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Complete PICARD Season 1 Soundtrack Coming April 3

The next round of music from the just-concluded first season of Star Trek: Picard is on the way, and we’ve learned this afternoon that the series’ next collection beaming down soon.

Following up the “Volume 1” collection that was released back in February, publisher Lakeshore Records announced today that the next round of Star Trek: Picard music — featuring composer Jeff Russo’s score from “The Impossible Box,” “Nepenthe,” “Broken Pieces,” and the “Et in Arcadia Ego” two-parter, plus all earlier-released tracks from the entire season — will arrive for digital purchase and streaming on April 3.

Of note is the inclusion of Star Trek: Picard actor Isa Briones’ cover of “Blue Skies,” which played in the season finale as Data’s neural image — his ‘soul’ — was set free at the end of the episode.

Here’s the press announcement from label Lakeshore Records:

“BLUE SKIES” (FEATURING ISA BRIONES) MUSIC FROM STAR TREK: PICARD
SINGLE AVAILABLE TODAY ON ITUNES & SPOTIFY

Season One Finale of the CBS All Access Original Series
Starring Patrick Stewart Available to Stream Now

Forthcoming Complete Soundtrack Composed by Jeff Russo Available Digitally April 3

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE March 26, 2020: Lakeshore Records is announcing the release today of the digital single “Blue Skies” featuring Isa Briones (“Dahj/Soji” on Star Trek: Picard) on vocals—the highly popular version of the Irving Berlin classic–recorded and produced by Jeff Russo that appears in the current season of the CBS All Access original series Star Trek: Picard.

The song will also appear on the forthcoming complete version of the Star Trek: Picard — Original Series Soundtrack available digitally both domestically and internationally April 3. The album will include 27 additional tracks taken from the entire season composed by Russo. The song will be available on all other DSPs TBD.

As soon there is preorder information for the Star Trek: Picard — Season 1, Volume 2 soundtrack collection, we’ll make sure to share it — and in the meantime, if you’d like to pick up a copy of the “Blue Skies” cover, you can buy that as a single on Amazon or on iTunes today, or stream it on Spotify.

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APRIL 2 UPDATE: We’ve now got a full listing of the full, 55-track Star Trek: Picard Season 1 music collection, courtesy of Film Music Reporter.

In addition to all 28 tracks from the “Chapter 1” February release, the additional 27 tracks included in this release cover everything from Jurati and Rios’ late-night encounter to the concluding moments of the new La Sirena crew warping off to parts unknown.

29. Jurati and Rios Get Close (2:37)
30. Raffi Calls Bosch (3:26)
31. Raffi Opens Up (1:34)
32. Borg Cube (4:28)
33. Looking For Picard (5:10)
34. Walking Around Nepenthe (2:25)
35. Picard and Riker Reunite (2:34)
36. I Was Human (3:04)
37. Elnor Fights Narissa (2:47)
38. Picard Bids Farewell (5:01)
39. Tal Shiar Admonisher (2:46)
40. Staying Close (2:59)
41. Rios Feels Lost (2:06)
42. Hologram Meeting (1:06)
43. Raffi and Rios Talk (4:40)
44. Rios and Picard (3:13)
45. Unexpected Visitor (2:32)
46. Leaving the La Sirena (2:51)
47. Sutra Arrives (4:23)
48. Narek Escapes (8:07)
49. Butterfly (1:41)
50. Romulans Arrive Pt.1 (2:12)
51. Romulans Arrive Pt.2 (4:35)
52. Talking To Data (6:32)
53. The Crew Leaves As One (1:24)
54. Blue Skies (2:46)
55. Star Trek Picard Episode 110 End Credits (Full Version) (2:10)

You can listen to the full soundtrack collection here on Amazon, or here on Spotify, and here on Apple Music.

As for physical release of this collection, both CD and vinyl editions of the Star Trek: Picard Season 1 soundtrack are expected down the line, but no specific availability details are available just yet.

S1 Soundtrack: Chapter 1

S1 Soundtrack: Chapter 2

S2 Soundtrack

Michael Burnham Stands Tall in New STAR TREK: DISCOVERY Season 3 Teaser Video

As Star Trek: Picard concludes its 2020 run, CBS is now turning towards the return of Michael Burnham and company with new promotional footage for Star Trek: Discovery Season 3 that hit the web earlier today.

Filming on Discovery Season 3 wrapped in Toronto a few weeks ago, and while we still don’t have a firm date as to when we can expect new episodes of the Sonequa Martin-Green-led series to arrive for viewing, a brief new teaser dropped with the Picard finale on CBS All Access this morning, featuring Michael Burnham holding up what’s left of the Federation’s flag.

We first saw this glimpse of the future UFP banner in the Season 3 trailer that was released back in October, and some of you may have spotted some unfinished Discovery artwork that leaked onto social media briefly in February, today’s 15-second video is the first official promotion for the upcoming episodes since New York Comic Con.

The societal impact of the coronavirus pandemic came after Discovery finished filming for the year, but the show’s post-production work has felt the effects; editor Scott Gamzon shared a photo of his makeshift editing studio where he’s been working on cutting episodes from home, and actors Wilson Cruz and Anthony Rapp noted that the situation may extend the wait for Discovery’s on-screen return.

For now, we’ll remain on yellow alert for news about when we can expect the adventures of the USS Discovery crew to return — and as soon as we know more, you’ll know it too.

Star Trek: Discovery
Season 1 Blu-ray

Star Trek: Discovery
Season 2 Blu-ray

Star Trek: Discovery
Season 3 Blu-ray

STAR TREK: PICARD Review — “Et in Arcadia Ego, Part 2”

In the final hour of Star Trek: Picard’s first season, the series did what it has done so well across 10 episodes. It brilliantly mixed nostalgia with a brave, creative new path for Star Trek, setting itself apart from every previous incarnation of the franchise, while grounding itself in everything that makes Star Trek so venerable.
 
For a series that prided itself on the journey of rediscovery taking place for so many damaged characters, “Et in Arcadia Ego, Part 2” is a tour de force. It’s a season finale that includes satisfying conclusions for more than half a dozen series’ standouts, all of whom are woven into this final hour of the narrative with the precision of a literary master – a literary master named Michael Chabon, who wrote the finale and earned a writing credit on an amazing eight overall episodes as the Picard series showrunner in Season 1.
 

Picard (Patrick Stewart) and Data (Brent Spiner) share a quiet farewell. (CBS All Access)

Coming on the heels of what was likely the least well-received hour of Picard last week in “Part 1,” this episode manages to put most of the question marks from that set-up into the plasma exhaust and engage headfirst into an action-packed hour of resolutions and important commentary.

Ultimately, the series is about Jean-Luc Picard (Patrick Stewart), and we get so many stand-out moments here it is going to be hard to break them all down, but we are beginning with the end and the unexpected thrill of seeing one of Star Trek’s most beloved characters get a send-off unlike almost any in franchise history.

As we’ve said in a number of reviews, Star Trek: Picard is obviously not a sequel to The Next Generation. It’s different in tone, content and structure in immeasurable ways. But in so many ways, it also scratches that “sequel” itch. From the call backs to “All Good Things…” to the resurrection of an important one-off character in Bruce Maddox, the seeds of TNG’s stories and storytelling are a huge part of this series.

And now, in the finale of a show about Trek’s most popular captain, the uber-popular Lt. Commander Data (Brent Spiner) takes center stage for the final resolution of the series and gets an emotional and heartfelt sendoff that is predominantly celebratory — with a few dashes of somber — and serves as a powerful epilogue to Star Trek: Nemesis.

Data prepares for the end. (CBS All Access)

Data’s consciousness, which has been reconstructed from a single neuron secured by Maddox from B-4, has been placed inside a massively complex quantum simulation where the neural image of Picard’s brain substrates has also been placed following his death. As Data confirms to Picard that the man has died — more on that later — the two have an incredible conversation in which Picard tells him that he dreams about him all the time, and he was furious at the android for sacrificing his life for his.

Picard is happy for the chance to tell his friend that he regrets never having been able to communicate his love for him, to which Data responds as only he can by saying that knowing this “forms a small but statistically significant part of my memories. I hope that brings you some comfort.”

The conversation is an amazing full circle payoff from the series’ opening moments in which the old friends are seen reminiscing in the dreamscape’s Ten Forward lounge. Now, 10 episodes later, they are meeting for real inside a quantum reconstruction — the great holodeck in the sky — as Picard faces his mortality. It’s a special moment, made even more so when Data reveals that Picard will only be there temporarily, as his friends race to save his life.

Before he leaves though, Data asks Picard to help him end his life, so that “he can live, however briefly, knowing that life is finite.” Data knows that mortality is what gives things like peace, love and friendship meaning. A final shot of Data, clad in a stylish smoking jacket, sees him fade into stardust while being comforted by his friend as he is serenaded by a cover of “Blue Skies,” sung by Picard star Isa Briones.

Of course, to get to that amazing conclusion, we see the show’s other characters come full circle, as well. For Seven of Nine (Jeri Ryan), the beloved xB from the Delta Quadrant, she ends up squaring off face-to-face with the series’ big bad, Narissa (Peyton List), who apparently has been hiding out on the Artifact since the end of “Nepenthe.” For Seven, her choice comes down to killing somebody “just because it’s what they deserve, just because it feels wrong for them to still be alive.”

For the second time this season, she makes the choice to kill, taking out Narissa — as payback for Narissa’s murder of Hugh — much in the same way she killed Bjayzl in “Stardust City Rag.” It’s a decision she rues later while talking to Rios, who is also regretting his decision to once again having to watch a captain he dedicated himself to die.

Throughout the series, Cris Rios (Santiago Cabrera) has been full of surprises. He’s never gone the expected direction for a rogue captain that left Starfleet under murky circumstances, and at the end of “Et in Arcadia Ego” his regret seems to be tinged with an acceptance that committing yourself to a cause, and letting “another self-righteous old starship captain” into his heart, might not be such a bad thing.

Agnes Jurati (Alison Pill) finds a way to stall the Romulans. (CBS All Access)

Even Agnes Jurati’s (Alison Pill) redemption in this final hour is satisfying and complete, if not overly simplified. It’s incredibly cathartic to see her coming to rescue Picard from confinement and team up with him aboard La Sirena — despite the murder of Bruce Maddox. The competent professional from the season’s opening episode has returned, an indication of her true self finally set free of Commodore Oh’s mind meld-induced anxiety and instability.

Jurati steals the most unexpected thunderbolt of the finale as she and Picard work to get La Sirena off the ground, even telling the captain to “make it so” as he struggles to get the vessel into orbit. The moment is perfectly scripted by Chabon and directed by Akiva Goldsman, who captures her wonder perfectly.

And if that “make it so” moment wasn’t enough, moments later, she comes up with a brilliant tweak of the Picard Maneuver to help stall the Romulan attack. The site of hundreds of projections of La Sirena (not to mention dozens of Jurati’s smiling face) confusing the Romulans is another great callback.

While Raffi (Michelle Hurd) didn’t have a massively-large curve to travel on her re-discovery arc in this episode, it’s clear she has found her footing in fighting her addictive demons in support of her friend and mentor, “JL.” We also get a surprising connection at the end of the episode with Seven, as the two hold hands amorously as a potential set-up for Season 2. Is it earned? Debatable. Is it interesting? Absolutely!

Seven (Jeri Ryan) and Raffi (Michelle Hurd) find an unexpected connection. (CBS All Access)

For Elnor (Evan Evagora), the journey is simple and consistent: he’s fought for Picard, and he’s fought for the xBs —  of whom Seven has to remind him that just because someone “doesn’t belong anywhere,” it doesn’t mean they should be left to fend for themselves; an allegorical moment for the season if ever there was one. As the season winds to a close, Elnor is by Picard’s side, continuing to practice absolute candor throughout, especially when it comes to Narek.

Narek (Harry Treadaway) has earned a fragile truce with the La Sirena crew, but Elnor doesn’t believe he can be trusted, regardless of the fact he is helping the crew fight back against the synths — and that he didn’t kill Saga last week. (Turns out Sutra was just using him as a scapegoat to motivate her synth family to follow her.)

Narek’s cat-and-mouse dance of good vs. evil finally lands on the side of good when it is revealed that the turmoil driving him through the season was the knowledge that his family viewed him as a disgraced washout from the Zhat Vash, a nice bit of continuity tying back to Oh’s distrust of him in the beginning of the season.

It’s unclear where Narek ends up by the end of the episode; last we see of him, he’s being held by the synths during the La Sirena crew’s sabotage attempt. Unfortunately, his fate is just one of a number of notable pieces missing from the episode’s narrative construction — along with the fate of the xBs now marooned on Coppelius, how Picard managed to get the Federation to lift the ban on synthetics, and other bits of connective tissue that could have really enhanced the flow of the story.

Narek (Harry Treadaway) surrenders at the point of Elnor’s (Evan Evagora) sword. (CBS All Access)

The series packed a lot of story in to the short, 10-episode season, and the shortcuts required to get to the closing moments of the narrative were probably necessitated by the unplanned expansion of the season’s opening episodes from two to three — leaving the creative team with a much shorter runway by the end of the year. Hopefully, some of the production lessons learned from this first year will lend themselves to Season 2’s benefit.

But in the end, you have to make your own evaluations. You are either more worried about the ease at which Commodore Oh (Tamlyn Tomita) was allowed to escape the final confrontation — the head of Starfleet Security openly leading a Romulan attack fleet! — or you can put those concerns aside and marvel at seeing Captain Will Riker (Jonathan Frakes) back in uniform, leading a squadron of ships to save the day.

The opportunity to see Riker in command once more is one of pure joy, and Jonathan Frakes is clearly having fun in the part, gleefully chasing the Romulan fleet away from their intended target.

Before you think we’re ignoring something, yes, we noticed that every Starfleet ship seemed to be the same digital model — and an ADR’d line of Frakes dialogue explains away the repetition, saying Riker’s got “a fleet of them” — but since the visual effects work for the season only got completed last week according to VFX supervisor Ante Dekovic, we’ll chalk that up to a lack of available production time to allow for a wider range of ship variation.

Captain Riker (Jonathan Frakes) chases Oh (Tamlyn Tomita) away. (CBS All Access)

Instead, our focus from this epic yet busy finale is on the wonderful closing arcs of all the characters discussed above, and, of course, for Soji and Picard.

In the end, it came down to the wisdom of Picard, knowing through his lifetime of experience that it was up to Soji (Isa Briones) to make the right decision. Knowing that regardless of how anyone felt about the impending doom, or the Federation’s role in succumbing to fear and shutting down the synths, it was really going to come down to Picard and the Federation being willing to give her the choice. Either be the destroyer — or not.

Early in the episode, as she chides him about being completely under their control, Picard pushes her to see that it’s her own “failure of imagination” that is holding Soji back from seeing that she absolutely controls this final decision.

Once he’s aboard La Sirena and preparing to face the Romulans, Picard shows how much he believes in the synths by telling Jurati that they are children who feared extermination in being raised by a couple of hermits, “and fear is an incompetent teacher.” He knows that the best way to teach children is by example, so he contacts Soji again and tells her dramatically that he is going to give up his life to help change her mind.

Soji (Isa Briones) listens to Picard’s powerful words. (CBS All Access)

As Soji activates the beacon, and the battle heats up, Picard’s battle with Irumodic Syndrome deteriorates, so he instructs Jurati to stabilize him (at the detriment to his long-term prognosis) so he can have one more conversation with Soji, this time on an open channel for everyone to hear.

In a powerful summation of the entire season, he explains to her that it’s up to her to make the right choice. That’s the whole point of why he is there, and why he saved her life and tired to save Dahj. So that she could save all of their lives in return. He trusts her and believes in her, and she eventually decides to take matters into her own hands by shutting down the beacon and ending the threat of the great Romulan Ganmadan — the day of annihilation. As Kestra hoped, Picard and Soji had one another to guide and save each other.

With the threat neutralized, the Romulans remove themselves from the Ghulion system, and Riker and Picard exchange goodbyes. Sadly, for Riker he has no idea what is in store for his friend, but as Picard whispers a final “adieu,” the expression on Jurati’s face relays an understanding that they are never going to speak to each other again.

Picard has a lot of questions about his new body. (CBS All Access)

Picard immediately collapses and Jurati knows there is no way to save him. He dies surrounded by his new crew, who are seen in various stages of mourning… before it is revealed that Soong has assisted Jurati in transferring Picard’s neural image into the synthetic “golum” body we saw last week — giving the former Enterprise captain another chance to live.

The move does not come as a major surprise, but certainly opens up a lot of questions about the technology and what it could mean for the Federation moving forward — which many may compare to the now-infamous “Khan blood” controversy generated by Star Trek Into Darkness. Hopefully, that will be one of the issues that Star Trek: Picard will address next season — along with the fate of still-burning Mars, and perhaps more investigation into what caused the Romulan star to supernova in the first place — but we’ll have to wait and see.

For now, Picard is alive — without any android superpowers, of course — and free of both the artificial heart and brain defect that has overshadowed most of his life. With a hearty “engage” command, La Sirena‘s new crew sets off at warp speed, destination unknown.

The PICARD team warps off to Season 2. (CBS All Access)
  • Jurati’s comment mentioning how Maddox thought Alton Soong’s “cyber kung-fu was the best” is a reference 1990s computer hacker Kevin Mitnick and the phrase he made popular through his criminal exploits — also occasionally referenced by The Lone Gunmen trio in The X-Files.
  • A provision of the Treaty of Algeron is used to give Ghulion IV status as a Federation protectorate; the treaty is most-commonly used to explain why the Federation does not use cloaking devices, but its first mention came in “The Defector” around the rules regarding the now-dissolved Romulan Neutral Zone.
  • Captain Riker’s starship is the USS Zheng He, named for the 15th century Chinese explorer who traveled throughout Asia and eastern Africa during his time.
  • The bridge of the USS Zheng He is a redress of a portion of the USS Discovery bridge set (with distinctive glass-panel display screens removed), and its captain’s chair is a slightly-modified version of the Discovery command seat — continuing the longstanding tradition of reusing the standing Trek sets as needed.
  • Seven and Raffi are playing a game of Vulcan kal-toh during their shared moment aboard La Sirena, a game we know Seven must be letting her win.
The Zhang He’s bridge stations are a redress of the ‘Discovery’ bridge set. (CBS All Access)

Exactly how well Star Trek: Picard stuck the landing in the “Et in Arcadia Ego” two-parter will likely depend on how much you care about some of the shortcuts the producers took to get there. Ultimately, though, the finale stands on its own, an intelligent conclusion to a season where many issues of the day were reflected in a story of personal re-discovery, refugee dehumanization and the politics of fear.

How are things going to change for Picard now that he has a synthetic body? What’s next for Seven of Nine? How did Data spend his time in cybernetic purgatory? Is Rios still getting paid? Will Elnor EVER get to meet a cat!?

Share your thoughts on the finale — and your predictions for Season 2 — in the comments below!

https://twitter.com/jonathansfrakes/status/1243187835554824198

Star Trek: Picard is set to return in 2021 — and the franchise will be back at some point later this year, with the launch of Star Trek: Lower Decks and the third season Star Trek: Discovery, both currently in post-production.

Jim Moorhouse is the creator of TrekRanks.com and the TrekRanks Podcast. He can be found living and breathing Trek every day on Twitter at @EnterpriseExtra.

New Photos for STAR TREK: PICARD’s Season Finale: “Et in Arcadia Ego, Part 2”

This week brings us to the season finale of Star Trek: Picard’s first season — “Et in Arcadia Ego, Part 2” — and we’ve got your next round of new photos, as the crew of La Sirena faces off against the massive Romulan attack fleet as the synthetic storyline comes to a head.

As Jean-Luc Picard (Patrick Stewart) endeavors to convince Soji (Isa Briones) to turn against Sutra (Isa Briones) and the android population of Coppelius’ drive to call the synthetic alliance, Narek (Harry Treadaway) joins up with the crew of La Sirena to stop Commodore Oh (Tamlyn Tomita) and the oncoming attack fleet.

Here’s six new photos from this week’s episode:

Finally, if you didn’t catch it at the end of “Et in Arcadia Ego, Part 1,” here’s the preview for this coming week’s finale.

ET IN ARCADIA EGO, PART 2 — In the season finale, a final confrontation on the synthetics’ homeworld, Coppelius, pits Picard and his team against the Romulans, as well as the synths who seek to safeguard their existence at all costs.

Teleplay by Michael Chabon.
Story by Michael Chabon & Akiva Goldsman.
Directed by Akiva Goldsman.

Star Trek: Picard’s first season concluded on Thursday, March 26 with “Et in Arcadia Ego, Part 2” on CBS All Access and CTV Sci-Fi Channel, following internationally on Amazon Prime Video on March 27.

STAR TREK ADVENTURES Heads to the Delta Quadrant

The tabletop game Star Trek Adventures is expanding once more, as the journey of the USS Voyager are introduced in the new Delta Quadrant Sourcebook, announced this week.

Available now from game developer Modiphius, the new Delta Quadrant Sourcebook for Star Trek Adventures recalls the events seen in Star Trek: Voyager as aliens from the scavenger Kazon to the deadly Borg Collective are brought into gameplay.

The Delta Quadrant Sourcebook provides Gamemasters and Players with a wealth of information to aid in playing characters or running adventures set within the ever-expanding Star Trek universe. The 138 page full colour Delta Quadrant Sourcebook Hardback and PDF contains:

Detailed information about the post-war Federation and S.S. Voyager’s monumental mission, bringing the Star Trek Adventures timeline up to 2379.

– Information on many of the species inhabiting the quadrant, including the Kazon Collective, the Vidiian Sodality, the Malon, the Voth, and more.

– Extensive content on the Borg Collective, including their history, hierarchy, locations, processes, and technology.

– A dozen new species to choose from during character creation, including Ankari, Ocampa, Talaxians, and even Liberated Borg!

– A selection of alien starships, including Kazon raiders, Voth city-ships, Hirogen warships, and a devastating collection of new Borg vessels.

– Guidance to aid the Gamemaster in running missions and continuing voyages in the Delta Quadrant, with a selection of adventure seeds and Non-Player Characters.

Here are several preview pages from the new release featuring some familiar Delta Quadrant alien races:

The new Star Trek Adventures Delta Quadrant Sourcebook is available now in both print and PDF form from Modiphius Entertainment’s web shop.

DESTINATION STAR TREK Germany Convention Pushed from May to October Due to Coronavirus Concerns

The Star Trek convention scene has seen its first scheduling impact from the ongoing coronavirus pandemic, as May’s planned Destination Star Trek event in Germany has just been pushed to late fall.

Already rescheduled once a few weeks ago — from May 8 to May 1, much to the consternation of already-paid attendees — the Destination Star Trek Germany convention in Dortmund team announced this morning that the event planned has now been pushed out to October 9 – 11, 2020.

In a message sent to ticketholders today, the convention team informed attendees that all purchased convention passes will remain valid for the fall event.

We wanted to update you on Destination Star Trek Germany.

In these worrying times we very much wanted to beam you all out of these stark realities to escape once more into the Star Trek universe! However, it has become apparent that the raft of measures in place to combat the spread of the Covid-19 virus will likely still be in place at the beginning of May! Our primary concern, even above delivering an amazing event, is the health, safety and welfare of our attendees, guest stars and everyone that forms part of the DST family.

Therefore, we have made the decision to postpone the event to the 9th to 11th October 2020, when we hope the virus should no longer be an issue and we can all beam down and enjoy celebrating the world of Star Trek together! 

The venue will be the same in Dortmund and all tickets already purchased will remain valid for the new dates. If you are unable to attend the new dates then please contact us.

Everyone at the Destination Star Trek team wishes you and your loved ones the best! Please stay safe and look after each other. We look forward to this virus being beaten and all of us having an amazing time in October at the best Star Trek event ever, as we will be so pleased to have got past these dark times.

While the new dates for the event are now more than six months away, it’s likely that there will be a few — if not many — changes to the Star Trek guest lineup announced between now and October.

For more information, keep an eye on the official Destination Star Trek Germany website.

STAR TREK: PICARD Review — “Et in Arcadia Ego, Part 1”

After a thrilling build-up across eight episodes of broken Borg cubes, mysterious android twins and emotional reunions, the first season of Star Trek: Picard is beginning to wind down this week with “Et in Arcadia Ego, Part 1.”

The two-part season finale will conclude next week, and though it might make sense to reserve judgment on “Part 1” until the entire story of “Et in Arcadia Ego” can be told, this episode — an interesting mix of exciting set-ups, out-of-left-field plot developments, original intrigue, and rote conflicts — still needs to stand on its own.

The episode begins with some of those aforementioned exciting set-ups and original intrigue as we join La Sirena riding the rapids of a Borg transwarp conduit on their way to Soji’s homeworld, which she identifies as Coppelius. Most of the crew is enjoying the ride, including Soji (Isa Briones), Cris Rios (Santiago Cabrera) and Jean-Luc Picard (Patrick Stewart), but Agnes Jurati (Alison Pill) is most certainly not. And once they arrive, Raffi Musiker (Michelle Hurd) declares that she’s “never doing that again.”

The Artifact arrives — via transwarp conduit. (CBS All Access)

The crew has beaten the Romulan fleet to the planet, but don’t have any time to relax as Narek’s ship shows up right behind them and immediately attacks. The cat-and-mouse dogfight between the two ships is a thrill that is only magnified by the “unexpected” arrival of the Artifact as it emerges spectacularly out of its own Borg conduit to join the fray!

The shot of the broken Borg cube rocketing out of the conduit — created by Jason Zimmerman and the Picard visual effects department — is staggeringly impressive and one of the best visuals of the entire series, and the sound design of the orbital orchid attack sequence is top-notch.

And speaking of “unexpected,” as soon as the Borg ship arrives, a planetary defense mechanism arrives on the scene in the form of a bunch of giant, uh, space-faring orchids that envelop Narek’s ship, the corners of the Borg cube, and La Sirena to force them into the atmosphere and onto the planet surface, where each ship is left immobilized and without power.

The entire ordeal leaves Picard incapacitated and confused, which leads Jurati to discover that he is suffering from Irumodic Syndrome. Once he’s recovered from the landing, Picard cuts to the chase with the crew and lets them know about his terminal prognosis and that anyone who treats him like a dying man “will run the risk of pissing me off!” The news hits Raffi hardest, as she is visibly shaken.

The crew rushes to Picard’s (Patrick Stewart) aid. (CBS All Access)

With that bit of housekeeping behind them, Picard gets a status report from his crew and they put together a plan to get Soji back to her people and warn them about the Romulans heading their way. They are going to go as a group to Coppelius Station, where Soji thinks she was born and where she believes the inhabitants are “free of bias” — as Picard described Data in “Broken Pieces” — and will welcome them. In a bit of foreshadowing of what’s to come, Rios says, “They crashed my ship without even asking my name. I don’t know, that feels a little biased to me.”

As they depart for “synthville,” the crew sees the crashed Artifact and decide that they should detour to the cube first to check on Hugh and Elnor (Evan Evagora) on the off chance they survived. (“Hugh was my friend, too,” says Soji, agreeing). When they arrive at the cube the ship is in bad shape, but miraculously they find survivors – an xB recognizes “Locutus” just as Elnor sees his old mentor and runs toward him to embrace him joyfully. At the same time, Seven of Nine (Jeri Ryan) shouts to Picard and asks if he is there to help with the clean-up “or do you just make messes?”

Seven explains to Picard that she linked with the cube to fight off the Romulans — following Hugh’s death — and when she did she saw that he needed help. Picard is disheartened to think about the appalling brutality Hugh must have endured from the Romulans before he died. Before the crew can resume their journey to Coppelius Station, Elnor tells Picard he is sad to stay behind again, since he knows he is dying.

Picard is miffed by the revelation, and gives his crew a frustrated stare for revealing his condition to Elnor. He then tells the young Qowat Milat that he’s very proud of him, but that the xBs need him more, releasing him again from his personal pledge. As he departs the crashed Borg cube, Seven tells Picard in support to “keep saving the galaxy,” something she had previously said to him derisively when they first met in “Stardust City Rag.” And in a playful moment of passing the torch, he tells her, “That’s all on you now.”

Elnor (Evan Evagora) and Seven (Jeri Ryan) remain at the downed cube. (CBS All Access)

With that very promising set-up in place, the second half of “Et in Arcadia Ego, Part 1” is surprisingly ineffectual and subdued as our heroes finally arrive at Soji’s home. As the first half of a puzzle, though, there is every chance that some of the elements laid out in the final 20 minutes will pay off in different ways in “Part 2.”

Having said that, one element that should have immediately worked on a more emotional and inspiring level was the return of the great Brent Spiner. Since his homecoming to Trek was announced last summer, there had been speculation that Spiner could resurrect any number of his previous Soong characters – either in dreams (as he did with Data earlier in Picard) – or that he could be playing a wholly new character.

And that’s what we get here. Spiner is revealed to be a literal “son of Soong,” playing Dr. Altan Inigo Soong, never-before-mentioned son of Dr. Noonian Soong.

It’s clear Altan will have a big part to play in “Part 2,” but right now, the character feels so much like 22nd century mad scientist Arik Soong — an ancestor of Noonian Soong introduced in Star Trek: Enterprise — that his motivations and interactions with the androids come off as somewhat repetitive and unoriginal.

The reveal of this unexpected new Soong character comes as Soji and the crew of La Sirena discover scores of synthetics living harmoniously in a picturesque compound on a mountainside. The androids seem to be led by a very gold and very Data-looking synthetic named Sutra, who of course is expertly played by Isa Briones, and is the twin sister of Jana, the android killed by Captain Vandermeer on the ibn Majid.

Dr. Alton Soong (Brent Spiner), the heretofore unknown son of Noonian Soong. (CBS All Access)

After getting a complete update on Soji’s adventures in the real world, Sutra — who has taught herself to mind meld — decides to see the “admonition” for herself by melding with Jurati. She believes the admonition was intended for a synthetic mind, since it drives so many organics insane.

In full context now, we see and hear the admonition and it is a message sent from “beyond the boundaries of time and space” to warn that “your evolution will be their extinction.” So, Sutra is right – the message is for synthetics. And the Zhat Vash is also right – the admonition is a message they intercepted that actually forewarns the extinction of organic life.

The entity that set-up the admonition is identified as an alliance of synthetic life monitoring and waiting for the call to apparently hasten the end of all organic life. Following that revelation, the episode narrative becomes dense and murky with a variety of threads that will hopefully pay off in satisfying ways in Part 2, but until then, are, well, mostly unsatisfying.

The first is a moment between Soong and Jurati, where he offers her a way to pay off the debt she owes for killing Maddox by assisting him by solving the mystery of a “mind transfer” into a golem he has created.

Sutra (Isa Briones) tries to convince Soji (Ia Briones) to follow her plan. (CBS All Access)

Then, Narek (Harry Treadaway) shows up for a hot minute as a prisoner, before escaping with the apparent help of Sutra and “maybe” killing a synth in the process. (It seems just as likely that Sutra killed that synth as part of her master plan.) While being held, Soji gets to stare down her Romulan tormentor, who tries to manipulate her again by telling her he loves her. As an indicator of her current mental state, she tells him, “You disgust me, Narek. But not as much as I disgust myself for pitying you.”

Around the same time, Rios and Raffi decide to head back to the ship with a sonic screwdriver — a gift from the synths — that apparently fixes things with your imagination (what?). As they depart, Raffi breaks Picard’s rule by getting emotional and giving him a hug and saying thank you for everything he has done.

She tells him she loves him, but he “doesn’t have to say it back.” Picard struggles before forcing himself to respond, telling Raffi he loves her, too. The lovely moment is a callback to his conversation with Soji in “Broken Pieces” about his own limitations in expressing his emotions.

We also get a brief glimpse of Picard trying to get an emergency transmission through to Starfleet command, but to no avail (as far as he knows).

Saga (Nikita Ramsey) watches over Narek (Harry Treadaway) while he’s in custody. (CBS All Access)

One of the most successful elements of the episode are the repeated ruminations on killing, revenge and sacrifice that come up in regard to Soji. We saw it at the beginning of the episode when she was advocating for destroying Narek’s disabled ship and the others explained to her that there is a difference between killing an attacking enemy and watching a wounded one die. And now at the end of “Part 1,” Picard and Soji are getting deep into it.

She originally couldn’t understand why Agnes would kill Bruce, failing to grasp the logic of sacrifice and killing one life to safe another. Soji believes Agnes thought she was “right” in the moment, but now she is horrified by her actions. Picard tries to help her by asking if she thought she was “right in the moment” or did she simply believe she had no choice?

Soji’s response focuses on the thought that maybe all rationale for killing is fear, which is the opposite of logic. “But what if killing is the only way to survive.” Picard is worried that this line of reasoning seems to indicate that Soji is ready to jump ship and join Sutra’s cause.

Both Sutra and Soong have decided to signal their synthetic overseers via subspace frequencies that were encoded in the admonition. Picard tries to convince Soji not to go along with this plan, telling her she is basically setting herself up to become the destroyer that the Romulans have prophesized. He then turns to the group and gives a heavy-handed speech that obviously parallels his failures with the Romulans, saying he can help them relocate and then advocate to the Federation to help.

Picard tries to convince the synth population to trust him. (CBS All Access)

Soong mocks him at the end of his proclamation and it’s hard to gauge whether Soji is truly committed to the cause or planning to pull a double switch at some point to help her new crew. Unfortunately, the incarceration of Picard at this moment feels very rote, and Jurati appears to be clearly setting herself up to help him in “Part 2” by saying she will die for her children, an ambiguous statement that seems to convince Sutra of her loyalty. Soong also wants Jurati around to help with their cause, and, more personally, with the mind transfer he is likely planning for himself into the mysterious creation he showed her earlier.

As much as Alton Soong feels like Arik Soong, the conclusion of “Et in Arcadia Ego, Part 1” also feels very similar to the TNG episode “Descent,” and if we are being honest, not in a good way. Seeing the Daughters of Maddox (maybe Daughters of Daystrom???) leading their synthetic revolution much in the same way as the original Sons of Soong is fine, but the structure and beats of the final 20 minutes feel a bit strained and conventional.

With one final shot of Commodore Oh (Tamlyn Tomita) now in glorious full Romulan raiment, commanding the fleet of Warbirds on their way to Coppelius, the scene is set for what we can only hope will be a thrilling climax to this first season of Star Trek: Picard.

The Romulan fleet approaches. (CBS All Access)
  • This week’s installment was written by the husband-and-wife writing team of Michael Chabon and Ayelet Waldman, and was directed by Akiva Goldsman.
     
  • Coppelius is the fourth planet in the Ghoulion System.
     
  • Like Geordi La Forge’s exclamation in “Datalore,” Raffi calls out a “bogey” spotted on La Sirena’s sensors when Narek’s ship arrives.
     
  • La Sirena’s bridge stations have auto-locking seat belts, which have been seen previously in both Star Trek Into Darkness and a deleted scene from Star Trek: Nemesis — and manual seat belts were seen aboard the USS Franklin in Star Trek Beyond.
     
  • Like in “Peak Performance” and “Basics,” Narek uses his ship’s technology to project a simulation of his ship into space, fooling La Sirena’s sensors.
     
  • During Picard and Seven’s farewell conversation, Jeri Ryan holds her hands behind her back, much as Seven of Nine often did aboard the USS Voyager — and the Voyager theme plays in full as she first appears on camera in this episode.
Jeri Ryan returns to Seven’s familiar pose.
  • This episode marks the arrival of Brent Spiner’s sixth Soong-related character in the Star Trek franchise: three androids (Data, Lore and B4), Dr. Noonian Soong, Dr. Arik Soong, and now Dr. Alton Soong as well.
     
  • Like Data’s “grandfather” Ira Graves, Soong is chasing mind-to-machine transfer — perfected once, with the creation of the Juliana Tainer android.
     
  • While this new Son of Soong has never been mentioned before this episode, we know that Noonian Soong was married to Juliana Soong while the pair lived on Omicron Theta; it is possible the knowledge of their son — assuming she was the mother — was deliberately not included in the memories transferred to her android replacement.
     
  • The synthetic orange tabby living at Coppelius Station is not-so-creatively named Spot II. Hopefully young Elnor will finally get to meet that cat!
     
  • One of Sutra’s learned Vulcan skills is the ability to play the Vulcan lute — or ka’athyra, an instrument which gets its name from Margaret Wander Bonnano’s 1985 Star Trek novel Dwellers in the Crucible.
Sutra stands ready to call upon the galactic synth alliance. (CBS All Access)

The many successes of “Et in Arcadia Ego, Part 1” unfortunately get bogged down by an overly familiar second half of the episode. Through it all we get an interesting take on the Romulans perhaps being justified villains, as well as more emotionally resonant performances from Michelle Hurd and Isa Briones.

There’s also a strong score from composer Jeff Russo, who’s crescendo building strings help drive the tension in the final scenes, and a great set-up for “Part 2” with four groups – the Romulans, the synthetics, the Artifact and potentially a Starfleet rescue Armada – all ready to clash in the finale.

The motivations of the new Soong character, as well as Sutra, were less successful, but there is every chance their storylines will resonate more completely in the final hour of the series, “Et in Arcadia Ego, Part 2.”

Are the Zhat Vash (gulp!) the heroes of this story? What is the Artifact’s role in the finale going to be? What are Soji, Jurati and Picard destined for? Share your thoughts in the comments below!

Star Trek: Picard returns next week with “Et in Arcadia Ego, Part 2,” wrapping up the first season on March 26 All Access in the US and CTV Sci-Fi Channel in Canada, and following globally on Amazon Prime Video on March 27.

Jim Moorhouse is the creator of TrekRanks.com and the TrekRanks Podcast. He can be found living and breathing Trek every day on Twitter at @EnterpriseExtra.

New Photos for PICARD 109: “Et in Arcadia Ego, Part 1”

This week brings us to the penultimate episode of Star Trek: Picard Season 1“Et in Arcadia Ego, Part 1” — and we’ve got your next round of new photos, as the crew of La Sirena finally arrives at Soji’s (Isa Briones) homeworld.

La Sirena arrives at planet Coppelius, where Bruce Maddox (John Ales) fled to continue his work on synthetic life, after the Federation banned that line of scientific research — eventually resulting in the creation of Dahj, Soji, and the rest of their synthetic ‘family.’

Here are just a few new photos from this week’s episode — only four, which must mean there’s not much that CBS can show us without spoiling things — that also shows that Elnor (Evan Evagora) meets up with the team once more, on what looks like the Borg cube behind the team.

Finally, if you didn’t catch it at the end of “Broken Pieces,” here’s the preview for this coming week’s episode.

ET IN ARCADIA EGO, PART 1 — Following an unconventional and dangerous transit, Picard and the crew finally arrive at Soji’s home world, Coppelius. However, with Romulan warbirds on their tail, their arrival brings only greater danger as the crew discovers more than expected about the planet’s inhabitants.

Teleplay by Michael Chabon & Ayelet Waldman.
Story by Michael Chabon & Ayelet Waldman & Akiva Goldsman.
Directed by Akiva Goldsman.

Star Trek: Picard returns Thursday, March 19 with “Et in Arcadia Ego, Part 1” on CBS All Access and CTV Sci-Fi Channel, following internationally on Amazon Prime Video on March 20.

STAR TREK: SHORT TREKS Coming to Blu-ray in June

As we’ve been predicting for some time, the nine Discovery-connected run of Star Trek: Short Treks from the last two years are coming to their own dedicated Blu-ray release this summer!

Set to beam down on June 2, the standalone Short Treks collection contains all the small-form episodes produced in 2018 and 2019 — except for the Picard-aligned “Children of Mars” — and will also include several new bonus features as well, as announced on StarTrek.com this afternoon.

Included are “Runaway,” “Calypso,” “The Brightest Star,” “The Escape Artist” from the 2018 releases, as well as “Q & A,” “The Trouble with Edward,” “Ask Not,” “The Girl Who Made the Stars,” and “Ephraim and Dot” from the 2019 run of shorts.

(As for “Children of Mars,” we expect that one to be part of the Star Trek: Picard Season 1 Blu-ray set.)

Paired with the nine short tales are a host of additional features, including audio commentary tracks and interviews with the cast and crew from each Short Trek episode.

  • COMING OF AGE – Tied to the “Runaway” short, the first installment of the new Short Trek format was written by executive producers Jenny Lumet and Alex Kurtzman about Tilly finding a stowaway with whom she can relate. In this behind-the-scenes interview, Kurtzman, Director Maja Vrvilo and star Mary Wiseman talk about the use of the short to give the audience further insight into Tilly’s character.
     
  • SHALL WE DANCE – Writer Michael Chabon and Director Olatunde Osunsanmi discuss the challenges of creating a compelling story with only one on-screen character in the familiar setting of the U.S.S Discovery for the “Calypso” short.
     
  • FIRST CONTACT: KAMINAR – A deep dive into “The Brightest Star” short and creating Saru’s backstory with the Star Trek actors and writers.
     
  • COVERED IN MUDD – Tied to “The Escape Artist” short, an interview with star Rainn Wilson about directing the Harry Mudd short and his experience on both sides of the camera.
     
  • ENSIGN SPOCK’S FIRST DAY – Writer Michael Chabon talks about writing for Ensign Spock and finding hidden talents in relation to the “Q&A” short.
     
  • HERE COMES TRIBBLE – Fans will dive into “The Trouble with Edward” short as prop master Mario Moreira discusses bringing back the beloved Tribble for the shorts.
     
  • SCORE! – A behind-the-curtain discussion with Oscar and Grammy Award-winning composer Michael Giacchino about taking the reins on “Ephraim and Dot,” and directing and composing for Star Trek: Short Treks.
     
  • BEDTIME STORIES – Writer Brandon Schultz, director Olatunde Osunsanmi and actor Kenric Green (“Mike Burnham”) discuss the development of “The Girl Who Made the Stars,” the animated Short Trek about a bedtime story.
     
  • THE MAKING OF SHORT TREKS – An in-depth discussion with executive producer Alex Kurtzman and more about how and why the new concept Short Treks were made.
     
  • TWO AUDIO COMMENTARIES – Featuring Executive Producers Alex Kurtzman, Jenny Lumet providing commentary for the “Runaway” short, and star Anson Mount providing commentary for the “Ask Not” short.

Star Trek: Short Treks are coming to Blu-ray and DVD on June 2, and you can preorder the set from Amazon in the United States today.

Star Trek: Discovery
Season 1 Blu-ray

Star Trek: Discovery
Season 2 Blu-ray

Star Trek: Discovery
Season 3 Blu-ray

STAR TREK: PICARD Review — “Broken Pieces”

In contrast to “Nepenthe,” which took place mostly in a colorful, serene lakeside setting, “Broken Pieces” is a dense, monochromatic episode of Star Trek: Picard that delves deep into the show’s mythology to finally reveal most of the conflicting motivations driving so many of the series’ central characters and mysteries.

Answers are starting to come into focus regarding Captain Rios’ backstory, the origin of the Zhat Vash, Dr. Jurati’s nefarious presence on La Sirena, and the next steps in Soji’s journey to discover herself and her homeworld. All of these topics get addressed in detail in “Broken Pieces,” some more successfully than others.

Narissa (Peyton List) prepares for her ‘admonition.’ (CBS All Access)

At the core of this week’s action on board La Sirena is Raffi Musiker (Michelle Hurd), who leads an investigation that ties into all four of the big topics above, and begins with her immediately challenging Jean-Luc Picard (Patrick Stewart) when he beams on board the ship with Soji (Isa Briones). Raffi doesn’t think anyone coming on board should be trusted without being vetted, because, as she points out to Picard, his last-second addition to their motley crew, Jurati, has not only be tracking them for the Romulans, but is also the murderer of Bruce Maddox.

Picard will deal with whether those accusations are “fact or theory” in a minute, but first he needs Cris Rios (Santiago Cabrera) to help him get in touch with Starfleet Command. Rios is in a daze, seemingly recognizing Soji, but gets Picard the secure subspace frequency he needs before locking himself in his quarters to ruminate on some dark corners of his past.

The plan to talk to Starfleet is a sudden but logical change for Picard, who knows at this point going it alone is not the best idea. So, he circles back with Admiral Clancy (Ann Magnuson), first seen in “Maps and Legends,” to tell her that he was right – the windmills on his Quixotic quest have turned out to be giants. Much to his surprise, she agrees and is sending a squadron of ships to meet him at starbase Deep Space 12 to assist.

Raffi (Michelle Hurd) asks Enoch (Santiago Cabrera) about the mysterious symbol. (CBS All Access)

One of those giants, of course, is the Zhat Vash, the secret division of the Romulan Tal Shiar, and the episode opens with details surrounding their long-awaited backstory. Under the leadership of Commodore Oh (Tamlyn Tomita), the centuries old Zhat Vash are trying to stop modern society from hitting a game-changing and supposedly dangerous threshold in the development of synthetic life.

Oh’s acolytes include both Narissa (Peyton List) and Ramdha (Rebecca Wisocky) — revealed to be the adopted ‘auntie’ who took in Narissa and Narek as orphaned children — and they’ve all been exposed to the “admonition,” a message beacon located on a planet at the core of the Conclave of Eight… which turns out to be not so much of a “who,” but a “where.” (Eight stars have been artificially relocated around a single planet as a massive signpost and warning to future generations about the development of synthetic life.)

When exposed to the “admonition,” most participants are driven insane to the point of suicide. Narissa is not one of them, which fits her unhinged character perfectly. Ramdha, however, was. She has been adversely affected by her experience, and her subdued madness will eventually lead to her “breaking” the Borg cube that now serves as the Artifact — answering one of the season’s big mysteries.

As for Commodore Oh, she has finally been confirmed to be a half-Romulan, half-Vulcan operative who spearheaded the attacks on Mars’ Utopia Planitia 14 years ago to push the Federation toward outlawing the existence of synthetics.

Ramdha (Rebecca Wisocky) sleeps under Narissa’s watchful eye. (CBS All Access)

The Zhat Vash backstory is thick and complex, and only mildly rewarding at this point in the series. It also feels similar to the recent “end of times” technology tale recently told in Star Trek: Discovery — where artificial intelligence was threatening all sentient life.

The most interesting element of the Zhat Vash warnings about synthetic life terrorizing the universe is that our heroes are now on the opposite side of the equation (as compared to Discovery). Instead of trying to stop the AI infiltration, Picard is obviously fighting for the rights of synthetics to live and thrive.

It will be interesting to see how that juxtaposition plays out in the final two episodes of the season, where the soul of the show continues to reside in new characters like Raffi and Rios, and the journey of discovery for Soji, and of re-discovery for Picard.

One other character on an internal exploration is Seven of Nine (Jeri Ryan), who returns this week to answer the desperate hail of Elnor (Evan Evagora), who is stuck alone on the Artifact after the death of Hugh.

Unfortunately, we don’t get to see a protracted response from Seven to Hugh’s death, which is handled quickly as she arrives to answer the call — by blasting a few Romulans along the way — and then asking Elnor, “Where is Hugh?” His forlorn appearance and her subsequent hug to comfort him is the only moment of recognition we get from her that she understands the unraveling situation on the cube.

Seven of Nine (Jeri Ryan) unlocks the power of the Borg cube. (CBS All Access)

From the Queen’s Cell, Seven is hesitant to execute the plan that she knows will likely have the most success – creating a micro-collective that will allow her and the thousands of drones on the ship in stasis to fight back. She’s worried about what re-assimilating them without their consent would mean for them and her – and whether any of them, or herself, would even want to be released again after they dispose of the Romulans.

Eventually, Seven decides to activate Queen mode and is connected to the cube in a visual effect similar to previous incarnations of the Borg queen seen in Star Trek: First Contact and Voyager’s “Dark Frontier.” Her eyes go black, with a slight glowing glimmer of green, and she announces throughout the ship, “We are Borg!” The moment is chilling and quintessential Trek. Seven acting as a Borg queen just feels right.

With ”We are Borg” echoing through the Artifact, Narissa — who has been actively slaughtering the xBs — immediately moves to eject the activating drones into space before departing the Artifact with her fleet to find Soji’s homeworld.

Seven tells Elnor that the Romulans are gone and the cube is theirs again. He asks, in absolute candor, if that means she is going to assimilate him now, and she disconnects and announces, “Annika has work to do.” The moment is not insignificant, as Seven chooses her human persona to plot her next move, which hopefully will involve commandeering that Borg cube and somehow putting it to good use for Picard.

Activating the local Collective. (CBS All Access)

On board La Sirena, Raffi’s investigation leads her to an important revelation about Captain Rios. To get there, she collects all five of the ship’s holograms in the holo-chateau to figure out why Rios has gone into isolation after first seeing Soji on his transporter pad.

The five holograms now include the new Emergency Engineering Hologram (or “Ian”), who naturally features a brilliantly-thick Scottish brogue. During her questioning, Raffi learns that when he first activated them, Rios chose a “self-scan” mode which based each hologram on his physical template, and tied in his own personal knowledge into the database — though he later made some ‘careless’ deletions from each duplicate’s memories.

Those deletions range from events on board the ship to data files inside their own specialized matrices — Mr. Hospitality lost his recipe for Yridian tea (along with his respect for personal space!), and navigational hologram Enoch has no access to Medusan astrogation techniques.

Ultimately, the five broken pieces of Rios start to put the picture together with Raffi’s help, beginning with the nine-years-past tragedy of his former captain from the USS ibn Majid — Alonzo Vandermeer — who committed suicide. That event led to a mental breakdown and eventual discharge from Starfleet for Rios, who had revered Vandermeer like a father. Raffi tries to research exactly what happened, but information related to the ibn Majid has been designated classified.

Ian, Enoch, Emmet, Mr. Hospitality, and La Sirena’s EMH share the stage. (CBS All Access)

Armed with that information, Raffi gets Rios to open up his quarters, where he has been going through some of his belongings from the ibn Majid, including a drawing of himself and a girl that looks just like Soji. The girl in the drawing is called Jana, one of two passengers that the ibn Majid picked up randomly in space about nine years prior. After welcoming them on board, Vandermeer received a black flag directive from Starfleet and was forced to execute the two travelers… or else sacrifice everyone on board the ibn Majid.

Rios couldn’t believe it at the time and went after his captain hard, which he believes helped push him to suicide. At the time, Rios held it together long enough to cover it all up and protect the ibn Majid, but within six months he was out of Starfleet based on his post-traumatic dysphoria. Looking back now, he believes Vandermeer knew the two passengers were synths when he executed them.

“Small world” syndrome definitely gets tested a bit in this backstory for Rios, which is still both tantalizing and satisfying — if not a bit convenient, as it relates to the central mystery of Soji, who is spending her initial time on La Sirena talking with Picard.

In a continuation of the Data deconstruction that began on Nepenthe and that is becoming a focal point for the entire series, Picard tells Soji that she has a past and a story related to Data that is waiting to be claimed, regardless of how empty she feels in thinking her memories aren’t really hers. He tells her that Data was brave and curious and had a child’s wisdom.

When prodded by Soji about the mutual love and respect they obviously shared, Picard poetically compares his lifelong limitations of showing his feelings to the android commander. “Data’s capacity for expressing and processing emotion was limited. I suppose we had that in common.” It’s another brilliantly revealing moment from Picard showrunner Michael Chabon, who wrote the script for “Broken Pieces,” his sixth writing credit of the season.

Soji (Isa Briones) and Picard (Patrick Stewart) share a meal. (CBS All Access)

Following that healing moment with Soji, it’s time for Picard to confront Jurati with her crimes — to which she takes full responsibility — telling Picard that Oh had put poison in her mind. She basically believes she has seen hell, and explains to Picard that Oh showed her a history that took place a thousand centuries ago of a society reaching a tipping-point threshold in synthetic development that brought about – Soji enters the room and finishes their thought – “Seb Cheneb. The destroyer. Me.”

In the only real moment of happiness in this hour of Picard, Jurati gets to finally meet Soji, the product of her lifelong work with Bruce Maddox. And she is happy. Finally. She laughs excitedly when Soji tells her that she drinks when she is thirsty, and she marvels at the work of art that her beauty marks and crooked pinky toe represent.

She calls her a wonder, and the same can be said of Alison Pill’s staggering performance as Dr. Jurati. She portrays the weight of anguish and the lightness of joy in effortless ways. It’s a masterclass in acting. Soji eventually ends their meeting by making sure Jurati knows that she would never let her kill her. The cyberneticist understands and responds by saying that despite everything she has seen, she would never kill her now that she has met her. (So that’s nice!)

It’s a very, very small bit of redemption for Jurati, who obviously still has a lot to pay for. Together with the entire crew, she tells everyone that she is done murdering people and will turn herself in when they reach Deep Space 12. She adds that it’s the first time in her life she had a crew, and she’s sorry she ruined it. (Yeah, well, so is Maddox!)

Jana, a Soji-style synth encountered nine years in the past. (CBS All Access)

Turning their attention to Soji, Rios kicks off their group discussion by offering her French Fries and peppermint ice cream, something he knows she is fond of because so was Jana, her older sister that he had met nine years prior.

Raffi goes on to explain to the group about the Conclave of Eight, the admonition and the fact that the Zhat Vash believe there is a threshold of synthetic evolution that can’t be crossed. She tells them that Data’s creator Dr. Noonian Soong pushed that threshold so hard — with the creation of Data — that Oh was tasked with leading the Romulan incursion of Starfleet, which ended with a burning Mars and a ban on all synthetic research. And now the Zhat Vash is trying to end it all once and for all, by getting to Soji’s homeworld and destroying what they find there.

Upon hearing that, an enraged Soji quietly takes control of La Sirena and decides to open a Borg transwarp conduit (because she can!) and jump to her home. At this point, Picard is hard pressed to argue against this plan, noting that she has been forced to do it Maddox’s way, and then his way – it’s probably time to let her do it her own way now.

Rios isn’t thrilled with the idea of having his ship at risk and on the front-lines of this plan, but Soji implores him to please take her home, and he agrees.

As the ship approaches the jumping off point for the Borg transwarp conduit, Picard and Rios share a quiet moment on the bridge that begins with Picard reminiscing about his time on the night shift as a young ensign aboard the Reliant. He’s forgotten how much he liked the emptiness and silence.

Captain Vandermeer and Commander Rios aboard the USS ibn Majid. (CBS All access)

With Rios shook by everything that’s happened he wonders aloud, what if the Romulans are right about the destroyer? That moment cues the Picard we’ve known and loved for 30 plus years. He dismisses the notion and says that they might be right about what happened a few thousand years ago, but not about the future.

He laments that the Zhat Vash set a trap for the Federation, and instead of side-stepping it, we gave way to fear. “We have powerful tools. Openness, optimism and the spirit of curiosity,” says Picard. “All they have is secrecy and fear, and fear is the great destroyer.”

It’s a beautiful sentiment, reflective of our current times and the reductive politics that weigh down so much of the public discourse today. The moment is classic Picard. And the next moment is classic Star Trek. As Soji makes the final calculations to jump into the transwarp conduit, she reaches into her pocket and pulls out the broken compass Kestra had gifted her to help guide her to her homeworld… and to both her synthetic sisters and brothers. (Could we have already met Maddox’s male synthetic this season?!)

The moment is as strong as Picard’s speech and seems to signify the two do indeed have each other, as Kestra had hoped. As the ship jumps toward Soji’s homeworld, one final cliffhanger moment is in the offing, as Narek has somehow caught up to La Sirena and is seen darting into the conduit right behind them in hot pursuit.

A Borg transwarp conduit opens up ahead of La Sirena. (CBS All Access)

Here’s a few more observations that fell out of this week’s projected chronoton field:

  • The planet located inside the octenary system is called Aia, or “the grief world.”
     
  • Narissa boasts she’d be a much better Borg than the impaired Ramdha before she’s taken down by a hoard of xBs; who’s taking bets that the Romulan will end up an assimilated drone before the season concludes?
     
  • The Rios-shaped holograms are named Emmet (tactical), Enoch (navigation), Ian (engineering), Mr. Hospitality (per “Absolute Candor” closed captioning)… while the Emergency Medical Hologram remains appropriately nameless (for now, anyway).
     
  • Enoch references the famed Medusan astrogation techniques previously seen in “Is There In Truth No Beauty.”
     
  • Picard’s reference to time aboard the USS Reliant refers to a deleted scene from “The Measure of a Man,” restored in the episode’s extended edition on Blu-ray.

  • First seen in “Descent,” Borg transwarp conduits were often encountered in Star Trek: Voyager — and in “Shattered,” we learned that the Borg project chronoton fields throughout their ships while in transit, something Soji failed to do when attempting to commandeer La Sirena.
     
  • Yridian tea was first seen in “Eye of the Beholder.”
     
  • Jurati’s ingested tracker was a viridium-based device, the same substance Spock used to track Captain Kirk while in Klingon custody during Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country.
     
  • Stamped on Rios’ foot locker is his Starfleet serial number: SC-850-705.
     
  • Rios has a vinyl collection and record player in his quarters, which Raffi mistakes for a “Walkman” upon entry. (She’s no Tom Paris when it comes to 20th century technology!)
     
  • The USS ibn Majid’s registry number is NCC-75710, but its starship class is still unknown; the long-nacelled silhouette, with its triangular secondary hull, bears a strong resemblance to the USS Emmett Till, created by Star Trek: Picard ship designer John Eaves for the Deep Space Nine documentary.
     
  • The ibin Majid’s shape bears a close resemblance to the Emmett Till. (CBS All Access)
    • One of the books in Rios’ philosophy library is Surak and Existentialism, by an author with the last name “Notabene” — a pseudonym used by Søren Kierkegaard.
       
    • Captain Vandermeer once served as first officer to Marta Batanides, one of Picard’s Starfleet Academy pals introduced back in “Tapestry.”
       
    • Vandermeer may be named for author Jeff VanderMeer, contemporary author of Michael Chabon, who recently released the well-received sci-fi novel Dead Astronauts.
       
    • Along with his old Starfleet uniform, combadge, and rank pips, Rios’ box of personal effects include a “monster maroon” uniform rear shoulder disc — matching Spock’s uniform design — which the Anovos costume replica company calls a “security device.”
    Rios’ stash contains a TOS movie-era uniform disc (right). (CBS All Access)

    “Broken Pieces” is a heavy, exposition-laden episode that serves predominantly as a set-up for the two-part season finale that kicks off next week.

    The episode is directed beautifully by Maja Vrvilo, who used majestic lighting techniques, as well as interesting camera angles and movements, to pump life into the episode, which was shot almost entirely on cold, dark metallic sets with little variation. It’s impressive work from Vrvilo, cutting through the prose and uniform set designs to give each scene a life and vitality of its own.

    Is there a chance the Zhat Vash are right, and the message from the “admonition” should be heeded? What will La Sirena’s crew find on Maddox’ homeworld? Who is Soji’s brother? What’s the work Annika has to do?

    Share your thoughts in the comments below!

    Star Trek: Picard returns next week with “Et in Arcadia Ego,” debuting March 19 on CBS All Access in the US and CTV Sci-Fi Channel in Canada, and following globally on Amazon Prime Video on March 20.

    Jim Moorhouse is the creator of TrekRanks.com and the TrekRanks Podcast. He can be found living and breathing Trek every day on Twitter at @EnterpriseExtra.