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Keep Warm This Winter in Ukonic’s New STAR TREK Starfleet Uniform Robes and Shuttlecraft Slippers

Another winter is here, and during this year of social distancing and extended periods of relative isolation at home, Ukonic’s got some brand new ways for Star Trek fans to stay warm and cozy during the cold months!

If you’re looking to bundle up on the sofa, the company’s released four different editions of Starfleet uniform bathrobes, with Original Series, Next Generation, and Star Trek: Discovery versions to choose from.

Listed as “one size fits most” for adults, the Star Trek robes come in division-appropriate colors with period-specific Starfleet insignias: classic Trek command gold and sciences blue, a command burgundy edition from The Next Generation, and the gold-and-blue command-division design from Discovery’s 23rd century adventures.

Pricing on each 100%-polyester robe ranges from $55.99-$59.99 depending on style; each design is exclusively available through the links above at the Toynk web store.

If you need some more insulation for your frosty toes, just head to your nearest shuttlebay: Ukonic has finally released their Star Trek shuttlecraft slipper sets, with both classic Trek and Next Generation fans in mind.

Designed with embroidered hull markings and details, anti-slip bottom panels, and — most importantly — warp nacelles! For Original Series fans, the 23rd century Galileo shuttle serves as the theme for the classic Trek design, and the 24th century Type 6 shuttlecraft design is base model for the Next Generation edition.

Each pair of slippers are available in men’s sizes 8, 10, and 13, and retail for $29.99 through the links above at the Tonyk web store.

TOS Coloring Book: Vol. 1


TOS Coloring Book: Vol. 2


TNG Coloring Book: Vol. 1


TNG Coloring Book: Vol. 2


STAR TREK: PICARD Starships Lead April’s Hero Collector Slate of New STAR TREK Models

A new year brings new Star Trek starship announcements, and we’re just a few months away from the next expansion of the long-running Official Starships Collection!

This April, the Star Trek Universe Official Starships Collection launches, collecting all the upcoming DiscoveryPicard, and yet-to-be revealed Strange New World model releases under one banner — and as part of its inaugural month of releases, a pair of Picard ships are headed your way.

The first member of this new fleet will be Captain Rios’ La Sirena, the hero starship at the center of Star Trek: Picard, clad in its red-and-white hull coloring — followed by the ship Captain Will Riker lead to stop the invading Romulan fleet, the Inquiry-class USS Zheng He.

LA SIRENA — The signature ship of Star Trek: Picard, this red-and-white Kaplan F17 Speed Freighter was hired by Jean-Luc Picard, who required a discreet warp-capable vessel. Helmed by Captain Cristóbal Rios, an ex-Starfleet officer himself, the ship was home to Picard’s ragtag crew in their search for Doctor Bruce Maddox and Soji Asha.

USS ZHENG HE — A formidable Inquiry-class Federation starship named for a 15th-century Chinese admiral, the U.S.S. Zheng He was touted as the toughest, fastest, most powerful ship Starfleet had ever put into service. In Star Trek: Picard, William Riker returned from retirement to captain the U.S.S. Zheng He into battle above the planet Coppelius.

La Sirena measures in at 8″ (205mm) in length, while the Zheng He is slightly larger at 8.8″ (225mm); each ship model will retail at $54.95 / €49.99 / £39.99.

(Photos of the actual models set to arrive in April are not available yet, but we’ll update this post once we’ve got them.)

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Expanding the line of Star Trek Online starships is the Aelahl-class Romulan Light Warbird, a late-24th century successor to the traditional Next Generation-era D’Deridex-class ship.

AELAHL-CLASS LIGHT WARBIRD — An agile vessel available to Romulan players in Star Trek Online, the Aelahl-Class Light Warbird was conceived as a successor to the older D’deridex-class. The Aelahl’s smaller size made it slightly less durable than the larger warbird, but it more than compensated with vastly increased maneuverability.

The Aelahl-class ship will retail for $29.95 / €24.99 / £19.99, and measures 4.5″ (110mm) in length.

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Finally, in addition to the three new starship models scheduled for April, four more hardcover reprints of classic Star Trek comic tales are coming from The Official Graphic Novels Collection.

Included are Star Trek: Voyager stories Encounters with the Unknown, the Next Generation tale The Gift, DS9-era Starfleet Academy saga T’Priell Revealed, and a return to classic Trek in the Motion Picture-era three-part adventure The Return of the Worthy.

#131 – Star Trek Voyager: Encounters with the Unknown
The Voyager crew encounters pirates, the Borg, Arthurian knights, and a planet-killing doomsday machine! WildStorm Comics takes up the reins on Star Trek: Voyager to chart the adventures of Captain Kathryn Janeway across the Delta Quadrant. Collects the Planet Killer miniseries, plus three one-shots from writers including Dan Abnett and Kristine Kathryn Rusch.

#132 – Star Trek TNG: The Gift
DC Comics explores the backstories of Jean-Luc Picard, Will Riker,and Geordi La Forge—plus, the return of Q! Few actors have won over Star Trek fans’ hearts quite like John de Lancie, who made the trickster-god Q one of Picard’s greatest foils on Star Trek: The Next Generation. The actor cowrote the first of DC’s annuals starring Picard’s crew, naturally heralding Q’s return!

#133 – Starfleet Academy – T’Priell Revealed
Omega Squad faces execution for visiting Talos IV, and Ambassador Spock must intervene on their behalf! As Marvel’s Starfleet Academy nears its close, Spock represents Cadet Nog and his comrades in court, but the outlook is uncertain… Plus two unpublished tales, including one from actor Mark Lenard.

#134 – Star Trek TOS: The Return Of The Worthy
Danger! Danger! The space family Worthy are back as DC Comics’ Star Trek pays homage to Lost in Space, in a three-part tale co-written by Lost in Space’s Bill Mumy! Plus, J. Michael Straczynski offers an intriguing tale similar in tone to his most famous creation, Babylon 5.

(This volume also collects IDW’s Star Trek: Infestation, featuring crossovers with Ghostbusters, Transformers, G.I. Joe, and more.)

Each of the republished graphic novel hardcovers run from 170-240pages each, and will retail individually for $19.95 / €16.99 / £12.99.

Stick around for looks at more from Hero Collector and the Official Starships Collection, as well as reviews of the XL-sized, three-nacelled USS Enterprise-D from “All Good Things…,” the XL-sized edition of Starbase Deep Space 9, and the Regula One station from The Wrath of Khan in the coming weeks!

WeeklyTrek Podcast #125 — Looking Ahead to STAR TREK: DISCOVERY Season 4

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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 TrekLive co-host Bill Mann to discuss all the latest Star Trek news.

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

In addition, stick around to hear about Bill’s wish for the soundtrack to Star Trek: Discovery Season 3, and Alex’s hope for more Cardassians in the upcoming Season 4.

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!

CBS ALL ACCESS Becomes PARAMOUNT+ on March 4, First International Rollout Dates Announced

First announced back in September, the CBS All Access streaming service is set for rebranding into a new name — Paramount+ — to reflect the Viacom/CBS merger and move the streaming platform into the future.

Today, ViacomCBS has revealed that the official branding change will occur in the US and Canada on March 4, 2021, with the first round of international launch dates to follow later in that month.

ViacomCBS Announces March 4 Launch Date for Paramount+
Launch Dates Set for International Rollout of Paramount+ in Latin America and the Nordics

January 19, 2021 NEW YORK — ViacomCBS Inc. (NASDAQ: VIAC, VIACA) announced today that its highly anticipated streaming service, Paramount+, will launch in the U.S. on Thursday, March 4, 2021.

ViacomCBS will also bring Paramount+ to international markets with initial debuts in Latin America on March 4, 2021; the Nordics on March 25, 2021; and Australia in mid-2021. The CBS All Access service in Canada will be rebranded to Paramount+ on March 4, 2021, and an expanded offering will be available later in the year.

In anticipation of the upcoming branding changes, much of the existing CBS All Access streaming content slate have already been updated to reflect the new service’s name:

Like many of the world’s film studios, Paramount Pictures has a number of movies set to be released in theaters — at least, for now — in 2021; while there’s nothing announced yet, it’s quite possible some of them may find a first-run home on Paramount+ due to pandemic concerns, much like how Warner Brothers has altered their slate for HBO Max.

Existing CBS All Access subscribers are expected to see the service simply change names and brand identities on March 4; as of this writing, no alterations to subscription costs or other notable changes have been announced.

In the United States, Paramount+ will be the ongoing homes for Star Trek: DiscoveryStar Trek: PicardStar Trek: Lower Decks, and Star Trek: Strange New Worlds. A fifth Paramount+ series, Star Trek: Section 31 with Michelle Yeoh, is in development now.

Review: STAR TREK VOYAGER — A CELEBRATION

The silver anniversary of Star Trek: Voyager draws to a close with the publication of the massive Star Trek: Voyager – A Celebration hardcover, the latest publishing release from HeroCollector.

Written by Ben Robinson and Mark Wright, this hefty tome is gorgeously laid out and packed full of great behind the scenes details and art from the series as it takes you through the series from its inception to its finale.

Star Trek: Voyager has been one of the more under-covered series in published reference works. 2003’s Star Trek: Voyager Companion was a very disappointing book in comparison to its Next Generation and Deep Space Nine counterparts, and before that, Stephen Poe’s Star Trek: Voyager — A Vision of the Future was the closest we had to a Voyager reference book (though published in 1998, and primarily focusing on the show’s origins and creation).

Celebration succeeds in comprehensively breaking down all the various elements of the show. Each character gets their own spotlight, looking at the casting decisions behind the role, the character’s development throughout the series, and the creator’s intentions. Each section is a nice mix of actor, writer, and production staff perspectives to really give you a well-rounded look at each element of production.

In addition to each of the characters, there are chapters focusing on directing, music, visual effects, the art department, notable races from the races, along with a number of important episodes from the series run that changed direction for the series or introduced something notable.

The result is that Celebration is  — as the title would suggest — a very positive book that looks on the series as an equally worth entry to the franchise as any of the others. That mostly succeeds, and if you liked Voyager going into this book, you’ll like it even more coming out, after learning new details to enhance your appreciation for the show and what it accomplished.

And while Celebration does retread a lot of familiar ground for Voyager fans — particularly in the character-detail chapters — there is a lot of new information as well, particularly from the production side of things. We hear more from figures we haven’t heard much from before, such as Voyager directors like David Livingston, series composer Jay Chattaway, and several members of the show’s groundbreaking visual effects team.

The book also has a lot of art, in the form of episode stills, concept art and behind-the-scenes shots from the set which are sure to have Voyager fans poring over them on repeat visits to the book. There are concept drawings for the USS Voyager itself, as well as a number of other ships that appeared throughout the series run, and even some costume drawings and alien makeup designs.

There are also a number of cute vignettes and stories from the series run, including a chance encounter between Ethan Phillips and Robin Williams, and the time Robert Duncan McNeill’s pants accidentally caught on fire. These little stories add depth and humor to the story of the show’s run, and humanize figures who we may otherwise only know as their characters.

Every series regular (save for Jennifer Lien) participated in new interviews for this publication, and lest you think that whole situation be completely skipped, the book also provides a more detailed account of the producers’ decision to terminate Lien’s contract ahead of the fourth season. Celebration reveals that the actress’s troubles, which have been well documented in recent years, were already manifesting themselves during the production of Voyager, which ultimately led to her departure.

That said, aside from the Lien bit — something truly unavoidable for this type of ‘deep dive’ book — there isn’t much more about some of other messier elements of the show’s production history, like Robert Beltran’s outspoken complaints about script quality in the later years, or the on-set difficulties between Kate Mulgrew and Jeri Ryan (which both actresses have spoken about in recent years) — though thankfully the two actors seem to have found peace in the intervening years.

On the one hand, that does mean the book avoids venturing into the realm of gossip or airing tawdry dirty laundry for the sake of it. On the other hand, it does limit the book’s ability to provide a full, unvarnished account of the show’s history. The Mulgrew-Ryan relationship is not gossip at this point — it’s well-documented — though certainly it’s not something that would seem to fit into the positive nature of a celebratory book.

But overall, Star Trek: Voyager — A Celebration is a marvelous book, providing a thorough account of the show with a gorgeous presentation — and paired with last July’s Voyager Illustrated Handbook makes a great return to the Delta Quadrant.

Hopefully this is just the first in a series for Hero Collector; with the 20th anniversary of Star Trek: Enterprise right around the corner, is it too much to hope that might also receive the same treatment given how neglected it has been in reference works?

Star Trek: Voyager
A Vision of the Future



Star Trek: Voyager
Complete Series on DVD



Star Trek: Voyager
A Celebration



STAR TREK: FIRST CONTACT Data Figure Launches New Line of 1:6-Scale STAR TREK Releases from EXO-6

It’s been two years since the last sign of any news from Star Trek scale character figure licensee QMx — who previously showed off prototypes of several different Trek designs, and released several Original Series figures for collectors — and as they’ve seemed to have departed the marketplace, there’s a now a new name in scale figures: EXO-6.

Led by former QMx developer Schubert Tam — the designer who ran that company’s line of 1:6 Trek releases — new company EXO-6 kicked off it’s foray in to Star Trek figures with the announcement of a 1:6-scale Lieutenant Commander Data figure, as seen in Star Trek: First Contact.

Brent Spiner’s post-Borg-Queen-encounter look in “Star Trek: First Contact.”

This 12-inch tall figure is clad in the familiar grey-and-black Next Generation movie-era uniform, and comes with a wide range of hands to hold various accessories, interchangeable heads to reflect the Data’s pre- and post-Borg Queen encounters, and Starfleet gear including a Type II phaser, Type III phaser rifle, and a Mark X tricorder, which attach to the figure using hidden magnets (when not being held).

· Fully Articulated Body: More than 30 points of articulation allow the figure to be displayed in multiple dynamic poses, approximately 30 cm tall.

· Two Realistic Portraits: Data comes with two heads, his regular portrait and also his look after the Borg Queen gifts him with grafted skin. Lovingly rendered by a top artist, these are excellent likenesses of Brent Spiner in his role as Data. Each head sculpt is specially hand-painted.

· Starfleet Duty Uniform Jumpsuit: Meticulously researched, this duty uniform matches the pattern, and color of the original costume recreated in 1:6 scale. Magnets are sewn into the uniform so the holsters for the tricorder and phaser can be attached. An authentically scaled communicator badge is permanently affixed to the tunic.

· Boots: Soft plastic boots sculpted to match the cut and style of the original movie footwear.

· Display Base: A hexagonal display base featuring the transporter pad will provide additional support for the figure. Two different inserts for the floor of the base can represent the transporter pad or the center of the transporter array.

According to EXO-6’s release, the company will produce “a wide-range of characters from across the Star Trek universe, with each series of figures planned out in advance,” and there are future announcements for additional characters planned down the road.

Tam spoke with Screen Tested at San Diego Comic Con 2017, about his work on 1:6-scale figures during his tenure with QMx:

We’ll have more details on when you can put in your preorder for this Data figure — tentative list pricing at $189.95, likely due to the probable relatively-small manufacturing run on this item — and more news on future EXO-6 release plans, as soon as that information is announced.

In the meantime, you can find out more information about this upcoming release at the EXO-6 website now.

WeeklyTrek Podcast #124 — STAR TREK: DISCOVERY Season 3 Wrap-Up

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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 Abby Sommer to discuss all the latest Star Trek news.

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

In addition, stick around to listen to Abby’s theories about who the mysterious Federation president might be in Star Trek: Discovery, and Alex’s theory about Saru’s role in Star Trek: Discovery Season 4.

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!

STAR TREK: DISCOVERY’s Michelle Paradise on the Season 3 Finale, Confirms Key Characters Return in Season 4

Star Trek: Discovery ended its third season this week — so SPOILER WARNING if you’re not yet caught up — and showrunner Michelle Paradise hit the interview circuit to share some insight into the events of the finale, as well as confirming some of this year’s new characters will be back for Season 4.

The big finish to the season — the ascension of Michael Burnham (Sonequa Martin-Green) to Discovery captain’s chair — was the centerpoint of her conversation with TV Insider, along with both Saru’s (Doug Jones) and Tilly’s (Mary Wiseman) time in the main seat.

Captain Michael Burnham takes command of the USS Discovery. (CBS All Access)

On Burnham landing her captaincy, and the trade-off with Saru’s time in command:

“We knew we wanted to get Burnham to the captain’s chair at the end of the season, so a big question was, if that’s where we want to get her to at the end, where should she begin and how far away from that can we take her?

We wanted to give her the best arc possible, so in that moment, in Episode 3, where they’re having that conversation, she declines the chair, and even she, in that moment, recognizes that Saru is the right individual to have the chair because of the way he leads, because he has already led them there and it’s not something that Burnham is ready for.

As we see over the first half of the season, she’s even questioning whether or not she can reconcile her year of living there with coming back into Discovery and ultimately, of course, that culminates in the big questions for her in Episode 7, where she turns and recommits and that sends her on the journey to ultimately taking the chair herself.

They just felt the natural places for both of them to begin and end the season.”

Ensign Tilly takes temporary command of the Discovery. (CBS All Access)

She also shared some thoughts about how Tilly’s time as acting first officer — and leading the crew during the final confrontation with the Emerald Chain — will impact the young officer headed into next season.

“I can’t really say anything about that without spoiling stuff, but I will say it was a really interesting journey for Tilly in Season 3 and taking her from the place in Episode 2 where she’s asking Saru, ‘Why are you taking me on this mission?’

He sees strength in her she doesn’t quite see in herself necessarily and then watching her over the course of the season become more confident in herself to the place where she’s ultimately able to serve as Number One and then no one sees it coming but having to essentially be acting captain in this crisis situation and she handles herself beautifully.

What does that mean to come is I’m sure a question she’ll be asking herself and we’ll be exploring in Season 4.”

Cleveland Booker, now able to pilot the spore drive, formally joins the crew. (CBS All Access)

When it comes to the new characters introduced this season, while we already know that Adira (Blu del Barrio) and Gray (Ian Alexander) will be back for Season 4 — along with the mysterious Kovich (David Cronenberg) — Paradise also confirms that Book (David Ajala) will of course be returning next year, after finding his place aboard Discovery in the latter half of the season.

“It was really fun to watch [Burnham and Book] come together and grow together and I expect we’ll be seeing more of them in Season 4. I just can’t say what we’ll be seeing.”

On the nature of Season 4 itself, Paradise kept things vague:

“I can say the places we were really focused in Season 3 — trying to make sure our characters can grow, exploring new relationships, exploring how people can change, finding new layers for each of our characters — are also a really strong focus for Season 4 and I expect we’ll continue to see our characters grow in new and hopefully exciting ways.

[In terms of returning to the past,] all of them know going into that at the end of Season 2, this is a one-way trip. Now that they are here, we’re not looking to go back.”

Admiral Vance and Captain Saru discuss Starfleet operations. (CBS All Access)

Fan-favorite Admiral Charles Vance (Oded Fehr) also has a future with the series, Paradise notes in interview with ComicBook.com, sharing a great deal if insight into his role for Season 3 — and that there’s more story ahead for the Starfleet Commander in Chief next year.

“[With] the character of Vance, who is our introduction into what is Starfleet 930 years later, it felt important that for someone who was born into a world post-Burn, has grown up in that world, and is now trying to lead when every day is a new fire, that he be a character who is strong and dedicated and empathetic, and yes, also a little bit tired, because it’s a slog for him. And yet he believes, and he’s doing his best.

And you need someone like Oded [Fehr] to play a character like that. You need someone like that who can deliver all of those layers. And Oded is just phenomenal as Vance. And so yeah, we wanted Vance to be all of those things. Who would an admiral be in this world post-Burn where people are disconnected and he’s trying to reconnect, but in this new world, it’s just very, very difficult.

There aren’t ways to reach one another. And he hasn’t grown up in a world in which reaching one another is possible, which fuels partly his response to our heroes when they land in episode five because their idea of hope and connection is in some ways a bit foreign because he’s never experienced it.

And so being able to watch him grow over the course of the season, due to his connection with Burnham and our heroes on Discovery, was really fun for us to explore and to write. And I really love where he gets to and yes, he’s absolutely still a presence moving forward.

So I’m excited to see what’s to come for him too.”

Su’Kal and Saru visit their homeworld of Kaminar. (CBS All Access)

…and lest you fear that his side trip to Kaminar will be the last time we see Saru, don’t worry: the Discovery showrunner is quick to shoot down that idea.

“No, no, no, no, no. Doug Jones is not going anywhere. Saru will be back, a hundred percent in season four. So rest easy, sleep well. We’re not letting Doug go anywhere. We’re holding onto him.”

The sentient Sphere Data inhabits three DOT-23 repair bots. (CBS All Access)

Paradise also spoke about the nature of “Calypso,” the Short Trek tale which debuted in 2018, and how that far-future story may still one day tie into the series, with the Sphere Data’s migration into DOT-23 drones as an early step down that path.

“Well, first of all, ‘Calypso’ is incredible. I mean, it’s just, we love it. And it is now a part of Trek canon, but specifically our show’s canon.

It takes place many, many years beyond where our heroes are right now, and at some point, we will absolutely have to match up with that so that Discovery as a whole, including ‘Calypso,’ all fits together as a piece.

So certainly bringing in that voice in episode four and having — we’ll call her Zora, she doesn’t have a name at this point — but having her hide in the DOTs and be part of the story in 12 and 13 is the beginning of driving toward that.

And eventually — who knows when? — we will absolutely have to make sure that we sync up with that.”

A message from the creator concludes DISCOVERY’s third season. (CBS All Access)

Finally, she explained how the Discovery team ended up concluding the season with a quote about connection from franchise creator Gene Roddenberry, which served as the last moment in Discovery’s long-delayed third season.

“It emerged closer to the end of the post process as we were finishing post for the season and just recognizing that this was going to be airing at this particular time. And we just felt like it would be appropriate to have something from him.

I mean, Gene Roddenberry, we’re only here because of what he did and because of the show that he created and there’s the baseline, the template that he established, nd so it felt appropriate to have something from him, a quote from him at the end of our season.

And that was one that resonated with us.”

The fourth season of Star Trek: Discovery is in production now; the second season of Star Trek: Picard and the first season of Star Trek: Strange New Worlds are expected to begin filming in early 2021 — no air dates for these three shows have been determined.

The second season of animated series Star Trek: Lower Decks and first season of animated series Star Trek: Prodigy are expected to debut sometime later in 2021, though exact dates have not yet been announced.

Star Trek: Section 31, starring Michelle Yeoh, continues in development. Neither a production start date nor a broadcast date have been announced.

STAR TREK: DISCOVERY Season Finale Review: “That Hope is You, Part 2”

Star Trek: Discovery wraps up its third season — and its three-part season-ender — with “That Hope is You, Part 2,” a finale that ties up loose ends, opens new doors, and sets the Federation on the path to peace and cooperation.

WARNING: MAJOR SPOILER ALERT!

Picking up where “Su’Kal” left off two weeks ago, the story on the dilithium planet remains focused on helping Su’Kal (Bill Irwin) confront his fears and encourage him to disengage the holoprogram that’s preventing him and the Discovery away team from leaving.

As with the other crewmembers who beamed down to the planet, Adira (Blu del Barrio) and Gray (Ian Alexander) — who is recognized, apparently, by the holographic environment as an individual — are both given a different alien appearance. Adira gets the guise of a Xahean like last season’s Queen Po, and Gray manifests as a Vulcan… and as good as Gray looks as a Trill, he looks amazing as a blue-haired Vulcan.

Su’Kal and Saru finally find their Kelpien connection. (CBS All Access)

While Saru (Doug Jones) stays with Su’Kal — eventually helping him understand his life, his past, and preparing him to go “outside” — Dr. Culber (Wilson Cruz) works with Adira and Gray to determine the state of the crashed Kelpien ship, and finally crack the mystery of how Su’Kal caused The Burn.

Yes, it was Su’Kal: specifically, the connection between his DNA and the high concentrations of dilithium found on the planet, the result of his long exposure to the radiation, and the hostile environment. As Adira explains, dilithium has an inherent subspace component, allowing Su’Kal’s outbursts to propogate across interstellar space to affect dilithium across vast distances.

This also explains the limitations in subspace communication that accompanied The Burn; if Su’Kal can be evacuated from the planet, before another emotional explosion, any future Burn-like events will be prevented.

Finally — though not a lot of time is able to be spent on it — Adira and Gray’s time in the holoprogram allows Gray his first experiences as a separate, visible individual since his death. Culber and Saru are able to see and interact with him, and it’s tragic that he will again cease to be corporeal once they evacuate from the planet.

Gray manifests as a holographic Vulcan. (CBS All Access)

Culber’s promises that they’ll work to find a solution — such as the Doctor’s 29th century mobile holo-emitter, now “old” tech to the Discovery era — has me optimistic that a solution is forthcoming. Gray as an individual deserves to exist and be seen, as do Adira and Gray as a couple; we’ll have to put a pin in that story, however, until the pair returns next season.

Back at Federation Headquarters, an unnervingly close-quarters firefight breaks out between the Emerald Chain-held Discovery and the ten or so large Federation ships within the shield barrier. Impressively, Discovery is able to withstand the several-minute barrage of phaser and torpedo fire with little damage; perhaps even more impressive is that none of the other ships are accidentally destroyed by the crossfire.

It’s not until an entire fleet from Ni’Var arrives at Headquarters’ doorstep to help — called into action by Burnham’s mayday message last week — that Chain’s green leader gets desperate.

Burnham convinces Vance to let Discovery go. (CBS All Access)

To force an end to a firefight that has just escalated beyond what is winnable, Osyraa (Janet Kidder) threatens to use her stockpile of potent pesticides — established in “The Sanctuary” — as a makeshift means of chemical warfare. Horrified both at the potential loss of life and that she’s indirectly dragged Ni’Var into the conflict, Michael Burnham (Sonqeua Martin-Green) convinces Admiral Vance (Oded Fehr) to let Discovery and the waiting Viridian leave Headquarters for the safety of a nearby Emerald Chain base.

Once on the way, Osyraa brings Burnham to witnessed a captured Book (David Ajala) in sickbay, where Zareh (Jake Weber) has been threatening to torture him for the coordinates of the dilithium planet. After a few minutes of especially painful torture, Burnham manages to rescue Book and the two of them escape.

Continuing the Die Hard homage seen in “There Is A Tide…,” turbolifts and turbolift shafts — er, chasms — take the place of elevators as Burnham and Book attempt to elude Zareh and his Regulators. Climbing into (and eventually on top of) the turbolift cars, the heroes get separated while fighting a group of bad guys.

Bigger on the inside: ‘Doctor Who,’ eat your heart out. (CBS All Access)

Book struggles with Zareh in a rocketing turbolift car, until he’s finally able to toss him to his death below. As with “Part 1,” one of the lessons to be learned from “That Hope is You, Part 2” is that if you’re ever in a fist fight with Cleveland Booker, you absolutely do not want to insult his cat.

It is completely irrelevant to the success of this episode and does not meaningfully subtract from how fun and well executed the turbolift fight sequences are, but I do have to take a moment to ask how there’s an entire Blade Runner cityscape housed within Discovery’s secondary hull.

We’ve seen the turbolift “roller coaster” before — and it’s always been confusingly large — but “That Hope is You, Part 2” turns it into a truly cavernous space that extends all the way to the horizon. Frankly, I just don’t get it (unless Starfleet uses TARDIS technology in the 32nd century), but ultimately it’s not going anywhere any time soon, so perhaps I should just get over it.

Owosekun fights oxygen deprivation to plant her bomb. (CBS All Access)

Meanwhile, acting captain Sylvia Tilly (Mary Wiseman) deciphers a message from Burnham, which originally seems like a random reminiscence about a birthday celebration the two women shared but is actually a message encouraging the crew to sabotage a warp nacelle. If they can build a device to disrupt the magnetic attachment between the hull and the nacelle, the ship will drop out of warp.

Easy enough, except that oxygen levels are quickly depleting and the crew can’t use a DOT-23 drone to get the job done. Luckily, Lt. Owoeskun (Oyin Oladejo) can hold her breath for a very long time. Owosekun is successful, and Discovery is forced out of warp.

This bit of backstory, that she spent her childhood freediving for abalone, is so specific and suddenly offered that it’s painfully obvious as a setup for something later in the episode, but Owosekun is such a cool character that I genuinely don’t care. It’s clunky as hell, but any opportunity to learn more about her — no matter how situationally convenient — is fine with me.

After two seasons, the Sphere Data finally…. saves Owosekun. (CBS All Access)

Instead of the task being a suicide mission, thankfully Owosekun is rescued by one of the three Zora-possessed DOT-23’s. While I am eternally grateful to the Sphere Data droid for saving Owo, this is as good a time as any to say that I don’t particularly care for the deliberately cute design of the robots — especially given that they exist first and foremost to be functional repair robots.

They have the distorted proportions, tiny hands, and big wide eyes of a Funko POP! doll or Baby Yoda. This is 100% a subjective thing, so don’t get all worked up if you disagree, but I would like this version of Zora much more if it had used something like the trio of abstract looking flying robots Reno built during her time stranded on the crashed Hiawatha.

Reno’s “kids” were expressive and interesting without relying on the kawaii anthropomorphism of big blinking eyes and looking cute. But that’s enough of me being grumpy in the face of the adorable.

The showdown between Burnham and Osyraa in the data core goes by pretty quickly, both characters much more interested in an efficient conclusion than monologuing to one another.

Osyraa pushes Burnham into the heart of the Discovery computer core. (CBS All Access)

In an unusual choice, Osyraa attempts to kill Burnham by pushing her into a wall made of the same type of programmable-matter computer interface we’ve seen on Book’s ship. Burnham is completely submerged (shades of Superman 3), but quickly shoots her way out, hitting and killing Osyraa in the process. I wonder if this was something that maybe worked better on the page; on screen it just elicits an anticlimactic “huh.”

As soon as Osyraa is out of the picture, Burnham regains control of the ship, restoring life support and saving the remaining crew by beaming the Regulators “off the ship.” And directly into space? Sure maybe, works for me.

Once everyone meets on the bridge, Tilly immediately hands command over to Burnham. I was skeptical when Saru chose her to be his second in command, but that skepticism disappeared the moment she confronted Osyraa in “Su’Kal.” Tilly was calm, collected, and capable, a great captain for her ship and leader for her crew. That she would so quickly relinquish something that she’d been so successful at was disappointing; I hope we get some more insight into her decision later.

Spore Drive-compatible Cleveland Booker. (CBS All Access)

Knowing they need to get back to the dilithium planet ASAP and needing to blast their way out of the Viridian –which had enveloped Discovery after the latter ship dropped out of warp — Burnham’s plan is to eject and detonate the warp core then do a split-second jump to the Verubin Nebula using Book as the spore drive’s navigator.

The plan is risky and Book has never even touched the spore drive before, but it works. The fact that Book is able to use his empathic abilities to successfully operate the spore drive does open up the question of whether other members of his species would be able to do so as well.  Hmm…

Back in the nebula, the away team and Su’Kal are rescued just in the nick of time and Discovery returns to Federation Headquarters.

With Osyraa’s death and the destruction of the Viridian, the Emerald Chain seems to fall apart and no longer seems to pose any significant threat to the Federation or to various peoples and worlds, leaving Starfleet to mine and distribute the newly discovered dilithium cache without interference. The Federation also appears to be on the path towards at least some level of reunification: Trill has already rejoined, and Ni’Var is considering it as well.

Saru returns to Kaminar, which has changed a lot since his era. (CBS All Access)

Saru, who goes an extended sabbatical to Kaminar — to help Su’Kal settle into life in the real world — is now unavailable to captain Discovery, giving Admiral Vance the opportunity to extend to Burnham a captaincy that, despite their earlier conflicts, he truly believes she’s earned. After a bit of hesitancy, wanting to discuss the situation with Saru first, she accepts after Vance demands an immediate answer: after three years, Captain Michael Burnham takes the center seat.

In addition to this major change of command, many viewers will surely also be glad to see that the Discovery crew is also leaving on their next mission with some shiny new uniforms! It appears that going forward the crew will be leaving their 23nd century blues behind for the predominantly gray uniforms seen on the rank and file of the 32nd century Starfleet.

It should be noted as well that based on their uniform, Adira has gotten their own commission into Starfleet — assigned the rank of Ensign in the blue-stripe science division — and Book, though still dressed in his civvies, appears to be staying aboard as well. Book and Burnham are excellent together and I would miss them next season were Book not to stick around.

Captain Michael Burnham, USS Discovery. (CBS All Access)

OTHER OBSERVATIONS

  • Doug Jones is up in Toronto filming Discovery Season 4 right now, so don’t expect Saru to be out of the picture next year.
     
  • Was it concerning to anyone else that the Crossfield-class warp core ejection system includes shooting the thing down a long tube without any stabilization, letting it bang and spark off the sides of the ejection tunnel the whole way down?
     
  • The theme music played over the end credits is, of course, the same classic tune which closed out every episode of the Original Series. (Sadly, there’s no Heather Kadin credit over a dancing Orion, or CBS Television Studios logo over the fake alien from “The Corbomite Maneuver.”)
     
  • Cleveland Booker isn’t the first person to carry that name, nor does that seem to be our Booker’s given name. He mentions a mentor by that name, a person he hoped to live up to when he took the moniker. This story, sure to be part of Season 4’s tale, is likely to explain some of Book’s still-not-totally-explained origins, specifically how someone who doesn’t seem to be human has such a human sounding name.
     
  • I was extremely happy to see that lonely Aditya Sahil (Adil Hussein), who manned the long-isolated Starfleet watchtower in the season premiere, finally found his way back to the Federation after years of service in isolation… now an officially-commissioned Lieutenant.
     
  • In keeping with sacred Star Trek tradition, the dialogue for “That Hope is You, Part 2” includes mention of an “alien adjective animal”: the Alcorian Sorrowhawk, first mentioned back in “Calypso.” Not quite as catchy as the Tarcassian razor beast Denebian slime devil, but still pretty good.
Lieutenant j.g. Sahil, rescued from interstellar oblivion. (CBS All Access)
  • We learn from Osyraa that Orion hearts have six valves and that “blood flows in both directions.” I’m Hoping a xenocardiologist can shed some light on this because that sounds bad to me, from an oxygenation standpoint.
     
  • According to Su’Kal’s holoprogram, the gormagander has the dubious distinction of being the animal that’s spent the longest amount of time on the Federation’s endangered species list.
     
  • Though we don’t see him joining Discovery on its mission to distribute dilithium, Aurellio did survive Burnham’s order to beam all Regulators off-ship. Technically he wasn’t a Regulator, but as a member of Osyraa’s party the computer could reasonably have interpreted him as being included in the command. Glad he didn’t get spaced.
     
  • While Stamets is back on board under command of Captain Burnham, it’s clear that he’s still not cool with her blowing him into space and leaving Culber and Adira to (potentially) die. That friction should be interesting to see play out next season.
     
  • Finally, CBS shared artwork, class names, and registry information of several 32nd century Starfleet vessels this week; The Trek Collective has pulled together a great walkthrough of the different inspirations for ship names and class designations.

Closing out the season, Discovery leaves for its humanitarian mission under newly minted Captain Burnham — “Let’s fly!,” landing on a catchphrase right from day one — and the episode ends with a quote from Gene Roddenberry:

In a very real sense, we are all aliens on a strange planet. We spend most of our lives reaching out and trying to communicate. If during our whole lifetime, we could reach out and really communicate with just two people, we are indeed very fortunate.

Cosplayers, get moving! (CBS All Access)

After three seasons filled with drama and conflict, and three action-packed episodes to close them out, it’s extremely satisfying to end the year on a quieter note of optimism and adventure. Instead of spending its final ten minutes setting up the next Big Bad or insinuating that all is not what it seems, “That Hope is You, Part 2” simply breathes.

And that, as backward as it may seem, has me more excited for what’s to come in Season 4 than any cliffhanger.

Review — STAR TREK: PICARD – “The Dark Veil”

The second Star Trek: Picard tie-in novel hits stores this week, and James Swallow’s The Dark Veil is a great story that will deepen your appreciation for the show’s first season.

Set about one year after Admiral Jean-Luc Picard resigned from Starfleet — around a year past the conclusion of The Last Best Hope and about 13 years prior to “Nepenthe” — the events of The Dark Veil focus on Captain William Riker and Commander Deanna Troi on the USS Titan.

“Nepenthe” is widely considered to be the standout highlight episode of Star Trek: Picard’s uneven first season, and The Dark Veil provides new backstory that will deepen your appreciation for the episode.

Most notably, the book introduces us to the character of Thaddeus Riker, the son of Will and Deanna who had passed away by the time of “Nepenthe.”

The boy, who has a gift for languages and an active imagination, is a full and vibrant character in this novel — and he’s a young child who is already to developing the Ardani language and cultures that would be his legacy.

Getting to know the character in his earlier years makes his death — and the Rikers’ mourning of his life — all the more poignant. The depiction of Thaddeus Troi-Riker in this novel is pretty well aligned with the notes released last week by Season 1 showrunner Michael Chabon; I wonder if Chabon releasing those notes was just a coincidence, given how well everything fits together.

The USS Titan, seen on STAR TREK: LOWER DECKS in 2380 — six years prior to THE DARK VEIL.

Our introduction to the pre-Kestra Riker family is set in 2386, amid the backdrop of ongoing intrigue with the Romulans. By the time of this book, the supernova that would destroy the Romulan homeworld is close but has not yet happened. The Federation has abandoned its rescue efforts, Mars has been attacked, and synths have been banned by the Federation.

The story begins aas the USS Titan is on assignment to deliver several members of the mysterious Jazari species back to their homeworld, set near the Federation-Romulan border. When the Titan arrives, they discover that the Jazari are in the process of leaving their homeworld (and local space) behind entirely. However, they are set back by a catastrophic accident which requires the help of both the Titan and a nearby Romulan warbird.

As the story unfolds, the Titan assists the Jazari in completing their mission, while aboard the Romulan warbird a power struggle ensues between the principled Romulan commander and his Tal Shiar executive officer who may have additional loyalties.

James Swallow is an accomplished Star Trek author, who has written a gripping book that fits very comfortably into the Picard aesthetic, but also feels like a comfortable bridge between The Next Generation movies and Picard. He renders Riker and Troi as the accomplished, confident officers that they are at this point in the timeline, with Riker having been in command of the Titan for a number of years at this point.

Will Riker and Deanna Troi at their family home on Nepenthe in 2399.

For Picard fans who might have been disappointed not to get more Starfleet based action in the series, The Dark Veil is a nice accompaniment that deepens the Picard story through a very typical Star Trek tale. It is difficult to go into too much detail without getting into spoiler territory, but there are a lot of themes from Picard — and not just the characters — that get explored in this book. There are also two deeply surprising tie-ins to The Original Series; one is fun, and one is extremely poignant.

Fans of the previous Star Trek novel continuity will find some surprising similarities between the Titan crew in The Dark Veil and the crew of the Titan from the novel continuity; two of the primary characters from the ‘old’ Star Trek: Titan books have moved into the new continuity.

And though the new characters introduced to fill out the remainder of the Titan’s senior staff are not quite as imaginative as in the previous novels, they are still interesting characters in their own right.

The Dark Veil also has a strong Romulan subplot that continues to explore the race’s predicament, now very close to the supernova that we know will ultimately destroy their homeworld. The two main Romulan officers lean a little too hard into the archetypes of the stereotypical evil Romulan and the noble commander who stands by his principles, but both have several layers that elaborate further on things that we saw in Picard, particularly as it relates to the Romulan stance on artificial intelligence.

Valdore-type Romulan warbirds seen in STAR TREK: NEMESIS in 2379.

Overall, The Dark Veil is another great addition to the backstory for Picard. As last February’s The Last Best Hope gave much more backstory to what Picard had been doing between Star Trek: Nemesis and “Remembrance,” The Dark Veil gives us more backstory on the Riker family and gives us the opportunity to see them all in happier times.

I doubt we’ll get anything as ambitious as the eleven books of the previous Star Trek: Titan series, but I would love to read some more Titan stories about the Riker family before they moved to Nepenthe.