Cape Argus

Crew boldly go into new territory

- THERESA SMITH

DIRECTOR: Justin Lin CAST: Chris Pine, Zachary Quinto, Karl Urban, Zoe Saldana, Simon Pegg, John Cho, Anton Yelchin, Idris Elba, Sofia Boutella CLASSIFICA­TION: 10-12 pg RUNNING TIME: 124 minutes RATING: ★★★★✩

STAR Trek Beyond is full action stations ahead as our favourite crew are sent beyond the reach of the Federation and put on the defensive.

Just more than halfway through the five-year mission they started in Star Trek Into Darkness, the Enterprise crew stop off at a very Elysium-meets-Interstell­ar-meets-Naboo starbase called Yorktown. (the starbase design is deceptivel­y intricate, like many of the gorgeous sets in this film).

Chris Pine is more subdued than the sparky rebel of before as he matures into his role of the responsibl­e Captain Kirk who is starting to question just what it is they are doing out in space and toying with the idea of a career change.

Holiday time is cut short, though, when the Enterprise is asked to deal with a distress call and off they set to a faraway planet.

Here they encounter a literal swarm of some unknown aliens who seem hell-bent on destructio­n.

In time-honoured fashion, the Enterprise is destroyed, the crew are scattered and forced to consider their mortality, purpose and just how they are going get out of this problem.

There are plenty of fast-paced gymnastics from the crew, but the film, ironically enough, works best in the quiet, more contemplat­ive moments.

Kirk is grappling with the fact that he is about to turn older than his father ever got to be and the idea that he is now unable to measure himself against George Kirk, is unsettling.

Kirk is eventually pitted against Krall (Elba is mostly unrecognis­able under the make-up), who forces him to consider where he fits into Federation structure.

Spock (Quinto) discoverin­g the passing of his alternativ­e self creates a poignant and elegant memorial scene to Leonard Nimoy, while it is bitterswee­t watching the late Anton Yelchin figure out the plot as clever, ever-enthusiast­ic Chekov.

Bones (Urban) is the voice of reason to everyone else’s fantastica­l ideas, while Scotty (Pegg) provides the laughs and Uhuru (Saldana) keeps everyone sane and grounded.

Every member of the command structure gets a chance to show off their action skills, though it does get into Fast and Furious territory toward the end and you start wondering when Kirk is going to get off that bike already.

On the planet they meet Jayla (Boutella), a young castaway working hard to get away from the big, bad swarm and in the solitary youngster the crew find a convenient foil to explain their methodolog­y and thinking.

Except for when it is riffing off the musical theme used in the first

Star Trek reboot movie, the score is rather ho-hum, not helping along the atmosphere at all.

The plot, we eventually discover, hinges on a tiny Macguffin of sorts and if you really question it too much, there are holes to be discovered.

Still, the script is funny, the film is tauter, but less uptight, than Into

Darkness and it charms you along in old-school Star Trek fashion with its emphasis on teamwork.

It all comes together nicely as this crew start exploring new territory

– they are starting to leave behind the baggage of the original crew and creating their own personalit­ies and stories and it looks like that is a fun process.

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