Star Trek into Darkness (FILM REVIEW)
Star Trek into Darkness
Film Review by Kam Williams
Kirk Matches Wits with Rogue Commander in Intergalactic Showdown
Star date: 2259. Captain James T. Kirk (Chris Pine) has
just been called on the carpet following an expedition to a primitive
planet where, in the course of saving Spock’s (Zachary Quinto) life, he
violated the Starfleet’s strict sanction against interfering with alien
civilizations. Consequently, he is demoted in rank and summarily
stripped of the command of the USS Enterprise.
He is replaced by his predecessor, Rear Admiral Pike
(Bruce Greenwood) who reminds his headstrong protégé about the
importance of following the rules. Soon thereafter, however, Pike is
slain by friendly fire in a gunship attack launched by John Harrison
(Benedict Cumberbatch), a fellow officer ostensibly gone rogue.
The tragedy affords Kirk a second chance in the captain’s
chair, as well as an opportunity to track down the intergalactic menace
and to exact a measure of retribution for his late mentor. As it turns
out, Harrison isn’t really a disgruntled colleague but, lo and behold,
the reincarnation of Khan, a recurring villain who has appeared before
in both television and movie Star Trek episodes.
Here, the slightly tweaked character is the
recently-defrosted leader of a race of genetically-enhanced super-beings
who’ve been cryogenically frozen for a few hundred years. The
pseudo-scientific explanation of his dormancy and revival is of less
import than the fact that he’s just fled to Kronos, home of the
Klingons, another regular nemesis of Captain Kirk and his crew.
Thus unfolds Star Trek into Darkness, the twelfth big
screen adaptation inspired by the classic, Sixties TV show originally
starring William Shatner. It’s also the second installment directed by
J.J. Abrams, who oversaw the reboot of the sci-fi series in 2009. Truth
be told, Abrams’ semi-autobiographical thriller Super 8, which he shot
between Star Treks 11 and 12, proved to be a far more scintillating
summer blockbuster than either of those.
At least he did reunite the principal cast, including the
aforementioned Chris Pine as Kirk and Zachary Quinto as Spock, along
with Zoe Saldana as Uhura, Simon Pegg as Scotty John Cho and Sulu and
Karl Urban as Bones. Are the special f/x dazzling? Yes. However, the
film’s fairly formulaic plot is apt to capture the imagination only of
young’uns totally unfamiliar with Khan and the Klingons.
Still, Diehard Trekkies will probably appreciate all the
inside jokes sporadically sprinkled into the dialogue for the benefit of
loyal longtime fans. Overall, this safe sequel is certainly engaging
and entertaining enough to recommend, though it fails to live up to the
franchise’s daring, appointed mission “to explore strange new worlds”
and “to boldly go where no man has gone before.”
Very Good (3 stars)
Rated PG-13 for intense violence
Running time: 132 minutes
Distributor: Paramount Pictures
To see a trailer for Star Trek into Darkness, visit:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hq7iRPtmjwI
1 comment:
One of the worst movie reviews ever. Is this a professional critic? Do they pay him for this? Giving spoilers away without a warning. Spoiler? This guy gave the whole movie away. Somebody fire him!
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