IN the previous Star Trek instalment, Spock cried. In the latest, Star Trek Beyond, he laughs. And not just a little snicker, either, but a belly-full one. What bold explorations into the farthest reaches of the galaxy hold for Spock no one knows. A sigh? A hiccup?
Star Trek Beyond, like most of the rebooted properties flying around our movie theatres, delights in nostalgically resurrecting iconic characters and tweaking them anew.
The balance is a delicate one, as seen in the pre-release debate around this film revealing Sulu (John Cho but formerly played by LGBT icon George Takei) as gay.
The scene in question turns out to be a mere moment, lightly handled, showing Sulu greeting his same-sex partner and their daughter after a long mission. It’s all expressed with just a few arms tenderly draped across shoulders.
And it’s the kind of welcome touch that director Justin Lin, the Fast & Furious veteran who takes over for J.J. Abrams, has brought to this pleasingly episode-like instalment.
The opening scene, fittingly, plays with a smaller scale. Captain Kirk (Chris Pine), on a diplomatic mission, appeals to a snarling beast looming above him in a crowded amphitheatre. Enraged at Kirk’s offer, the alien beast hurtles down upon him, only to turn out to be no more monstrous than a feisty bulldog.
The film finds a bored Enterprise finishing up a five-year tour in deep space. The (albeit brief) change of pace is immediately appreciated.
The last two beefed-up Star Trek movies, as if overcompensating for decades of Trekkie nerd-dome, threatened to make the once brainy Star Trek less distinct from other mega-sized sci-fi adventures — just another clothesline of CGI set pieces strung together.