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Director’s Edition of STAR TREK: THE MOTION PICTURE to Be Remastered, Restored for 4K Release

Nearly two years after first concrete rumors about bringing Robert Wise’s fan-preferred Director’s Edition of Star Trek: The Motion Picture back out of DVD-era exile first began, those hopes have finally been confirmed in a new announcement made today.

Only ever available on standard-definition Star Trek: The Motion Picture — The Director’s Edition was a hit with fans, trimming down overly-long scenes and enhancing unsatisfactory visual effects with then-state-of-the-art digital updates…. but in the 20 year since The Director’s Edition arrived, fans have been clamoring to see that version of the movie upgraded to a high-definition release.

DVD cover art for 2001’s DIRECTORS EDITION release.

Officially announced today by Paramount Home Entertainment and Paramount+, it’s now confirmed that Star Trek: The Motion Picture — The Director’s Edition will finally get the love its long deserved: a fully restored and remastered edition for the new era of Ultra HD media.

As revealed through StarTrek.com this afternoon:

Paramount and Paramount+ are excited to announce that a full restoration of the Director’s Edition of Star Trek: The Motion Picture has been greenlit.

The restoration will be undertaken by producer David C. Fein, restoration supervisor Mike Matessino, and visual effects supervisor Daren R. Dochterman, all of whom worked previously with director Robert Wise.

The film will be prepared for presentation in 4K Ultra HD with Dolby Vision™ high dynamic range (HDR) and a new Dolby Atmos® soundtrack. The restoration is expected to take 6-8 months and will launch with an exclusive window on Paramount+.

So, that means that while we’ll ultimately end up with a much-needed and for-the-record 4K master of Robert Wise’s vision for Star Trek: The Motion Picture, we’re going to have to wait a while for the project to reach its conclusion. Not only will the film elements need to be addressed, but all of the digital visual effects — which were only built and rendered for the standard-def DVD release — will need to be revisited for a 4K presentation.

In addition, while this shiny new 4K Director’s Edition of The Motion Picture will eventually be released on physical media — we certainly hope, anyhow — Paramount has learned from its peers and is using their Paramount+ streaming service as the exclusive home for the updated film…. so now you have an excuse to sign up if the new Trek television shows haven’t gotten you there already.

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As rumors about a 4K release of all of the first ten Star Trek films continue to build, as covered by The Digital Bits yesterday, this long-term project makes it clear that any 4K edition of The Motion Picture that may arrive in 2021 — something growing ever likelier with each new retailer leak — will be the theatrical version of the film (which is all that has ever been released on Blu-ray to date).

UPDATE: See our other breaking news report about the first four Star Trek films coming to 4K Blu-ray in September 2021!

In the meantime, we’ll keep you posted on any and all details that make their way to the public over the next year — so keep your sensors locked on TrekCore as this exciting project moves forward!


Order the
Star Trek: TMP
Director's Edition DVD!



Order the
Star Trek: TWOK
Director's Cut!


 
 
 

Order the
Star Trek VI
Special Edition DVD!


Mego Introduces 14-Inch STAR TREK Action Figure Line

The revived Mego Star Trek action figure line has been running strongly for a few years now, and after moving into The Next Generation and even into Star Trek: Discovery in recent outings, the company is now expanding – quite literally – into their next venture: 14-inch high versions of their retro Original Series lineup.

We saw early prototypes of Mego’s larger Star Trek figures back at Toy Fair 2019, where the preliminary concept figures were pieced together using old, inaccurate Star Trek: The Motion Picture character doll heads from decades ago; looking at Mego’s first photos of their new 14-inch releases, while they’ve retained the ‘Spock’ sculpt, they’ve clearly updated ‘Kirk’ design to better resemble William Shatner.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l5i_omX8RLQ

Revealed through the company’s social media feeds and on MegoMuseum.com, here are the first three 14-inch figures coming to stores this summer — Captain Kirk, Mr. Spock, and the Gorn, each with interchangeable hands and action accessories.

Photos via Mego and/or MegoMuseum.com
Photos via Mego and/or MegoMuseum.com
Photos via Mego and/or MegoMuseum.com
Photos via Mego and/or MegoMuseum.com

The Spock figure will be the first one to hit store shelves later this summer, and you can see many more photos of the figure over at Mego Museum’s preview article.

In the meantime, if you’d like to add these 14-inch figures to your collection, they’re up for preorder at Entertainment Earth now for $39.99 each (Spock Kirk Gorn).

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The company isn’t finished with their standard 8-inch run, however, as Mego has also announced continuations of their Original Series and Next Generation figure lines with Kang the Klingon and Commander William Riker, each coming to stores in 2021.

Photos via Mego and/or MegoMuseum.com

Are you fans of Mego’s retro Star Trek figures — and if so, will you be adding any of these new additions to your own collection? Let us know in the comments below!

Hallmark Reveals STAR TREK IV Klingon Bird of Prey Event-Exclusive Holiday Ornament

While Hallmark’s wide-release annual holiday ornaments will be beaming down to collectors later this year — the second set of “Mirror, Mirror” Storyteller figures, and Star Trek: Picard’s La Sirena starship — the company announced this week a convention-exclusive special release timed to celebrate one of the franchise’s most beloved films.

Coinciding with the 35th anniversary of Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home, the company unveiled their new Star Trek Klingon Bird of Prey ornament — playfully named the HMS Bounty in the film — which will arrive on schedule with July’s San Diego Comic Con and October’s New York Comic Con events.

Unlike the original Hallmark Bird of Prey model released in 1994, this edition will be an all-metal build, and will be painted to match the color scheme of the ship seen in the 1986 film, right down to the “hand-painted” HMS Bounty name on the vessel’s neck.

Luckily for collectors, because of ongoing pandemic concerns neither of the two 2021 conventions will have an in-person Hallmark presence, so the company will be making the limited-edition ornament available for purchase online during the opening day of each event — so the only way to miss out is if the only 3,750 produced ornaments sell out before you get to enter your credit card information.

Priced at $35, the HMS Bounty Bird of Prey ornament will be available for purchase during these convention dates:

  • Comic-Con International San Diego: July 23-25
  • New York Comic Con: October 7-10

According to Hallmark’s announcement, the ornament “will be sold on a first-come basis starting at Noon Eastern time (9 a.m. Pacific time) on the first day of each convention,” and that “sales permit one of each exclusive product to be sold per person, per transaction while supplies last.”

While the ornament won’t be available for purchase until July 23, you can bookmark this page at Hallmark’s official site to order when it goes live.

Review: THE ORIGINAL SERIES — “Living Memory”

Christopher L. Bennett returns to the classic Star Trek movie era in this month’s new novel Star Trek: The Original Series — Living Memory, building upon last year’s The Higher Frontier and continuing his quest to chronicle the events leading up to Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan.

Living Memory is an ensemble story for the original Enterprise crew, set in a relatively unexplored period of their lives — right after Admiral James T. Kirk has been appointed commandant of Starfleet Academy.

The book comprises two main storylines (one excellent, one okay, but more on that later); the main story featuring Nyota Uhura with a supporting role from Spock and Scotty, and the secondary story featuring Kirk with a supporting role from McCoy and Sulu.

While this is definitely an ensemble book, Uhura is the character who gets the biggest spotlight as Bennett explores the character and revisits an important moment in the character’s life from her Original Series years.

Bennett’s stories tend to rely upon extrapolating upon something that remains unexplained or appears contradictory in the Star Trek canon. Last year’s The Higher Frontier, for example, is structured around  exploring why so many Original Series episodes seem to feature humans with telepathy, but by the time of The Next Generation that never comes up again.

In this case of Living Memory, Bennett chooses to devote the excellent main plot line of his book to exploring the fallout from Uhura’s encounter with the Nomad probe in “The Changeling,” when it completely wiped her memory. Though the show was quick to move on from that narrative development, Bennett returns to it and explores the impact that such a profound event must surely have had on Uhura’s life.

In addition to the important character growth for Uhura that asks questions around how anyone would react in such a situation — and how they might relate to friends, family, colleagues, and even former lovers — Bennett gives the main plot of the book a strong science fiction backdrop as mysterious anomalies impact Federation territory… and all signs point back to a connection to Uhura that she cannot explain or remember.

It’s rare that Uhura gets such a strong outing, even in the books, and it’s pleasing to see this year’s Original Series novel have a strong through line for the character. Living Memory affords Uhura some of the back story, development, and space to breathe that she was denied on The Original Series. I liked everything about this storyline; it was gripping and unpredictable.

Meanwhile, Admiral Kirk is settling into his position as the day-to-day administrator of Starfleet Academy, and must grapple with trying to integrate a group of specially-bred warriors from the planet Arcturis into Starfleet Academy. Arcturians were mentioned a couple of times in the Original Series — and then seen as one of the many background aliens in The Motion Picture — so it’s fun to get more information on the race and their motivations.

This subplot of the book attempts to explore interesting questions around the role of Starfleet, which has always sat uncomfortably between that of peaceful explorers and the Federation’s military. The book also allows for more exploration of the Federation’s stance on genetic engineering;  this time that has been carried out by another race, and not by humans.

However, this storyline is weaker than the Uhura half of the novel. On the way to its resolution, the story casts off a lot of the more interesting questions in favor of becoming a standard murder mystery (with a somewhat forced ending). It is great to see Kirk in a different situation — and how he handles being the leader of Starfleet Academy — but the Arcturian story never reaches the same heights as the Uhura storyline. It does feature a nice romantic subplot for McCoy, though.

In addition, the two main storylines of the novel — the anomalies’ impact on the Federation and their connection to Uhura, and the effort to integrate the Arcturians into Starfleet Academy — sit somewhat uncomfortably together. There are almost no points of connection, whether narratively or thematically, between these disparate stories, and at some points you feel like you’re reading two separate novels whose chapters have been

In some ways, I would have preferred de-emphasizing Kirk’s role in the book, dropping the Arcturian story entirely, and expanding the Uhura plot. That probably wasn’t what the publisher wanted; Kirk sells a lot of books, I’m sure, but as he’s not even featured on the cover art, it feels like the way this novel ultimately should have been structured.

Overall, the Uhura main story for Living Memory is more than worth the price of admission and is one of Christopher L. Bennett’s most interesting science fiction stories in his career. The Arcturian story is fine, but it just can’t compete with the rich character work for Uhura that expands on events from the Original Series.

Star Trek: The Original Series — Living Memory is in stores and available from online retailers now.

Classic STAR TREK Blu-ray Steelbooks Coming in September

The classic Star Trek series is getting yet another spin on Blu-ray this fall, as the show that started it all will arrive in stores with a fancy set of Steelbook packages to celebrate the franchise’s 55th anniversary.

Revealed via StarTrek.com yesterday, the 20-disc Blu-ray Star Trek: The Original Series collection — first released on that format in 2009 — will once again be reissued for the upcoming anniversary this fall, this time in a trio of brightly colored Steelbooks in September.

Featuring new artwork themed around the TOS era Starfleet uniform colors, collected in a large slipbox, the three new Steelbooks will arrive for home media collectors on September 7 in stores and online — in the United States, at least; so far no word of international availability.

As far as we know, there’s not any new on-disc content included in this Original Series Blu-ray collection, and the discs themselves will feature the same video and audio releases in use since the show was first remastered for high definition in 2009 — though we’ve reached out to CBS and Paramount’s home entertainment team for additional clarification and will update this report if we learn anything new.

Along with the original 2009-era single-season Blu-ray sets, the complete Original Series Blu-ray collection was also released in a full-series set in 2016, as well as inside the Star Trek 50th Anniversary collection that same year.

For now, if you’re a Steelbook collector and want to add this special anniversary-packaging edition of the classic Star Trek series to your library, you can preorder the three-pack now ahead of its September release.

REVIEW: Making FIRST CONTACT With Lt. Commander Data, EXO-6’s Debut 1:6-Scale STAR TREK Figure

Just over five months since new Star Trek 1:6-scale figure company EXO-6 hit the stage back in January, their first entry into the franchise has just arrived — marking the start of what the company hopes will be a long and fruitful run of Trek character collectibles.

EXO-6 has chosen to commemorate the 25th anniversary of Star Trek: First Contact with their inaugural figures, starting with Lieutenant Commander Data as he appeared in the 1996 film — a heavily-detailed replica of actor Brent Spiner’s android alter-ego, complete with a bevy of Starfleet-issue accessories and an alternate head featuring his Borg Queen-inflicted alteration.

Measuring in at just over eleven inches tall, this First Contact Data build comes clad in the 2373-era grey-shouldered Starfleet uniform, a non-removable outfit features all the details you’d expect: metallic rank pips and combadge, grey stitching to accentuate the shoulder areas, a bright operations-gold undershirt and matching wrist stripes, and stirrups under the boots to keep the trousers taught — no wrinkles allowed in the 24th century, you know!

We found that the collar has a little trouble staying above the shoulder yoke area, and required a bit of tugging to show the rank pips after positioning the figure on display; probably a bit of additional length on the collar tailoring would probably solve that for future character builds.

(One note on the sleeves: You may see in some of our photos that the left sleeve seems a bit too short, we learned only after our review was competed that the left arm was simply extended a bit too far at the shoulder joint — this occurred during photography ‘posing’ setups and is not an EXO-6 design fault.)

There is always a great deal of fan debate when it comes to the the accuracy of likeness sculpts on action figures, models, and other collectibles, and the initial reactions we’ve seen to EXO-6’s Data design certainly doesn’t escape that trend. With two included head options, the sculptors behind this figure have two opportunities to recreate Brent Spiner’s facial features; one is a bit more on-the-mark than the other, in our opinion.

While the ‘half-human’ head sculpt seems remarkably on point to us, the ‘standard’ Data head doesn’t quote hit the target — the cheeks and lower face seems slightly too full, and the eyes are open just a tad too wide, missing some of the “life” that seems to be in the ‘half-human’ face’s eyes… though perhaps that’s just Data’s emotion chip in action.

That said, both of the Data head sculpts are remarkably detailed when you examine them in person, from the depth of color in the eyes, to the blue and red ‘lights’ on his ‘half-human’ head, to the subtle variations of paint coloring which make up the varying tones of both the android and human skin.

Up close, it’s evident how much care was put in to getting just the right hues in the paint work; there is much more than just ‘android gold’ painted on Data’s face and hands here — whatever you may think of the sculpts themselves, the paint work is quite remarkable.

Again, likeness designs’ success are always pretty subjective, so of course you’ll have to decide for yourself how well the EXO-6 artists did here; both of the heads do find ways to hit that Spiner ‘sweet spot’ when you view them from just the right perspective.

Along with his uniform, and  this Data release also comes with four pairs of swappable hand forms to allow the figure to hold the included accessories; a Type II ‘boomerang’ hand phaser (with holster) and Type III, Mark II phaser rifle for combat situations; and a Type X Starfleet sciences tricorder for scanning during away missions (with holster).

The chrome-and-black phaser rifle is a solid piece — no worries about bending or deforming here — with the distinctive top-mounted spotlight dabbed with bright orange-yellow paint. It took a little bit of trial and error to identify which set of hands were meant to fit with the trigger grip for this one, but once in place, it’s a sturdy fit for showing off the fan-favorite First Contact weapon.

While the phaser rifle is certainly a bit larger than the other accessories, the dime-sized hand phaser and tricorder are remarkably detailed for their tiny dimensions — the ‘boomerang’-style phaser even has the the characteristic textured grip on its underside, something often ignored in small action-figure-scaled accessories.

The tricorder is also quite nice, with colorful sticker labels recreating the look of the future tech with ease. The folding tricorder, which fits into its included holster, is actually the work of a bit of integrated magnetics: each half of the hand scanner is separate, with no physical connection between them.

Small magnets are inserted in each plastic bit, which keeps the two halves of the tricorder together when folded or in the ‘open’ position. A neat way of keeping the design functional at such a small scale, however we did notice that the magnet slivers are somewhat easily extracted from their insertion points — and might be easily lost if accidentally removed. (A bit of adhesive in there would certainly solve that in future releases.)

Both the hand phaser and tricorder holsters nicely mount on Data’s hips, thanks to a pair of hidden magnets underneath his uniform — no need for unsightly Velcro patches, thankfully, which can wear out over time and don’t look very appealing when not in use.

Finally, each of EXO-6’s figures will include a transporter-pad-themed display base; creatively, the base plate has a removable graphic insert depending on how collectors choose to show off their figures as the collection grows.

Installed upon delivery is the blue central light of a standard Starfleet transporter pad, with an alternate graphic which is designed to mimic the outer ‘white’ standard pad. As additional EXO-6 figures are released, the base plates can be aligned in a circular pattern –with a blue base in the center — to simulate your Starfleet crew beaming into your personal collection.

There’s also an LCARS-themed ‘personnel file’ card packed in the box as well, for collectors who wish to pair Brent Spiner’s autograph (um, not included) with the 1:6-scale figure on display. (A nice unexpected touch, for those who can obtain the actor’s signature at a local convention.)

Despite the few minor quibbles we detailed above, EXO-6’s first foray into the Star Trek arena is a pretty remarkable one — and if the work and detail that went into this First Contact Data figure is the starting point for what they claim to have in the pipeline, fans who are collectors of 1:6-scale figures had better start building up that bank account.

With First Contact Captain Picard already announced, and promises of every Trek captain — and associated crew — on the way to follow, the sky’s the limit for who we might see in 1:6 form if the EXO-6 product line is successful… and we’ll certainly be keeping a close watch on their progress as their announcements continue.

If you want to add EXO-6’s Star Trek: First Contact Data 1:6-scale figure to your own collection, direct sales are closed, but you can still order through third-party distributors like Big Bad Toy Store for $189 USD.

STAR TREK: LOWER DECKS and STRANGE NEW WORLDS Headed to Paramount+ in Latin America

While Star Trek fans in most of the world have been able to watch the new animated series Star Trek: Lower Decks, viewers in Latin America have been left out of the Chu Chu parade until now — but not for much longer.

Announced today via StarTrek.com, both Star Trek: Lower Decks and Star Trek: Strange New Worlds — when that show debuts next year — will be headed to Latin America by way of Paramount+, ViacomCBS’s streaming service (and home of both shows in the United States).

“We jumped at the opportunity to bring these two new series from the iconic Star Trek universe to Paramount+ in Latin America,” said Kelly Day, President of Streaming and COO of ViacomCBS Networks International. “We are proud that Paramount+ is a destination for Star Trek and these are the perfect additions to our diverse content offering featuring beloved franchises, new originals, and fan-favorite localized content for our global audience.”

Lower Decks streams on Amazon’s Prime Video service in other parts of the international marketplace (aside from Canada, where it lives on that country’s Crave service); for fans in Latin America, the show is expected to become available on Paramount+ in September.

As for Strange New Worlds, while it’s going to be on Paramount+ in the US, and on the Crave service in Canada (along with the CTV Sci-Fi Channel cable network in that country), there’s no word on additional international distribution plans yet.

In the United States and Canada, Lower Decks returns for Season 2 on August 15; no specific debut date for Star Trek: Strange New Worlds has been announced.

New Details About The Wand Company’s Classic STAR TREK Tricorder Replica’s “Disk Drive”

The much-anticipated classic Star Trek tricorder from The Wand Company is still several months away (due to pandemic-related delays impacting their original timeline), yet the team at TWC is keeping fans salivating with new monthly insights into the eventual product we’re all waiting for.

In June, the company went into great detail about some of the planned functionality of the tricorder replica, focusing on a newly-created feature — not seen in action in The Original Series, but implied by original tricorder designer Wah Chang’s concept plans for the futuristic scanning computer.

Wah Chang’s original concept drawing for the tricorder device.

First discussed in their April updates, The Wand Company is taking inspiration from Chang’s design, focusing on the central row of silver-colored components — extrapolating their intended function as removable ‘data discs,’ as one appears to be “inserted” into a slot next to the display screen in the above drawing.

The collection of circular discs, which were not specifically used on-screen in the television series, will use color-based identification functionality to trigger different features of The Wand Company’s tricorder replica — everything from activating the built-in, real-world sensors TWC’s tricorder will have in its housing to Enterprise starship status updates, and more.

Here’s TWC’s commentary on this ‘data disc’ concept:

Our first task was to design an ejector mechanism that would work smoothly and reliably, and fit in the limited space the prop has to offer in this area. The eight-disc array is fairly tightly boxed in between the hood, the lower compartment cavity wall and the back of the tricorder. Disc insertion and ejection is further complicated by the fact that the disc diameter is larger than the apparent opening the discs must pass through to be taken in and out of their dock.

An array of spring-loaded latching switches attached to thin, crescent-shaped, bendy ‘catcher’s mitts’, which flex to hold and eject the discs, coupled with an upper “glamour bar” that rotates out of the way when a disc is ejected, provided the aesthetic functionality we were after. With all the discs inserted, and while being displayed in a cabinet, the glamour bar springs into position over the top of the array and the tricorder looks perfectly like a pristine version of the first season hero.

But for those that want to boldly go beyond display and into the realm of realistic function, pressing any one of the discs ejects it with a satisfyingly premium click. The latching switch at the back of each disc slot tells the tricorder’s software which of the slots have discs in them.

A digital render of the disc ejection mechanism.

With the ejector’s mechanical design well on the way to completion, we went to work on making the discs a plausibly functional part of the tricorder’s operation. Initially, we considered ways of ‘writing’ even just small amounts of data wirelessly to the discs (using an RFID chip embedded in the disc), but technical issues caused by the proximity of discs to each other, and the metal outer ring, closed down that idea.

Given the capability of the tricorder’s internal electronics, and the onboard memory’s ability to cope with the functions we had planned for it, our thinking moved away from the complexity of adding hardware to each disc. To make the discs integral to the tricorder’s operation, for example, using them to activate the tricorder’s various functions, the tricorder has to be able to identify each disc.

The disc in the right-most position will be sensor-identified by its colored labeling.

To simplify the identification process and add another level to the interaction required by the user to operate the tricorder, we chose to only monitor the disc slot furthest to the right. Using this as the activation position ties nicely in with the possibility that, in the hero prop’s original incarnation, this particular disc was the removable one. The right-most slot also allows us to hide the disc identification sensor behind the moiré panel.

To identify the discs, we chose colour sensing: it is human-readable, robust and reliable, and yet being non-obvious to the untrained user, appears suitably sci-fi. To add the necessary colour to the otherwise metal discs, in the absence of any hard evidence, once again Wah Chang’s sketch points the way. In it, what looks like a disc can be seen protruding from a socket next to the display. Although this particular feature never made it into the final design, the image shows what looks like a disc with a rim wrapped around a contrasting material.

For the actual colours, The Original Series has a large and vibrant colour palette and there are plenty of richly coloured memory blocks and console switches which, between them, offer more than enough colours to provide an in-universe range of coloured disc inserts that an optical sensor can reliably differentiate between.

The eight colored discs planned for use…
…with coloring inspired by the toggle switches on the original Enterprise bridge.

In use, inserting any of the discs into the right-most slot enables the user to access that particular disc’s set of related functions, information or files, and calls up any previously recorded data for those sensor functions. By using them in this way to control the tricorder, the discs become a properly engaging and integral part of the user interface, each one effectively acting as a specific data access key.

The sensors, such as humidity, temperature and pressure, are interrelated so instead of assigning the function of a single sensor to each disc (and then leaving the other exciting tricorder functions buried in somewhere else in the user interface), we grouped the tricorder’s mix of dynamic and static information, capabilities and functions together more intuitively by usage.

Planned functions of each disc — with more details yet to be revealed.

While the specifics of each of the eight discs’ data contents and “in-use” functionality have not yet been fully defined beyond the above chart, it’s clear that TWC’s plans for this replica device are certainly high-level in concept.

The company is also taking significant advantage of fan feedback as they share updates with the public; the original color selection for these discs were much more “rainbow bright” versions of each color, until an Original Series fan suggested that TWC take direction from the classic Trek sets’ more muted color palette.

You can read much more about this new ‘data disc’ concept at TWC’s Tricorder Blog entry on the topic, as well as another post from this month about how the company has worked to recreate the moire pattern seen on the classic Tricorder design, and implemented motorized action behind that part of the product’s build.

Originally planned for a summer 2021 launch, The Wand Company’s classic Star Trek tricorder replica is now expected closer to 2022, or into next year entirely; with these kind of ongoing progress reports, though, we’re certain it’ll be worth the wait.

WeeklyTrek Podcast #143 — Updates on STAR TREK: PRODIGY, PICARD, and More!

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On this week’s episode of WeeklyTrek, brought to you in partnership between The Tricorder Transmissions Podcast Network and TrekCore, host Alex Perry is joined by SnapTrek Podcast co-host Ross Webster to discuss all the latest Star Trek news.

This week, Alex and his guest discuss the following stories from TrekCore and around the web:

In addition, stick around to listen to Alex and Ross theorize about what is going to happen in Star Trek: Picard Season Two!

WeeklyTrek is available to subscribe and download each week on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, YouTube, and Spotify — and we’ll be sharing the details of each new episode right here on TrekCore each week if you’re simply just looking to listen in from the web.

Do you have a wish or theory you’d like to share on the show? Tweet to Alex at @WeeklyTrek, or email us with your thoughts about wishes, theories, or anything else about the latest in Star Trek news!

FIRST LOOK: September’s New Additions to Hero Collector’s Official STAR TREK Starships Collection

We’re back with a look ahead to what’s coming down the interstellar pipeline from Hero Collector, as today we can bring you a pair of exclusive first looks at September’s upcoming additions to the Official Star Trek Starships Collection!

First up, a reminder of what’s already been announced — including the second entry in Hero Collector’s Star Trek: A Celebration book series, this time focused on the Original Series for its 55th anniversary year.

The definitive collection of interviews, history, photos, and artwork from Star Trek: The Original Series. A must-have for all fans of Captain Kirk and his crew!

Following the success of Star Trek Voyager: A Celebration, this second volume in the series focuses Star Trek: The Original Series. The book will be released in the week of Star Trek’s 55th anniversary.

Gene Roddenberry’s series changed television forever and created a broadcast phenomenon, and world that continues to influence our culture today.

With a curated selection of archive interviews, personal recollections from cast and crew, and new interviews specially undertaken for the book, the chapters explore the writing, directing, production art and visual effects, plus classic episodes from the show’s three season run.

Star Trek: The Original Series – A Celebration will feature a mix of “curated archival interviews” along with new interviews with the surviving cast and crew, and like the Voyager edition before it, will include chapters on production, art design, visual effects, and special spotlights on selected episodes.

It’s likely not to be quite as interesting as the Voyager version — it’s not like there haven’t been many classic Trek behind-the-scenes books in the past — but it’ll be a nice addition for those not so versed in the stories from the the Original Series’ creation.

Due out in September, Star Trek: The Original Series – A Celebration can be preordered today.

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The next addition to the slowly-growing Star Trek Universe collection is the seventh ship from Star Trek: Picard — the workhorse Wallenberg-class tug ship, used in Starfleet’s massive Romulan evacuation endeavor. Many of these ships were seen in orbit above Mars in “Maps and Legends,” some with and some without long cargo pods nestled between the underslung warp nacelles.

According to the Star Trek: Picard tie-in novels, these cargo containers were retrofitted for housing the large Romulan population ferried out of their home territory before their sun went supernova; the Wallenberg-class was called out by name in “Absolute Candor.”

WALLENBERG-CLASS TUG (ISSUE #7) — A larger variety of spacefaring tug, the Wallenberg class saw use by the Federation in the late 24th century, as a “warp-capable ferry”. Most notably, the Wallenberg formed a key part of the rescue armada that the Federation intended to evacuate the planet Romulus. Tragically, the fleet was destroyed at dock by a synth rebellion, leaving much of the Romulan population stranded on their doomed world.

Appropriately enough, given its intended mission, this class of vessel was named for the Swedish diplomat Raoul Wallenberg – whose efforts saved thousands of Jewish people from the Holocaust.

The Wallenberg-class starship model also measures in at nearly 8.5 inches long, and is expected to retail at $54.95 / €49.99 / £39.99.

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The Star Trek Online model collection also gets a new alien addition in September, as the three-pointed Recluse-class Tholian carrier joins the physical world in the 18th entry for this line of ships.

RECLUSE-CLASS THOLIAN CARRIER (ISSUE #18) — A reverse-engineered vessel available to Starfleet players in Star Trek Online, the Recluse-class Tholian Carrier was derived from technology and ships seized in clashes with the Tholian Assembly. Xenophobic in the extreme, this Alpha Quadrant polity refuses any attempt to study its technology – making captured starships a rare and valuable prize.

As the Tholians’ natural environment is hostile to most humanoid life, a great deal of retrofitting and re-engineering has gone into simply allowing a crew to board the Recluse-class without needing protective environmental suits. The Recluse’s combat capabilities proved worth the effort, however.

This Tholian starship model also measures in at just over 4.5 inches long, and is expected to retail at $29.95 / €24.99 / £19.99.

We’ll be back soon with more coverage of Hero Collector’s Official Starships Collection, including our reviews of the XL-sized Delta Quadrant hot rod Delta Flyer, and the hero freighter of Star Trek: Picard, Captain Rios’ La Sirena!