Community Corner
'Star Trek Into Darkness' Trailers and Reviews
One critic calls the film "reverential" and "faithful," while another says the choice to go with the original mythology hinders.
"Star Trek Into Darkness" is playing at Regal Hamilton Mill Stadium 14. The movie is showing in 3D at 9:30, 1:00, 4:10, 6:15, 7:15, 9:30, 10:25 and 12:30. Regular showings are at 10:30, 12:15, 1:45, 3:30, 4:45, 6:45, 7:45, 10:45 and 11:45.
The premise, courtesy of the film's official website:
When the crew of the Enterprise is called back home, they find an unstoppable force of terror from within their own organization has detonated the fleet and everything it stands for, leaving our world in a state of crisis. With a personal score to settle, Captain Kirk (Chris Pine) leads a manhunt to a war-zone world to capture a one man weapon of mass destruction. As our heroes are propelled into an epic chess game of life and death, love will be challenged, friendships will be torn apart, and sacrifices must be made for the only family Kirk has left: his crew.
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Here's what critics are saying:
'Star Trek Into Darkness' is like fan-boy fiction on a $185 million budget. It's reverential, it's faithful, it's steeped in 'Trek' mythology. It's also an excessively derivative what-if rehash of themes and interactions that came before, most of the characters lesser copies and even caricatures of the originals. — David Germain, Associated Press
It is arguably no better written than the last time around, with the film again coasting on its technical aspects and sheer chemistry of its cast over a story that makes little sense and feels rushed. And the picture is hobbled, especially in its second half, by an inexplicable choice to chain itself to the original mythology to its disservice as a new story. — Scott Mendelson, Forbes
'Star Trek Into Darkness,' bursting at the seams with enemies, wears its politics, its mettle, its moxie and its heart on its ginormous 3-D sleeve. Director J.J. Abrams and the crew of the U.S.S. Enterprise try to build a better sequel with action spectacles to get lost in, clever asides to amuse, emotional waves to ride and allusions to terrorism in general and 9/11 specifically. — Betsy Sharkey, Los Angeles Times
The visual effects and stunt work in the movie is very impressive, as you’d expect in a J.J. Abrams film, and offers up the kind of spectacle that almost makes you forgive the flaws elsewhere. (Almost.) But the number of climactic action sequences contained within the plot corkscrews also starts to feel exhausting, eventually pushing the audience from feeling like 'things keep getting more intense!' to 'seriously, shouldn’t this be over yet?' — Graeme McMillan, Wired
'Into Darkness' eclipses the first film in a rare occurrence of a sequel one upping its predecessor, though missing are those sensations of grandeur and stargazing as Kirk, Bones and Spock experience space and the Starfleet for the first time. Having all of that already established, Abrams instead fashions a hardboiled action-thriller, putting the film in full-throttle from the get go, grabbing the audience by the jugular and refusing to let go until the end credits roll. — Justin Craig, Fox News
"Star Trek Into Darkness" is rated PG-13 for PG-13 for intense sequences of sci-fi action and violence. The movie runs 2 hours and 12 minutes.
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