Parallel Universe

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J.J. Abrams, 'Star Trek' and a fan's last wish

By DonKaye_ParallelUniverse Jan 7, 2013 12:11PM

Paramount Pictures

By Don Kaye
Special to MSN Movies

We've taken issue with the work of J.J. Abrams on this site, and we don't always agree with his creative or artistic choices. More recently, his obsessive secrecy over his projects -- while well-intentioned to a degree -- has become less playful and more irritating. But let's put all that aside and proclaim here and now that the man has shown, with one gesture, more compassion, decency and sensitivity than you could probably find in the rest of Hollywood all year.

Bing: More on J.J. Abrams | More on 'Star Trek Into Darkness'

That last line is a bit facetious. Just a few nights ago, we happened to be with someone whose loathing of Hollywood celebrities who use their power and recognition to champion certain issues was oozing off him. But there have been many, many examples of that power being used for acts of supreme kindness, and those are the ones that are usually not widely disseminated to the public (two recent examples: Christian Bale visiting victims in the hospital after the Aurora, Colo., shootings and Ron Perlman spending time in full Hellboy makeup with a sick little boy).

In the case of Abrams, this story did make its way across the Internet -- a powerful tool in itself that actually played its own role in the way events unfolded.

Daniel Craft, a 41-year-old New York-based film buff and co-founder of that city's Asian Film Festival, found out six weeks ago that he had terminal cancer. His last wish was to see Abrams' upcoming "Star Trek Into Darkness," the sequel to the 2009 reboot that is not due out until May. Daniel's wife, Paige, posted his wish online; his friend Doug got it onto the Reddit message board, and a short time later, Paige got a voice-mail message from Abrams and "Trek" screenwriter Damon Lindelof that a producer of the film would be coming to their apartment the next day to show them a rough cut of the film on DVD.

Daniel had rested the previous day so he could watch the movie, which he by all accounts loved. And then this past Friday (Jan. 4), he died at 10:15 p.m., his wife and brother by his side. His friend Grady Hendrix wrote at Reddit:

"At a time when he didn't have a whole lot to look forward to, r/StarTrek, JJ Abrams, Damon Lindelof, and Bad Robot performed a simple act of kindness for a total stranger and gave Dan something to be excited about for a couple of days. The movie did exactly what movies are supposed to do, it helped him forget about his problems for a couple of hours. It doesn't sound like much, but in this case it was."

The generosity of what Abrams did cannot really be overstated. This is a man who does not like to reveal much of anything about his projects until they are officially released, and yet he allowed this man, Daniel Craft, and his wife to see his upcoming summer blockbuster in unfinished form nearly five months before any other member of the public will see it. Abrams gave some excitement, some comfort and some inspiration to a fellow human being who was literally staring into darkness, and made his final wish a reality.

As a number of people on the Reddit board noted, this gesture was very much in the spirit of the original "Star Trek," which was about optimism, compassion and courage in the face of the unknown. And the entire story says something about the power of film itself, and the way the most imaginative movies can take us away from the often dismal reality of everyday life, a reality that in the case of Daniel Craft was almost too terrible to contemplate.

We all have our favorites. For Daniel it was "Star Trek." When we've needed cinematic comfort, we've turned to "Trek" ourselves or James Bond. For others, it's "Star Wars" or a romantic comedy or a Pixar film. For us and many others we know, the pure escape of genre films -- which often  take us to other worlds -- give us the most solace in times of personal tribulation. For Daniel Craft, a filmmaker and a single film helped make his final days in this life just a little more bearable. And for that, we give J.J. Abrams the highest commendation we can.

As for the power of cinema itself, no such accolades are needed. May it always be there for us, on our brightest days and in our darkest moments.

"Star Trek Into Darkness" is out in theaters on Friday, May 17.

 

Specifically between Plutarch and President Snow

By Myriam Gabriel-Pollock 1 hour ago

During a Stella Artois-sponsored media event at the 2013 Cannes Film Festival, "Catching Fire" director Francis Lawrence revealed that the film, while keeping very faithful to the book, will also feature some entirely new scenes:

"Lots of new stuff—new cast members, new action, a new arena and a fantastic story. There's very little that's been taken out—there's some additional scenes with some of the characters," says Lawrence, who specifically mentions new moments between Gamemaker Plutarch Heavensbee (Philip Seymour Hoffman) and President Snow (Donald Sutherland).

Could the still image shown above be from one of the newer scenes?

Jennifer Lawrence has revealed, when asked about how "Catching Fire" compares to "The Hunger Games," that, "Visually, it's a lot bigger this time. We get a little deeper into The Capitol as Katniss is trying to get her life back together."

As the book is written from Katniss' perspective, we only see The Capitol as she does. We'd definitely be fascinated to see more of what goes on behind President Snow's closed doors.

"Catching Fire" will open in theaters November 22.

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Kryptonian fight comes to Earth in spectacular new footage

By DonKaye_ParallelUniverse 11 hours ago
Warner Bros. Pictures
There's a new "Man of Steel" trailer out, this time focusing on the quest by the villainous General Zod to find Superman.


Superman/Kal-El (Henry Cavill) wasn't the only survivor of the destruction of his home planet, Krypton. Zod (Michael Shannon) and others have also managed to live, and in this trailer the general lays down an ultimatum: Superman must turn himself over, or Earth will face the consequences.

As you can see from the 90 seconds of awesomeness below, Superman doesn't go down without a fight. While previous trailers have played up the emotional side of Superman's story -- and have done so quite effectively -- this new one gives us a taste of the kind of large-scale action Superman fans have been wanting for years. And heat vision!

Zack Snyder is behind the camera, while joining Cavill and Shannon in front of it are Amy Adams, Russell Crowe, Kevin Costner, Diane Lane, Laurence Fishburne, Antje Traue and more. 23 days to go ... and we can't wait.

"Man of Steel" is out in theaters Friday, June 14.

What do you think of the new "Man of Steel" trailer?  Tell us on our MSN Movies Facebook page and on Twitter.


 

That's what series star Sam Neill says

By DonKaye_ParallelUniverse 22 hours ago
Universal
New Zealand actor Sam Neill, who played Dr. Alan Grant in the original "Jurassic Park" and in "Jurassic Park 3," doesn't think he'll be appearing in "Jurassic Park 4." And his reason for saying so seems a little ... strange.


In an interview with New Zealand's Dominion Post (via Comic Book Movie), Neill was asked about whether he would show up in the fourth movie about dinosaurs in the modern world and responded that it wasn't likely, adding: "I'm told it's a big reboot, a total re-jig."

We think Neill might be mixing up his terms slightly. When we think of a "reboot" these days, we tend to see that as a relaunch of a series or storyline from scratch, with different casts and creative personnel, and perhaps even going back in time to events unexplored in previous films -- think "Batman Begins" or "X-Men: First Class."

We doubt that "Jurassic Park 4" will take us back to, say, how the dinosaurs were originally cloned and how John Hammond built his island theme park. Nor will it retell the events of the first movie. We suspect, however, that the movie will feature all-new characters and situations that no longer involve Grant or Jeff Goldblum's Ian Malcolm or anyone else from the first three pictures.

Of course, all this is moot right now anyway, since production on "Jurassic Park 4," which was originally slated for release next summer, is on hold for the moment with no new release date confirmed.

Do you think "Jurassic Park 4" needs Sam Neill (or Jeff Goldblum or Laura Dern) in the cast? Or is time for new faces and perhaps an entirely different direction? Tell us what you think at MSN Movies on Facebook and Twitter.
 

Matt Smith, Steven Moffat also set to return

By DonKaye_ParallelUniverse 23 hours ago
BBC America
Following this past Saturday's (May 18) Season 7 finale, the BBC has announced -- to no one's great surprise -- that the modern incarnation of "Doctor Who" will be back for an eighth set of shows in 2014.


Although the British press loves to speculate endlessly over whether the current season is the last for whoever is playing the Doctor at the moment, Matt Smith will be back for Season 8 as the Doctor, with showrunner and head writer Steven Moffat also returning as well.

Of course, the current season isn't truly over, especially since the finale, "The Name of the Doctor," raised some potentially universe-rattling questions. November 23rd will see the premiere of the "Doctor Who" 50th anniversary special, which will bring Smith's Doctor and current companion Clara (Jenna-Louise Coleman) together with previous Doctor David Tennant and his first, beloved companion Rose (Billie Piper). John Hurt as a much-theorized-about mystery guest and Jemma Redgrave as Kate Stewart (from the episode "The Power of Three") are also on board for the special.

Airing around the same period will be "An Adventure in Space and Time," an original BBC movie about the launch of "Doctor Who" back in 1963, and then in December we'll get the usual Christmas special.

So if you're already jonesing for more of the Doctor after this season came to its close, don't worry -- there's more on the way six months from now, and then a whole new set of Smith/Moffat shows next year. 


Tell us what you thought about this season of "Doctor Who" on our MSN TV Facebook page and on Twitter.


Follow Don Kaye on Twitter @donkaye.

 

Odds favor 'Doctor Strange' and 'Hulk' movies

By DonKaye_ParallelUniverse 23 hours ago
Marvel
Well, Marvel Studios' Phase Two is off to a gargantuan start: "Iron Man 3" has just passed the $1 billion mark in worldwide ticket sales after less than a month in theaters, and shows no signs of slowing down anytime soon. Coming off the $1.5 billion haul for last year's "The Avengers," that's one hell of an impressive start for the next round of movies set in the universe created by the comic book juggernaut.

Bing: More on Marvel Studios | Bing: More on 'Iron Man 3'

We already know what lies ahead for the rest of Phase Two: "Thor: The Dark World" arrives in November, followed next April by "Captain America: The Winter Soldier" and in August 2014 by the weirdest, most cosmic new addition, "Guardians of the Galaxy." Those, of course, will all lead up to "The Avengers 2" in May 2015, for which writer-director Joss Whedon has already confirmed the addition of mutant brother-sister act Quicksilver and the Scarlet Witch to the roster. But what happens after that presumably takes in its billion-plus box-office earnings?

Next comes Phase Three, and plans for that have been, until now, mostly murky. But Marvel president Kevin Feige, the public face of the studio, just gave an extensive interview to EW.com in which he discussed a number of potential candidates for Phase Three movies and gave some better chances of making the schedule than others. So let's take a look at the possibilities and lay our own odds on which heroes, villains and otherworldly beings could be blasting onto movie screens in 2015, 2016 and 2017:

Marvel
Ant-Man: Not only is this a done deal, but it's even got a release date of Nov. 6, 2015. Good thing too, since an "Ant-Man" movie has been in the works for seven years. Edgar Wright ("Shaun of the Dead") will direct and has been revising the script, which centers on a scientist who can shrink himself down to the size of the titular insect. In comics canon, Ant-Man was Dr. Hank Pym, who along with wife Janet (aka The Wasp) was a founding member of the Avengers. Is it possible we'll meet Pym first in "The Avengers 2"? Neither Feige nor Whedon has said anything to that effect, but we bet the option is there. Odds: none. The movie's on.
Marvel
Doctor Strange: This fan favorite (and on our personal wish list as well) also seems to be a high priority for Feige, who told EW that he "would love Strange" to be part of Phase Three. A recent script does sit in Marvel's vault, but there's no word yet on whether that screenplay will be used or who, if anyone, the studio has in mind to either star or direct. For the uninitiated, Dr. Stephen Strange -- created by Stan Lee and Steve Ditko in 1963 -- is a former neurosurgeon who becomes the Sorcerer Supreme, protector of Earth from all threats of a magical or mystical nature. The Ditko-drawn comics at their peak were truly psychedelic and surreal, a characteristic we'd love to see in a movie that could be one of Marvel's trippiest. Odds: 2 to 1
Marvel
The Hulk: With Mark Ruffalo nearly stealing the show as Bruce Banner/the Hulk in "The Avengers" -- no mean feat when you're sharing the screen with Robert Downey Jr. -- a third standalone Hulk movie seems like a given. But does the Hulk really work best in a team situation? Or could Ruffalo's interpretation be the one that can finally carry its own movie? If Banner is as popular in "The Avengers 2" as he was in the first one, you could probably win a few bucks by betting on a "Hulk 3" to show up in 2017. Odds: 5 to 1
Marvel
Black Panther: Introduced in 1966, the leader of the African nation of Wakanda (and no relation to the militant group of the same name) was the world's first black superhero -- yet T'Challa has been unable to find his way to the big screen. There have been persistent rumors that we'll either see him in his own movie at some point, or perhaps introduced in "The Avengers 2" (the "Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D." TV series is also a possibility), but the character has such a loyal following that we're fairly certain he'll show up sooner or later. And he should: All the black characters we've seen so far in the Marvel Studios movies -- Samuel L. Jackson as Nick Fury, Don Cheadle and Terrence Howard as Jim Rhodes and Idris Elba as Heimdall -- have been supporting ones. The time is right for a superhero of color to step up front and center. Odds: 7 to 1
Marvel
The Inhumans: As EW points out, this family of space-faring heroes was at one point competing with the Guardians of the Galaxy for a Phase Two slot. We know how that turned out, but there's still a chance that the Inhumans could find their place in Phase Three, especially since Feige is apparently a huge fan. Who are they? Created in 1965 by Lee and the legendary Jack Kirby, the Inhuman Royal Family (their best-known iteration) actually started life eons ago as primitive humans -- until alien experimentation changed them dramatically and exposure to the mutating Terrigen Mists altered them even further, bestowing many of them with superpowers. Led by Black Bolt, who can level cities with his voice, they've interacted with many Earthbound and galactic heroes and villains -- including, not coincidentally, the Avengers. Odds: 12 to 1
Marvel
Namor the Sub-Mariner: OK, Feige didn't actually talk with EW about this character, one of Marvel's oldest (he debuted in 1939, before the company actually existed) and most complex anti-heroes. Namor is the son of a human seaman and an Atlantean princess, and he eventually becomes king of the underwater kingdom, alternately finding himself opposing or aligned with the human race on the surface at various points in his long history. Namor has been part of the Avengers, the Defenders, the Invaders and even the X-Men at one time or another -- and has often fought against all of them as well. A movie was once underway through Universal in 2006, but the rights have since reverted to Marvel and nothing else has been heard. Odds: 40 to 1

And then there are the wayward children who have recently come home: the rights to "Daredevil," "Ghost Rider," "Punisher" and "Blade" have all reverted to Marvel from the studios that owned them previously. But don't expect to see any of them -- even Blade, the vampire hunter whose hit 1997 movie arguably launched the current wave of comic book movies -- back on the big screen in the near future.

Why? Because with the exception of Blade, none of these characters have truly caught on with the public. The first "Ghost Rider" and "Daredevil" were modest hits despite being widely regarded as lousy movies, while the second "Ghost Rider" and the "Punisher" films have been almost complete write-offs in both quality and commercial success. No one's asking for a new movie about Ghost Rider, and we suspect it will be a long time before anyone is.

Plus, there's only so much room in Phase Three, unless Marvel expands beyond its current pace of two films a year. With "Ant-Man" locked in and, say, "Doctor Strange" or "The Inhumans" making their debut, Feige and company still have to figure out where to put a "Thor 3" or a "Captain America 3" or, depending on how current negotiations go with Robert Downey Jr., an "Iron Man 4." This is a quality problem, one that will keep the Marvel brain trust up nights and the rest of us speculating madly until Phase Three is officially unveiled at Comic-Con 2015.

Which characters would you like to see Marvel tackle in Phase Three? Tell us on our MSN Movies Facebook page and on Twitter.

Across the Universe is a weekly 5-part column written by Don Kaye. Follow him on Twitter @donkaye.
 

Hugh Jackman faces samurai and snake women in latest footage

By DonKaye_ParallelUniverse Tue 11:58 AM
20th Century Fox
A new trailer for this July's "The Wolverine" has been released, giving us our best look yet at Logan (Hugh Jackman) and his long-awaited adventures in Japan.


The new clip opens with Logan waking up in bed next to Jean Gray (Famke Janssen) -- an unsettling surprise indeed since he was forced to put her to death in 2006's "X-Men: The Last Stand."

But that's the least of Logan's problems as he travels to Japan and is made an offer he may find difficult to refuse: the chance to become a normal human being.

Of course, being invincible and immortal has its upsides too. Logan soon finds out the hard way that having enemies like the Silver Samurai (Will Yun Lee) and Viper (Svetlana Khodchenkova) when you no longer have the advantages of being a self-healing, adamantium-clawed mutant can be a major issue.

Check out all the mutant and martial arts action in the trailer below for the James Mangold-directed thriller, and tell us what you think on our MSN Movies Facebook page and on Twitter.

"The Wolverine" is out in theaters Friday, July 26, 2013.



 

'Lego Batman,' 'Captain America' and more!

By DonKaye_ParallelUniverse Tue 11:28 AM
DC Animation
Out this week on Blu-ray/DVD is "Lego Batman: The Movie - DC Super Heroes Unite," which basically boils the popular video game down to a 71-minute movie yet still works as a fun family outing with all the key players from the DC Universe gang.


The Lego Batman set first introduced in 2006 has proved enormously popular, leading to a total of 17 DC-themed Lego playsets as well as two video games. It is the second video game, "Lego Batman 2: DC Super Heroes," that has provided most of the footage that comprises this new Blu-ray, which serves both as an entertaining comedic lark as well as a decent entry-level movie for children to check out.

Cutscenes from the game are edited together with newly filmed material (which replaces actual gameplay footage) to bring together Batman (voiced by Troy Baker) and Superman (Travis Willingham) as they battle the Joker (Christopher Corey Smith) and Lex Luthor (Clancy Brown). The latter is running for president and the former is doing everything he can to help, while simultaneously bringing down the Caped Crusader and the Man of Steel.

The story also features appearances from Robin (Charlie Schlatter), Riddler (Rob Paulsen), Penguin (Steven Blum), Catwoman (Katherine Von Till), most of the Justice League and plenty of other villains in a colorful, madcap adventure that offers up a constant stream of tongue-in-cheek references to the live-action DC films as well as excerpts from the iconic "Superman" and "Batman" movie scores by John Williams and Danny Elfman, respectively.

Also included are a featurette called "Building Batman," three bonus cartoons, an additional Lego short and, while supplies last, a Clark Kent/Superman Lego figure. Check out an exclusive clip below!

"Lego Batman: The Movie - DC Super Heroes Unite" is out Tuesday, May 21, as a Blu-ray Combo Pack and DVD, On Demand and for Digital Download. 
Also out this week on Blu-ray is "Captain America" -- no, not the terrific 2011 Marvel Studios movie starring Chris Evans as the all-American super-soldier and future "Avengers" leader, but a 1990 oddity made in the dark days before Marvel got its act together on the big screen.


The film, directed by Albert Pyun, was produced by Menahem Golan, the Israeli filmmaker best known for a long string of action/adventure/sci-fi B-movies released through his Cannon Group. When Golan left Cannon, he took the rights to "Captain America" with him and ended up making the film through the low-rent 21st Century Film Corporation. Long before Marvel Studios was formed in the mid-2000s so that the comic book giant could control and produce its own movies, the company sold the film rights to many of its iconic characters to both major studios and fly-by-night production entities -- with the results being either no Marvel movies at all or really bad ones.

File "Captain America" under the latter. A bland, robotic Matt Salinger (son of J.D. -- yes, the "Catcher in the Rye" author) plays the title role yet never comes across the least bit heroic. He's not helped by the dumb design of his costume, which comes complete with little wings on the helmet and fake ears poking through the sides (admittedly, Cap's outfit is hard to do right, although the new Marvel films make it work well enough). Salinger is just wrong in the role.

But he's not helped by either the script, which starts out somewhat faithfully to the comics yet veers wildly off course and ends up being a bizarre pro-environment "message" film, or the production values, which look just south of your average 1970s TV movie. Pyun is no Joe Johnston, but he also has little to work with here. If you're making an epic superhero movie on the budget of an ABC Movie of the Week, you're going to face obstacles that even an A-list director might find insurmountable.

Because it's so badly and cheaply made, "Captain America" doesn't exactly pop off the screen on Blu-ray: The colors and cinematography tend to be either flat or murky. The audio, at least on our copy, is also terrible: We had to really crank the volume to hear dialogue, making explosions and gunfire even more jarringly loud. Having said all that, this is worth having, we suppose, if you're a Marvel completist, and certainly any time you want to complain or nitpick about the current crop of Marvel movies, you should take this out for a reminder of how things used to be.



"Captain America" is being released on Blu-ray by Shout Factory, whose Scream Factory subsidiary also has two new releases debuting this week on Blu-ray: "The Burning" and "The Town that Dreaded Sundown." The former is a 1981 slasher movie and early Miramax Films offering, produced by Harvey Weinstein, co-written by his brother Bob, and featuring the motion picture debuts of Jason Alexander ("Seinfeld") and Holly Hunter ("Saving Grace").

The film is about a vile summer camp caretaker named Cropsy (a spin on the old urban legend) who returns to the campground and starts a spree of slaughter there years after some other campers caused him to be severely burned in a prank gone wrong. Essentially a ripoff of "Friday the 13th," "The Burning" revels in lots of blood and gore (courtesy of makeup legend Tom Savini) while offering just enough suspense to keep things moving. But it's mainly all about the kills in this one, which has grown into a cult favorite over the years.

The Scream Factory collector's edition offers a decent restored print of a film that will always have that early '80s grungy look, while interviews with Savini, editor Jack Sholder (who later directed "The Hidden"), actress Leah Ayres and Cropsy himself, actor Lou David, form the bulk of the bonus features, along with commentaries from director Tony Maylam and stars Shelley Bruce and Bonnie Deroski (what, Alexander and Hunter didn't want to participate?).

The Burning
The other Scream Factory release, "The Town That Dreaded Sundown," is a 1976 film from exploitation director-actor Charles B. Pierce that has not always been easy to see. Reportedly based on true events, the movie details a series of murders in and around the Texarkana area that were never solved. Ben Johnson ("The Wild Bunch") is the lawman attempting to find the killer, while Dawn Wells of "Gilligan's Island" fame appears as one of the victims.

The movie plays fast and loose with the actual events, which took place over a 10-week period in 1946, although it's true that the "Phantom Killer," as the perpetrator was dubbed, was never caught or identified. The story is told in the film through voice-over narration and the recreation of allegedly actual events, giving it a weird, half-"faux doc" feel that makes it sort of a predecessor to the "found-footage" horror films so popular during the last decade or so. Pierce's wide-screen compositions make it look like a more expensive picture than it actually is, but several sequences are effectively staged and the open-ended nature of the story is effectively unsettling (a remake from "Paranormal Activity" producer Jason Blum is in the works).

A commentary from historian Jim Presley and Justin Beahm leads the bonus features lineup, which also features video interviews with Wells and co-star Andrew Prine, a B-movie veteran. Best of all, a second DVD-only disc features Pierce's even more rare "The Evictors," a 1979 horror film about a young couple victimized in their new home by the previous owners. Jessica Harper ("Suspiria"), Michael Parks ("Django Unchained") and Vic Morrow ("Humanoids From the Deep") star. 

The Town that Dreaded Sundown

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Across the Universe is a weekly 5-part column written by Don Kaye. Follow him on Twitter @donkaye.

 

Second 'Trek' film remains gold standard for series

By DonKaye_ParallelUniverse Tue 11:01 AM
Paramount Pictures
"Star Trek: The Motion Picture" came out in 1979 and was a tremendous hit for Paramount Pictures, despite a lukewarm response from critics and some fans. But clearly people were interested in seeing "Star Trek" adventures again, so the studio commissioned a second film -- which ended up being considered the best of all the "Trek" movies to date.


Paramount wanted a second film to be made for a lot less money that the $46 million spent on the first one, which is chump change today in terms of film budgets, but back then it was a colossal figure. So the studio removed "Star Trek" creator Gene Roddenberry as producer -- thinking it was Roddenberry who had blown up the first movie's budget -- and installed Harve Bennett, a TV guy who had never seen a "Star Trek" episode at the time.

Bennett in turn hired Nicholas Meyer to direct -- like Bennett, he had never watched "Star Trek," but had a keen sense of story and character. Several scripts for the film had already been written, and Meyer was the one who pulled together elements from all the various drafts and did a final (uncredited) rewrite in 12 days to get the screenplay into shape.

After watching all 79 segments of the original series, Bennett had picked Khan from the episode "Space Seed" as the villain for "Star Trek II," thinking that a strong enemy was what the first movie had lacked. Star Ricardo Montalban expressed some concerns about returning to the character, but ultimately agreed to do it. More troublesome was Leonard Nimoy, who was reluctant play Spock again -- unless he was promised that the Vulcan would be killed off in this movie. William Shatner, meanwhile, was concerned with playing Kirk in middle age -- even though that was a central cornerstone of the movie!

"Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan" began filming in November 1981 and finished in early 1982, with the movie coming out June 4 of that year (they didn't take a year or more for post-production back in those days). It was a substantial hit, earning $97 million worldwide on a budget one-quarter ($11 million) that of "Star Trek: The Motion Picture."

The movie finds Kirk and Spock forced to take the Enterprise, crewed mostly with trainees, out on a secret emergency mission to find out what has happened to Space Station Regula 1. The scientific installation is where a project called Genesis is being developed -- under the supervision of Kirk's one-time lover Dr. Carol Marcus (Bibi Besch) and their son, David (Merritt Butrick) --  which can terraform lifeless planets and make them habitable ones. It can also do the reverse if deployed on a living planet and utterly destroy all the ecosystems there.

The ship assisting the lab in its research, the USS Reliant, has accidentally stumbled upon the planet where Kirk left Khan and his surviving band of genetically enhanced supermen to carve out their own society 15 years earlier. Driven mad with grief over the death of his wife (a Starfleet officer who had actually helped Khan take over the Enterprise in "Space Seed") due to the planet's inhospitable conditions, Khan hijacks the Reliant and goes on a mission of vengeance against Kirk -- a mission that ends with Spock sacrificing his own life to save the Enterprise.

By today's standards of ultra-fast editing, pacing and visual effects, "Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan" might seem slow and hokey-looking. But following its more cerebral predecessor, "The Wrath of Khan" seemed much closer in spirit, pace and tone to an episode of the original series, blending action and science fiction concepts with the great character interplay that had been a hallmark of "Star Trek" on TV. Compared to today's often dumbed-down blockbusters, which race without pausing for a second from action sequence to explosion and back again (a style that, sadly, dominates the new "Star Trek Into Darkness"), "Star Trek II" is refreshing, thoughtful and most important, soulful, while still working as rousing space opera.

The story is also poignant. Kirk, always the space cowboy, is haunted by thoughts of aging and death as he oversees the humdrum training of new Starfleet recruits. By reuniting with his estranged son -- who doesn't know initially that Kirk is his father -- and also confronting Khan, the captain of the Enterprise must come to terms with unfinished business from his past while also acknowledging the uncertain future ahead. Kirk's longstanding ability to seemingly cheat death also blows up in his face when Spock dies saving the ship -- an act that serves to renew Kirk himself and provide him with a kind of spiritual rebirth.
Paramount Pictures
Shatner delivers perhaps his best performance as Kirk in the movie, troubled and exhausted yet still capable of thinking on his feet and taking command of any situation. Nimoy, too, is excellent, cool and stoic to the end as Spock and courageous in the face of his own demise. Montalban chews the scenery and swallows it whole as Khan (as opposed to his more seductive performance in "Space Seed"), but does provide the kind of grand, operatic antagonist that the franchise needed at that point to work on the big screen.

Why does ""Star Trek II" succeed while "Star Trek Into Darkness" fails? "Star Trek II" has a well-constructed and tightly knit story that breathes and has room for both thought and character development, while also building on relationships that have endured for more than 15 years at the time of the film's release. The new film, taking place early in the careers of the Enterprise crew, tries to jam many of those same elements into a story where the characters are not that far along in either their life experience or relationships with one another, and not given the screen time to develop that.

"Star Trek II" doesn't hold back very long before introducing Khan as the villain, and there's certainly no silly mystery surrounding his identity as there is in the latest film -- a "mystery" that will be meaningless to all but older "Trek" fans and doesn't serve to advance that story in any way. The game of cat and mouse between Khan and Kirk is clearly laid out and suspenseful without resorting to mayhem and reversals and fisticuffs every few minutes -- in fact, Kirk and Khan never meet in person in "Star Trek II," which serves to frustrate both men.

Spock's death in "Star Trek II" is a truly moving moment, even if you're not a die-hard "Trek" fan who has been following the characters for years. The staging of the same sequence in "Star Trek Into Darkness" -- reversed so that it is Kirk who dies and not Spock -- not only lacks the gravity of the original, but is completely undercut by bringing Kirk back to life literally minutes later. Yes, Spock didn't stay dead either -- but we had to wait two years and the entire length of the next film, "Star Trek III: The Search for Spock," until he was restored to close to his former self.

There are many other points on which "Star Trek II" trumps "Star Trek Into Darkness," but as we said earlier, we're also quite certain that there are many modern moviegoers who won't be able to find their way into a movie that's now 31 years old. Yet if they could, they might find it a rich experience, a terrific sci-fi film and still perhaps the best "Trek" movie yet. We're sure it will endure long after the new "Trek" envisioned by J.J. Abrams and crew is sitting in Blu-ray bins, forgettable and forgotten.

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Across the Universe is a weekly 5-part column written by Don Kaye. Follow him on Twitter @donkaye.


 
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