James T. Kirk tente d'être à la hauteur de son père sous le contrôle de M. Spock alors qu'un Romulien vengeur du futur crée des trous noirs pour détruire la Fédération, planète par planète.James T. Kirk tente d'être à la hauteur de son père sous le contrôle de M. Spock alors qu'un Romulien vengeur du futur crée des trous noirs pour détruire la Fédération, planète par planète.James T. Kirk tente d'être à la hauteur de son père sous le contrôle de M. Spock alors qu'un Romulien vengeur du futur crée des trous noirs pour détruire la Fédération, planète par planète.
- Réalisation
- Scénaristes
- Vedettes
- A remporté 1 oscar
- 27 victoires et 95 nominations au total
- Uhura
- (as Zoë Saldana)
- Officer Pitts
- (as Antonio Elias)
Avis en vedette
With regards to the acting characterisation, everyone was pretty much solid, with perhaps the exception of Sulu, who I thought didn't have much to do. Kudos, though, to Zoe Saldana's loveliness as Uhura and also, especially, to Chris Pine as Kirk - I had always thought Spock was my favourite character, but it looks like I may have to reassess; Pine lives and breathes that Kirk moxie exquisitely and he'll be great fun to watch in future instalments.
With regards to plot, it's pretty good; there is a decent sense of internal logic to it, without it being too overwrought. True, there are a number of points where you might think, "Blimey, that's serendipitous," but as I'd already suspended my disbelief to accept the possibility of time travelling green-blooded alien from the planet Vulcan, these things really didn't bother me at all. Plus there were a number of points in the movie where they were saying, "We were pulling this kind of shtick 20+ years ago, and you loved it then; run with us on this one," and I was happy to.
Oh, and most importantly of all, the movie is fun; it has the good sense to not take itself too seriously, despite remaining well aware of that sense of pomp and importance that all great character dramas should have, and that isn't a bad thing at all.
How this movie will bear up to repeat viewings, I'm not certain yet, but at the premiere, it was a blast.
Addendum: It's a month plus since I originally wrote this and I have seen the film three times in total now - the opening ten minutes remain a manipulative marvel that the remainder of the film struggles to match, the coincidences and conveniences seem even more far fetched than ever and the jokes seem even more silly BUT I still fancy seeing it again, so I guess it must work for me.
The cast is pretty well put together, and each character is pretty memorable and involved quite well. Eric Bana was excellent as Nero, not to mention Bruce Greenwood is awesome as well. Zachary Quinto is the beloved Spock and for one of those hyper-intelligent characters it's a character you will end up feeling emotionally drawn to. The story never drags at all and it's all together a pretty well written piece of sci-fi I must add. To be honest Chris pine is great in the movie, it's just that at times he too much of an archetype 'bad-ass', dare I say it? How many times have I seen a drunken protagonist in a bar starting a fight with a guy and/or trying to get a girl who views him as trash. Other than that, though, he does fine, and the rest of the cast is no less than good.
The cinematography was beautiful on its own, let alone the action scenes. Speaking of which, a new bar for space battles has been set. And the score by Michael Giacchino and Alexander Courage was not too shabby. In fact I thoroughly embraced it. I consider it a must see, being one of those rare sci-fi gems anyone can enjoy.
Yeah, both movies had some corny lines and one or two ridiculous scenarios (Spock and Uhura making out?), but the first two movies in this reboot were great fun. The actors were brilliant even when their lines weren't, the action decent. Was either movie award-worthy? No, but not every movie has to be in order to enjoy it. I wasn't disappointed. Both kept me very well entertained. Sometimes it's good just to sit back, relax, enjoy, and not take everything so damn seriously.
Now, the third installment is altogether another matter. While it did have its moments, it was really terribly written. There is a limit to how much even good actors can do with pervasively bad lines, and how much slop a viewer can put up with. And if Hollywood doesn't stop with their "wokeness", I think I'll have to stick with foreign flicks.
Must-Stream Sci-Fi on Paramount+
Must-Stream Sci-Fi on Paramount+
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesIn the scene where Kirk is taking the Kobayashi Maru test, he is eating an apple, which is also what he is eating while recounting his tale of taking the Kobayashi Maru test in Star trek II: La colère de Khan (1982). (According to director J.J. Abrams in the Blu-ray audio commentary, this was not intended to be a reference to The Wrath of Khan. At one point, he was simply told that lead actors seem cocky eating apples.)
- GaffesAfter Spock boards the Vulcan ship on board the mining vessel, Kirk is seen walking through some pipes. His Starfleet phaser has switched to a Romulan gun (longer barrel and no lights), before switching back to the Starfleet one again in the next scene. He actually acquires the Romulan gun a few scenes later.
- Citations
Spock Prime: James T. Kirk!
James T. Kirk: Excuse me?
Spock Prime: How did you find me?
James T. Kirk: Whoa... how do you know my name?
Spock Prime: I have been and always shall be your friend.
James T. Kirk: Wha...
[shakes head]
James T. Kirk: Uh... look... I-I don't know you.
Spock Prime: I am Spock.
James T. Kirk: Bullshit.
- Générique farfeluThe first part of the closing credits is styled after the opening credits of Patrouille du cosmos (1966), where the starship Enterprise blasts off into space as a monologue describes its mission, and then the cast names appear as the famous "Star Trek" theme music plays.
- ConnexionsEdited into De wereld draait door: Episode #4.157 (2009)
- Bandes originalesTheme from 'Star Trek' TV Series
Written by Alexander Courage & Gene Roddenberry
Meilleurs choix
- How long is Star Trek?Propulsé par Alexa
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Site officiel
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Star Trek: The Future Begins
- Lieux de tournage
- sociétés de production
- Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Budget
- 150 000 000 $ US (estimation)
- Brut – États-Unis et Canada
- 257 730 019 $ US
- Fin de semaine d'ouverture – États-Unis et Canada
- 75 204 289 $ US
- 10 mai 2009
- Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
- 385 681 768 $ US
- Durée
- 2h 7m(127 min)
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 2.39 : 1(original ratio)





