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Boldly going forward, oh wait we’ve found reverse May 18, 2009

Posted by Snoopy in Entertainment, Film, Technology.
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Star Trek? Well, perhaps more of a Star Battle. A Star War if you will. Nah, too trite.

So is the quintessential nature of the series now gone? The “Trek” in “Star Trek” now as redundant as plot, tension, poise and intellect? This latest installment would, I fear, suggest so.

People who have already been to see the film will find my synopsis complete and accurate in every detail. People who haven’t, I’m not going to flag a spoiler alert, because you already knew what the film was going to be about way before you came here.

So. Car chase, fight, fight, explosion. Fight, argument, fight, explosion. Time travel, kiss. Comment from the original series, hilarity ensues, Kirk meets Spock. Argument, fight, explosion, explosion, Kirk meets McCoy, McCoy meets Spock, comment from the original series, hilarity ensues. Kiss, Chekov tries to say “Wessel”, the computer fails to understand him, hilarity ensues. Time travel, Kirk, meets Old Spock, meet Scotty. Rummy! The set is now complete. Explosion, chase, explosion, escape, explosion. Kirk, Spock, Uhura, Scotty, Bones, Chekov, and Sulu all stand together in a group looking at the camera, and… CHEESE! Nice picture. Hold for one more… Perfect, thankyou. Explosion, fight, explosion, smiles, Old Spock, a final scattering of random comments from original series, hilarity ensues, and cheers all round for a rousing victory.

Now what they were victorious for, or perhaps against, I couldn’t tell you. If you examine my synopsis you will note a complete lack of plot, storyline, point to any of them getting out of bed on that, or any other fateful day. On top of the unbridled, no sorry, bridled story-telling, it would appear that it is possible to become captain of a flagship straight out of University, oh and apparently a black hole can destroy an entire planet, but you’re safe to stand and watch the spectacle if you’re located on its neighbour. Incidentally, I still can’t remember the name of the bad guy, so please, if someone can remember, feel free to mock it in the comments. I know he looked kinda human, but with a tattoo on his face, clearly making him a completely different race. Oh, and he drove around a ship about a thousand times the size of the enterprise but was still defeated in the end, in a kind of David and Goliath kinda way. So fresh, so vital.

So sad.

I had a bit of a moan a while ago about banning sequels. I need to add to that the banning of prequels, at least before the trend gets too far out of control. I spent most of the film waiting for the main characters to “meet”, ticking each off as it happened (which was of course spaced neatly throughout the 90 minutes), I cringed my way through McCoy and Scotty’s one-liners (which were, incidentally, bad fourty years ago), and roll my eyes as time-travel took centre stage and attempted to pull together something that was best left on the back of the napkin to which it was born.

And I’m also stuck trying to figure out what the point of it all was. It doesn’t further the franchise, rather, being in danger of damaging it irrevocably (unless you’re a fan of such bubblegum schtick, in which case you’ll probably be happy with pretty much anything Hollywood throw out). It could have been an introduction to viewers new to the franchise, but if that were the case, why use the original cast and characters? Surely they’re only there to appeal to the pre-cast fans, who all decided to be up-in-arms anyway because there wasn’t a single Klingon in the whole shebang, ridiculously unbelievable as they were?

But then maybe that’s the perfect theme for what Star Trek has become. Entertaining, but totally unbelievable. Bubblegum for all its screen-blowing action and lack of plot. It’s not where I would have gone, but then I don’t get to pull the strings, and probably a good thing too. I’d probably want some depth, a bit of plot, some twists, an ending that left me wanting (but which would not give it because of my distaste of sequels). Nah, perhaps it’s better such things are left to the sci-fi masses, many of whom I’m sure were frothing in the isles at every “she canna tek it any more Jim!”.

All in all I give this film a solid 6 out of 10 for all of it’s eyeball-piercing effects, but would be hard pressed to recommend it to a friendly neighbour.

Oh to ban film sequels… August 15, 2008

Posted by Snoopy in Current-affairs, Film, Technology.
4 comments

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Gah. I’m getting fed up of my favourite franchises getting chewed up and spat out like yesterday’s old cheroot.

The first was Star Wars. I loved the original three films, they were fun and quirky, but at the same time big and bold in score and ambition. Moreover I loved the concept that told of a wide universe of politics, intrigue, spaceships, robots, hyperspace and aliens that played jazz. Since then, no-one has even come even close to engendering such passion in so many comic-shop workers, which for an idea with such mind-boggling possibilities for story telling is, quite frankly, astonishing.

But of course that didn’t stop George Lucas trying. Oh no. The mishy-mashy hodge-podge of filth and feculance that was Star Wars episodes one, two and… DEEP BREATH… three… made me physically allergic to ever speaking the name of Skywalker ever again.

The second franchise to suffer an equally gruesome fate was of course The Matrix. The first film, released in 1999, turned my film-watching world upside down. If truth be known, it even made me look askance at my surroundings with rather slyer eyes and just a hint of the what-if’s, and I’m guessing that, at the time, I probably wasn’t alone. Again, the concept was mind-boggling, and replete with possibilities to last film-makers and cinema-goers alike well into the next century, or at least until we got our own head-sockets.

But then came the inevitable gip-worthy second and third films, and like a badly constructed house of cards when someone has inadvertently turned on the overhead fan, everything just came tumbling down in a shower of arrogance and hyperbole.

So more fool me for having such high hopes for the new Clone Wars film. I like Anime, I like the possibilities that it can give to writers, freeing them from the bonds of reality-induced green-screening. It can give style and character where, particularly in the case of Hayden Christensen, there is none. But I suppose it was inevitable that such hopes would be dipped in tar and sent off to the feather factory. Gah.

So what can be done to stop the rot? How can we safe-guard our beloved franchises, stories and characters of our childhood, hopes for our entertainment future? Do we go all Open-Source and continue these productions as a mass collective? Do we demand that such cinematic gold get turned over to “The State” to ensure long-term survival and growth in safe hands? Perhaps we should just bite the bullet, make sequels illegal, and be done with it. At least then I’d be able to hear the words “feel the force Luke” without the shiver of midichlorians running down my spine…