Home Blog Page 111

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.

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

This week brings us to the first Star Trek entry for 2021 — and possibly the last live-action episode for long, while thanks to filming delays caused by the COVID-19 pandemic — the Star Trek: Discovery season finale!

In this new episode, “That Hope is You, Part 2” — which in early descriptions was titled “Outside,” but now closes the “Part 1” title from the season premiere — the Discovery crew must work with the sentient Sphere Data (Annabelle Wallis) to retake the ship from Osyraa’s (Janet Kidder) Emerald Chain forces, while keeping the Orion villain from destroying Starfleet Command and the remains of the Federation.

Meanwhile, Saru (Doug Jones) and Culber (Wilson Cruz) — along with Adira (Blu del Barrio) and Gray (Ian Alexander) — must find a way to reach the terrified Kelpien responsible for The Burn, Su’Kal (Bill Irwin), before the deadly radiation inside the Verubin Nebula claims their lives.

Here are ten new photos from “That Hope is You, Part 2,” where we see Adira’s new look — a Xahean, like Queen Po from last season — after beaming down to the holographic environment.

Finally, if you didn’t catch it at the end of “There Is A Tide…,” here’s a new preview for the episode — featuring what looks to be Trill host Gray Tal in a Vulcan guise, thanks likely to Su’Kal’s holographic environment — and a clip which debuted during Thursday’s episode of The Ready Room, where Saru and Culber realize their situation is getting worse.

THAT HOPE IS YOU, PART 2 — Season finale. As the Emerald Chain tightens its grip and the mystery of the Burn is finally solved, Burnham and the crew have one last chance to save themselves – and the Federation.

Written by Michelle Paradise. Directed by Olatunde Osunsanmi.

Star Trek: Discovery’s third season concludes this Thursday, January 7 with “That Hope is You, Part 2,” on CBS All Access and CTV Sci-Fi Channel. International viewers get the episode January 8 on Netflix, in all other global regions.

Learn About Real-World Biology with New STAR TREK: DISCOVERY-Themed Science Video Series

If you’re a fan of the Star Trek Universe, then real-world science is probably something you also tend to find fascinating — pardon the pun! — and a new video miniseries is launching this month that blends both worlds together.

Helmed by Duke University biology professor — and Star Trek science consultantDr. Mohamed Noor, alongside actor Jayne Brook (Discovery’s Admiral Cornwell), have teamed up to create a new YouTube video miniseries where the pair uses episodes of Discovery’s third season to teach real-world science concepts.

Expanding Noor’s existing BioTrekkie Explains! YouTube channel, the new show — titled BioTrekkie with the Admiral — will be a weekly series running about 30 minutes per installment, covering biology through the lens of Star Trek: Discovery, along with behind-the-scenes anecdotes from Brook’s time on the show and her acting career.

*   *   *

STAR TREK ACTRESS JAYNE BROOK AND STAR TREK SCIENCE CONSULTANT
MOHAMED NOOR LAUNCH VIDEO MINI-SERIES TO TEACH BIOLOGY CONCEPTS

DURHAM, NC, USA- Star Trek science consultant Dr. Mohamed Noor has teamed up with Star Trek actress Jayne Brook (Admiral Katrina Cornwell in ‘Star Trek: Discovery’ Seasons 1-2) to launch a new YouTube mini-series that discusses science using Season 3 episodes of ‘Star Trek: Discovery.’

Entitled “BioTrekkie with the Admiral”, videos will be less about explaining scenes in ‘Discovery’ episodes and more about using on-screen depictions as springboards to teach interesting real-world biology. Videos will cover 1-2 ‘Star Trek: Discovery’ episodes at a time, and close with Brook’s insights about acting and production, so Brook and Noor alternate taking on the role of student and teacher of their respective craft.

Each video will be about 30 minutes long, and new videos will launch weekly on Sundays at 8am Pacific starting January 10, 2021, in Noor’s “BioTrekkie Explains” YouTube channel.

The show launches next Sunday, January 10, and will release weekly through the first months of 2021.

Star Trek: Discovery
Season 1 Blu-ray

Star Trek: Discovery
Season 2 Blu-ray

Star Trek: Discovery
Season 3 Blu-ray

STAR TREK: VOYAGER Documentary Crowdfunding Campaign Begins March 1

Announced nearly a year ago, the in-production Star Trek: Voyager documentary project from David Zappone and the 455 Films team is about to move into its next stage: a crowdfunding campaign to build funds and complete the project.

Over the last several months, Zappone — who produced and co-directed What We Left Behind: Looking Back at Star Trek: Deep Space Nine — has quietly been tweeting out minor updates on the project:

…and as the new year begins, the project is warping into its next phase as Voyager co-star Garrett Wang lead an announcement video setting the start date for the upcoming crowdfunding campaign for a March 1 start.

There’s a limited amount of information available regarding the crowdfunding campaign at this time, but more detail is expected to be released over the next few weeks, including the perks associated with crowdfunding donations — but as soon as there’s more to share, you can be sure we’ll update you here!

In the meantime, you can watch for other updates at the official Voyager documentary website, or follow the creative team on Twitter, on Facebook, or on Instagram.

Star Trek: Voyager
A Vision of the Future



Star Trek: Voyager
Complete Series on DVD



Star Trek: Voyager
A Celebration



STAR TREK: DISCOVERY Review: “There Is A Tide…”

Star Trek: Discovery kicks into the propulsive second chapter of its three-part season finale this week, “There Is A Tide…,” as the captured starship becomes the setting for the Emerald Chain’s endgame at Starfleet Headquarters.

I love a good episode in which our heroes must retake their ship — a longstanding Star Trek tradition, in classic episodes like “Basics,” “Chosen Realm,” “Shockwave,” and, um, “Rascals” — and now Discovery gets its time to play with the genre, even moreso than during Harry Mudd’s chaotic time loop escapade in Season 1.

With a tight script from Kenneth Lin — and the usual great pacing from six-time Discovery director Jonathan Frakes — this episode is fast, exciting, and action-packed, delivering some thoughtful and surprising world-building that expands our understanding of the politics of the 32nd century.

Zarah is back from his icy exile. (CBS All Access)

The episode opens with Discovery under Osyraa’s (Janet Kidder) control, and includes a return of Zareh (Jake Weber), the human antagonist last seen heading out into the parasitic ice in “Far From Home.” On the one hand, it is a delight to see Jake Weber return, because he is an extremely capable actor who gives Zareh an air of confident menace.

However, the decision to bring back Zareh — who we previously thought was just some pirate raider in a forgotten system — as a high ranking member of Osyraa’s team, makes the galaxy feel very small.

Given how hard it should be to travel across that galaxy with the absence of dilithium, it feels like a mistake to make it so easy for characters to show up wherever they please. Discovery can do it because it has a spore drive. But if the show’s conceit for this season is that the galaxy has become factionalized and hard to traverse, reintroducing Zareh undercuts that.

After hurriedly catching up to the captured starship by way of dangerous courier subspace corridors, Book (David Ajala) and Michael Burnham (Sonequa Martin-Green) implement their own take on Emergency Landing Plan B, crashing Book’s ship into Discovery’s open shuttlebay to get aboard before it manages to breach Starfleet Headquarters’ defenses.

Blasting through the dangerous courier network. (CBS All Access)

From here, the show divides into several main plot lines that run throughout the episode.

The first involves Burnham, who works to evade Emerald Chain soldiers, or “regulators,” as she makes her way to engineering. She is injured in an early confrontation with a regulator, which makes her efforts much more difficult. Burnham’s injury certainly raises the dramatic stakes and requires her to rely more on her brains than brawn… but it stretches my suspension of disbelief somewhat that when phasers transform to fit on your wrist and transporters are housed within a combadge, there was not a medkit anywhere between Discovery’s shuttlebay and engineering? That seems like a serious health and safety lapse.

As she makes her way through the ship, we get to learn some more about the Emerald Chain as captured Paul Stamets (Anthony Rapp) is left to be interrogated for spore-drive secrets by Chain scientist Aurellio, played by returning guest actor and fan favorite Kenneth Mitchell.

Like Mitchell’s real-life requirement, the scientist is confined to a wheelchair due to a genetic defect; Osyraa saw Aurellio’s potential, and used Emerald Chain resources to make sure he had the right treatments, leading him to become one of the Chain’s most prominent scientists.

Kenneth Mitchell returns to ‘Discovery’ – this time in human form. (CBS All Access)

The actor, who publicly revealed he is suffering from ALS in February, turns in a quietly commanding performance as the Emerald Chain scientist who, while shielded from many of Osyraa’s crimes, has a deep well of loyalty for her. It’s a far cry from the scenery-chewing appearances by Mitchell in his Klingon roles in past seasons, but it’s an affecting performance that takes us deeper into life in the Chain.

(As the episode progresses and Aurellio begins to witness some of Osyraa’s more ruthless tactics, it is clear he is conflicted about them. I hope and expect we will see more of Mitchell in the season finale to continue playing out that conflict.)

The first two stories collide in perhaps the season’s most emotional moments, as Burnham rescues Stamets from his captivity, and — over his extremely vocal protests — successfully executes her plan to evacuate him (explosively) from Discovery and away from Osyraa’s clutches.

Stamets: not happy. (CBS All Access)

The only issue with that, though, is that Stamets — who is driven by concern for both Culber and Adira, each stuck back in the radiation-soaked Verubin Nebula — does not want to leave the ship.

It’s a heartbreaking moment for the two characters, weighing Burnham’s duty to Starfleet (which she seems to have realized in this instance takes priority) against Stamets’ love for Culber and Adira, and sense of betrayal that Burnham would pursue this action without his consent. Anthony Rapp has not had many big emotional beats this season, and as he rages against Burnham’s actions, he reminds us what a great actor he is.

Up on the command levels, Sylvia Tilly (Mary Wiseman), Ryn (Noah Averbach-Katz) and the ship’s bridge crew — Detmer (Emily Coutts), Owosekun (Oyin Oladejo), Bryce (Ronnie Rowe, Jr.), Rhys (Patrick Kwok-Choon), and Ina (Avaah Blackwell) — are under lock and key in Saru’s ready room.

The scenes between these characters are great, as the bridge crew work together to distract the guards and disarm them, and then follow Tilly as she immediately takes command of the next steps and begins developing a plan to retake Discovery… along with some assistance from an unexpected friend.

Sphere data? Meet Tilly. (CBS All Access)

After a few brief assists earlier in the season, it seems that Zora (voiced by Annabelle Wallis) — the manifestation of the Sphere Data living inside Discovery’s computer systems — was able to hide herself in a set of DOT-23 repair drones when the Emerald Chain hijacked the ship’s operating system. I’m excited to see how that plays out in the season finale!

Perhaps the most interesting story of the week, however, is one separate from all the action and fight scenes: the negotiation between Admiral Vance (Oded Fehr) and Osyraa, in which she reveals that the Chain has hijacked Discovery not to destroy Starfleet, but to propose a peace agreement between the two organizations.

We learn that Osyraa is actually a ‘minister’ in the Emerald Chain, a politician who has bigger designs for the relationship between the Federation and the Chain than simply just perpetual conflict.

Osyraa proposes an alliance with the Federation: as part of the proposal, the Emerald Chain would agree to shut down its slave markets and its endorsement of the slave trade, remove its influence from pre-warp civilizations, and commit to peaceful relations with the Federation. In exchange, the Federation would be required to endorse the Chain’s mercantile economy and normalize relations… effectively merging the Federation and the Emerald Chain into a single body.

Vance and Osyraa face off over the future of their organizations. (CBS All Access)

Vance is extremely tempted, and acknowledges that the proposed armistice presented by Osyraa shows they have made significant concessions — but he askes for the one thing the Orion simply can’t agree to: her own surrender.

It’s a fascinating moment for a Federation that has laid low and being offered an opportunity to rebuild itself. Vance clearly wants to find a way to take the deal, but he cannot compromise the Federation’s “moral clarity” any further, refusing to allow Osyraa the opportunity to serve in Chain leadership without bringing her to justice for her crimes.

And so the deal is off. Where it heads from here in the finale is unclear. Osyraa returns to Discovery intent on regaining control of the ship, but it was fascinating to see that the Emerald Chain seem to be a much more complicated faction than the show previously indicated… and that the Federation is more tired and threatened than it has ever been.

I hope these dynamics continue to be explored as the show heads into Season 4.

Zora enters the game. (CBS All Access)

OTHER OBSERVATIONS

We’re waiting with wallets open for a replica. (CBS All Access)
  • The 32nd century Starfleet phasers fire blue energy beams; with a few occasional exceptions in the TOS and Original Series film era, the vast majority of all Starfleet hand phaser beams seen to date have been red-orange in color.
     
  • Like hand phasers of years past, the new Starfleet phasers can also be set to overload; the normally-blue lights on the weapon’s upper section change from green to yellow to flashing red as the energy buildup reaches explosive levels.
     
  • The new phaser design also features a green light on the front of the weapon, where the energy beam emanates.
Vance reads the Emerald Chain armistice proposal. (CBS All Access)
  • Stamets tells Aurellio that he’s got a child — referring to Adira — but while the two characters have certainly started to bond over the last few episodes, that kind of serious familial attachment seems like it’s coming out of nowhere. It’s one thing to take a young friend under one’s wing as a mentor figure, but quite another to claim the role of their father — though to be fair, it could simply be Stamets’ way of trying to throw Aurellio off his game.
     
  • One of the destroyed ships in the courier tunnel is a Orion Wanderer-class vessel, a design created for the mid-1980’s FASA Star Trek role-playing game.
     
  • The president of the 32nd century Federation is mentioned several times in this episode, but is neither referenced by name nor gender. Perhaps when we finally get to meet them, it’ll be a familiar face whom we know made it to the far future?
The first ‘Picard’ species makes it to ‘Discovery.’ (CBS All Access)
  • The Emerald Chain regulator Burnham sends into space is played by Lisa Berry, better known to Supernatural fans as Billie the Grim Reaper. Her species is the same as young Kima from the Picard Short Trek “Children of Mars.”
     
  • Osyraa knocks the replicated apple as not quite tasting right, a longstanding Trek trope about replicated food not measuring up to “real” food.
     
  • Starfleet station Deep Space 253 is a far-flung Federation outpost that has been trading with the Emerald Chain for nearly a century, implying there may be other outposts and ships that continue to operate on their own — much like the liaison office Burnham visited in the season premiere.
The USS SONG moves into a defensive posture near Discovery. (CBS All Access)
  • One of the Starfleet vessels parked at headquarters is the USS Song (NCC-325084).
     
  • Zora’s trio of DOT-23 units have colored eyes which match the standard Starfleet assignment divisions: red, blue, and gold.
     
  • The stardate on Osyraa’s armistice document reads “STARDATE 29141429.1,” which is well outside the (correct) range of 32nd stardates established in “People of Earth.”
     
  • It seems likely that Burnham’s mayday message to her mother — who we know is still on Ni’Var — will result in the arrival of combined Vulcan/Romulan forces. If they come to save the day, it’ll be the fourth Trek season finale in a row to have our heroes rescued at the last moment by outside help, after the Klingons and Kelpiens in “Such Sweet Sorrow, Part 2,” Riker and the Starfleet armada in “Et in Arcdia Ego, Part 2,” and Riker and the Titan in “No Small Parts.”
NOW I HAVE A COMBADGE, HO-HO-HO. (CBS All Access)

Overall, though, “There Is A Tide…” doesn’t quite stand on its own particularly well. It’s full of action-packed and tragic moments alike — like Rhys and Bryce’s tactic to fool their Chain captor, and the execution of world-weary Ryn — but largely ignores everything “Su’Kal” set up about The Burn (likely to be a major part of next week’s finale).

There is a lot of story left for this show to resolve in the year’s one remaining episode, and hopefully the season’s last outing will not only stick the landing, but set up a solid jumping-off point for Season 4’s adventure.

Star Trek: Discovery concludes its third season with “That Hope is You, Part 2” on January 7 (on CBS All Access and CTV Sci-Fi Channel); international viewers get the finale on Netflix on January 8 in all other global regions.

WeeklyTrek Podcast #122 — Year in Review: TREK in 2020

6

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 guest Jenn Tifft to discuss all the latest Star Trek news.

This week, Alex and his guest look back on 2020 and answer the following questions:

    • What was the best Star Trek moment in 2020?
    • What were we most disappointed by?
    • What were we most surprised by?

In addition, Alex and Jenn also look forward to 2021 and ask:

    • What do we most want from Star Trek next year?
    • Will a new Star Trek movie be announced?
    • How about another show?

Happy New Year to all our listeners — and we’ll see you back for a regular episode in early January.

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 312 Photos: “There Is A Tide…”

This week brings us to the season’s penultimate Star Trek: Discovery episode, and we’ve got a new round of photos from “There Is A Tide…” for you today!

In this new episode — which in early leaks was titled “The Good of the People” — the Discovery crew, under Sylvia Tilly’s (Mary Wiseman) command, must work to attempt to retake the captured starship from Osyraa’s (Janet Kidder) Emerald Chain forces.

Meanwhile, Michael Burnham (Sonequa Martin-Green) and Book (David Ajala) must find a way to return to the stolen starship after being left behind in the Verubin Nebula, and help liberate it before it can become a weapon against Starfleet Command.

Here are eight new photos from “There Is A Tide…,” where…

The episode’s title comes from Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar (Act IV, Scene III), where Brutus explains to Cassius that “There is a tide in the affairs of men. Which, taken at the flood, leads on to fortune,” a metaphor for recognizing and seizing an opportunity at the right time.

Finally, if you didn’t catch it at the end of “Su’Kal,” here’s a new preview for the episode — featuring the long-expected return of recurring Discovery guest star Kenneth Mitchell — and a clip which debuted during Thursday’s episode of The Ready Room where Osyraa tries to play-act an attack on Discovery to gain entry to Starfleet’s inner sanctum, as Admiral Vance (Oded Fehr) watches from afar.

THERE IS A TIDE… — After capturing the U.S.S. Discovery, Osyraa seeks a meeting with Admiral Vance while Burnham and the crew must overcome unimaginable odds as they attempt to regain command of their ship.

Written by Kenneth Lin. Directed by Jonathan Frakes.

Star Trek: Discovery returns Thursday, December 31 with “There Is A Tide…” on CBS All Access and CTV Sci-Fi Channel. International viewers get the episode January 1 on Netflix, in all other global regions.

Review: THE ORIGINAL SERIES — “A Contest of Principles”

Aptly timed for a post-Election Day release, Greg Cox’s latest Star Trek novel goes political in A Contest of Principles.

The Enterprise is dispatched to serve as election observers to the Vokin in this new tale, a planet facing its first planetwide general election to decide the path of the planet out of authoritarianism. Meanwhile, Doctor McCoy is kidnapped and First Officer Spock and Nurse Chapel must team up to find him.

Cox is a master at turning out classic Trek novels that feel very close to being actual episodes of the show. His books hew pretty closely to the style and conventions of a traditional episode of the Original Series, but with a slightly larger scope afforded to the written word that the need for more sets and props would have precluded for the television show.

A Contest of Principles feels like an easy episode from a hypothetical fourth season, in which the ship is still carrying out its five-year mission but all of the character growth that took place during the three season run of the show is available to the author.

Cox never misses with his characterizations, always perfectly capturing the voices, mannerisms, and behaviors of our intrepid crew.

In recent novels — such as last year’s The Antares Maelstrom — Cox has adopted a story structure that involves breaking up the senior officers of the Enterprise and sending them off on different, but interrelated missions.

He continues that here, splitting the novel into three primary story lines: Kirk on the planet Vok working to oversee the election, McCoy’s kidnapping to Vok’s sister planet Ozalor to provide medical assistance to a dying princess, and Spock and Nurse Chapel’s efforts on the disputed planet Braco to find him.

This storytelling tactic is an effective one for allowing some of the supporting characters from the show to step out into the limelight from under the harsh spotlight of James T. Kirk. While Kirk is the focus of one of the three main storylines, his absence from the other two allows Spock and McCoy to take control of their respective plots and give us some great character moments for both.

But it would be nice perhaps for Cox’s next novel not to adopt the same structure a third time running. In this book, it can be difficult at times not to feel as though one is reading three novellas loosely threaded together. None of the stories feel like they quite get the attention that they deserve for the scope of plot and ideas that Cox is presenting.

For example, we spend a little time, but not enough, unraveling the mystery of Braco — contested between Vok and Ozalor — but whose real history might be far more interesting. Likewise, on Ozalor, we barely scratch the surface of that planet’s monarchy and the intrigue that drives McCoy’s kidnapping and his experiences on the planet.

And lastly, on Vok, the politics as depicted by Cox are interesting, but not terribly sophisticated. While they are nowhere near as obviously simplistic as the politics of an episode like “Let That Be Your Last Battlefield,” it feels like a misstep for a novel whose main pitch appears to be its political angle — and which was likely timed for an Election Day release — not to have pushed further in deconstructing the politics of Vok and what it means for a whole planet to be on the brink of emerging from authoritarian rule.

Cutting one of the three main storylines would have necessitated shortchanging at least one of the focus characters of the novel, but it might have been worthwhile to get to explore the remaining two stories in more detail.

But minor criticisms aside, I always love any time McCoy gets a character spotlight, as he does here. He is one of my favorite characters in the whole franchise, and it’s always exciting to see the character in a position where he has to rely on his own wits and smarts in order to get out of a particular situation, rather than serving in the advisory role to Kirk doing that as he does in so many episodes of the Original Series.

It is also really nice that Nurse Chapel gets the opportunity to take more of a leading role. A Contest of Principles, which is set towards the end of the Enterprise’s famous five-year mission, demonstrates very capably why Chapel would soon after decide to pursue her medical degree to become a fully fledged doctor by the time of The Motion Picture.

And despite being teamed up with Spock, it’s gratifying that the book chooses not to dwell on Chapel’s crush on Spock from earlier seasons of classic Trek, and instead highlight her skills and professionalism.

Overall, if you are a fan of the Original Series’ wider cast, and have enjoyed one of Greg Cox’s previous novels, you will enjoy A Contest of Principles very much. Sometimes, there’s nothing more comforting than a book that feels very much like an episode of the series, and Cox always delivers.

Looking forward to the next book, Greg!