Arguably, that's where the movie had its greatest success. It doesn't slow down at all, it keeps the pace so fast and frenetic that you don't have time to notice the gaping plot & logic holes, and you never even begin to take stock of any flaws. They probably storyboarded it specifically to keep the audience on their toes and never let them actually think about what's going on. Because, if the audience started thinking, they'd get about as far as "supernova threatening to destroy the Galaxy" before calling bull****.
But an approach like this practically guarantees that once people had a few days to think about the film, their opinion will worsen dramatically. This will hurt the franchise in the long run, IMHO. It is possible to write a movie that is internally consistent and doesn't suffer from the
fridge logic effect and at the same time is thrilling and exciting. In Star Trek's case, the writing staff got a little overexcited at times, and seemed to believe that following the
rule of cool to the letter would be a good substitute for good writing.
In some ways, this reminded me of the second Mission Impossible, which was constructed to provide a scaffolding to stitch the action setpieces together. In this case, I'm fairly certain the writers had a checklist with things they wanted to show, and then constructed a plot around those things.
So, saying that the movie moved fast enough to cover those plotholes sounds a lot like you're damning it with faint praise.
According to writer Roberto Orci, the part of the mind meld sequence in which Prime Spock sees the destruction of Vulcan was meant to be "as impressionistic for a general audience." The idea was that Spock saw the planet's destruction through "a telescope or some other type of measuring device," but showing it that way on-screen "isn't very cinematic." However, Orci himself prefers to think of Delta Vega as being in close orbit of Vulcan
Lazy, lazy writing. I can see why they did it but I don't respect it.
Seriously? I mean, what is wrong with the old Tarkin approach? Why not have Spock on Nero's ship, watching it from Nero's side as Starfleet makes a futile attempt at saving the planet? (Personally, I would have put Spock into a lifepod with disabled comm systems and put that lifepod in orbit around the planet or something like that.)