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New Images From LOWER DECKS 104: “Moist Vessel”

This week brings us to the fourth episode of Star Trek: Lower Decks, and we’ve got your next round of new photos from “Moist Vessel” today!

In this new episode, Ensign Tendi (Noel Wells) spends her time trying to fix a colleague’s botched “spiritual ascension,” while Mariner (Tawny Newsome) finds herself assigned a series of menial and demeaning tasks aboard the Cerritos after disrespecting Captain Freeman (Dawnn Lewis) — her mother — in front of the crew.

Here are nine new photos from this week’s episode, along with two previously-released images for “Moist Vessel.”

Finally, if you didn’t catch it at the end of “Temporal Edict,” here’s the preview for this coming week’s new episode of Star Trek: Lower Decks.

MOIST VESSEL — Captain Freeman seeks the ultimate payback after Mariner blatantly disrespects her in front of the crew. A well-meaning Tendi accidentally messes up a Lieutenant’s attempt at spiritual ascension and tries to make it right.

Written by Ann Kim. Directed by Barry J. Kelly.

Star Trek: Lower Decks returns Thursday, August 27 with “Moist Vessel” on CBS All Access and CTV Sci-Fi Channel. International distribution for the series has not yet been announced.

Celebrate STAR TREK: VOYAGER’s 25th Anniversary With New Comic and Behind-the-Scenes Retrospective Book

While all of this year’s in-person Star Trek: Voyager celebrations have been tentatively postponed or cancelled, this fall, the print world is doing its part to give the fourth live-action Trek series its due for it’s silver anniversary!

Starting in November, a one-two punch of in-universe comic storytelling and in-depth behind-the-scenes insight comes from IDW Publishing and Hero Collector, beginning with a four-issue comic series set during the show’s fourth season.

Star Trek: Voyager — Seven’s Reckoning tells a new tale set in 2374, just after Seven of Nine joined the crew in “Scorpion, Part II” and “The Gift,” in the earliest days of her journey into humanity after being liberated from the Borg.

Here’s the announcement from IDW:

The Humanity of Voyager’s Beloved Borg Survivor is
Put to the Test in ‘Seven’s Reckoning’

‘Seven’s Reckoning’ opens with the USS Voyager encountering a damaged alien ship deep in the Delta Quadrant. What at first seems to be a simple repair mission becomes much more complicated for Seven of Nine as she becomes ensnared by an ancient conflict, one that puts her newfound humanity to the test.

“As a lifelong ‘Star Trek’ fan, being able to play my small part in advancing the ideals of a better tomorrow means the world to me,” says Baker. “This plays directly into why I wanted to write the book to begin with. To put it simply, the stories we tell one another matter… and the stories we tell ourselves matter most of all.”

“After the amazing response to our ‘Voyager’ one-shot set in the Mirror Universe, we’re thrilled to return to the Delta Quadrant for a full four issues,” says editor Chase Marotz. “Dave Baker is a talented writer and huge ‘Trek’ fan with a great understanding of the characters. Angel Hernandez, who has wowed fans with his work on ‘Star Trek / Green Lantern’ and ‘Picard — Countdown,’ keeps getting better and better, and Ronda Pattison will bring her unique palette to an all-new alien species that we think fans are going to love. We have a great crew and can’t wait for people to see where we’re going!”

Seven’s Reckoning is a four-issue monthly comic book miniseries written by Dave Baker (Star Trek: Waypoint, Action Hospital), illustrated by Angel Hernandez (Star Trek: Picard — Countdown, Transformers), and colored by Ronda Pattison (Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles).

The first issue, Star Trek: Voyager – Seven’s Reckoning #1, will be available in November with multiple cover variants, including Cover A by Angel Hernandez, Cover B featuring a cast photo of Seven of Nine as portrayed by Jeri Ryan, and a Retailer Incentive edition by Jeffrey Veregge (G.I. Joe, Red Wolf).

Following the comic launch is the November 17 arrival of Star Trek: Voyager — A Celebration, an all-new hardcover from our friend Ben Robinson over at Hero Collector, with in-depth insight into the creation of the series, along with production secrets that brought the show to life and a number of new interviews from the cast and creative team behind the Voyager story.

Here’s the official synopsis:

STAR TREK: VOYAGER was groundbreaking. It was the first STAR TREK show with a female captain and had the franchise’s most diverse cast. It pushed the boundaries of visual effects and makeup further than ever before, and literally took the show into new territory when Voyager was stranded in the Delta Quadrant, home of the Borg Collective.

STAR TREK: VOYAGER – A CELEBRATION tells the behind-the-scenes story of Voyager’s epic journey, from its earliest origins and pivotal episodes to in- depth features on writing, directing, visual effects, production art and more.

This is the ultimate guide to the making of a television classic. It is based on more than 30 new interviews, featuring the nine principal cast members, including Kate Mulgrew, Jeri Ryan, and Robert Picardo, and key behind-the-scenes personnel who reveal the stories and secrets behind the show.

STAR TREK: VOYAGER first appeared on TV on 16 January 1995, running for 172 episodes over seven seasons. Charting the adventures of the 24th Century Starfleet Vessel U.S.S. Voyager, this multi award-winning series followed the starship and its crew to the distant side of the galaxy. Celebrating 25 years since its first broadcast episode, this book explores the very best of STAR TREK: VOYAGER, with chapters looking at the greatest episodes, alien characters, visual effects, hair and makeup, costumes and guest stars. Plus the actors talk of their memories of the show, and recall their personal highlights over its six-and-a-half year run.

There are also a few preview pages of this 216-page hardcover, thanks to online retailer listings.

 

Star Trek: Voyager — A Celebration will arrive on November 17, and is available for preorder now. Watch for more coverage of this anniversary publication as we get close to the release date!

Star Trek: Voyager
A Vision of the Future



Star Trek: Voyager
Complete Series on DVD



Star Trek: Voyager
A Celebration



STAR TREK: LOWER DECKS Review: “Temporal Edict”

with Jim Moorhouse and Ken Reilly

The ensigns of Star Trek: Lower Decks are not the only crew members of the USS Cerritos on a journey of self-discovery, as this week’s “Temporal Edict” shows.

After the series’ initial episodes were firmly focused on the four series leads — Boimler, Mariner, Tendi, and Rutherford — “Temporal Edict” allows for Captain Freeman and Commander Ransom to share the spotlight and explores their characters in more detail.

Frustrated that the Cerritos has lost out on a prestigious diplomatic mission to Cardassia Prime, Captain Freeman (Dawnn Lewis) imposes strict scheduling on her crew to maximize their efficiency and prove that she’s a good enough captain for the prestige missions. Eliminating the lower-decks practice known as “buffer time,” the crew quickly become exhausted.

This exhaustion has near deadly effects, when a diplomatic mission to Gelrak 5 almost turns deadly. Mariner (Tawny Newsome) and Ransom (Jerry O’Connell) must rescue the away team, while Freeman and Boimler (Jack Quaid) work to repel boarders on the Cerritos.

“Temporal Edict” is a different kind of Star Trek celebration than last week’s “Envoys.” Where last week’s episode was propelled by a massive number of visual and dialogue references to previous Star Trek shows and movies, “Temporal Edict” plays much more with some of the franchise’s staple of tropes, rather than out and out references.

Captain Freeman has trouble keeping up with her own orders. (CBS All Access)

On the ship, Captain Freeman’s anger and shame at being excluded from a prestigious assignment is the main theme explored in the episode. Initially it appears as if she’s taking the slight out on her crew by punishing them for being relegated to a diplomatic courtesy mission. But, as the Gelrakians invade the Cerritos after being insulted by the away team’s presentation of the wrong holy relic, Boimler discovers that Freeman is not so much punishing the crew as she is punishing herself by also being subject to the new scheduling rules.

The Freeman story is a new angle on the traditional Star Trek captain’s tale, because she is not automatically the smartest, most capable officer that our previous heroes have been. She’s flawed, like the lower deckers, and working on it – not always with productive results.

Meanwhile, on the planet, Mariner must learn the lesson that she’s not always the best placed to fix any given situation, and that sometimes senior officers are more senior for a reason. Though initially bumbling his way through a few potential escapes with the Gelrakians — “I have written a speech!” — brawn ultimately wins over brains and Ransom subdues the Gelrakian champion, Vindor.

The Ransom/Mariner relationship is a fun one, that I hope the show continues to explore. Jerry O’Connell’s Ransom is fast becoming my favorite of the senior officers, and Tawny Newsome’s Mariner is my favorite of the core four ensigns.

And in a sign that, as the show settles into its groove the four ensigns will appear more or less depending on that week’s episode, both Rutherford (Eugene Cordero) and Tendi (Noel Wells) get a bit less to do this week than in the previous two episodes.

Ransom and Mariner knee up in classic Will Riker fashion. (CBS All Access)

Trek Trope Tributes

  • The episode opens with a violin concert at the Cerritos‘ bar, echoing many a relaxing classical music concerts in Ten Forward aboard the Enterprise-D… except that Mariner and Tendi then rock out so hard it’s heard over an open comm channel with a nearby Klingon ship. Oops!
     
  • The Lower Deckers practice of “buffer time” is based on “creative scheduling,” by telling senior officers a task will take much longer than it really will and then enjoying the praise when it is completed early. Sounds like a certain Scottish chief engineer and miracle worker from a previous Enterprise!
     
  • This episode contains a classic “computer, halt turbolift” scene followed by a very serious conversation. I missed those.
     
  • Ransom disengages the shuttle’s autopilot and lands it manually, despite there being absolutely no need to have done so.
     
  • Before agreeing to fight Vindor, Ransom first tries to secure release for him and the rest of the away team by writing a speech. I love a good Star Trek speech!
     
  • The fight between Ransom and Vindor is one extended Trek Trope Tribute! As previously seen in many different episodes — “Arena,” “The Savage Curtain,” “The Gamesters of Triskelion,” “Darmok,” etc. — our crew is put into a trial by combat situation. And then, of course, Ransom immediately rips his shirt off and attacks Vindor with the Kirk-patented two-handed punch. (Chris Westlake’s score for the scene also has a very strong “Amok Time” vibe to it).

Canon Connections

Klingon Bird of Prey

During the cold open, the Cerritos is in the middle of a rendezvous with a Klingon Bird of Prey. The first time this classic vessel has made an animated appearance, thee ship retains the first introduced back in 1984’s Star Trek III: The Search for Spock.

Cardassia Prime

The USS Cerritos is initially headed for the homeworld of the Cardassian Union, which was seen multiple times in Deep Space Nine… though we aren’t sure what a ceremonial Cardassian dance might look like!

Baryon Sweep

Boimler tells Captain Freeman he has just assisted in conducting a baryon sweep of the warp nacelles. The Enterprise and underwent a full baryon sweep, designed to remove long term buildup of the harmful particles, in the TNG episode “Starship Mine.”

The 2260s

In universe acknowledgement of historical events and exact years are quite rare — the official dating of Kirk’s five year mission wasn’t even mentioned until Voyager’s “Q2” — so Mariner’s line (“What am I, Kirk? Is this the 2260s?”) is a notable one!

Magus III

One of Mariner’s scars was from an incident on Magus III. Guinan owned a rifle from the planet, which she showed off effectively in the TNG episode “Night Terrors.”

Delta Shift

Captain Jellico’s dreaded four-shift rotation gets a shout out from Ensign Tendi, who doesn’t like that “Delta Shift thinks they are so much better than us… just because they are so much better than us.”

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Other Observations

  • Boimler is humming the Next Generation theme before Captain Freeman joins him in the turbolift ride to the bridge.
     
  • Ransom mentions he has encountered “horned gorillas” during his Starfleet career – perhaps a Mugato?
     
  • Several times during this episode, Ransom adopts the classic Riker “leg up” command.
     
  • The Starfleet Command logo on the case presented to the Gelrakians matches that of the Command logo from Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country.
     
  • Mariner says she’s good at exploring “strange new worlds,” another entry for the iconic Star Trek credo into the canon.
     
  • Dilithium crystals get a mention in reference to the crystal-loving Gelrakians when Boimler says they don’t have any crystals: “Well, expect dilithium — but you can’t have those!”
     
  • The Cerritos’ coffee mugs are white with the Starfleet delta on them, quite similar to Captain Kirk’s delta-adorned mug from the opening minutes of Star Trek Beyond.
     
  • In the far future, Boimler is seen alongside one of the “great birds of the galaxy,” of course a reference to Gene Roddenberry, who earned that nickname himself.
     
  • Love a Miles O’Brien reference — especially one tying back to his days as a transporter operator aboard the Enterprise-D. “Perhaps the most important person in Starfleet history: Chief Miles O’Brien!” (Also perhaps the most random reference in Lower Decks to date!)
“The laziest, most corner-cutting officer in Starfleet history.” (CBS All Access)

Star Trek: Lower Decks is firing on all cylinders, and with more episodes comes a deeper exploration of the Cerritos and its crew. As we get more comfortable with these characters and their relationships, there is a lot of potential for great things to come.

Star Trek: Lower Decks returns on August 27 with “Moist Vessel,” the fourth episode of the season, on CBS All Access in the United States and CTV Sci Fi Channel in Canada. Additional international availability for the series has not yet been announced.

STAR TREK: SHORT TREKS Available for Free ‘Til August 31

Thanks to the short-form series’ Emmy nomination last month, CBS has now made the six Star Trek: Short Trek tales released in late 2019 available for free viewing to promote the production for award consideration.

Launching this morning on CBS.com, the network’s mobile apps, and on YouTube, the six most recent Short Trek episodes will be available for free through the end of this month, including:

  • The Captain-Pike-and-Enterprise-crew stories “Q & A,” “The Trouble with Edward,” and “Ask Not,” which serve as unofficial prequels to the in-development Star Trek: Strange New Worlds series coming 2021

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0j6s_zfgv4c

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fx0Eg5NvDbw

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RHAEBJ7xKv4

  • The animated Star Trek: Discovery tie-ins “Ephraim and Dot” and “The Girl Who Made the Stars

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PGOsa4Ojiss

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=72w6-qP0Ve0

  • The Star Trek: Picard prequel short “Children of Mars,” which is set years before the events of the series on a day that changes the Federation forever

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hot0uT8c3ys

Unfortunately, as is to be expected, the video links are region-locked to the United States only — as international distribution is contractually outside of CBS’s purview — but fans still have the ability to watch the Strange New Worlds and Discovery shorts on the recent Short Treks Blu-ray release, and October’s Star Trek: Picard — Season 1 Blu-ray set will include “Children of Mars” as one of its bonus features.

Franchise boss Alex Kurtzman has recently talked about his desire to produce more entries in the Short Treks series, with some potential ideas shared in the interview we covered last week.

Star Trek: Discovery
Season 1 Blu-ray

Star Trek: Discovery
Season 2 Blu-ray

Star Trek: Discovery
Season 3 Blu-ray

New Images From LOWER DECKS 103: “Temporal Edict”

This week brings us to the third episode of Star Trek: Lower Decks, and we’ve got your next round of new photos from “Temporal Edict” today — as Captain Freeman (Dawnn Lewis) decides that it’s time to crack down on the Cerritos’ crew’s below-par efficiency, while Ensign Mariner (Tawny Newsome) and Commander Ransom (Jerry O’Connell) face off during an away mission.

Here are eight new photos from this week’s episode, along with two previously-released images for “Temporal Edict.”

An advance clip of the episode debuted last Friday during the ReedPop Metaverse live panel with the Lower Decks production team.

Meanwhile, Star Trek licensee FanSets has announced its upcoming line of Lower Decks pins are coming to collectors soon, with plans to release versions of the Cerritos crew, the California-class USS Cerritos itself, as well as pins representing the on-ship bar logo and the silver Starfleet delta worn by the show’s officers.

Finally, if you didn’t catch it at the end of “Envoys,” here’s the preview for this coming week’s new episode of Star Trek: Lower Decks.

TEMPORAL EDICT — A new work protocol eliminating “buffer time” has the Lower Decks crew running ragged as they try to keep up with their tightened schedules. Ensign Mariner and Commander Ransom’s mutual lack of respect comes to a head during an away mission.

Written by Dave Ihlenfeld & David Wright. Directed by Bob Suarez.

Star Trek: Lower Decks returns Thursday, August 20 with “Temporal Edict” on CBS All Access and CTV Sci-Fi Channel. International distribution for the series has not yet been announced.

STAR TREK: LOWER DECKS Review: “Envoys”

with Jim Moorhouse and Ken Reilly

Despite our delayed publication schedule this week — thanks, everyone, for your patience! — the second contact with Star Trek: Lower Decks is a hilarious success, as the show’s sophomore episode, “Envoys” builds upon the groundwork laid in last week’s premiere while continuing to tell a fun — and funny — story.

The A-plot of “Envoys” continues to develop Ensigns Mariner (Tawny Newsome) and Boimler (Jack Quaid) as they attempt to deliver a Klingon ambassador to a rendezvous on the neutral planet Tulgana IV. Meanwhile, back on the Cerritos, Ensign Rutherford (Eugene Cordero) explores reassignment to other departments aboard the ship in order to spend more time with his new friend, Ensign Tendi (Noël Wells).

Mariner and Boimler continue to have the most chemistry of any of the characters, and across the first two episodes of Lower Decks, they are emerging as the show’s primary relationship — though clearly more of siblings rather than anything romantic. The two characters, as much as they may annoy each other on the surface, clearly have deep affection for one another as they continue to balance each other’s strengths and weaknesses.

Boimler and Mariner have different outlooks on their away mission. (CBS All Access)

Newsome’s performance as Mariner continues to be utterly delightful. And thanks to Rutherford’s reassignment roulette — something showrunner Mike McMahan designed to give viewers a “tour” of the Cerritos — the ship’s senior staff also get a little more screen time, as the young engineer tests his career options with Commander Ransom (Jerry O’Connell,) Doctor T’Ana (Gillian Vigman) and security chief Lieutenant Shaxs (Fred Tatasciore).

The characters on this show are a delight, and the way in which each of the department heads supports Rutherford’s search for the right fit is very Star Trek.

If there is one criticism among all the great things about “Envoys,” it is Boimler’s reaction to the Ferengi character at the end. While the show does a great job of subverting your expectations about the Ferengi himself — as the final scene reveals that Mariner called in a favor with Quimp to help her restore Boimler’s confidence — I didn’t care for the way Boimler treated and talked about the Ferengi at the bar later by laughing about his cultural traits.

Ensign Rutherford trades in his engineering gold for medical blue… for a few minutes, anyhow. (CBS All Access)

While we know that young cadets are “warned about Ferengi at the Academy,” as Harry Kim obliviously told Quark in the Star Trek: Voyager pilot, Boimler’s jabs at the four-lobed fellow — “Big ears, beady eyes, the greedy thing they do with their hands!” — was honestly kind of racist for an ‘enlightened’ 24th century human.

Armin Shimmerman wrote a whole novel exploring the idea that the Federation is a little racist towards Ferengi, and Boimler’s reaction here is no departure from that. But after two decades of rightfully calling out the way Star Trek: Deep Space Nine sometimes treated its Ferengi characters as laugh lines, particularly in the early days, and even deconstructing that narrative within the show itself in later seasons, to see it ported over to Lower Decks is a little dismaying.

But not enough to derail an otherwise stellar episode.

Trek Trope Tributes

  • The episode’s cold open includes a trans-dimensional, ball-of-energy alien who arrives randomly on the ship, which has strong “The Child,” “Imaginary Friend” and “Day of the Dove” vibes — with the energy being even proclaiming, “I shall make a feast of your misery!”
     
  • Captain Freeman talks about how she needs a catchphrase for going to warp (like “Make it so!” or “Hit it!” for previous captains) though her suggestion “It’s warp time!” could probably do with a little work.
Tendi and Mariner encounter a glowing orb in the corridor. (CBS All Access)
  • Mariner calls out the way in which many Klingon names are similar and how they all “have an apostrophe for some reason.” She’s not far off the mark, with names like K’mpec, B’Etor, K’vort, K’mtar, K’Tal, K’Temoc, K’Vada – and now K’orin!
     
  • Mariner having a preexisting relationship with K’orin echoes characters like Dax, who we learned had a long history with Klingon warriors prior to Jadzia’s time aboard Deep Space 9.
     
  • If the holodeck programming reflects reality, the Cerritos has children aboard — during Rutherford’s command simulation, the ship “loses” both its kindergarten and pre-K classrooms. (“All the ships children have been ejected into space!”)
     
  • Boimler predicts a future for himself in which he is assigned to an asteroid research facility where he studies insects, until they eat him, but not before he is able to send out a distress call that gets picked up by a nearby starship who need to then reconstruct what happened to him from his final shaky log entry. Sound like any episodes of Star Trek you know?
     
  • Mariner’s reaction to the thought of working on a research asteroid speaks volumes to all the less than prestigious Starfleet assignments out there: “Absolutely not. Do not even joke about that. That is the lamest thing you can do!”
Kaelon, Klingon, Ferengi, Lurian, Skorr, and Napean…

Alien Alert!

  • Klingon: Ambassador K’orin,one of several Klingons seen in the episode, wears an eye patch similar to General Chang (Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country).
     
  • Evora: The short, herbivoral aliens from the opening moments of Star Trek: Insurrection can be spotted walking around the spaceport landing pad as the shuttle lands.
     
  • Kaelon: Seen in the TNG episode “Half a Life,” Mariner notes that they are notoriously isolationist. I mean, who expected to ever see a Kaelon again?! This show!
     
  • Andorian: A number of Andorians appear in this episode, many wearing uniforms of the Andorian Imperial Guard and carrying ushaan-tor blade weapons.
     
  • Bajoran: In addition to security chief Shax, the officer about to be operated on in Sickbay that Rutherford is tasked with calming down is also a Bajoran.
     
  • Napean: Introduced in the TNG episode “Eye of the Beholder,” the Cerritos also has a Napean crewman in Shax’s security division.
…Borg, Andorian, Evora, Bajoran, and the tentacled Vendorian.
  • Vendorian: A true throwback to The Animated Series, we see our first tentacled Vendorian shapeshifter since 1973’s “The Survivor.”
     
  • Skorr: If one TAS alien wasn’t enough for you, we also see a member of the tall, golden birdlike Skorr race in an overhead establishing shot of the Klingon market. The winged aliens were prominently featured in 1974’s “The Jihad.”
     
  • Lurian: The race of DS9’s talkative barfly Morn, a Lurian can be seen brawling in the Andorian bar (and also in the establishing shot of the Klingon market).
     
  • Ferengi: Mariner’s pal Quimp is the first Ferengi to appear sine 2002’s “Acquisition.” In his playacting scene, he cosplays as a “The Last Outpost”-era Ferengi, complete with furry sash.
     
  • Borg: In Shax’s “Smorgasborg” security training program, Rutherford faces off against a squadron of Borg drones, easily taken out with the help of his Vulcan cybernetic upgrade.

Canon Connections

Klingon Greetings & Songs

In order to impress Ambassador K’orin, Boimler tries out a few different variations on the pronunciation of the traditional Klingon greeting – Nuq’nuh — translating to ‘(eventually deciding to “keep it subtle”). And later Mariner and K’orin sing a Klingon anthem together.

EPS Conduits

Rutherford is seen aligning the EPS conduits; additionally, one of the tools he uses is a common engineering tool seen in Deep Space Nine, and also made an appearance in the hands of the Red Bolian in the recent Picard episode “Stardust City Rag.”

Klingon Paraphernalia

As Boimler and Mariner exit the shuttle, they step over K’orin who has passed out on the floor. Around him are Klingon blood wine bottles (as seen in Deep Space Nine), a Klingon d’k tagh knife, and his luggage is very similar to the carry case used by Colonel West disguised as a Klingon sniper in Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country. (And if you know where those flagons on the shuttle came from, please let Ensign Boimler know!)

Khitomer Accords

Boimler mentions he thinks they might be violating the Khitomer Accords, the famous peace treaty between the Federation and the Klingon Empire that was developed from the events of The Undiscovered Country.

Section 31

By 2380, the shadowy organization is again common knowledge among Starfleet personnel, as Boimler mentions them in passing. I’m sure this reference will not be controversial at all among fans. (Mariner also mentions some previous “off-the-books grey ops stuff” with K’orin.)

Type VI Shuttle

As the Cerritos’ shuttle — a Type 6A design — lands in the Klingon district, Type VI shuttles (the main shuttle from later seasons of The Next Generation) can be seen parked in the background.

Mek’leth

The Klingon street vendor is armed with a mek’leth, the smaller of the two Klingon swords that was a favorite of Worf’s (like in First Contact, when he uses it to cut the arm off a Borg).

Klingon Armory

One of the street vendors in the Klingon district is selling a number of Klingon weapons, including variations seen throughout the whole franchise history. Included on display are the TOS Klingon disruptor, the version seen throughout TNG and DS9 (“beak nose”), Kelvin Timeline Klingon disruptors, and a “death sting” (seen in the TOS movies).

Jamaharon

There are several references in the episode to the Risian pleasure seeking activity, known as jamaharon (which is, y’know…) Also seen in the Risian district is a large Horgahn statue; both jamahoran and the Horgahn were first referenced in The Next Generation episode “Captain’s Holiday.”

Ushaan-tor

The Andorians are armed with the ushaan-tor weapons seen in the Enterprise episode “United.”

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Other Observations

  • While having her awesome dream, Mariner is quietly reciting lines from Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan, referencing “the moons of Nibia” and being “marooned for all eternity.”
     
  • The establishing shot of Tulgana IV includes a spire tower and radial structure, which strongly resembles Deneb IV’s Farpoint Station.
     
  • There is also a lot of Star Trek: Enterprise­-style architecture across the various alien sectors of the planet’s surface, perhaps indicating that Tulgana IV has been occupied for several centuries. The look of “Little Qo’noS” matches Klingon buildings seen on Enterprise, the Andorian designs reflect the starship interiors of the Kumari and similar vessels, and the Federation Embassy looks a lot like the Earth Embassy seen in “The Forge.”
     
  • Commander Ransom tells Rutherford that “nothing compares to the firm hot pulse of a joystick in your hand,” a fun crack at the Enterprise-E’s “manual steering column” from Star Trek: Insurrection. (Because there is no way he was talking about anything else, right?)
     
  • Ransom also suggests that Rutherford use “The Janeway Protocol,” which seems to frighten and alarm the holographic crew once the young ensign tries to put it into practice. (Here’s hoping we never find out what it is, only suggestions of chaos and disaster that the Janway Protocol might bring about!)
     
  • Rutherford echoes Wesley Crusher’s famous line from “Justice” — “I’m with Starfleet: we don’t lie!” — when he commits to joining Tendi to watch the Trivoli Pulsar. “I’m Starfleet; I never go back on my word!”
     
  • As Boimler and Mariner approach Quimp on the planet’s surface, some very Vasquez Rocks-looking outcroppings fill the background.

If you thought “Second Contact” had a lot of Star Trek references in it, as you can see, “Envoys” totally blows it out the water by taking franchise references, callbacks, and Easter eggs to the next level, all wrapped up in a genuinely good, funny episode of Star Trek.

Star Trek: Lower Decks returns on August 20 with “Temporal Edict,” the third episode of the season, on CBS All Access in the United States and CTV Sci Fi Channel in Canada. Additional international availability for the series has not yet been announced.

INTERVIEW: Mike McMahan on STAR TREK: LOWER DECKS’ Animation Design, Balancing Canon and Creativity, and “Good People Doing Good Things” in Starfleet

Star Trek: Lower Decks is heading into its third week on the air, and as the episodes continue to roll out, we caught up with series creator and showrunner Mike McMahan to talk about the show’s animated art style, why the TNG era is such a draw for storytelling, and how his team uses existing Trek canon to form the Lower Decks world.

Mike McMahan at San Diego Comic Con 2019.

TREKCORE: You’ve talked about your inspiration for the show, and how you pitched it to the team at Secret Hideout – but how did you land on the look of the show, the character design, and the overall animation style for Lower Decks?

MIKE MCMAHAN: I grew up watching The Simpsons and Futurama, and Family Guy a little bit later, and King of the Hill – and from, from my time working in animation, I’ve worked in and around a lot of what people would call primetime animated comedy.

That’s the stuff you see around the 7:00 PM block on Fox, and other places too, you know, the ‘animation domination’ style; that’s what I grew up with. I was a [production assistant] on South Park, I was a P.A. on Drawn Together, and a writers’ assistant and eventually showrunner on Rick & Morty – so that, combined with really loving the feeling that I get from watching Simpsons and Futurama

Like, those shows really land for me in a way that are really comforting. So when we sitting down with the artists at Titmouse Animation — whose art team makes the show in their studio in Vancouver – my edict for what the show should look like were really coming from a place of where I wanted a combination of things to work.

Because we were animated, because we’re a comedy, I wanted the character designs to really have the prime-time animated comedy vibe. All of the characters seem like, from a distance, when you sit down to watch the show, it’s probably not going to be an action kids show. And on top of that, I really wanted the backgrounds, the ship design, and all of the stuff behind the characters to be an elevated version of what you might see in a prime-time animated comedy.

So traditionally, you have very few backgrounds, you have very few incidentals, and you don’t spend a bunch of time making sure that everything in the background is looking gorgeous and crazy and awesome — but on Lower Decks, you know, it’s the opposite of that. I wanted a lot of detailed backgrounds, I wanted a lot of references to The Next Generation for the prime-time animated-looking characters to inhabit.

McMahan on the ‘Discovery’ set during production of his ‘Short Trek,’ the Harry Mudd-centric ‘The Escape Artist.’ (Photos: Mike McMahan)

Now, alongside all of that, I explained this a lot to our art team, the prime-time look of the characters — those designs — they feel very human to me, even when they’re not human. We have voice actors on our show, but you’re not seeing an actor inhabiting an actual space… and I wanted the design of the characters to reflect a feeling of, you know, these are people. These are human beings and these are aliens that are inhabiting these sci-fi areas.

It went hand in hand with the feeling of the grounded sort of every-man vibe of The Simpsons in a way. At least, that’s what we were trying for.

TREKCORE: When you start talking about Star Trek, there’s nothing people pay more attention to than the details: especially in prop design, costume design, alien and set designs.

How do you take these familiar elements, that are so well known in the physical world, and translate them into this animated world?

MCMAHAN: Well, many of the people on the show – and many of the artists on the show — are Star Trek fans, and we have a lot of people who are in charge of making sure that if you write a scene where technology is being used, we then dive into the existing Star Trek lore and imagery.

I mean, there are so many reference guides — not only physical, but also online — you know, the fan reference guides, the various kind of wikis that are out there, and episode guides, and still frames from all of the, all of the series and the movies that exist for us to be able to look at. What we do is we write the scene so that it’s really driven from an emotional place, and from a comedic place, and then when the artists are going through it, everything is hand designed — every element of the show.

It’s not like you can just open up a prop cabinet. So we will get a bunch of designs, and then a group of us who are huge, very knowledgeable Trek fans will say, “Oh, not this, you know, that’s too old of a phaser for this setting. Put this type of phaser into the visual lexicon of the show.” Or, like, “Oh, a shuttle can’t have those types of weapons on it. They would never put that on there.”

The Andorian ushaan-tor blade, introduced in ‘Enterprise,’ is given an animated rendition. (CBS All Access)

That kind of thing — we’re really trying to follow the rules of any other Star Trek show that would take place in 2380, but also translate them, with our artists, into the animated version that we’re doing. You’ll see across Season 1 — this always happens in animated shows — we get better and better at it as each episode goes on, because we’re building what we know of as ‘our version’ of that TNG era… just in a hand drawn way.

TREKCORE: And what sort of timeline does the development of each episode follow? Obviously right now, pandemic life has turned every production schedule upside down, but when things are ‘normal,’ what’s it take to bring an episode of Lower Decks from story idea to screen?

MCMAHAN: Well, let’s say the show’s been picked up and you’re ready to go – maybe you have a pilot written, maybe you don’t – but it’s usually about 13 months from ‘zero’ to having a finished episode.

That can give or take, you know, a little bit more or less, depending on how long the episodes are, how complicated they are… or if there’s a global pandemic keeping everybody working remotely so you can’t just pop into somebody’s office and be like, “Hey, does this bat’leth look right?”

Instead you have to schedule a Zoom call, or shoot an email off and wait! But the process, in a nutshell, is: you write it, you have a lot of conversations about the script, and then you record it with the actors and they give their shine to it. Then we get, like, an old-timey radio play version of the episode, that gets distributed to the [storyboard] artists, who start putting together sequences.

An early animatic sketch for the holodeck beach resort program seen in ‘Second Contact.’ (CBS All Access)

And then at the same time, once you know how many things are supposed to be in each episode — and depending on what planet you’re going to — you’re working with the character designers to design new aliens, or figure out what our Klingons look like, or what our Andorians look like.

Then you’re working with the background artists and the color artists, and everybody’s kind of working hand-in-hand to make sure that it’s all filtering through me — because there has to be one person saying ‘yes’ or ‘no’ at the very end of the day.

That’s kind of like what I really geek out over — all these different artists who are all loving it… and then the more we do, the more they understand what the show should look like.

TREKCORE: That also means you get to see your name in that classic blue Next Generation font in the credits every week, which has to be pretty mind-blowing.

MCMAHAN: Oh, it’s the best. The best! Even while making the show, I was like, “Are they gonna let me do that?”

The classic 1987-era ‘Next Generation’ font returns for the ‘Lower Decks’ credits sequence. (CBS All Access)

TREKCORE: The last fifteen years – between the Kelvin Timeline movies, Discovery, and Captain Pike – have been a lot of Original Series-era stuff, but now with Picard and Lower Decks, 2020 has become the year of Next Generation nostalgia.

What is it about that TNG era that makes such a great time period for Star Trek storytelling, instead of centering Lower Decks at some new point in the Trek timeline?

MCMAHAN: Well, I think the TNG era did a really amazing job of showing people in charge who were responsible, and ethical, and really liked to talk stuff out, and really make sure that the right thing was being done…  and I think right now, maybe, the people in charge [of the world] don’t always seem like that they are guided by, you know, being bastions of truth and honesty.

Like, I think that ‘Truth-with-a-capital-T’ is kind of getting banged around right now a little bit. So there is this baseline of Starfleet, and these morality stories in all the Star Trek shows — but for me growing up, especially in TNG — I like playing in a world where there are rules and there are good people doing good things.

Then, you want to write characters that are also good people trying to do good things, but who have personality. They don’t have to be like existing cast of a Star Trek show to be a good person who wants to do better, and who wants to explore.

There’s room in the TNG galaxy for the characters we’ve made for Lower Decks.

A blink-and-you’ll-miss-it return of the Kaelon alien race, seen once back in 1991’s ‘Half a Life.’ (CBS All Access)

TREKCORE: Now that you’re set in that part of the franchise timeline, how do you choose  between fitting in a familiar alien, introducing a new technology, or calling back to that one weird creature from a 1993 episode of Next Gen when you’re breaking stories?

‘Canon’ can be a dreaded word sometimes for the Star Trek creative teams — it’s obviously something you’re embracing closely in Lower Decks — but where you strike the balance between a making a reference to something known, and creating something new for your stories?

MCMAHAN: I mean, nobody on our show goes into it being like, “Ooh, we’re making an Easter egg show!” Like, every single person is there to tell emotional stories about Mariner, Boimler, Rutherford, and Tendi.

For us, all of the Easter eggs and all of the little references and stuff that are in the episodes aren’t there for people to pick through – they’re really there to create a rich, vibrant, fun expression of the world of Star Trek in that era, and incorporating elements of other areas.

Because we’re such a different show, and we have such a different tone from all other Star Trek shows, it just brings us a lot of joy to bring in all that Starfleet stuff and to bring in all the alien stuff, and to honor the other shows that already existed.

That fine line is, you know, we’ve had to pull stuff out, like when an artist loves something from the Original Series and it gets into the show and it’s like, “Ooh, actually, that alien isn’t actually known by these people, “ or, “There would be no reason for that alien to be in this sector during this time period,” that kind of thing.

A Vendorian shapeshifter, first seen in 1973’s ‘The Survivor.’ (CBS All Access)

So if it’s making us ask more questions than providing answers, we’ll pull it out — but at the same time, the way I like to make animated shows? I’m a big re-watcher. I like to put stuff on and find new things every time I watch – I’m the kind of guy who just loved Where’s Waldo? books growing up.

I like to make TV shows feel like Where’s Waldo? books, so that you watched it four times because you love the characters, because you love Tawny Newsome and Jack Quaid’s performances, and Noel Wells’ and Eugene Cordero’s… but then you watch a fifth again and you say, “Wait a minute, look at that! I never noticed that!”

We want it to be like a visual feast, and be having fun, but if you don’t know any of those references, it doesn’t diminish the show – and if you know every one of them it’s going to be like sensory overload! But it should still feel like we’re doing it carefully.

We’re not just like spraying it all over the show and then being like, “Good luck! Have fun hunting it all down!”

Captain Freeman (Dawwn Lewis) and Ensign Mariner (Tawny Newsome) share a family secret. (CBS All Access)

TREKCORE: Tell me about the reveal in “Second Contact” that Mariner is actually Captain Freeman’s daughter. How will that surprise play out as the season continues?

MCMAHAN: We’ve seen a lot of parents in Star Trek with their kids before, but we’ve never seen one of those relationships where both of them are constantly at odds with each other.

For me, growing up, as many times as we had where our whole family was getting along, we also got in big arguments — because we love each other. That’s just how our family expressed what a long car ride should be like, you know?

I knew that I really wanted to write Mariner as a new type of Starfleet character, who is great at everything, but doesn’t have it all figured out yet – like, hasn’t figured out her place in Starfleet. And I knew that I wanted her to have been on other ships before the Cerritos, and that this assignment was kind of her last hurrah — her last chance of being a Starfleet officer.

Making her mom the captain — and making nobody else on the ship knew –provided very rare they’ve-never-done-this-on-Star-Trek-before character elements that got me really excited to find out what that might look like in a Star Trek show.

So it really was just a mixture of all those things that allowed me to write Mariner in a way that she could behave a little differently than other Starfleet characters, and allow me to write Captain Freeman in a way to allow her to behave a little bit differently as well, and it didn’t really break the rules of Starfleet, because they have this kind of secret between them.

That’s something we explore across the whole season in a way that I had a lot of fun with, and you’ll also see it reverberate into Season 2 as well.

Ensign Tendi (Noel Wells) gazes into the unknown. (CBS All Access)

TREKCORE: Before we wrap up here, Mike, what are your hopes for the series – and is there anything else you’d like to share with Star Trek fans who will be watching?

MCMAHAN: I’d say that I’m really excited for people to do the series. I know it’s tempting to judge the entire series based on each episode — but every episode is different. Every episode, has, you know, a story of the week with light serialization across the whole season.

I would say, keep watching the show if you’re finding things you like. If you’re holding us to task, if there are things that you want to be better, keep watching — because I think you’ll be really surprised at how many different, amazing, and fun kind of stories are coming across the first season.

We’ll have our review of Lower Decks’ second episode, “Envoys,” up on the site Sunday — just a little bit of real life getting in the way of our publication schedule this week.

In the meantime, let us know what you think about Mike McMahan’s insights into the creative processes behind Lower Decks in the comments below!

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Star Trek: Lower Decks returns this Thursday with “Temporal Edict” on CBS All Access in the United States, and CTV Sci Fi Channel in Canada. International availability for the series has not yet been announced.

STAR TREK: LOWER DECKS Discussion — “Envoys”

The newest episode of Star Trek: Lower Decks — “Envoys” — has just debuted on CBS All Access, and we’re sure you’re ready to dive into a discussion about the story!

Here’s your place to take on all the new Trek lore this episode brought us, with no restrictions on spoilers. If you haven’t yet watched the new episode yet, here’s your last warning!

We’ll have our full episode review — full of analysis, Trek tropes, canon connections and more — soon enough, along with a new interview with Star Trek: Lower Decks creator and showrunner Mike McMahan before the weekend, so keep your sensors locked!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_HzRGqvRK8U

Meanwhile, if you’ve still not had a chance to see the Lower Decks series premiere, CBS All Access has made “Second Contact” available for fans worldwide on YouTube for a limited time — so those of you outside North America can watch the first episode of the show!

Alex Kurtzman Wants More SHORT TREKS, and Talks “Upcoming Seasons” of DISCOVERY, PICARD, STRANGE NEW WORLDS, and SECTION 31

Last month’s Emmy nominations shined a spotlight on Star Trek: Short Treks, the short-form mini-episodes of Trek canon that have touched on various corners of Star Trek: Discovery and Star Trek: Picard over the last two years.

While it’s unclear if there’s any official plans to continue with the series quite yet, Star Trek franchise boss Alex Kurtzman is hopeful that the award nomination for ‘Outstanding Short Form Comedy or Drama Series’ will help spur on another wave of Short Treks in the future.

In a new interview with award-buzz blog Gold Derby, Kurtzman shared his thoughts on the future of Short Treks, including a few ideas for what kind of formats he’d like to see:

It was an amazing experiment, the Short Treks, because I think I love was the idea of using them to experiment with different tones and different styles and push at the boundaries of what ‘Star Trek’ feels like it can be.

[…]

Thanks to the Emmy nomination, I’m really hoping [there will be more]… There are so many different forms that the shorts can take. I’d love to do a musical, for example, I’d love to do one in black-and-white, and figure out what that means.

I could probably think of fifty different ways that we could tell stories, in fifty different little crevices of the ‘Star Trek’ universe to explore, that may not be the right kind of crevices for the larger shows, but we always think of the ‘Short Treks’ as scenes just as important as what’s going on in the main shows — but that you wouldn’t have time [to include].

Sonequa Martin-Green in a ‘Discovery’ Season 3 promotional image.

He also spoke for a moment about how the various Star Trek Universe writers rooms are making progress on future seasons of the shows during pandemic life, including mentions of Discovery — hinting that, despite what some corners of the Internet may tell you, Season 4 is on the way, though no official CBS announcement has yet been made — as well as Season 2 of Star Trek: Picard, and initial seasons of both the Captain Pike-centric Strange New Worlds and the Michelle Yeoh-starring series Section 31.

We’ve been running all of our writers’ rooms on Zoom. The silver lining is that we’ve been actually been able to get quite ahead [on] scripts for upcoming seasons of ‘Discovery,’ and ‘Picard,’ and ‘Strange New Worlds’ — which is going to be shooting next year — and ‘Section 31.’

It was fairly obvious that Star Trek: Discovery was set to follow Picard in the 2020 television line-up — thanks to promotion beginning nearly a year ago — and here Kurtzman confirms that it was planned for a spring debut before the pandemic impacted all areas of post-production.

The thing that we’re very lucky about is that we wrapped ‘Discovery’ [Season 3] ten days before the lockdown happened, so the challenge that it posed is that is slowed [post-production] down quite a bit; it slowed visual effects; it slowed editing. I’m now editing with our editors, and we’re both on our laptops.

Obviously, the visual effects companies took a very hard hit, and it took them a minute to get back on their feet after everything that happened. And when it comes to recording music, you can’t have musicians in an orchestra in one room any more, so each musician is individually recording their instruments and sending it to Jeff Russo – our composer – and Jeff has to mix them together as if they were all sitting together in a room.

So all of that takes a lot longer. That being said, everybody’s been heroic about it, and I think it’s given everybody a real purpose: we get to keep working, we get to keep occupying ourselves during this really difficult and challenging time — and we are planning to go back into production.

A lot of time has been taken, coming up with a big plan for how the sets and the stages are going to be run — that’s still being iterated right now — obviously, safety being everyone’s number one concern. Everybody’s working on that really diligently, because everybody wants to go back to work, and nobody wants to do it in a way that’s unsafe.

The good news for the animated shows is that those shows have been barreling full steam ahead, both ‘Lower Decks’ and ‘Star Trek: Prodigy.’ The animators are obviously working from home, the writers have just finished Season 2 of both shows….

We will be airing ‘Discovery’ after ‘Lower Decks.’ We’re done editing — we’re still doing work on the mixes and visual effects — but it’ll all be coming out soon, and I can’t wait for people to see it. I’m just so sad people couldn’t see it in the spring when it was supposed to originally come out — but that’s what COVID did to us.

Star Trek: Lower Decks continues weekly through October; Star Trek: Discovery Season 3 debuts on October 15. Air dates for Picard Season 2, Prodigy, Strange New Worlds, and Section 31 have not yet been announced.

Animated STAR TREK: PRODIGY Finds Its Creative Lead

We’re still a long way from seeing next year’s kids’ animation series, Star Trek: Prodigy, warp into our quadrant, but this week the driving creative force behind the show has been named by Nickelodeon and CBS’ Eye Animation Productions.

On Monday, the network and studio announced that Swiss-born director and producer Ben Hibon will serve as the director, co-executive producer, and creative lead behind Prodigy — the CG-animated show coming to Nickelodeon in 2021 — which follows a group of teens who take command of an abandoned Starfleet vessel.

Here’s the official press release on the news:

AWARD-WINNING DIRECTOR AND PRODUCER BEN HIBON TO DIRECT NICKELODEON’S ANIMATED SERIES, STAR TREK: PRODIGY

BURBANK, Calif.—August 10, 2020—Nickelodeon and CBS Television Studios today announced that award-winning director and producer Ben Hibon (Codehunters) will direct, co-executive produce and serve as the creative lead of Nickelodeon’s all-new animated series Star Trek: Prodigy.

The CG-animated series, which expands the Star Trek Universe, follows a group of lawless teens who discover a derelict Starfleet ship and use it to search for adventure, meaning and salvation. Star Trek: Prodigy will debut exclusively on Nickelodeon in 2021 for a new generation of fans.

“Ben’s contributions to the world of animation are immeasurable, and we are so lucky to have his vision and creative genius on Star Trek: Prodigy. As an incredible storyteller and a world builder with a distinct vision, his original approach paired with this beloved property will bring the characters to life in a whole new way,” said Ramsey Naito, Executive Vice President, Animation Production and Development, Nickelodeon Group.

Said Hibon, “Getting the chance to work on an IP like Star Trek has been an incredible opportunity, particularly when partnered with the talented teams at Nickelodeon, CBS and Secret Hideout – who have been pushing the boundaries of what animation and serialized storytelling for younger audiences can deliver.”

Hibon’s perhaps best known work is the animated Tale of Three Brothers sequence in 2010’s Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Part 1, which he directed — and would later go on to earn an Academy Award nomination for the tale.

He also directed the 2006 short film Codehunters, which received critical acclaim at dozens of international film festivals in 2006 and 2007.

Star Trek: Prodigy, expected to debut sometime in 2021, will be from CBS’ Eye Animation Productions, CBS Television Studios’ new animation arm; Secret Hideout; and Roddenberry Entertainment. Alex Kurtzman, Heather Kadin, Katie Krentz, Rod Roddenberry and Trevor Roth will serve as executive producers alongside Kevin and Dan Hageman. Mac Middleton will serve as a producer with Aaron Baiers as co-executive producer.