Star Trek Beyond

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Co-written by Simon ‘Scotty’ Pegg, the third film in the rebooted series is a playful, spirited tonic that also sees the return of Chris Pine and Zachary Quinto’s Kirk and Spock and the rest of their crew

Co-written by Simon ‘Scotty’ Pegg, the third film in the rebooted series is a playful, spirited tonic that also sees the return of Chris Pine and Zachary Quinto’s Kirk and Spock and the rest of their crew.

Much of the fun of the film simply comes from watching the crew conform to our expectations, giving new spins to old routines. Familiarity breeds content.

As ever, Pine's Kirk is recklessly daring, while Quinto's Spock remains imperturbably calm, even when marooned in the company of Karl Urban's comically dour medic Bones. Equally reliably, Pegg's engineer delivers his customary quota of droll jokes and miraculous technical fixes. All play their part when the Enterprise crew end up in their latest jam; lured to an alien planet by the fearsome and sadistic Krall, played by Idris Elba, unrecognisable beneath layers of prosthetic make-up save for tell-tale traces of his familiar Hackney accent.

Fortunately, our heroes find a resourceful new ally on the planet in the shape of Jaylah, played by Sofia Boutella (the sleekly lethal Gazelle in Kingsman: The Secret Service). A kick-ass fighter in black-and-white war paint, she forms a delightful double act with Scotty after the pair team up.

When it gets to the action scenes, however, things prove slightly disappointing, with Justin Lin's blurry, fast-and-furious direction often making it hard to work out what is going on. But the film has enough humour and heart to enable us to forgive its flaws.