I just watched III last night and I have to say that I enjoyed it thoroughly. I think it was because we got to see the supporting characters actually
doing somthing in this movie as opposed to just being their duty stations. There is a lot of good humour and emotion in this one, and because this movie is full of hope for Spock's future it's mostly the positive emotions. I just watched the first part again with the director/producer/actor commentary on, and I have a juicy bit for all you proponents of Klingon honour and family values. *grin*
The producer/writer said that he wanted to do an action/adventure movie. He said that according to the TOS episodes he watched, the Klingons were either ill-defined or undefined. He could have picked the Romulans but he thought that the Klingons would be more likely to have the absolutism and determination needed to pursue the "opposition" role to the end in his movie.
Director Leonard Nimoy said of the Klingons--and specifically of Kruge killing Valkris for knowing too much--that Klingons are so paranoid that "if your brother knows too much, you're going to kill your brother. That's the Klingon mindset." (I'll have to listen to that again to clarify the quote, but that's the jist of it.)
I've also heard from some corners that the Klingons were just set up to be the fall guys in this movie, the bad guys that Kirk & Co. beat. You have no doubt they will do it, so that makes Kruge & Co. "straw men" and there is no substance to them. While it may be true that they are going to be beaten, the same can be said of
any movie of "the good guys vs. the bad guys". So, setting that inanity aside, I thought that Kruge was a very nuanced and complex character. He showed he was Klingon, and showed his power to his crew and his opponents, but also proved that he could be noble and recognise nobility in others: "I give two minutes, for you and your gallant crew."
He was unapologetically Klingon: taking on the weird photon tube thing for no discernable reason and killing it with his bare hands to prove his power. (Surely he didn't think it was "the very scientists" he sought?) Killing a prisoner (he didn't care which) to improve his barganing position with Kirk, but not killing wantonly or indiscriminently. His violence was purposeful. Crew discipline is
very important, so the upstart gunner had to go. It was a lesson to the rest of his crew.
I had always thought that, in the final confrontation between him and Kirk, Kruge had said "Yes, accelerating, isn't it?" when Kirk told him the planet would destroy itself soon. I managed to listen properly last night and found him to be saying "Yes,
exhilarating, isn't it?"
Now
that strikes me as class. Stubborn Klingon refusal to let outside considerations such as an exploding planet--that he happens to be standing on!--getting in the way of him getting what he wants. Though admittedly, he must not have heard of the Klingon proverb Kang quoted some 14 years earlier: "Only a fool fights in a burning house."
A whole bunch of great scenes and dialogue in that movie. Uhura & Mr. Adventure. Bones in the Bar. Sulu and "Tiny"--and the rest of the McCoy breakout scene. Scotty's "This, or
nothing!". The whole breakout from Spacedock. Kirk's "The answer... is no. I am therefore going anyway", "That's what you get for missing staff meetings", "Calm yourself, Doctor". Kirk falling of fhis chair at his son's death. (Though, on that... there's a lot of swearing at Kruge and it doesn't seem like the audio comm channel was muted during it. Since kruge didn't react to the insults or the surprising knowledge within Kirk's anguish, I can only assume that either Chekov or the computer knew when to mute the audio.)
I have to agree with the Guv saying STIII was one of the best. STII will always be my favourite, but I've always liked III as well. This is the first time I've seen it in many years, and the first time in considerably longer where I've just sat and
watched the damn thing instead of trying to take notes and stuff for my own nefarious purposes.
Good Movie.