Because I loved it! I mean, seriously loved it. After it was done, I fell to my knees like a religious person after they'd gotten a revelation from their God. (Yes, I just compared Star Trek to religion. It's not like the fandom is anything like a cult, right?) I nearly cried. You see, I had such high expectations: a Star Trek movie with Benedict Cumberbatch, supposedly an iconic TOS villain, and I had been so afraid that it wouldn't meet my expectations.
And it did! It was everything I hoped and wished, and...
I should probably stop gushing and actually say what I loved. It's just...it was a profound experience.
I too loved all the references to prime universe Trek. They helped me feel like this was Star Trek, the universe I was used to. Rewatching the first reboot after watching lots of prime universe Trek, it took until McCoy's "Dammit man, I'm a doctor, not a physicist!" line to make me feel like it was Trek. This one, it was pretty early on when they mentioned the Prime Directive. And just catching all the references made me feel smart...let's see:
-Offhand reference to Gorn
-Tribble
-KHAN!!!
-Section 31
-An evil admiral
-Scotty's a miracle worker
-Sulu being captain
-Redshirt
I'll probably get more after I see it again tomorrow evening.
Also, I loved how the main moral of the movie was that Starfleet was exploration, not military. Most of the previews before it were apocalypse movies, and it was wonderful to see it affirming Star Trek's vision of a peaceful future.
And Benedict Cumberbatch, is, as usual, fabulous. The only thing I can say is that he doesn't look much like Ricardo Montalban, and most reboot characters look like their prime counterparts. But he acted well, as expected.
And speaking of acting, I think that the actors were getting closer to their TOS counterparts. Dare I say, Chris Pine plays Kirk better than Shatner - the same character, but with less...scenery chewing and...excessive hamminess. And random...pauses. But everyone was much closer to their original counterparts. My theory is that they tried to lure in new Trekkies with the first reboot, which was not as close to original Trek. Now, they know they've converted people, so they're making this one closer. Or the actors have had more time to study up.
Also, TOS didn't develop characters other than Kirk, Spock, and McCoy, and this seems to be going towards developing them more. Special mention goes to Scotty and his heroism. I'm much more of a Scotty fan than I was.
Sadly, no movie is perfect. There was one thing I didn't like, and didn't like about the first one: Spock/Uhura. It lacked development, which made it feel very strange. Like, a female character can't just be a well-rounded, interesting person. She has to be the love interest just because she's the one female main character? Deanna Troi and Riker end their relationship because they're serving on the same ship. Wouldn't Spock see the same logic? Uhura as love interest is a step back for Star Trek. You go from B'Elanna and Tom, whose relationship developed over several seasons of Voyager, to this. It makes me sad to think that there's still this prevalent idea in our society that male characters can stay single, but female characters must be the love interest. And don't get me started on Carol Marcus's blatant fanservice. You know, writers, Star Trek fans aren't all straight guys anymore.
But I hate to end on that note, so I'll end with how this is the first Star Trek movie where I've really understood where the Spirk shippers are coming from. I'm pretty sure it's just my squicked out reaction to shipping anything with Shatner, combined with my dislike of Spock/Uhura, but for some reason the reverse scene to the one in Wrath of Khan felt much more slashy this time around. I really felt the depth of their feelings for each other much more than I did when I had to wade through Shatner-speak. That scene choked me up in the best possible way.
Overall, it was awesome, and I'm looking forward to seeing it again tomorrow night.
And now anyone reading this is probably glad I'm done rambling.