a5c7b9f00b Getting through the first half of their five-year mission, Captain Kirk and the USS Enterprise crew now venture into uncharted territories. They arrive at Starbase Yorktown for shore leave, Kirk intends to be promoted to Vice Admiral to remain there and has recommended Spock for his present position as ship's captain. After a devastating attack by a massive army of unknown aliens, Kirk and his crew find themselves stranded on an unknown planet with no means of contacting the Federation or each other. The alien warlord Krall seeks an ancient weapon called the Abronath that Kirk has kept after an unsuccessful diplomatic mission. Reunited and aided by the alien warrior Jaylah, Kirk and crew must fight to survive and take on this deadly menace with a strong hatred for the Federation. Will they be able to destroy the new danger before it's too late? After stopping off at Starbase Yorktown, a remote outpost on the fringes of Federation space, the USS Enterprise, halfway into their five-year mission, is destroyed by an unstoppable wave of unknown aliens. With the crew stranded on an unknown planet and with no apparent means of rescue, they find themselves fighting against a ruthless enemy with a well-earned hatred of the Federation and everything it stands for. Only a rebellious alien warrior can help them reunite and leave the planet to stop this deadly menace from beginning a possible galactic war. This is the new Trek movie I've been waiting for; one where I didn't just love the cast, but the actual movie (and also the cast). It even does a few things I thought were impossible, like making me leave with Kirk in the running for my favorite character. For the first time, including in the TV series, I really feel like we get to see the ballsy, tactical genius that warrants the legend Kirk is supposed to become, and I've gotta hand it to Chris Pine because this time around he knocks it out of the park, as does everyone else in the cast. <br/><br/>Beyond is still very much an action movie first at its core, but it finally has the heart that the others lacked to make it really feel like a Trek film (funny how replacing someone who doesn't care about the series with Simon Pegg will do that). One of my problems with the previous movies is that I kept feeling like ridiculous things would happen for no reason other than JJ Abrams thought "wouldn't it be _awesome_ if…", without regard for whether it actually contributed to the story or, you know, made sense. I always left feeling like my intelligence had been insulted a bit (or more than a bit). This movie doesn't just avoid those ridiculous things, it does them, and then actually pays them off. Like, three or four times I started thinking to myself "oh movie, you were doing so well, but now you're trying too hard to be cool again, and it's totally not going to wo– HOLY CRAP THAT WORKED AND MADE SENSE AND WAS Awesome". <br/><br/>There are also little nods in memory of both Nimoy and Yelchin, and a couple of well-placed love letters to the franchise as a whole that… well, let's just say there was a lot of dust in the theater by the end. <br/><br/>To sum up: Simon Pegg and company get it. The new Trek cast finally has a movie worthy of them, and it's about damn time. I fought my brain for hours after finishing Star Trek Beyond to find a single good thing about it. The only thing I could find is this line, half way through the movie: "You put a tracking device on your girlfriend?" I'm not over reacting. I'm not even mad. But it is that terrible.<br/><br/>The cliché-ridden and predictable script honestly felt like it written by an uncreative child. The dialogue was consistently below average with every character spewing forth obnoxious 'witty-banta', the worst offender being Doctor Bones. Every single character was either one-dimensional or downright terrible with the only character going through any sort of arc or transformation being Kirk, and this was done entirely separate from the actual story. A good character arc is noticeably influenced and affects the events of the story, while in Beyond it was simply brought up in the first scene of the movie and concluded in the last scene.<br/><br/>Easily the worst part about the movie was it's villain Krall. I'm sick and tired of movies trying to get their viewers rooting against the villain, by making the villains make up and design hideous, and having them kill of some random/nameless side character every five minutes because they feel particularly evil this morning. None of the actors gave a good performance, and no one brought anything to their characters. Simon Pegg gave possibly the best performance in this movie, although he never had anything to work with, which is bizarre because he helped write the damn thing.<br/><br/>But hey, at least you can just enjoy the action, right? Not really. The visual effects varied from average to hideous, which is surprising for such an expensive film, and the actual action scenes and fight choreography were simply your bog standard affair with nothing special or entertaining about it. Despite that, this movie constantly wants you to be impressed with it's effects, continually shoving big CG images, set piece and alien design at you one after another. The actual science-fiction in this sci-fi movie was completely devoid of any interesting or any original ideas.<br/><br/>Before I end this unsophisticated rant of a review, I want to point out one scene in particular which honestly dumbfounded me. This be a MASSIVE SPOILER by the way, and it's best if you have already seen the film, because I honestly do a bad job of describing the scene.<br/><br/>In the middle of the climactic act 3 action set-piece, Kirk and the crew have to defeat the alien swarm of miniature space-ships, but don't have the weaponry to do it. So they cook up a plan to disorientate their enemy by destroying their communication devices, which they rely heavily on. Kirk and the crew somehow do this, by blasting rock- music at the alien swarm through their own spaceship. In theory this is admittedly interesting, although in practice it makes absolutely no sense, as it starts blows up the alien ships with no explanation as to why or how. But the scene gets even more absurd, as the alien swarm creates a massive wave, and Kirk's ship begins to surface up said wave, while blasting metal music, and leaving a trail of explosions behind him. This scene was a joke. And it could have been a good one. If this was a sci-fi parody, it would be hilarious. But Star Trek Beyond plays it off entirely seriously.<br/><br/>I could go on, but you get the point. It is easily one of the worst movies I have seen in a long time. Justin Lin proves a safe pair of hands at the helm of the Enterprise. Powered by a spirited sense of adventure and a nice teamwork dynamic, it’s fun, but not essential, summer viewing. Source. In story terms, it seems most likely that Carol Marcus has left the Enterprise for unknown reasons prior to the events of Beyond. The adversary Krall is ultimately identified as a deformed Balthazer M. Edison, captain of the U.S.S. Franklin, a ship that, according to Scotty, disappeared without a trace in 2164, shortly after the foundation of the Federation of Planets. Krall/Edison is also identified as a former M.A.C.O. (Starfleet Marines), and mentions fighting during the Xindi War (2153-2154) as well as the Romulan-Earth Wars (2156-2160). Especially the mentioning of the Xindi War is interesting, because this places him directly on board the Enterprise NX-01, during the events of the third season of <a href="/title/tt0244365/">Enterprise (2001)</a>. He later states that he became disillusioned when the Federation was founded, and there was no apparent need for soldiers anymore. He received command of the U.S.S. Franklin in recognition of his services for Starfleet, and later disappeared. Some viewers have noted that this does not seem to fit in the official Star Trek timeline. If Edison received command of a ship after the Romulan Wars, how could it be a warp 4 ship? By the time the wars had ended, the Enterprise NX-01 and the Columbia NX-02 had already been flying with warp 5 engines for many years. So this is a potential error on the part of the writers of Star Trek Beyond.<br/><br/>However, there is a fitting explanation for this. According to the Star Trek timeline, warp 2.5 was achieved in 2142, and warp 3 in 2145. Since we know that the Enterprise NX-01 launched with an experimental warp 5 engine in 2151, the prototype warp-4 vessel U.S.S. Franklin must have been built somewhere in the late 2140s. This is sustained by several other observations: the ship is very close in design and size to the Enterprise NX-02 (relatively flat with the nacelles almost directly attached to the saucer section), it has transporters that were only used for cargo (Enterprise NX-01 was the first with a transporter that could also transport humans), and it still has conventional torpedoes for weapons (Enterprise NX-01 started out with these, but soon switched to photon torpedoes). So the U.S.S. Franklin must have been used as a cargo ship long before Edison received command of it. By that time, it must have been at least 11 years old, capable of only warp 4 and without transporters for personal transfer. Since Edison was already upset about losing his job as a MACO, being offered an obsolete ship may have added to his frustration. 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