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New Photos for PICARD 108: “Broken Pieces”

This week brings us to the eighth episode of Star Trek: Picard — “Broken Pieces” — and we’ve got your next round of new photos, as Seven of Nine (Jeri Ryan) returns to the series after Elnor’s (Evan Evagora) call for rescue aboard the Romulan-held Borg cube.

In addition, this week marks Jean-Luc Picard’s (Patrick Stewart) return to La Sirena with Soji (Isa Briones) in tow, ready to confront Agnes Jurati (Alison Pill) after last week’s incident in sickbay.

Here are nine new photos from this week’s episode, along with one previously-released image from “Broken Pieces.”

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

BROKEN PIECES —When devastating truths behind the Mars attack are revealed, Picard realizes just how far many will go to preserve secrets stretching back generations, all while the La Sirena crew grapples with secrets and revelations of their own. Narissa directs her guards to capture Elnor, setting off an unexpected chain of events on the Borg cube.

Written by Michael Chabon. Directed by Maja Vrvilo.

Star Trek: Picard returns Thursday, March 12 with “The Impossible Box” on CBS All Access and CTV Sci-Fi Channel, following internationally on Amazon Prime Video on March 13.

Explore the Props of PICARD — and DISCOVERY — Inside STAR TREK: THE CRUISE’s Maritime Starfleet Museum

Photos by
Marina Kravchuk

The fourth excursion of the Star Trek Cruise is off sailing the high seas this week, and lucky passengers are getting an up-close-and-personal look at some of the props used through this first season of Star Trek: Picard… and some on the way from the next season of Star Trek: Discovery too!

Our pal Marina Kravchuk is aboard ship for the 2020 voyage, and thanks to a timely transmission from subspace, we’ve got a few gigaquads of new photography showing off these new prop displays — surely a preview of things to come for July’s annual San Diego Comic Con gallery, which typically then makes its way to Las Vegas for the annual Star Trek convention in August.

First up is a set of Federation-aligned props from the Picard family vineyard, 2399-era Starfleet operations, the Daystrom Institute, and Cris Rios’ starship La Sirena.

Also on display are a set of Romulan artifacts, including gear worn used by Zhat Vash commandos, Elnor’s Qowat Milat sword, and other accessories seen on planet Vashti.

The shipboard gallery also offered a look ahead to Star Trek: Discovery Season 3 — set to arrive sometime later in 2020 — with a few props seen in October’s teaser trailer for the upcoming episodes.

The voyage also paid homage to the 25th anniversary of Star Trek: Voyager with a collection of costumes and screen-used items from that series.

Which selections from this multitude of Star Trek gear most grabs your attention? Let us know your thoughts in the comments below!

STAR TREK: PICARD Review — “Nepenthe”

In a season high point for Star Trek: Picard, a trip to “Nepenthe” allows home and family to take center stage with an emotional resonance that touches an array of cornerstones from Trek’s past — while also perfectly setting up the final three episodes and the climax of this standout first-year series.
 
The strength of this fully-formed hour of Star Trek begins with a script from Michael Chabon — this time with a co-writing credit alongside Samantha Humphrey — that features the language of the franchise being celebrated throughout. From a ready room scene in the dining room of the Troi-Riker home, to the important concept of homeworlds in Trek:“Nepenthe” is Picard at its emotional best, and includes beloved characters being lost and advanced in impactful ways.
 
…and if you thought the celebrated return of beloved Next Generation favorites Will Riker (Jonathan Frakes) and Deanna Troi (Marina Sirtis) would be nothing more than a souped-up cameo, you were very much mistaken. The couple are now married and living blissfully away from the world of starships and interstellar intrigue, and their appearance is an epiphany for the series. In their scenes, the two legends emphatically support and honor their friend, Jean-Luc Picard (Patrick Stewart), but also refuse to give him a free pass.
 

Soji (Isa Briones) and Picard (Patrick Stewart) face a wild girl of the woods. (CBS All Access)

As we are introduced to their new planet, we see that mastery also translates to their daughter, Kestra Troi-Riker (Lulu Wilson), named after Deanna’s older sister who died as a child. In a scene reminiscent of young René Picard’s “highway robbery” of uncle Jean-Luc back in TNG’s “Family,” the savvy youngster has approached Picard and Soji with a bow-and-arrow as the “wild girl of the woods” — a character who is part of an elaborate fantasy world created by her brother.

Picard recognizes her immediately, and the exchanges between all three characters are delightful, including a conversation about lies, and how we represent ourselves. Kestra’s inquisitiveness about Soji’s connection to the “great captain” ultimately reveals to her she is an android, related in some capacity to Data.

Soji (Isa Briones), though, is not processing any of this well and doesn’t trust anyone, despite Picard’s attempt to explain to her that some of it was “real,” including her sister Dahj. She dismisses all of it by saying, “None of this real. Just get on with the mind game.”

Kestra Troi (Lulu Wilson) and Soji: the NEXT next generation. (CBS All Access)

As they reach the Troi-Riker house, Picard and Deanna embrace in an emotional reunion, the second cathartic hug for Picard in two weeks. Troi is thrilled to see him, but when her empathic abilities kick in, her love immediately turns to concern regarding Jean-Luc’s health. He insists that he is fine, in an unspoken reference to the Irumodic Syndrome from which he suffers.

From inside the house, a relaxed Riker is cooking for his family and doesn’t understand all the commotion, until he turns around and sees Picard standing in his home. After a powerful show of emotion — “Oh, man!” — Riker snaps into Starfleet mode when he realizes Picard is potentially in danger and is there to hide out, telling his house, “Shields up! Perimeter scans to max.” The moment is fantastic fun and immediately sets up their new life on their new starship – their home.

Both Sirtis and Frakes are instantly comfortable back in the skin of their famous characters. Their performances are lively and wise, and their new lives feel completely lived in. Another success from showrunner Chabon and his team, including director Doug Aarniokoski, who seamless meshes the action on Nepenthe with accelerated stakes taking place on La Sirena and “the Artifact.”

Commodore Oh (Tamlyn Tomita, right) sends Jurati (Alison Pill) on a mission. (CBS All Access)

Those stakes begin with another flashback, this time to that mysterious meeting of Commodore Oh (Tamlyn Tomita) and Agnes Jurati (Agnes Pill) just before she joined Picard’s crew. As expected, Oh has forcibly performed a mind-meld with Jurati — settling that debate about whether she’s Vulcan or Romulan — to show her what life would be like if synthetics are allowed to exist. Jurati is shook and instantaneously agrees to assist Oh, even though it will require a terrible sacrifice on her part.

Now on board La Sirena, Jurati is uneasy in just about every decision taking place on board the ship. She wonders if any one really even wants to go to Nepenthe to meet up with Picard and Soji, and then later declares she just wants to go home and doesn’t care about “that fucking synth.” (Yep, it’s another use of profanity that helps emphasize Jurati’s mental collapse. It’s appropriate and necessary in today’s modern television landscape.)

After that outburst, “Auntie” Raffi (Michelle Hurd) takes Jurati for some one-on-one time on “Planet” Raffi to try and calm her down – with cake. It doesn’t work, as she just gets sick.

Through all of the above, Rios (Santiago Cabrera) has been trying to shake the Romulan ‘snakehead’ ship that he knows is somehow tracking them. On board that ship, of course, is Narek (Harry Treadaway), who is trying to locate exactly where Soji and Picard jumped to. Rios is trying all the tricks, but can’t seem to shake him, and suspects that perhaps Raffi might be the reason. He confides to Jurati that he thinks Raffi might have a tracking device on her.

Narek (Harry Treadaway) tracks La Sirena’s escape from Romulan space. (CBS All Access)

Meanwhile, Elnor (Evan Evagora) is back on the cube where he told La Sirena he was needed to stay and fight. He’s working alongside Hugh (Jonathan Del Arco), who has sadly had to watch Narissa (Peyton List) massacre half-a-dozen xBs right in front of his eyes. He’s devastated, but even though he refuses to tell her where Picard is, Narissa can’t harm him as he is protected by the Romulan treaty with the Federation.

Finally, something Narissa respects! The rule of law!

Back on Nepenthe, Kestra is becoming more amazing every minute she is on the screen. Lulu Wilson is superb as she confidently grills — and educates — Soji on all things Data. Do you play the violin? Do you like Sherlock Holmes? Can you run really fast and bend steal with your hands?

Kestra’s deconstruction of Data – a being who could do all those amazing things, but only ever wanted to dream and tell jokes and learn how to ballroom dance – will being a tear to your eye. And it’s the perfect introduction for Soji, who is finally coming to grips with the fact she is an android – which brings a tear to her eye as she begins to cry.

The tears have long-since dried up for Troi and Riker, though, who it is slowly revealed throughout the episode, have lost a child in the years since we saw them last — their son, Thad, born during their time in Starfleet after leaving the Enterprise — and it’s the main reason they live on Nepenthe, where the soil is known for its regenerative abilities.

Will Riker (Jonathan Frakes) offers Picard some sound advice. (CBS All Access)

Now Picard is trying to protect their family by being vague on some of the details that has brought him to their doorstep, but Riker intelligently calls him on his bullshit: “How great it would be if the ignorance of danger was all it took to keep it away from the people we love.” Picard knows that Will is right.

As it relates to Soji, both Troi and Riker show they haven’t lost a step and quickly and independently piece together much of the puzzle that Picard has been hesitant to tell them. First Troi can’t read her, and then later Riker confidently breaks it down for Picard as he works over his outdoor oven, saying he figures the Tal Shiar are involved and she’s an android on the run with Data’s robo-DNA.

In the emotional fulcrum of the episode, Deanna and Soji get to the heart of what it means to be “real” by discussing the many made-up worlds of Thaddeus Troi-Riker, raised on starships, but who always wanted a homeworld of his own. A real boy relying on his imagination to create languages (12 of them!) and homeworlds (Ardani – which literally meant ‘home’ in one of those languages) until he got sick and moved to Nepenthe, which became his “real” homeworld.

In contrast, Soji is not a “real” girl and she was “made” — not born — on a homeworld that she doesn’t really remember, and she is doubting everything in front of her as subterfuge and simulation and mind games.

She’s being guided by the code in her positronic matrix that it turns out would have been the key to saving Thad when he was diagnosed with Mandaxic neurosclerosis, a silicon-based virus that is easily curable with an active positronic matrix. But the synth ban made that impossible, and the Troi-Riker’s paid the price.

Kestra has a thousand questions for Soji. (CBS All Access)

It’s a beautiful juxtaposition between the real world of a made-up girl and the made-up world of a real boy. And there is no one better than Deanna Troi to break it all down, summarizing it succinctly to Soji that “real” is not always better — except probably when it comes to tomatoes. Throughout the episode, which is one of the best-ever for Troi, the counselor’s well-known empathy is written in a dynamic and intrinsic way. That wasn’t always the case during the Next Gen days, where it frequently was presented as a device to move stories forward. Her empathy is on full display here, one scene after another.

Through it all it is heartbreaking to see Soji not being able to trust anyone, and she even calls out Troi by saying her sensitive and caring actions make her trust her even less. As she storms off, she shoves Picard – hard – after he pushes her to the edge with a few frustratingly, sarcastic lines about his “elaborate plot.”

Deanna immediately tells Picard that he had it coming, and that he’s missing the big picture of what the Romulans have done to Soji. She says Soji has no idea what is real and that her very consciousness has been violated. Now in full counselor mode, she helps remind Picard to be himself with her: compassionate, patient and curious.

Jurati takes drastic action. (CBS All Access)

Back on board La Sirena, Jurati’s instability seems to be teetering toward her coming clean to Rios that it isn’t Raffi who is being tracked, it’s her — as Commodore Oh made her ingest a tracking device back on Earth. With guilt coming at her from all angles, she doesn’t tell Rios what is happening, but instead decides to inject herself with a hypospray that puts herself into a coma, thus knocking out the tracking device so Narek can no longer follow their ship.

It’s not quite clear if that was a straight act of contrition or a suicide attempt, or maybe a little of both, but Jurati’s mental and physical well-being is perilous, to say the least.

Also perilous is the challenge facing Hugh and Elnor on the Artifact, as they plot a counter move against Narissa. Of course, she’s monitoring them closely and hears Hugh talking about taking back the cube from Romulan control — which for her is citing open insurrection, a treaty violation that allows her to eliminate him after all. Elnor, though, is there to fight for him, taking his Qowat Milat training to the limit in a showdown with his ultimate Zhat Vash opponent.

The young warrior does well, but in a shocking moment that is going to devastate fans of Jonathan Del Arco and his healing return to the role of the beloved Hugh, Narissa gets the best of Elnor and kills Hugh before beaming to safety in advance of Elnor’s retaliatory strike.

Hugh (Jonathan Del Arco) can’t escape Narissa (Peyton List) and the Zhat Vash. (CBS All Access)

The death is an emotional one and will be polarizing among viewers. It’s hard to take, but there is one last moment of glory for Hugh who instructs Elnor on exactly what it will take to continue the fight against Narissa – an xB. As he dies, he slips something into Elnor’s hand and sadly says, “All of this for a lost cause. I was that much of a hopeful fool again for a minute. Thanks for that.” It’s a poignant demise that will be remembered alongside the saddest deaths in Trek history.

Peyton List has been chewing the scenery all season long as Narissa, and with this episode she has now fully earned her ‘Big Bad’ status. She’s deliciously evil. No need to look at it any harder than that. She’s just a fun, oversized villain who sashays her way from one scene to the next with grandiose language and gothic leatherwear. And it’s a blast.

As for that item that Hugh slipped to Elnor, it appears to be one of Seven of Nine’s Fenris Ranger calling cards, which the young Romulan activates while hiding and thinking pensively about his next move. The signal on the chip lights up, and Elnor is left alone to await the arrival of everyone’s favorite Borg to potentially guide the other xBs… as their queen.

Elnor (Evan Evagora) signals for help. (CBS All Access)

After imploring Picard to let them help him, the group on Nepenthe settle down for dinner in the Troi-Riker makeshift “ready room” to come up with a next step for Picard and Soji, who opens up about the “home” she revealed to Narek when he got inside her head.

She realizes trying to find it is probably the way to go, but she still doesn’t trust anyone or anything.

In classic Jean-Luc Picard style, he takes Deanna’s earlier advice and speaks to Soji with compassion, patience and curiosity. He explains that she was created from their friend, Data, who gave his life to save Picard’s, and that Dahj was instrumental in helping him regain purpose in his life. He tells her that no one is going to stop him from his mission to help her.

Kestra asks Soji if she believes him, and she says she only knows that he doesn’t believe he’s lying. It’s a start, and she proceeds to tell them what Narek had discovered about the two red moons and a sky full of lightning in her implanted memory of a real place. Hearing that, Riker and Troi immediately surmise it must be Maddox’s home base where he went into hiding to continue his work creating synthetic lifeforms.

It’s literally a ready room scene from Star Trek: The Next Generation.

Soji and Kestra listen to Picard in the “ready room.” (CBS All Access)

Kestra then turns to Soji with a smile to make sure she knows she has that all important homeworld that everyone needs, and Soji simply says, “My Ardani,” a gesture that touches Riker and Troi immensely.

Kestra, of course, figures out the location of Soji’s homeworld and as Picard and Soji begin discussing what it would take for them to get there, both Troi and Riker remind them the Romulans are going to be a problem.

One problem that has finally solved itself, is that Picard has heard from Rios who is arriving at Nepenthe shortly with La Sirena. In a final, beautiful scene with Riker on a bench by the lake, Picard tells him about his new crew and their extra baggage, and thanks Riker for “so many things.”

Before they depart, Kestra wisely explains to Soji that her mom and dad had helped her through a bad time in her life, and since she doesn’t have a mom and dad, she could have Picard. And he could have her. And together they could have each other. It’s a beautiful summation to a beautiful episode of discovery for Soji and her new friend, Kestra Troi-Riker.

Picard bids farewell to Riker and Troi (Marina Sirtis). (CBS All Access)

Below are a few more highlights that we uncovered inside the forest of Viveen, home of the wild girl of the woods!

  • Commodore Oh details the size of Jurati’s data transfer to Picard as “300 gigabytes” of information on Bruce Maddox; typically in 24th century Star Trek, the measurement for data storage is in units of “quads,” a fictional descriptor not directly analogous to modern-day file sizes.
  • Two of the images of planetary destruction seen during the Oh-Jurati mind-meld are reused visual effects from Discovery‘s “If Memory Serves,” from Control’s destructive attacks on Earth and Tellar (as seen in Spock’s dark Red Angel vision). Whether this is meant to be an implied connection — or just a simple set of repurposed CGI images — is yet to be determined.
  • As Raffi works to free La Sirena from the Borg tractor beam, she refers to the cube’s systems as “freaky Borg machine language,” which resembles Soji’s drawings of interlocking rings — the symbol of her necklace, representing fractal neuronic cloning.
  • One of the native species on Nepenthe is a venomous horned rabbit called a “bunnicorn,” which may be an homage to the Alfa 177 canine seen in “The Enemy Within.” (They apparently make an excellent sausage.)
The cat-like Kzinti, seen in “The Slaver Weapon.”
  • Picard refers to his “solid duratanium” heart, a replacement implant last addressed in TNG’s “Tapestry.”
  • It wouldn’t be a visit with Will Riker if he didn’t get to call for “Shields up!” — and this time, he’s concerned about recent trouble with the Kzinti, the cat-like warrior race created by famed science-fiction author Larry Niven… which made two appearances back in The Animated Series.
  • Thaddeus Troi-Riker, Will and Deanna’s late son, is named for Colonel Thaddius “Old Iron Boots” Riker, the Civil War-era Riker ancestor mentioned during Will’s visit to the USS Voyager in “Death Wish.”
  • Deanna mentions that Thad’s 18th birthday just passed, placing his date of birth in 2381, just two years after the events of Star Trek: Nemesis.
Admiral Picard and baby Thad Troi-Riker. (CBS All Access)
  • Jurati makes reference to a gormagander, the type of alien “space whale” encountered by the USS Discovery in “Magic to Make the Sanest Man Go Mad.”
  • Like the deadly affliction encountered by the crew of the Enterprise NX-01 in “Observer Effect,” Thad was infected by a silicon-based virus.
  • Captain Rupert Crandall — the disreputable starship captain who lives across the lake from the Troi-Riker home — claims to have traveled to Tyken’s Rift, the anomaly encountered by the Enterprise in “Night Terrors.”
  • Soji’s homeworld is in the Vayt sector, in the Ghulion system, information Kestra obtains from the galactic wanderings of Captain Crandall.
  • The replicator found in La Sirena’s sickbay looks to be a repurposed Monoprice MP Voxel 3D printer.
The Troi-Riker family: Will, Deanna, and Kestra. (CBS All Access)

“Nepenthe” is a wonderful affirmation of homeworlds, and the confidence we put in our environments — and the people in our life. Ultimately, it’s not about what’s real. It’s all real. It’s about trust.

In the end, when paired with “The Impossible Box,” “Nepenthe” is the perfect back-to-back companion piece to “The Best of Both Worlds” and “Family” from The Next Generation. The episode allows a damaged Picard to take stock of his experiences of the past three weeks, while also resetting on his end game as he rejoins his new crew with Soji in tow.

For a series that is clearly not a sequel to Next Gen or Voyager, it connects to what has come before in smart, inspiring and rewarding ways.

Is Seven going to show up to rescue Elnor next week? What’s going to go down once everyone arrives at Soji’s homeworld? What does Narissa have up her leather-clad sleeve next? File your report in the comments below.

Star Trek: Picard returns next week with “Broken Pieces,” debuting March 12 on CBS All Access in the US and CTV Sci-Fi Channel in Canada, and following globally on Amazon Prime Video on March 13.

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.

REVIEW: Dayton Ward’s STAR TREK — KIRK FU MANUAL

An important resource for any aspiring Starfleet officer, Dayton Ward’s long-awaited Kirk Fu Manual: A Guide to Starfleet’s Most Feared Martial Art — with art by Christian Cornia — is the latest in a series of whimsical Star Trek releases that aims to have fun with some beloved features of the franchise.

And what is more fun in Star Trek than the uniquely singular style of Captain James T. Kirk? Despite Starfleet and the Enterprise crew’s lofty mission and progressive ideology, sometimes the only way to resolve a problem is with a good old-fashioned scrap.

Kirk never shied away from a fight, and you don’t have to either with the benefit of his fighting form. Presented as an in-universe Starfleet Academy training manual, with a helping heap of tongue-in-cheek irreverence, the Kirk Fu Manual presents “excerpts from Kirk’s own notes and personal logs” to teach you how to survive the final frontier.

The book presents a series of Kirk fighting moves, pairing prose about Kirk’s missions, and where and why he chose to deploy each move, with double page spreads providing a series of diagram instructions about how to replicate the moves at home, not that you probably should… only in combat with a Gorn!

Despite being a fun – and delightfully absurd – book, Ward still takes the task of capturing the voice of Captain Kirk very well. And that’s what ultimately makes the Kirk Fu Manual work so well, which is that it knows when to have fun and it knows when to play it straight. The introductions to each “move” are thoughtful considerations by Kirk on combat, and reflections upon some of his missions.

There’s actually a lot of interesting introspection here from Kirk about his adventures on the show. Star Trek novels do a great job of examining the inner life of this character during new adventures, but we don’t get a lot of chances to double back to Original Series episodes and get more of a view of Kirk’s philosophy. And so that’s very much appreciated, given that it adds depth to the piece overall.

But seriousness aside, where the Kirk Fu Manual really shines is in each of Kirk’s signature moves. The titles of each are genuinely funny – my personal favorite being the “Box Lunch” move, where Kirk bashes his opponent simultaneously on either side of their head.

And the illustrations are fun and vibrant. It’s also a nice touch that, in the series of diagrams on each move, Kirk ends up with a ripped shirt in the last image of each series. That’s a fun touch. The descriptions of each move are also a joy to read, where they could have been purely functional or leaned on the illustration to do the work. And there are some cool surprises and nice touches that I won’t spoil here, but the last two-page spread is probably my favorite of the book!

Overall, the Kirk Fu Manual is another delightful addition to your Star Trek library, mixing a joyful reverence for the source material with whimsy to provide Star Trek fans with something a bit different from your usual reference material.

But despite that, the book also allows fans to do what every Star Trek non-fiction book does, which is deepen their love and appreciation for the franchise a little more.

Michael Chabon Answers the Internet’s PICARD Questions

Early last month, Star Trek: Picard showrunner Michael Chabon took to social media to address some fan concerns he saw raised after the first few episodes of the series debuted — and late last week, the writer/producer took up the challenge of answering fan questions directly.

On his Instagram Story, Chabon took the time to address several dozen fan-submitted questions about his career, his influences, and of course, Star Trek: Picard. The questions and answers we’ve highlighted below are direct quotations from the writer’s Instagram account.

Q: Star Trek was always about a future in which we were better than the past. Why the change of tone?

CHABON: I’ve answered versions of this question a lot, and I don’t have too much to add, but I will just gently suggest that your question is premised on inaccuracies.

The tone of Star Trek: Picard may be darker, at times, than some Trek has been, at times, in the past, and “we” are not worse. We are still as human as ever, and as likely as ever to be thrown, as Sisko once suggested, whenever we encounter the reality “beyond the windows of Starfleet.”

Q: Is there a link between Star Trek: Picard (Federation downfall) and Discovery Season 3 (Federation gone)?

CHABON: “Federation downfall”? What Federation downfall? The Federation is still very much alive and well and home to trillions (quadrillions?) of safe, housed, fed, educated citizens with the potential to lead fulfilling lives.

There was a crisis 15 years ago, in the wake of the costly Dominion War and the Romulan emergency, which had a negative impact on the lives of many people, including most of our principal characters, in one way of another, during which Starfleet (and by extension the Federation) did not acquit itself well – in Picard’s eyes.

From Admiral Clancy’s viewpoint, which is likely the mainstream view, Picard’s attitude was unrealistic, quixotic, and even dangerous. She may be right! They may be right, and both wrong. But that was fifteen years ago, and the Federation is still going strong.

Perhaps in the eyes of some, it lost its luster, its air of invulnerability, its claim to the moral high ground, a process that began during Deep Space Nine times. That is hardly a “downfall,” though.

Q: Will there be references to the political impact the Dominion War had on the Federation?

CHABON: Tried to work it in several times, in drafts. Wiser heads argued correctly that it made things just that much more intimidatingly complicated for non-fans. In the end, regrettably, it just had to be implied.

Q: Can you go into more depth about the Borg? Voyager very clearly destroys them.

CHABON: I think it would be more accurate to say Voyager very clearly implemented their plan to infect the entire Collective and destroy the transwarp network. But whether that outcome was completely successful, partly successful, or was somehow foiled (by the Borg, or by some other entity), remains an open question.

In any case, it’s not really relevant to the story told in Picard Season 1, though I would say that certainly most of the characters seem to behave as if the Borg are part of the past.

Supreme Voyager guru Kirsten Beyer and I have had many discussions on this subject and we are in pretty firm agreement that “all the Borg died” is, at best, arguable.

Q: Based on experience, what isn’t Seven more involved with the reclamation project and the xBs?

CHABON: She found herself on another past that, while difficult, was meaningful to her.

Q: I saw such sexual tension between Annika and Bjazyl. Am I right?

CHABON: Definitely.

Q: Why did the EMH not have an override function in case of potentially fatal actions [like Jurati killing Maddox]?

CHABON: Without going into specifics that might verge on spoilers… blame Rios.

Q: Could you tell us if there are plans for Picard Short Treks before Season 2?

CHABON: I would say there are not.

Q: Has anyone on the show used Stardates?

CHABON: Stardates, in my view, and I know this is going to make some people mad, are a uniquely perverse form of uninformative information. Using a stardate tells you precisely nothing. Even people who know how to interpret and convert them have to go off and interpret and convert them to have them mean something.

Giving an audience the stardate is like I wanted to know if I needed to put on a sweater or not, and you told me the temperature outside in Kelvin. “It’s 287 out.”

Q: Do you think an episodic [traditional-style] Star Trek series is in the future?

CHABON: The market determines which literary forms predominate. That has always been true, and not just on TV. When big-circulation magazines paid good money for short stories, our best writers revolutionized the form. In Germany, magazines wanted novellas; Thomas Mann wrote some of the best ever.

Short answer: when there is perceived demand for episodic TV, episodic Trek will return, though likely not in quite the same way.

Star Trek: Picard returns Thursday, March 5 with “Nepenthe” on CBS All Access and CTV Sci-Fi Channel, following internationally on Amazon Prime Video on March 6.

New Photos for STAR TREK: PICARD 107 — “Nepenthe”

This week brings us to the seventh episode of Star Trek: Picard — “Nepenthe” — and we’ve got your next round of new photos, as the former Enterprise captain reunites with long-awaited friends from his past.

Will Riker (Jonathan Frakes) and Deanna Troi (Marina Sirtis) make their first post-Star Trek: Nemesis appearance in this chapter of the Picard story, as Jean-Luc Picard (Patrick Stewart) and Soji Asha (Isa Briones) arrive at the planet where the married pair currently live… with their daughter, Kestra (LuLu Wilson), named for Deanna’s older sister (seen in TNG’s “Dark Page”).

Meanwhile, as seen in the episodic trailer below: separated from La SirenaElnor (Evan Evagora) teams up with Hugh (Jonathan Del Arco) who faces off against Narissa (Peyton List) on board the abandoned Borg cube, while Cris Rios (Santiago Cabrera), Raffi Musiker (Michelle Hurd) and Agnes Jurati (Alison Pill) have to find a way get away from the Cube and rendezvous with Picard.

Here are nineteen new photos from this week’s episode, along with one previously-released image from “Nepenthe.”

While the characters made an appearance in the final episode of Star Trek: Enterprise, that story was set during the seventh season of The Next Generation; the last chronological moments with Riker and Troi took place as the pair left the Enterprise-E for life aboard the USS Titan.

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

NEPENTHE —Picard and Soji transport to the planet Nepenthe, home to some old and trusted friends. As the rest of the La Sirena crew attempt to join them, Picard helps Soji make sense of her recently unlocked memories. Meanwhile, Hugh and Elnor are left on the Borg cube and must face an angered Narissa.

Written by Samantha Humphrey and Michael Chabon.
Directed by Doug Aarniokoski.

Star Trek: Picard returns Thursday, March 5 with “Nepenthe” on CBS All Access and CTV Sci-Fi Channel, following internationally on Amazon Prime Video on March 6.

STAR TREK: DISCOVERY Wraps Season 3 Production, Plus: A Few SHORT TREKS Canon Connections

All things Star Trek: Picard have kept us moving at warp speed these last two months, but we didn’t want to let the month end without checking in on that other series, Star Trek: Discovery!

The series officially wrapped production on the show’s third season this past week, as the team took to social media to share the news that the next 13 episodes of Discovery were in the can: including showrunner Michelle Paradise, Toronto-based executive producer Olatunde Osunsanmi, and several of the series cast.

While we still don’t know just when Discovery will be back on the air, we know from our conversation with series producer Heather Kadin back in January that the series could be ready for air by May 2020, though there’s no indication that CBS All Access will have Season 3 back on their schedule quite that soon.

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We also finally completed our Canon Connections entries for the Discovery-era Short Treks, which include the Captain Pike-and-crew-focused “Q & A,” “The Trouble with Edward,” and “Ask Not,” along with the animated entry “Ephraim and Dot.”

“Q & A” — Ensign Spock, Reporting for Duty

Spock beams aboard and introduces himself: “Ensign Spock, S-179-276SP, reporting for duty!” Spock’s serial number was previously established in The Original Series episode “Court Martial.”

Number One’s castigation of him “no need to shout,” is also clearly a winking reference to Leonard Nimoy’s performance as Spock in “The Cage.”

“The Trouble with Edward” — Iota Geminorum IV

Larkin claims to have modified the tribble – a native lifeform of Iota Geminorum IV – to become a food source. The home planet of the tribble was previously established in an Okudagram in Keiko O’Brien’s classroom “The Nagus,” an early-season episode of “Deep Space Nine.”

“The Trouble with Edward” — The Great Tribble Hunt

When facing tribunal, Captain Lucero is told that from Pragine 63, the tribbles made their way into Klingon space. This is likely a reference to the severe aversion of Klingons that tribbles have, and to Worf’s description in “Trials in Tribble-ations” of the Great Tribble Hunt that eradicated the species in Klingon space.

“Ask Not” — Tholians

“Ask Not” opens with a supposed attack on Starbase 28 by the Tholians. The reference to the reclusive race is the first in “Star Trek” canon since the “Enterprise” episode “In a Mirror Darkly.”

“Ask Not” — Starfleet Regulations

Pike and Cadet Sidhu quote a number of Starfleet regulations to each other that have appeared in previous Star Trek episodes, including the (little known, seldom used!) reserve activation clause (Star Trek: The Motion Picture,) Regulation 191, Article 14 (VGR: “Equinox”), and Directive 010 (VGR: “In the Flesh.”)

“Ask Not” — Testing Starfleet Officers

The test that Captain Pike forces Cadet Sidu through is reminiscent of the test undertaken by Wesley Crusher to join Starfleet Academy (TNG: “Coming of Age”), and the command test undertaken by Deanna Troi (TNG: “Thine Own Self.”)

“Ephraim and Dot” — A Love Letter to the Franchise

“Ephraim and Dot” is effectively a nine-minute-long Canon Connection, as Ephraim the tardigrade travels through much of the history of the USS Enterprise NCC-1701.

Episodes from the Original Series referenced in this short include “Space Seed,” “The Naked Time,” “The Doomsday Machine,” “Who Mourns for Adonais?” “The Tholian Web,” “The Savage Curtain,” as well as the movies “The Wrath of Khan” and “The Search for Spock.”

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Despite our late departure from spacedock on the Short Treks, our Canon Connections series will continue this week with a look a back at the first three episodes of Star Trek: Picard, so stay tuned for that — along with all the latest Trek news!

First Look at STAR TREK: VOYAGER Fluxx Card Game

For the third year in a row, game company Looney Labs is adding to the canon of Star Trek card gaming with Star Trek: Voyager Fluxx, which takes players back to the Delta Quadrant just in time for the show’s 25th anniversary year.

Following Star Trek Fluxx and Star Trek: The Next Generation Fluxx in 2018, Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Fluxx in 2019, as well as last year’s Chrono-Trek game, the company gave us a first glimpse at their in-development Voyager edition — which follows the same rules as the other Fluxx games — at last weekend’s ToyFair expo.

(STAR TREK: VOYAGER Fluxx box art not final.)

Here are some looks at the unfinished prototype card designs for Star Trek: Voyager Fluxx shared with us by the Looney Labs team, expected to still receive some final tweaks before the game goes into final production later this year.

Star Trek: Voyager Fluxx is expected to beam down during this year’s summer months — with more specific release date plans still being ironed out — but if you were thinking that next year may bring us a Star Trek: Enterprise-themed edition, unfortunately we confirmed that as of this writing, Voyager is the last planned Fluxx variant in the works.

We’ll bring you more on Star Trek: Voyager Fluxx as plans are announced!

STAR TREK: VOYAGER Documentary Project Sets Sail

Following several years of Star Trek productions from 455 Films, the company’has announced a new focus for their next documentary: a look back at Star Trek: Voyager.

455 Films, the production company behind For the Love of Spock, Chaos on the Bridge, and The Captains has charted a course for the Delta Quadrant as president David Zappone revealed plans to revisit Star Trek: Voyager in a new documentary beginning production this month.

After Voyager fans got their first hint towards this project on social media last week, voyagers on the next journey of Star Trek: The Cruise — leaving port on March 1 — will be the first to get their chance to participate in the film, as Zappone plans to interview several fans aboard ship during the cruise.

While much is known yet about the intended production timeline or release date of this just-launching documentary project, we’ll be sure to keep you posted with all the latest news as it reveals itself!

Star Trek: Voyager
A Vision of the Future



Star Trek: Voyager
Complete Series on DVD



Star Trek: Voyager
A Celebration



March Events: STAR TREK Art Gallery Pop-Up, PICARD at PaleyFest

March may bring us the final four episodes of Star Trek: Picard for this year, but there are also a pair real-life events coming to southern California next month as well!

First up is a pop-up art show set to hit the Gabba Gallery in Los Angeles: contemporary artist CANTSTOPGOODBOY will be debuting several Star Trek-themed pieces alongside a collection of original costumes and props from the franchise’s history.

STAR TREK x CANTSTOPGOODBOY
Star Trek and CANTSTOPGOODBOY announce collaboration and launch of their capsule collection

CANTSTOPGOODBOY is collaborating with Star Trek to create a limited edition capsule collection based on the many critically acclaimed Star Trek series.

The capsule collection, under license of ViacomCBS Consumer Products, will include hoodies, crews, jackets, flannels, t- shirts, hats, and sneakers as well as original artwork and fine art prints in CANTSTOPGOODBOY’s unique and universally recognized style.

CANTSTOPGOODBOY is known for his eye catching multi-layered colorful backgrounds and tonal imagery. Star Trek comic books and pattern “shards” will be incorporated in the backgrounds for three original art pieces: Spock from the Original Series, the U.S.S. Discovery, and the women of Star Trek.

These one-of- a-kind pieces created exclusively for the event will be 36”x36” Acrylic and Mixed Media on Canvas, signed and dated by CANTSTOPGOODBOY. The designs will also be available as fine art prints on 22” x 30” Cotton Archival Paper with Deckled Edges. Limited to only 25 pieces per design, each one is signed, dated and stamped by CANTSTOPGOODBOY and comes with a certificate of authenticity.

The collection, along with Star Trek costumes, props and iconic artifacts, will be available at a two-day pop-up event, March 14 – 15, 2020 at Gabba Gallery from 11:00am to 6:00pm; admission is free for both days.

Just a few days later, the cast of Star Trek: Picard will make their way to the spring PaleyFest in Los Angeles to talk about the nearly-concluded first season.

The panel, emceed by The Ready Room host Wil Wheaton, will take place at the Dolby Theater in Hollywood, where showrunner Michael Chabon, executive producer Akiva Goldsman, and cast members Patrick Stewart (Picard), Alison Pill (Jurati), Isa Briones (Dahj/Soji), Evan Evagora (Elnor), Michelle Hurd (Musiker), Santiago Cabrera (Rios), Brent Spiner (Data), Marina Sirtis (Troi), Jonathan Del Arco (Hugh), and Jeri Ryan (Seven of Nine) will take the stage stage at 7:30PM on March 18.

Tickets for the event are available to the public through TicketMaster.