I kno.
It's amazing how all these little guys keep going. The trailer is good though. The voices of the actors are strong and intense. Smart move. And did you notice the Cylon. Lol
I could have sworn the guy giving the impassioned speech was Vin Diesel. He'd make a better Klingon than the people playing Klingons. I missed the Cylon. I'll have to look it over again.
I don't know what time period they are going for, but I like how it looks that it is in the ten years between the end of TOS and TMP.
This is the what I really hate about the ST canon. The difference between TOS Enterprise and TMP Enterprise stems from 3 axis: 15 years experience in space model workshops, budgets for same, and Big Screen detail requirements. The Enterprise refit was just a convention to explain the inadequacy of the original Enterprise model for a Cinematic feature. What that convention can never do is make an early 1960's television spaceship model work in a HDTV world. That model needs to be abandoned for higher production standards. TMP model is really good. That isn't to say it couldn't be better, but if I had to stick with any model made for any ST, that would be it.
In 2nd Place comes TMP Klingon Battlecruiser. The studio model had too many ridiculous gimblies, and they blued it all to Hades in post production, but it was cool-looking anyway.
I'm tired of ST productions wearing the ST canon like a strait-jacket. This is the one thing that JJ Abrams got right. ST can go in so many directions. Personally, I'd like to see someone take up the concept of that a starship contains an enormous power source. Nuclear weapons and nuclear power were very much on the minds of 1960's sci-fi writers. With Star Wars in the 1970's, spaceships and space weapons were not so high energy as highly magical, and I think that universe effected the creators of ST.
There is a good example of this between "The Enterprise Incident" and STIII "The Search for Spock." In TOS, Kirk bluffs that he's going to self destruct the Enterprise. He does this by sending a general warning of an enormous blast radius. As the Romulans decode the message, they give the Big-E space to slip away and try out the cloaking device. In STIII, Kirk does self destruct the Enterprise, but it just blows a few big holes in itself and falls out of orbit. Considering that they were able to siphon one ounce of anti-matter from the engines in TOS episode "Obsession," any physicist could tell you that a starship would have a truly scary explosive potential.
As a matter of fact, TOS did better with high energy explosions than any later production of ST. They used strobe lights to represent the flash of truly powerful detonations. It may have been cheaper than showing a nice orange fireball, but considering spaceships run on anti-matter and not gasoline, I should think the resulting explosion would tend toward the blue end of the spectrum, if not down into the gamma rays.
Even Warner Brothers classic cartoons of the 1950's had a better handle on high energy. The "Illudium Q-36 Explosive Space Modulator" looked like a firecracker but was supposed to deliver a (very literally) "Earth shattering kaboom."