You're right, mine's worth more because I know what I'm talking about. Everyone is not a special little butterfly whose opinions are as equally valid as everyone else's. Because most people are just idiots.
When you've watched Citizen Kane and hundreds of subtitled foreign movies - and rewatched movies you've hated just so you can "give the cinematography a second chance" - then maybe you can attempt to patronize me.
Till then, I remain singularly right.
What would a Star Trek film have to do to be worthy not only of YOUR money, but also be successfull enough to make making another one a good business proposition?
Have a plot that didn't involve a mining foreman being magically sent back in time by a blackhole, stealing a bleeding-edge shuttlecraft from his race's most hated enemy, somehow using his incredible knowledge of advanced mining techniques to hack said shuttle's systems and learn how to operate the doomsday weapon inside.
And let's not forget that his solution to the whole "a supernova blows up my world 200 years in the future" situation wasn't to go and use the blackhole machine to actually destroy the star before it became a supernova, but instead to try and annihilate the tiny handful of people who'd gone and tried to save Romulus.
Then there's the small matter of a Romulan mining foreman having such an intimate understanding of the mechanics of blackhole-based time travel as to be able to predict the exact time and location Spock's shuttle would be thrown out.
Or that he felt the need to spend an hour drilling into the core of Vulcan before deploying his
blackhole machine, because clearly a blackhole is only effective when thrown into the core of a planet. Which, incidentally, we've apparently decided is made of solid rock and not a seething mass of boiling liquid magma which would be entirely impossible to 'drill'.
Or maybe you'd prefer we discuss the small matter of how a single drop of the blackhole goo managed to destroy the entirety of Vulcan, and yet
hundreds of litres of it only managed to create a blackhole just large enough to destroy the mining ship which was actually all-but-in-orbit of Earth at the time.
Any of those things,
in my humble opinion, might have been somewhat of a small mistake.