I hate to say it bud, even though I liked the movie, the things that are being hit on are not really "nit-picking". I watched it again a week or two ago. There are a lot of plot holes and things that just don't make sense. And as stated above things like "super blood" thrown in as simple plot devices since bringing a human back from the dead seems a bit harder then a Vulcan that can mind meld himself into someone else and come back. Long and the short of it, I hate to start agreeing with a lot of the negativity some people show for the film, but a lot of the issues a pretty glaring. My wife, who has only ever seen the new star trek and is in no way a fan watched STID with me. She said she really liked it, as I did, but even her not being into the trek world asked many of the same questions I posed.
Why can't they beam spock out of a volcano yet beam across a galaxy no problem. How many times is Kirk going to get demoted and promoted in a 10 minute period. Why when kirk died didn't they just use the other guys blood that they thawed out. How does someones blood, super or not, bring someone back from the dead. She's not a fan and she even caught these "nit-pick" things. Again, I enjoyed it, but they could have simplified a lot of issues by removing Khan in general, and doing away with the copy cat scenes and plot devices like super blood.
Rant over.
Oh man, this is the thread that never dies. And yes, I acknowledge my hand in it not dying.
Ok, first of all, let's take a step back. As I have said numerous times in this thread, it's totally ok to not like the movie. I'm not making judgments on anyone's level of fandom, or expertise in film criticism. At the end of the day, film, even commercial blockbusters, is art. Art is subjective. We all take different things into the movie in our heads, and our brains all process the events of the film slightly differently.
What I have been saying is that
some of the arguments that
some people have posted in this thread, aren't good reasons to not like the film.
Angelus Lupus saying: "If you have to publish a comic to explain details/errors in the film, then the film didn't work," is a BAD ARGUMENT for the reasons stated above. Chiefly, that it's an unfounded presumption that the comic book was published with the intent of explaining alleged errors in the plot of the film. More generally, what does releasing a comic book have to do with the writing of the film? Whether or not a comic book is released, has no bearing on the quality of any element of the film.
On the other hand, when Angelus followed up with: "look, they've cured death with "super blood", rendered Starships useless with the personal transwarp beaming thingy, and go running to Old Spock whenever they need help. There's no drama anymore." This is an argument. It's not one I necessarily agree with personally, but it's an argument which takes into account elements of the film which Angelus feels did not come together.
I'm totally into having nerdy discussions about a fictional universe, and the narrative storytelling elements. And for the most part, there's a lot of good discussion here. But sometimes, I just gotta call out the bad arguments (IMHO, obviously).
Now, as far as nitpicking, yeah, it's nitpicking. The transwarp beaming device - which I totally acknowledge is a 'lazy' plot device (as was the original transwarp beaming concept, really) - is not standard issue Federation equipment. It's a piece of covert technology from Section 31. So, no, the Enterprise can't beam Spock out of the volcano with their standard transporters. They are two separate in-universe concepts, and there's a good reason why it would be that way in-universe (the device is experimental, and covert, thus non-standard). James Bond had gadgets the British army didn't...because covert intelligence agencies develop secret technology. They don't put it into wide issue because they don't want that technology to proliferate. In Trek, we know this is true of the cloaking devices (like why the Defiant had that Romulan officer operating the cloaking device when the Defiant was introduced). So why doesn't it make sense to have the secret Section 31 retaining control of their own gadgets?
Kirk being demoted and promoted, yeah, that felt funny to me too. But in fairness, this plot element was specifically meant to address fan criticism that Kirk was promoted too quickly in the first film. Damned if you do, damned if you don't.
Why didn't they use the other guy's blood? Because McCoy had only tested Khan's blood. If you were McCoy, and you had one shot at a transfusion, are you going to gamble it on the assumption that every member of Khan's crew having the same super blood, or are you going to want the sure thing?
Is the super blood a little hokey? Absolutely. But it's there in the film, so we do actually have to think about the situation. The fact that it's a hokey plot device does not, in and of itself, mean that the way it's presented in film doesn't have it's own internal (in-universe) logic.