which was the very reason that Pike convinced him to join Star Fleet, because he thought that those qualities were lacking) then convinces Admiral Marcus to allow Kirk to be his first officer, then Pike gets killed, then Kirk is back in command of the Enterprise, then Spock is back as the first officer, because Kirk needs him (the same guy who got his command stripped away from him), and now we were ready to start the adventure! Who wrote this 💩?! That whole sequence was a complete waste, and served only to accomplish getting Pike killed (who we all checked off as dead when the Romulans were torturing him, but he survived and was in a wheelchair at the end of the last movie, and now he has canes, but he's dead now anyways, and no one f-ing cares!!! This is yet another reason why I loathe Jar Jar Abrams!!! Honestly, I didn't think that it could get any worse. If I knew that it would I would have walked out of the theater right then and there!!! Thank you for bringing up one of my most painful cinematic memories EVER!!!
Remember that in Wrath of Khan, Khan figured out how to run the reliant in a basic way, but he had no experience in starship combat beyond the first ambush, and that only worked because Kirk had a dumb attack. So even if Khan gained certain knowledge by studying the manuals for the Reliant, he didn't have the experience or skill to use it properly. It would have been the same, or worse, in this movie. Now, it is hard to believe that even in that "civilized age" that there still weren't good officers, ship designers, etc., in Star Fleet. The Andorians at least probably were keeping up a combat ready fleet and training. So there likely would have been people as good or better than Khan.
Into Darkness plot could have been vastly improved by having Admiral Marcus work with house Duras and some other klingons to start a war. Hence the torpedoes (far less. Like 5 or 6) fired at Qo'noS. Khan is still helping but as insurance, Marcus has the other augments on Qo'noS in a facility already with a fixed transporter relay (explain long distance beaming). Have Marcus cross Khan no matter what happened, to keep the blame from him and remove the augments and facility. Enterprise saves the augments, but someone still fires the torpedoes, the war still happens, starting with a small conflict in the neutral zone. Blame Enterprise for what happened. Have Kirk and crew form an alliance with Khan and some of the hearing ears on Qo'noS (house Mogh most likely) so they can stop the war. (I know, undescovered country and all that. But its far better than what it got)
Impossible to say how much genetic engineering could boost Khan's value as a weapon designer. Imagine an ape that could build spears and train other apes to use pikes in a phalanx formation against other apes.
I cringed so hard when Spock shouted "KHAAAAAN!". It was so painfully forced and made no sense. Abrams himself said repeatedly, he nor his writing staff ever liked Star Trek, and he wanted to do Star Wars. And it really shows. Between the lens flares, shaky cams, pointless story elements, and dumb character motivations, how anyone can accept this as a Star Trek movie boggles my mind. And can we talk about the pointless title?? What does Into Darkness even mean?? I also won't discuss how obsessed they are with using modern (or 1990s) music 300 years in the future. How often do you jam out to music from the 1800s today? Ugh...
Yeah, I remember how clever they thought they were with marketing and with Benedict Cumberbatch's character. Everyone was like "That guy is obviously gonna be Khan." And the filmmakers were all "No, he's an original character." "Really? Because he seems like he's gonna be Khan." "No, his name in John Harrison, he's a new character." "But he's clearly got augmented super strength and..." "He's not Khan!" "... just seems pretty Khan-like is all .." "Dammit, he's not Khan! He's John Harrison, and if you don't shut up about Khan we'll cancel the whole movie and then NO ONE will see it!" "Okay, fine he's not Khan." Movie comes out: "My real name is Khan..." And then they were all "HA! FOOLED YOU! It was actually Khan and none of you had ANY IDEA that was coming! We're geniuses!"
The crazy thing is that all JJ had to do was convert any given TOS episode into a movie, and then give it his own mystery box twist. For example, do Space Seed itself, and have Cumberbatch play one of Khan’s lieutenants. Now, he’s either attempting to revive his master, so that he represents a threat greater than himself (he keeps beating Kirk, reminding us that Khan is even more dangerous)… or he’s a rival to Khan, so there’s a three way conflict throughout the movie. Add a Marla McGivers love triangle (or even Carol Marcus), and things become exactly what the studios want.