Director
JJ Abrams Talks ‘Trek’
Not only did it score a pretty sweet looking banner for ‘Star Trek’, MTV got to sit down with JJ Abrams and go over a couple of details about the new film. Â He went over the film’s humor, Leonard Nimoy’s role in the film, and potential easter eggs found in the film. Â Check out his answers to some pretty important topics.
About the film’s humor:
It’s funny, because when you see a quarter of something or less, it’s easy to draw conclusions about what the whole thing is. The thing with the hands is probably the most extreme sort of borderline-silly thing that happens in the movie. But the humor in the movie is constant within the wit of the characters. And I think when you look at the original “Star Trek” show, there was actually a great deal of humor.
At one point, when Kirk first meets Uhura at a bar, there is a reference to Slusho!, the fake drink that had a major part in the viral marketing for ‘Cloverfield’. Â JJ’s answer to whether or not there are other easter eggs found throughout the film:
No. That was sort of the only one, and it was just sort of a goof.
About bridges between the old and new ‘Star Trek’ universe:
I think what you’ll see is there are  both story-wise and performance-wise, visually and aurally  many connections to what is familiar and what has come before. Which for the new fans of “Star Trek,” the newcomers to the world, will be irrelevant. But for those people who are fans and who hope for or expect certain familiar nods, they will undoubtedly get those.
About Nimoy’s role:
It’s no cameo. He’s in the movie, and his role is critical. I always think “cameo” feels like a role that the movie could exist without. This is critical, emotional and also a story element.
About what the other ‘Star Trek’ films were lacking:
There are a number of things that I think are unique to this movie. There’s a level of relevance that I think is really because of the actors playing the part. I didn’t want to just re-create or reset everything, I thought going back to those characters was important. [In previous films] when we met those characters, we met them pre-established. They’d already been working together, they already knew each other. They had this history. And for some reason, the origin of those relationships of those characters was something that probably would have helped me, at least, connect to them and understand why I should care about them and who they were.
So on those fundamental levels, none of the movies have had that before. But on a much more practical level, “Star Trek” has never had the opportunity, nor the resources, to be realized in this way. Things like the ships and the battles and the planets and the chases and the action sequences … and do them in a way that felt thrilling and terrifying and entertaining in a way that the show and the prior movies simply couldn’t afford to do. I feel we were able to bring to life, in a way we’ve never seen before, what it is to be a member of Starfleet. And that’s kind of cool.
Source: MTV
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