The main theme which was used in the new film was strangely wrong and inappropriate. It was not soaring at all. It was completely static mass of sound. How could someone create that for Star Trek??!!
I hated James Horner's trite score for WOK, with the pathetic cliche of arpeggiated augmented triads for "SPACE" and the total ripoff of the Prokofieff "Alexander Nevsky" MAIN MOTIF of the Germans. That is something that James Horner specializes in. Total fucking ripoffs. Astoundingly plagiaristic composer. Some that come to mind: Willow - a rewrite of the first movement main theme from Schumann's Third Symphony. It is exactly the same, except with fanfares added. Humanoids of the Deep - a rewrite of Ive's Unanswered Question. Sorceresses - a rewrite of not only notes but ORCHESTRATION of Shostakovich's 5th 2nd movement. These are not mere influences, such as you might have with John Williams who is an expert and very knowledgable composer/conductor who understandably is influenced by the great composers he loves. With Horner, it is conscious, coldly calculated plagiarism. And BTW those are only examples that I happened to notice while watching the movies - I have no idea of how many others might exist. I have a feeling an entire catalogue could be compiled.
Though on the subject of Jerry Goldsmith's score to the first film, despite the film's occasional clunkiness it may be the greatest orchestration AND film score ever written. It is intensely imaginative and vivid writing, with the most heroic main theme since Korngold. I defy anyone to write something that great. I was thinking the other day about who influenced the two great film composers - Jerry Goldsmith and Berrnard Herrmann. Part of the reason was I was listening to Vaughn Williams 6th Symphony. The last movement is all pianissimo, an eerie sound depicting a lifeless landscape, and is obviously an influence of Goldsmith's score sections depicting the huge alien spacecraft. But Goldsmith, being the original composer he was, did not steal but simply couldn't help be influenced. Just as Herrmann was highly influenced by Holst and Rachmaninoff, in both his vivid orchestrational approach and his lyrical romantic quality.