Star Trek: Beyond – 9
Since 1966 Captain Kirk, Mr. Spock, and the crew of the USS
Enterprise have been a presence in my life, intermittently popping in and out,
much like the moles that seem to show up in the backyard every couple of years,
just much more welcome. I can’t think of
anyone else with that staying power. That’s
50 of my 63 years, 80% of my life. No
other group approaches that. It’s only
when you have that type of investment – that you watched the show with your dad
when you were 13 – that you want it to all fit together like a good jigsaw
puzzle. Be careful with the details and
Star Trek will live long and prosper.
We’ve seen classics (Khan), several spin-offs (including an
upcoming TV series,) alternative realities that cheapened the past, terrific
recasting of parts, and now 13 films.
So, when a new movie comes out, I’m there. For better (2009) or worse (2013). What’s the verdict on the 2016 release? Better.
Here, with a minimum of spoilers, is what you need to know
about Star Trek: Beyond.
- Forget about the Enterprise’s vaunted shields. It’s time to talk about the shields around the main crew. Despite all the incredible battles, they maintain their perfect half century record of not being so much as grazed by a phaser, laser, or bullet. It must be said that Spock suffers an injury, and Kirk is again a punching bag, but personal shields are up, as usual.
- If you were looking forward to the romance between Kirk and Dr. Carol Marcus, it either happened between movies and you’re never going to see it, or you’re going to have to wait. The five-year mission is a definite inhibitor of love lives….
- Unless you are Sulu who is either gay, or he’s got a family on every space station. Even Gene Roddenberry couldn’t have seen this coming.
- The action is almost non-stop in the hands of Fast and Furious director Justin Lin, who has taken the controls from JJ Abrams. Character development is at a minimum, but let’s face it. If we don’t know these people by now…..
- As you would expect in a Justin Lin movie, there is so much going on that’s it’s a CGI visual overload. Between the sometime too-up-close blurry action and the immense size of the ships and space stations, it’s sometimes more than the eye can process, especially if you’re a non-video-gamer.
- Nevertheless, see it in 3D. This may be the best 3D movie yet. Nobody even moved when the credits rolled because even they are eye-popping. I sprung the extra bucks for the IMAX 3D and it was worth it.
- The classics are timeless. Shakespeare, Mozart, and apparently The Beastie Boys.
- The villain is played by Idris Elba, who while he’ll always be Stringer Bell to me, is poised for superstardom. He’s terrific, especially when they finally let him, well, “emerge.”
- There’s another new character, named Jayla, and she’s a welcome addition.
- This installment was co-written by Simon Pegg, who plays Scotty and had the good sense to include a beautifully poignant scene towards the end. Wait for it.
- If there's ever been better casting of a movie series, I don't know what it would be.
- All in all, and despite the over-adrenalinized action, if that’s a word, it’s worthy. That’s all us Trekkie’s want.
The Free State of Jones – 8
Living in Mississippi and knowing a little bit about the
fanatically conservative Jones County makes this movie all the more shocking in
its revelations. Turns out there was a
band of Confederate deserters who didn’t like the way the war was going. Led by Newton Knight, who had deserted first
when he decided to take a dead relative home to his mother, they holed up in a
swamp and eventually played very effective swamp foxes, controlling a nice
swatch of southern Mississippi. It’s all
news to me. The wonderful girl I once
went out with from Ellisville (prominent location in the movie) never mentioned
it. The awesome girl from Laurel I once
went out with never mentioned it. Maybe
they would have eventually told me had they not dumped me, joining a long
list of dumpers. Hey ladies – look at me now – I’m
blogging.
Back to the movie. Matthew
McConaghey plays Knight with the proper intensity. He has a couple of families along the way,
and the movie goes on too long. There is
a flash forward sub plot that takes place in a courtroom that lengthens the
movie. At first I didn’t like it, but by
the end of the movie it had grown on me.
They were trying for an epic, and some of the action fits the bill. The director eventually has to start
overlaying explanations because he’s trying to cover so much historical ground
(voting, reconstruction) but somehow he gets the whole story told.
Here’s a note to Hollywood – if you really want to make
close to 3 hour epics – give us an intermission. Gone With The Wind, The Sound of Music, My
Fair Lady – they all had intermissions.
I had to make a quick trip in the middle of this one and I came back and
the war had abruptly ended. I’ll never
know how. But Newt was off to Soso,
Mississippi to settle down after the war, and I actually know someone from
Soso, so it was all very interesting.
So, while the movie may have been more fascinating to us Mississippi
residents, I would think anyone who likes history is going to find this
compelling. Good stuff. Well worth seeing.
Jason Bourne – 5
Oops they did it again.
They just had to do another one.
Four in the series, three with Matt Damon, and enough box office money
printed to buy one of those countries they inevitably begin in.
In this one, Jason Bourne is fighting (literally) for money when his old
compadre Nicki Parsons (Julia Stiles) comes calling with some totally
unnecessary information to hang a movie on, but there are chases to be filmed,
carnage to be carned and a body count in the hundreds ahead.
Paul Greengrass, who is one of my favorite action directors,
just overdoes the action. Yes, all movie
action is ridiculous, but the wreckage they make of the Las Vegas strip in the
last of three superchases, while not entirely a bad idea, is so ludicrous that
its cartoonish. The hand to hand combat
is filmed too closely to see exactly what is going on, but that’s standard in
these movies. The plot centers around
privacy, hacking, and social media, but some of the acting, especially by Tommy
Lee Jones, is corny with a Capital C.
Here’s hoping Jason can retire soon, but it’s not a spoiler to tell you
he probably won’t. As I was watching, I just
couldn’t help but think how much water Matt Damon could have distributed to one
of those third world countries with the budget used on this movie.
Scanning the Satellite
The Night of – 10 (after 4 parts)
HBO throws us a summer bone with this limited series which
so far has been a riveting murder mystery that goes where mysteries don’t
usually go – deep into the jailhouse.
If you haven’t been watching, make like a bottle and
ketchup.
Roadies – 10
But my favorite show of the summer comes from Showtime and
the rock n roll creativity of Cameron Crowe.
It focuses on the Roadies who set up the tour of a fictional rock
band. The story is great, and the music’s
terrific, especially the Song of the Day, which is pretty much the way some of
us roll through life – one day at a time, one song at a time.
Cyberwars – 9
Viceland is a channel that has been added to my Directv. It’s almost all documentary reports and so far, so good. Cyberwars focuses on hackers, and it’s way scarier than Jason Bourne.
Lastly there are the two political party conventions and the Olympics which share the fact that they are now largely made-for-tv events. A great time to have a remote, but that’s just me.
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