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STAR TREK: PICARD Review — “The Impossible Box”

As Jean-Luc Picard once said, “There is a way out of every box, a solution to every puzzle. It’s just a matter of finding it,” and in “The Impossible Box”, the sixth episode of Star Trek: Picard, we have a series of puzzles being solved right before our eyes.

Like “Phantasms,” “Dark Page,” and “Lethe” before it, the dense, psychological mystery presented in “The Impossible Box” successfully hearkens back to many classic dream-monitoring episodes in franchise history. It answers questions and moves mysteries forward, eventually ending with a serious deep-cut reference from Star Trek’s distant past.

In one corner of this impossible box are Soji’s dreams, being dissected by Narek and the sleeper android via the Zhal Makh, a traditional Romulan form of meditation that he believes will reveal the location of a nest of synth’s created by Bruce Maddox.

In another corner, Jean-Luc Picard is struggling with having to return to a Borg Cube — a.k.a. “The Artifact” — for the first time since “The Best of Both Worlds,” so he is understandably apprehensive. Elsewhere, Dr. Agnes Jurati is coping with her internal tracking of her own bad decisions.

Young Soji (Ella McKenzie Gross) sees a pair of “dark as blood” red moons in her past. (CBS All Access)

And if that wasn’t enough, throughout the episode Narek is constantly fiddling with his tan zhekran (the Romulan equivalent of a Rubik’s Cube) as his schemes reach their final stage.

Narek’s (Harry Treadaway) puzzle focuses on his need to crack the code of Soji’s programming, while also trying to deal with the feelings he has developed for the android. The first problem is easier than the second, as he realizes her recurring dreams are the key to opening the door to her subconscious… without activating her dangerous android defense mechanisms.

Soji (Isa Briones) has been dreaming about an early memory, where as a little girl she discovers her father working secretly in his lab on a stormy night — a dream which always ends abruptly. Narek prods her about the details, but she can’t remember much. As he did in “Absolute Candor,” when he planted a few seeds of discord about her past into her mind, he pushes her now on the fact that every single night she makes a call to her mother that ends after exactly 70 seconds.

Soji doesn’t believe it, but also knows something’s not right, since she consistently falls asleep while speaking with her mom… which unbeknownst to her, serves as an “embedded A.I.” designed to protect her.

Soji (Isa Briones) can’t help but fall asleep when she sees her mother’s face. (CBS All Access)

On her next call home, Soji does everything she can to try and stay awake, including quickly stabbing herself in the hand. In this effectively creepy scene, director Maja Vrvilo slowly rotates the camera to keep the viewer off balance, and no matter what Soji tries, she eventually drifts off to sleep.

When she awakes, Soji accelerates her uneasiness by trashing her quarters, and finds while scanning her belongings that literally everything she owns — from her beloved stuffed animal, to the photos on her wall, to the necklace around her collar — is just 37 months old. That’s just a month longer than her entire stint aboard the Artifact, and lines up with Jurati’s analysis of when Dahj first popped up in Federation records.

After telling Narek what she has learned, the Romulan convinces her to go with him to try and solve the mystery via the Zhal Makh, which he believes will give him the answers he seeks.

Agnes Jurati (Alison Pill) talks about the Borg. (CBS All Access)

Now that he knows where she is, Jean-Luc Picard’s (Patrick Stewart) quest to help Soji begins with first trying to figure out a way to access the Artifact — no small task, since La Sirena is not even allowed to be in Romulan space. Picard has already lost his cool in a conversation with Jurati, who manages to keep hers in lying to him about killing Maddox in “Stardust City Rag.”

He explodes on Dr. Jurati (Alison Pill) in a scene reminiscent of his famous breakdown in Star Trek: First Contact. Seething in anger he says, “Changed? The Borg? They coolly assimilate entire civilizations, entire systems, in a matter of hours, they don’t change, they metastasize!”

In revisiting his iconic role, Stewart has frequently said that repeating himself was not something he wanted to do, so seeing him as a Borg again was never going to be on the table. That fact — and the deep emotion that we feel building early in this episode, which is based so heavily on the lore of one of Trek’s most infamous stories — makes the next moment all the more surreal as Picard stares into the research on his virtual screen above his desk.

Picard (Patrick Stewart) faces his demonic alter ego: Locutus of Borg. (CBS All Access)

As the camera slowly moves around him, it eventually squares off directly in front of him as an image of his assimilated alter-ego Locutus appears on the screen and superimposes itself over his head. As Picard grabs his face, both he and the viewers are left to remember the horror and intrigue of his capture by the Borg Collective so many years ago. It’s an indelible piece of direction from Vrvilo and her crew.

Picard soon realizes that the only way to get on board the Artifact is the Qowat Milat way: they must be completely open, and somehow gain access to some Federation diplomatic credentials. To do that, they use Raffi Musiker (Michelle Hurd) to sweet talk an old “friend” who wants nothing to do with her.

Musiker, though, has been on a bender since her disastrous family reunion last week. Her La Sirena collegues, however, prop her up and she gets the job done by basically telling her former pal they are going to show up anyway — and since the Romulans are deep into a “250-year bad mood,” it’s probably better to have Picard there as aN official Federation representative.

Rios (Santiago Cabrera) offers Musiker (Michelle Hurd) a friendly hand. (CBS All Access)

The ruse works, but at what cost to Raffi? She is in a bad way as Cris Rios (Santiago Cabrera) escorts her back to her quarters, trying to comfort his heartbroken friend. Later, as Raffi’s head clears, she tries to crack the team’s own puzzle box — the mystery of why the Tal Shiar would keep Soji alive at all.

Speaking of the comforting captain, the smoldering chemistry between Rios and Jurati got physical as the not-so-good doctor conveyed her feelings of being “hollow, hopeless, lonely, afraid.” Despite knowing exactly when she is making bad decisions, the pair go through with their encounter, as later highlighted by Elnor’s unknowing observation about the “obvious tension” between them.

Of course, that tension is nothing compared to Picard’s internal strife as he beams aboard the Artifact alone. Once on board the cube, Picard’s past trauma comes roaring back as he finds himself stumbling through the alcoves, experiencing jarring flashbacks to his darkest days among the Collective — with a quick cameo from the Borg Queen (Alice Krige) thanks to archival footage from Star Trek: First Contact.

With a jolt, Picard is grabbed by two xBs as he hears a voice shouting to him. It’s a friendly voice. Finally. “They don’t want you to fall,” says Hugh (Jonathan Del Arco) with a warm and welcoming smile. “I don’t know what you’re doing here,” he tells the former Enterprise captain, “But I will help you, anyway I can.”

Finally, someone’s happy to see Picard: former Borg drone Hugh (Jonathan Del Arco). (CBS All Access)

After five weeks of Picard’s failures being thrown in his face, it’s a relief to finally see the Trek icon being embraced for who we know he really is. The two men exude joy in their hug and reunion, bringing the first truly uplifting moment we’ve seen this season.

Finally, Picard has a friend that wants to work with him and help him. The moment is perfect, and it is how it should be, as we see Hugh’s appreciation that receiving a new name — as he did, years ago, back on the Enterprise-D — can be the first step to a new identity.

With Picard still being affected by his surroundings as the pair walk through the catacombs together — allowing Patrick Stewart the opportunity to show Picard’s vulnerable side, hunched over and cowering like a scared child — Hugh emphatically reminds him that they aren’t passing through a Borg cube anymore, reminding him that it’s now just an artifact… and that he is not Locutus of Borg.

Picard suddenly understands, praising Hugh for his efforts to ‘reclaim’ former drones, allowing them to be seen as victims, and “not monsters.”

Soji and Narek (Harry Treadaway) attempt to decode her dreams. (CBS All Access)

With Picard unlocking that corner of his personal impossible box, it’s now Narek and Soji’s turn as they relocate into a special room (impervious to outside scans) for the Zhal Makh, a journey into the center of the mind’s most intimate space — where dreams are hidden. To further manipulate her, Narek reveals his “true name” with her, a secret not lightly shared.

As Narissa (Peyton List) monitors from afar, Narek walks Soji through the ritual, while continuing to fiddle with his tan zhekran, twisting and turning the pieces with each question as his target paces through an elaborate pattern on the floor, meditating on the contents of her dream.

Soji eventually cracks the code, getting a glimpse behind the barrier of orchids in her mind: a harrowing sight of her father’s blurry face, herself as a wooden doll, and a viewport containing “two red moons, dark as blood, and lightning” — giving Narissa more than enough information to start searching for the advanced synthetics’ point of origin.

It’s also more than enough for Narek, who tells Soji that she isn’t real — and never was —  as he ducks out of the room, locking her inside with his tan zhekran, now modified to release a deadly radioactive gas to kill her.

Narek’s puzzle box reveals a deadly prize inside. (CBS All Access)

The anguish and tears on Narek’s face would seem to indicate that he has some regret with his decision, and not just because Soji has her own answer to the impossible box. Her synth self-defense program has been activated, allowing Soji to save herself as she punches her way through the floor and escapes.

After finding her quarters in disarray, Picard and Hugh are on the hunt for Soji now, too — and when they finally catch up to her, Picard quickly earns her trust by showing her Dahj’s necklace, convincing Soji that he’s there to help.

To hide from the Romulans trying to stop Soji, Hugh leads their group to a secret compartment deep inside the Artifact which Picard instantly recognizes as the Queen’s cell… home to one of the deepest of deep-cut Trek canon references, as episode writer Nick Zayas reaches all the way back to 1995.

Hugh explains that the Borg assimilated the Sikarians — one of the earliest Delta Quadrant races we met in the first season of Star Trek: Voyager — and their incredible “spatial trajector” transportation technology, which gives Picard and Soji an escape from the Artifact through instantaneous transportation across space.

Narissa (Peyton List) is on the hunt for Soji’s origins. (CBS All Access)

The reference is fun and pulpy, and the pair jump through the portal to planet Nepenthe, where they will await a rendezvous with La Sirena… and, we suspect, with a married pair of former Enterprise colleagues you may have heard about.

Before they can leap, though, there is one final moment of excitement as Elnor (Evan Evagora) appears out of nowhere to dispatch three Romulans hot on Soji’s tail, disobeying Picard’s orders to remain aboard ship. Though he appreciates Picard’s efforts to take Elnor through the portal — avoiding another moment of abandonment — the young warrior stays behind to help protect Hugh while the ex-Borg gets Picard and Soji off the cube.

The trajector sends Soji and Picard to safety in the final moments of the episode, and as the screen fades to black, Elnor once more offers his Qowat Milat warning to the oncoming hoard: “Please, my friends, choose to live.”

Elnor (Evan Evagora) guards Picard’s escape. (CBS All Access)

Here are a few more observations we assimilated while accessing the Artifact’s interlink frequency:

  • You’re likely to see many people mention Rios’ solo soccer practice, but in fact he was playing Futsal, a sport obviously derivative of soccer/football, played on an indoor hardwood surface, with a slightly weighted ball.
     
  • Elnor’s odd comments about “in-butting” and “out-butting” during Jurati and Picard’s conversation regarding the Borg seem to be referencing some unseen conversation where he was told to stop “butting in,” a phrase which likely is new to the young Romulan.
     
  • Romulans, we learn, have three names: their name for outsiders, their name for their family, and their “true name,” reserved only for those they love; Narek reveals his true name to be Hrai Yan.
     
  • Soji’s box of art supplies calls back to a familiar childrens’ program of the 24th century, The Adventures of Flotter, a favorite holoprogram of young Naomi Wildman (and many of the Voyager crew).
“The Adventures of Flotter” remains popular for much of the 24th century. (CBS All Access)
  • “The Impossible Box” follows the trend of the season, opening with a flashback scene; with a running time of over 54 minutes, this episode is the longest of the season to date.
     
  • Strips of latinum, the 24th century currency introduced in Deep Space Nine, get a mention this week as Rios and Musiker discuss their surprise over Soji’s survival.
     
  • Narissa wears the same type of black earpiece in her left ear as Narek, perhaps some kind of Romulan communications device.
     
  • The hand scanner Soji uses to determine the age of her belongings may be a tool for quantum dating, an age-analysis technique first introduced in Star Trek: Enterprise.
     
  • Soji’s stuffed animal is named Squoodgy.
     
  • The spatial trajector hidden aboard the Borg cube has a theoretical range of 40,000 light years, just as when we first heard about the technology in Voyager’s “Prime Factors.”
Picard and Soji get zapped off the Borg cube via spatial trajector. (CBS All Access)
  • Picard’s database image of Locutus of Borg provides a dramatic moment when overlaid against Patrick Stewart’s face… but from Picard’s point of view, the image is flipped backwards on his holo-screen display.
     
  • Rios has a notable round scar on his abdomen, implying he was impaled by some sort of object long ago; this may be connected to his tale about seeing his old captain’s gristly death during his time in Starfleet.
Remembering a dark encounter with the Borg Queen (Alice Krige). (CBS All Access)
  • The ‘mess hall’ area where Jurati, Picard, and Elnor sit while discussing the Borg is the lower level below La Sirena’s command deck; Picard drinks from a mug bearing the ship’s logo which, of course, can be yours if you shop through the StarTrek.com store.
     
  • Sometime after the events of “Descent, Part II,” Hugh gained full Federation citizenship status.
     
  • During his time aboard the Borg cube, Picard’s PTSD flashbacks include snippets from his assimilation during “The Best of Both Worlds, Part II,” his time as Locutus in that same two-part episode, and encounters with Borg drones during Star Trek: First Contact.
     
  • CBS released a photo of Raffi conversing with yet another variant Rios-styled hologram, a hat-and-sweater wearing gent, who doesn’t actually make an appearance in the final cut of this episode. (A similar image from a Discovery deleted scene was released in 2018.)
An unseen, new version of Rios chats with Musiker in a seemingly cut scene. (CBS All Access)

“The Impossible Box” brings together Star Trek: Picard’s two main stories after weeks of build up, giving us a satisfying merger of mysteries that all seem connected. It’s a strong entry in the series, with interesting reveals and advancements, while also building on the central mysteries of the last six weeks.

With only four weeks left this season, time is running out to see if the truth behind Soji’s creation, the truth behind the synth attack on Mars, and the truth behind Jurati’s motives for killing Bruce Maddox will be revealed.

Star Trek: Picard returns next week with “Nepenthe,” debuting March 5 on CBS All Access in the US and CTV Sci-Fi Channel in Canada, and following globally on Amazon Prime Video on March 6.

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 106: “The Impossible Box”

This week brings us to the sixth episode of Star Trek: Picard — “The Impossible Box” — and we’ve got your next round of new photos, as the crew of La Sirena finally make their way to that Artifact in Romulan space… the captured Borg Cube where Soji (Isa Briones) and Narek (Harry Treadaway) find their relationship at a turning point.

In addition, this week marks the long-awaited reunion between Jean-Luc Picard (Patrick Stewart) and Hugh (Jonathan Del Arco), who last saw each other during the events of “Descent, Part II” all the way back in 1993.

Here are fourteen new photos from this week’s episode, along with one previously-released image from “The Impossible Box.”

Revealed in the Star Trek: Picard press kit for this opening season, Hugh (last seen in “The End is the Beginning”) now serves as the director of the Borg Reclamation Project on the captured cube, overseeing the de-Borgification of former drones, separated from the Collective.

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

THE IMPOSSIBLE BOX — Picard and the crew track Soji to the Borg cube in Romulan space, resurfacing haunting memories for Picard. Meanwhile, Narek believes he finally found a way to safely exploit Soji for information.

Written by Nick Zayas. Directed by Maja Vrvilo.

Star Trek: Picard returns Thursday, February 27 with “The Impossible Box” on CBS All Access and CTV Sci-Fi Channel, following internationally on Amazon Prime Video on February 28.

Review — STAR TREK: PICARD – “The Last Best Hope”

The Last Best Hope by Una McCormack is an indispensable companion to Star Trek: Picard, providing a lot of additional context and background for the series and the key event that we have seen only snippets of in the show so far: the years-long evacuation of a large part of the Romulan Star Empire due to an impending supernova.

This novel is a hard reset of the post-Nemesis continuity — as far as the last two decades of Trek books are concerned — matching the new on-screen canon established by Star Trek: Picard almost seamlessly.

Longtime Trek scribe Dayton Ward has said recently that the ongoing “novelverse” storylines that fans have been following since 2001 aren’t finished quite yet, but when it comes to The Last Best Hope, the only requirement for new readers is a familiarity with the opening few episodes of the new television series.

Beginning in 2381 — two years after the events of Star Trek: Nemesis — Captain Jean-Luc Picard of the USS Enterprise-E learns of a terrible secret that will change the course of his life forever: the Romulan sun is going to explode, and the Federation is going to need to make a choice about how to respond. Should they leave their old enemy to fall, or should they extend the hand of friendship and aid?

You all know from watching Picard what the answer is, and what the terrible consequences of that choice are. The book follows Picard from the first moment he learns about the Romulan supernova, all the way through is eventual resignation from Starfleet after the  synth attack on Mars — the final scene in the book takes place just moments before Picard and Raffi discuss his resignation in “The End is the Beginning.”

Along the way, we see much more about how the evacuation unfolded, including its early successes — and later defeats. We learn much more about the development of the Bruce Maddox-designed A-500 synths that ultimately went rogue (for reasons still unknown), and the internal politics of the Federation that ultimately led Starfleet to cancel the rescue mission following the Mars disaster. McCormack successfully layers a sense of unease and impeding disaster throughout the book that makes it a deliciously uncomfortable narrative at times.

Admiral Kirsten Clancy’s professional relationship with Picard begins during this story. (CBS All Access)

You might think that sounds like a lot for one book, and it is, but Una McCormack was the perfect choice of author to take on this task, because of the current roster of Trek novelists, she is probably one of the best at really focusing in on the characters and ensuring they have full, rich, internal lives.

The Last Best Hope succeeds not because it is a sweeping epic that covers four pivotal years in the history of the Federation and the Romulan Empire, but because they cover four pivotal years for a core cast of characters, centrally that of Jean-Luc Picard.

Like the show that The Last Best Hope is branded under, this book is a Jean-Luc Picard novel. Picard’s hopes, dreams, successes, and failures over a four-year period are laid bare, building the narrative and providing the reader with significant insights about why, when faced with Starfleet’s decision to cancel the Romulan evacuation, he would walk away from it all.

McCormack has Picard’s voice and character totally down, and even begins to show us some of the ways in which the Romulan evacuation changed his character from the one we last saw in Star Trek: Nemesis into the Picard we reunited with in “Remembrance.” Want to know what Picard thought the first time Raffi called him “JL”? It’s in here.

Telling a story of this scope might have tempted another author to pull in much larger casts of characters, to explore what other fan favorite Star Trek characters were up to during this period and what role, if any, they played in the Romulan evacuation. But the book wisely avoids that — while there are a slight few moments touching on Worf, Riker, Troi, and Beverly Crusher in early chapters, the author focuses on the Star Trek: Picard characters we’ve been following for the past few weeks: Picard, Raffi Musiker, Bruce Maddox, Agnes Jurati, and Kirsten Clancy.

‘The Last Best Hope’ expands upon Geordi’s story from ‘Countdown.’ (IDW Publishing)

McCormack also follows a thread from the Star Trek: Picard — Countdown comic series by keeping an eye on Geordi La Forge’s work running the Mars shipbuilding project (and his involvement with the synths), as well as introducing original characters of Federation Councilor Olivia Quest, and civilian astronomer Amal Safadi, and a number of Romulan characters involved in the evacuation storyline.

The result of that, hopefully, is that The Last Best Hope will remain consistent as a tie in book regardless of what the TV production decides to explore next in the late 24th century.

Perhaps the most interesting other character in the novel is Bruce Maddox, who we have only met briefly so far in Picard (who seems to have met his story’s end). Maddox in this novel shares a lot in common with the Brian Brophy version we first encountered in “The Measure of a Man,” in that he possesses an almost singular focus on his work to create a sentient android that he is driven almost mad by it.

The book specifically clarifies that the synths working at Utopia Planitia were not sentient — avoiding the “race of disposable people” concern from “The Measure of a Man” — and that they were created out of necessity to speed up shipbuilding for the Romulan evacuation fleet… but that Maddox never considered them to be truly products of his work, and continued to spend considerable time pursuing his own dream of replicating Data.

After the disaster on Mars, it is implied that Maddox’s obsession with sentient androids caused him to lose focus on the synths, leading to the unexplained malfunction that caused them to go rogue — including speculation that they may have “somehow” gained sentience on their own.

The Mars synth workers were built to be non-sentient. (CBS All Access)

If there is one flaw in this novel, it’s not one that the author had any control over. 2009’s Star Trek film established that a star in the Romulan Empire went supernova, threatening multiple star systems in the process. This proposition is a patently absurd product of JJ Abrams’ total lack of care for science… but since it’s part of canon, it has to be weaved into the fabric of both this story and of Picard.

McCormack does the best job she can of making sense of the absurd notion that a single star’s destruction could put an entire empire at risk, starting with the premise that Spock’s vague claims from the film refers to the Romulan home star itself — as opposed to the Hobus star referenced in the old 2009-era Countdown comics. But there’s still a lot of handwaving that McCormack needs to do in order to infer that the supernova threatens multiple star systems.

Her efforts here mostly work, appearing to focus a bit less on the actual percussive force of a star exploding causing a physical destruction of multiple systems and more on the impact of supply chains breaking down throughout the Empire after the homeworlds are destroyed — and how the supernova will severely impact the climates of planets in these nearby systems — but it’s still one of Star Trek’s most eye rolling story devices (from a scientific perspective).

There is a saving grace introduced in The Last Best Hope, however: the narrative teases us with at least one character drawing the conclusion that the supernova was not a naturally occurring event, which could account for both the lack of warning about the disaster, and the severity of its after-effects.

‘The Last Best Hope’ concludes just moments before this scene. (CBS All Access)

I hope that will be explored either in the show or future novels, along with several other crucial details from the pre-Picard era that remain unexplored, like the supernova event itself. The narrative of the story ends shortly before the star’s explosion — and the book’s epilogue picks up some time after.

You might be wondering how Spock’s story from Trek ’09 ties in here, but aside from a brief cameo from the Vulcan during the evacuation storyline, that isn’t touched upon here. Perhaps we will finally learn Spock’s perspective in a future novel. But, as I mentioned before, part of the power of this book is that it takes a focused approach to such an epic tale, and if they tried to build in too much — like Spock — it may not have ultimately been as successful.

The Last Best Hope is a strong start for a new 24th century continuity built around the events of Star Trek: Picard. If the snippets of flashbacks from Picard’s first five episodes have left you wanting more information about this crucial chapter in Picard’s life, then look no further than this book.

Here’s hoping we don’t have to wait too long for another novel to continue filling in the 14-plus years of background details yet to be explored.

STAR TREK: PICARD Review — “Stardust City Rag”

We have reached the halfway point of Star Trek: Picard, and with a visit to the planet Freecloud finally in the offing, our crew has also reached a breaking point on several fronts.

The series’ latest episode, “Stardust City Rag,” is an interesting mix of tones and motivations that includes three brutal murders sandwiched around some old school Vegas con-game high jinks. The episode’s intriguing confluence of storylines, while not always harmonious, is certainly successful in advancing the season-long narrative arc in shocking leaps and bounds.

It also fills in the recent backstory for one of Trek’s most beloved characters, Seven of Nine (Jeri Ryan) — born Annika Hansen — and her impetus to destroy a nefarious old acquaintance who drives much of the storyline in “Stardust City Rag.” We learn early on that Seven has been working as a Fenris Ranger since the destruction of Romulus and the Federation’s “abandonment” of so many worlds in the wake of the supernova disaster.

Seven of Nine (Jeri Ryan) weeps over the body of Icheb (Casey King). (CBS All Access)

The performance from Jeri Ryan is immediately and comfortably Seven of Nine. Her stilted, “functional” tone is slightly softer. Her tilted head and rigid posture when she speaks is slightly more relaxed; and her confidence is more controlled. For Star Trek fans it is the holy grail: Jeri Ryan returns to her iconic, career-defining role, and she is being bolstered with a script by series co-creator and famed Star Trek: Voyager novelist Kirsten Beyer.

The episode opens with a staggering gut-punch that is rightfully guided by Beyer — a flashback revealing the death of Icheb (Casey King, taking over from Manu Intiraymi), the Brunali teenager rescued from the Borg Collective by Seven and the Voyager crew during their time in the Delta Quadrant (“Collective,” et al).

Icheb, who by 2386 earned the rank of Starfleet lieutenant aboard the USS Coleman, is being dismantled — butchered — by Bjayzl’s crew, who mercilessly carve up Borg and ex-Borg alike to profit off the sale of their valuable hardware.

With Icheb just moments from death, Seven comes crashing into the facility where he’s been held in a late rescue attempt, but she’s too late: his injuries are too severe, and rather than allow her to be captured, Icheb asks Seven to end his life on the spot.

She knows it’s the right choice, and with only a moment’s hesitation, she fires her phaser into his chest while embracing him as her “child.”

The traumatic death occurs 13 years prior to Seven’s arrival aboard La Sirena, which puts it seven years after Voyager returned to Federation space. The choice to open the episode with such an out-of-the-blue, sensationalized moment is definitely an interesting one for the production team — and director Jonathan Frakes — as the revelation of Icheb’s identity could have potentially been more emotionally effective later in the story as Seven squares off with Bjayzl in their final showdown.

Coming on the heels of her dramatic beam-in for the last few seconds of the previous episode (“Absolute Candor”), the script for “Stardust City Rag” jumps quickly into the much-anticipated face-to-face meeting between Seven and Jean-Luc Picard (Patrick Stewart). The two former Borg drones have an ease of unspoken acquaintance when they are together – as pointed out by Captain Rios (Santiago Cabrera) who assumes they know each other before realizing she is that “ex-Borg Fenris Ranger… from the Delta Quadrant.”

As he is becoming accustomed to in this series, Picard is no longer in a position to be revered and respected by those he encounters. Seven challenges him right away, saying she chose to become a vigilante with the Fenris Rangers to help people who have no one else to help them, because the only thing worse would have been to give up.

It’s a biting rebuke of Picard and the Federation, and a familiar refrain for the famous admiral by now, who has been told by someone in each episode of the series thus far that he shirked his responsibilities by “quitting.”

Picard (Patrick Stewart) and Seven team up. (CBS All Access)

Picard acknowledges her motives and says he admires the Rangers’ goals, courage and tenacity, but can’t abide that they also act as judge and jury. (He doesn’t add the word “executioner” to that claim, but the viewers will find out later that they do that to.)

Although Seven originally assumes that he is out here on a “misguided diplomatic mission,” she changes her tune when she realizes his goals are more personal and align with hers – he is looking for someone who has no one else to help her. That someone, of course, is Soji, the “daughter” of Data and the creation of Bruce Maddox (John Ales, taking over for original actor Brian Brophy).

Maddox is seen for the first time in the series being snared by Bjayzl, who is looking to trade him for a profit with the Tal Shiar (who have destroyed his current lab and sent him on the run). Being on the run is something he’s accustomed to, as he’s been missing on Earth since the rogue synths attacked Mars in 2385.

Through Raffi’s connections on Freecloud, the crew on La Sirena quickly learn Maddox’s whereabouts and that he is being held by Bjayzl. With her impressive status in Stardust City, though, they also realize they are pretty much out of options since they don’t have enough fire power to spring him nor money to pay for his release.  But Seven has other ideas. Her interest is piqued when she hears the name Bjayzl (Necar Zadegan), and suggests to the crew they can use her as Borg trade bait to get Maddox.

Bruce Maddox (John Ales) falls for Bjayzl’s (Necar Zadegan) trap. (CBS All Access)

With a plan in place, the escapades kick in as the crew plots their Maddox heist, which includes several elaborate costumes, exaggerated accents and flamboyant behavior — and before long, we’ve got “Zoot Suit Rios” running the opening move against reptilian Mr. Vup (Dominic Burgess), and an eyepatched Picard negotiating for Maddox’s release.

Stewart is in full-on Avery-Brooks-as-Hippocrates-Noah scenery-chewing mode while inhabiting Picard’s flamboyant alter ego… but while it’s admittedly a lot of fun, it’s also a bit much for an episode bookended with heavy, tragic material.

One of those heavy scenes centers on Raffi Musiker (Michelle Hurd), who we learn came along to Freecloud in an attempt to reconcile with her estranged son, Gabriel Hwang (Mason Gooding), who she finds waiting for his wife at a reproductive health clinic.

Raffi tells him she is clean and makes a case for being back in his life, but Gabriel is more focused on her often-repeated conspiracy theories surrounding the Mars attack. Despite her break from alcohol and snakeweed, Raffi snaps, telling her son — like she told Picard in “The End is the Beginning” — that she still believes her claims, souring her chances of reconciliation, and sending her back to La Sirena in shame.

Raffi Musiker (Michelle Hurd) tracks down her estranged son (Mason Gooding). (CBS All Access)

This scene might initially feel out of place amidst everything else happening in this episode, but it also successfully links back to Raffi’s downfall; the reference to “the conclave of eight” from her son’s tirade will likely be a big part of solving the mystery of the rogue synths, and may shed some light on why Raffi was “fired” from Starfleet after Picard’s resignation.

The tragic, heaviness of the episode arises again as the crew completes their con to free Maddox from Bjayzl, but only after a few more bombastic lines from Picard in setting up the ruse. Once that is out of the way and Seven and Bjayzl are face-to-face, Picard’s mood turns when he realizes that Seven had actually been conning him. Her goal all along was revenge, and she’s ready to take it by killing Bjayzl, who it is revealed had a very close –and perhaps intimate — friendship with Seven, whom she coerced into revealing details of her life, which led her to Icheb.

With Seven ready to execute her plan, literally, Picard implores her, “Murder is not justice. You’ve had your humanity restored to you. Don’t squander it now.” In the past a speech like this from Picard would have worked, but 2399 is a very different time for Annika Hansen.

Seven finds a moment of connection with Jean-Luc Picard. (CBS All Access)

To end this standoff, the street-savvy Rios steps in and reminds Seven that a play like this will put a bounty on the whole crew. It’s something he can live with, but something everyone knows would end badly for the others. As he tells Seven this, he slyly signals her by telling her to “look at the math of it” while flipping the transport pattern enhancer in the air that is going to allow them to escape. “You found her once, odds are you can do it again.” Seven catches on and agrees to a new exchange: Maddox for Bjayzl’s life.

The crew beams aboard with Maddox and are seemingly out of harm’s way, but it is immediately clear that Seven is not done. Rios quietly slides the pattern enhancer on to the transporter controls for Seven, who surreptitiously grabs it, while also borrowing a couple of phaser rifles before preparing to beam down.

Picard’s sullen look seems to indicate he knows what she is planning, and before she beams down the two share a moment that can only be described as surreal for any dedicated Trek fan. She responds to his earlier prodding about her humanity by asking him if he honestly feels like he had regained his humanity following his assimilation. He says, “Yes.” But she presses further. “All of it?” A sad, hesitant Picard must admit, “No.” And then they both knowingly acknowledge that they are working on it “every damn day” of their lives.

Seven leaves her calling card — in case Picard needs a vigilante. (CBS All Access)

As the Star Trek: Voyager theme song swells, Seven beams back down to dust Bjayzl, the Stardust City rag. Of course, the scoundrel tries to talk Seven out of it… but now, Seven has run out of mercy and hope. With nary a hesitation, she executes Bjayzl and then blasts her way out of the bar.

The death of Bjayzl is the second merciless murder in the episode, and the final one comes from an unlikely source. During the mission to extract Maddox, Dr. Agnes Jurati (Alison Pill) remained on board La Sirena to operate the transporter to get everyone back.

But while she was waiting her seemingly normal nervous energy triggered a “psychiatric” check-in from the Emergency Medical Hologram, who she quickly dismissed. Earlier it was revealed through some personal videos, that Jurati’s relationship with Maddox was intimate, making her actions now that much more impactful.

Once in sickbay and “safely” on board La Sirena, Maddox tells Picard that Soji is on the Artifact to try and find the truth about the ban on synths, describing the “lies upon lies” inhabiting both the Federation and the Romulans.

Dr. Jurati (Alison Pill) takes matters into her own hands. (CBS All Access)

When Picard leaves to allow Maddox some rest, the cyberneticist proudly acknowledges to Jurati that he had joined the ranks of Dr. Noonian Soong in creating life-like, sentient androids, while pointing out that she was part of that exclusive club, too, since her contributions were essential.

Jurati doesn’t want to hear that, though, and mutters under her breath that it’s “one more thing she has to atone for.” As Maddox slowly fathoms the meaning of those words, Jurati changes the medical settings on his bio-bed so that he’ll be dead in a few seconds. As that happens, the EMH appears again to check on both Jurati’s psychological well-being and Maddox’s deteriorating condition. He is deactivated quickly by Jurati, paving the way for the episode’s third brutal murder.

There had been speculation, based on her off-screen meeting with Commodore Oh in “The End Is the Beginning,” that Jurati might have been under some sort of influence to do the bidding of the Zhat Vash while with Picard, but now it seems like she is acting under her own agency.

She clearly regrets helping Maddox crack the code of the positronic brain and seems to be convinced that what they’ve done is leading to something terrible. “I wish I didn’t know what I know,” she stammers tearfully. “I wish they hadn’t shown me.”

“He was a son to me, J. This is for him.” (CBS All Access)

Here’s a few more observations that our sensors picked up on the Freecloud information net:

  • In a nice moment of continuity, the dastardly surgeon who rips out Icheb’s implants can’t locate his cortical node… because he donated it to Seven of Nine when her own node began to fail in “Imperfection.”
     
  • Icheb’s demise comes on planet Vergessen, located in the Hypatia system; Freecloud is in the Alpha Doradus star system.
     
  • In Jurati’s home movie, Maddox describes his dislike of replicated chocolate chip cookies — like Picard and caviar in “Sins of the Father” (among many others), this is another example of humans preferring “the real thing” over replicated foodstuffs.
     
  • Gabriel Hwang was born on Hellas Planitia, on Mars, on stardate 52461 — this puts the year of his birth in 2375, during the final year of the Dominion War and four years before the events of Star Trek: Nemesis.
Gabriel Hwang’s file in the Freecloud information net. (CBS All Access)
  • Elnor (Evan Evagora) has a few excellent character beats this week, as he struggles to understand the crew’s actions in the face of his Way of Absolute Candor: “But are you really a ‘facer?,” he innocently asks Rios; trying to “not be Elnor” for the mission; getting confused over not receiving his own holo-advert; and having to ask if their cover has been blown during the confrontation with Bjayzl.
     
  • “Mr. Quark of Ferenginar” has continued his business success in the 20-plus yearssince we last saw him on Deep Space 9; the establishment where this week’s undercover mission takes place carries his name, and Mr. Vup references the noble businessman’s issues with the Breen when talking about Rios’ fictional background as a “facer.”
     
  • Quark’s Bar in Stardust City carries the slogan “What is Yours is Ours,” a play on the 42nd Rule of Acquisition: “What’s mine is mine — and what’s yours is mine too.”
Welcome to Stardust City, home of Quark’s Bar and Mr. Mot’s Hair Emporium. (CBS All Access)
  • Other familiar Stardust City sights include holographic signs advertising dabo tables at Quark’s, a carafe of tranya offered to Maddox, and a neighboring salon called Mr. Mot’s Hair Emporium. (Good to know the Bolian barber survived the Enterprise-D crash!)
     
  • Maddox tells Picard that Dahj’s “embedded Mom A.I.” activated — sending the girl to La Barre —  which confirms that the holo-calls we’ve seen her and Soji make are to a fictional woman.
     
  • This is the first episode that doesn’t check in on Soji, Narek, and the intrigue aboard the Borg cube, but Maddox calls it “the Artifact,” a term which Picard recognizes quickly enough to tell us that the Romulan prize must not be much of a secret to the galaxy.

“Stardust City Rag” balances itself oddly between brutality and frivolity, and probably does about as well as you can integrating such contrasting and disparate narratives. The death of Icheb in the episode’s first 90 seconds is an absolute gut-punch for anyone looking for a little nostalgia in their new Star Trek, as is Seven’s ‘hopeless’ execution of Bjayzl.

The Vegas-style heist scenes with the new crew are energetic, clever and fun. Together, all the elements make for an odd mix – that somehow works.

Icheb (Manu Intiryami) and Seven of Nine in happier days. (“Child’s Play”)

Is Jurati’s final line in the episode a reference to Soji, who has been called the Destroyer and the Seb-Cheneb? Is it a hint towards to the “shackled demons” referenced by Ramdha in “Absolute Candor”? Who is the conclave of eight? Will Seven return (we hope)? Let’s hear your theories in the comments below!

Star Trek: Picard returns next week with “The Impossible Box,” debuting February 27 on CBS All Access in the US and CTV Sci-Fi Channel in Canada, and following globally on Amazon Prime Video on February 28.

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 105: “Stardust City Rag”

This week brings us to the fifth episode of Star Trek: Picard — “Stardust City Rag” — and we’ve got your next round of new photos featuring the return of Jeri Ryan as Seven of Nine, seen for the first time since her return to Earth aboard the USS Voyager in 2001.

After four weeks, the crew of La Sirena finally make their way to the lavish, colorful planet Freecloud in search of the elusive Bruce Maddox — where Jean-Luc Picard (Patrick Stewart) and company must go undercover to accomplish their mission.

Here are six new photos from this week’s episode, along with two previously-released images for “Absolute Candor.”

Revealed in the Star Trek: Picard press kit for this opening season, Seven of Nine now spends her time serving in the ranks of the Fenris Rangers in the lawless outer reaches of the Beta Quadrant.

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

STARDUST CITY RAG — The La Sirena crew begin an unpredictable and lively expedition on Freecloud to search for Bruce Maddox. When they learn Maddox has found himself in a precarious situation, a familiar face offers her assistance.

Written by Kirsten Beyer. Directed by Jonathan Frakes.

Star Trek: Picard returns Thursday, February 20 with “Stardust City Rag” on CBS All Access and CTV Sci-Fi Channel, following internationally on Amazon Prime Video on February 21.

REVIEW: Eaglemoss STAR TREK: NEMESIS Scimitar Model

The intimidating Scimitar — the Reman warbird commanded by Captain Picard’s clone Shinzon in Star Trek: Nemesis — has decloaked to join your Eaglemoss starship collection ready menace your Federation ships with its deadly thalaron weapon.

Designed by John Eaves for the final Next Generation film, the Scimitar was built in response to the need for a new imposing Romulan ship design that would dwarf the Enterprise-E. A ship described as “awesome in its power” by the movie’s shooting script, the Scimitar is an imposing shape.

The primary hull of the Scimitar resembles a large beetle, and the sweeping wings and appendages all over the ship give it a dangerous insectile quality. Visually, the Scimitar is a striking vessel; you wouldn’t necessarily say that it was good looking, but it definitely evokes the right emotions on the screen of power and scale.

One of the “special”-sized ships, the Scimitar model measures approximately eight-and-a-half inches across its wingspan, though feels a little small given the ship it is modeled from is so massive. Despite not being as big as it maybe should be, however, the decision to make the Scimitar at the special rather than the smaller regular size is a welcome one.

The general trend of Eaglemoss towards making the movie ships in the “special size” has been a welcome one. In many cases, these models are more detailed and impressive than their TV counterparts because they needed to be in order to impress upon the big screen. The larger size allows for the detail of these models to shine.

And so it is for the hull of the Scimitar. The whole hull has intricately molded details that add significant visual interest to the model, and draw the eye in wherever you are looking. Without them, the Scimitar is all blocky shapes and could be boring.

The Scimitar is largely plastic, with only the ventral section of the primary hull being metal. The rest of the ship, including the dorsal section of the primary hull, as well as the wings, are all plastic. As a result, and given how thin the wings are – they bend quite easily in your hand without much force – the model is quite fragile.

You will not want to accidentally let this one fall; it’s not liable to survive the landing.

If Eaglemoss produces enough specials, it might be nice for them to get back to the Scimitar and produce a version with the wings fanned out, when the main tharalon weapon is ready to fire.

Eaglemoss’ ships have not had any articulation built into them, so that was never going to be an option here and would likely be quite fragile, but the wings-out mode for the ship is a striking one. If it can be produced, here’s hoping that it will be.

The stand fits over either side of the primary hull; the fit is merely okay. Given the fragility of the model, it is a shame that the stand does not hold it a little tighter. If jostled, the model does move about quite a bit when on the stand, worrying me that one jostle in the wrong direction will cause it to fall and break.

Overall, the Scimitar is a nice addition to the collection. A visually engaging model whose larger size works for the detail necessary to make it so engaging, the Scimitar will look good facing off against the standard size Enterprise-E or nestled among your Romulan fleet.

If you’re interested in adding this Reman predator to your own starship fleet, the Scimitar is available at the US webshop for $49.99 and when available, for £24.99 from Eaglemoss’ UK online store.

STAR TREK: PICARD Review — “Absolute Candor”

The Qowat Milat way might sound potentially annoying, as our resident cyberneticist quips, but it’s not — it’s an enlightened episode of Star Trek: Picard that moves at breakneck speed in introducing new characters, new worlds, and new mythology about the ever-secretive Romulan civilization.

Bolstered by an intelligent and ambitious script from writer Michael Chabon, “Absolute Candor” is literally filled with, well, absolute candor. From the introduction of the Qowat Milat, a sect of Romulan warrior nuns being revealed for the first time, to the crystallizing motivations of Narek’s manipulation of Soji on board the derelict Borg cube, there’s no shortage of truth-telling in this dynamic episode.

For the third week in a row, the narrative begins with a flashback: this time to a visit from Jean-Luc Picard (Patrick Stewart) to planet Vashti during the years of the Romulan evacuation efforts. The colony world is home to a “relocation hub,” a crossroads of sorts where displaced Romulan evacuees have made a temporary home pending their journey to their final new destination.

In better days, young Elnor (Ian Nunney) fences with Jean-Luc Picard (Patrick Stewart). (CBS All Access)

Vashti is home to an order of the Qowat Milat, a group of warrior nuns who believe in the communication of emotion without any filter between thought and word. That practice, of course, runs counter to the modus operandi of the normally secretive Romulans (making them the natural opposition to the Tal Shiar).

Making what seems to be a regular visit to their compound — to coordinate with the local leader, Zani (Amirah Vann) — to work on details of the Federation’s Romulan relief efforts, we see the man has come a long way from his I-don’t-feel-comfortable-with-children days aboard the Enterprise.

Picard excitedly catches up with a young Romulan boy — who the Qowat Milat has taken in after he was orphaned during the relocation crisis — sharing with him a well-worn copy of The Three Musketeers and playacting a sword fight together…

…and that’s when a call comes in on Picard’s combadge, with word of the synth attack on Mars bringing a quick halt to the pair’s fun. With barely a moment to make his goodbyes, Picard urgently beams back to his ship, leaving the young boy — Elnor (Ian Nunney) — in the dust.

Raffi (Michelle Hurd) tries to understand Picard’s motivations. (CBS All Access)

Now, as the story jumps ahead to the current-day journey of the starship La Sirena, we learn that Picard has directed captain Cristóbal Rios (Santiago Cabrera) to make a stop at Vashti — a plan with which Raffi Musiker (Michelle Hurd) is not on board.

Musiker, of course, served alongside Picard during his last visit to the planet, and urges him not to divert from their course to Freecloud — where they hope to find the elusive Bruce Maddox — reminding him they need to keep their focus on “one impossible thing at a time,” a familiar phrase to readers of the Star Trek: Picard — Countdown comic series.

Vashti has changed since Picard’s last visit: the once-thriving colony of refugees has eroded into a sullen place and Picard is saddened to see rampant poverty, degradation and ethnic strife. The decline is an obvious byproduct of the Federation’s withdrawal, and a societal choice not to help brothers and sisters in need.

Despite not being welcomed by the general populace upon his arrival, Zani remembers the former admiral, and is both understanding and accepting in seeing him again — though, in the way of absolute candor, immediately tells him he has gotten old since their last meeting — and the pair are soon joined by a lithe young man carrying a sword.

Elnor (Evan Evagora) surprises Picard as he visits the Qowat Milat sanctuary. (CBS All Access)

That swordsman turns out to be none other than Picard’s once-young pal, Elnor (Evan Evagora), now grown to become a “truly formidable” fighter skilled in the techniques of the Qowat Milat… but as a male, Elnor is forever out of place among the female-only tribe of warriors.

Surprised that Elnor never found a more suitable home in the years that have passed — something Picard had hoped to assist with before being called away after the attack on Mars — the reunion with the young Romulan does not go well. Elnor says his story only tells him why he needs someone, not why he needs him. It’s yet another setback for Picard, who hoped to recruit the swordsman to his cause.

Dejected, Picard heads into town while waiting for a transport window to return to La Sirena. With nothing to lose, Picard defiantly throws a “Romulans Only” sign to the ground as he enters a local cantina, and is soon embroiled in a war of words with a former Romulan senator who can’t help but throw all of Picard’s broken promises back in his face.

Picard chastises Elnor for killing the Romulan aggressor. (CBS All Access)

Through the expert guidance of Jonathan Frakes, making his Star Trek: Picard directorial debut, the energy in the scene ratchets up quickly — and before you know it, Picard is in a sword duel with the Romulan. Just as he throws his sword on the ground, refusing to continue to fight, Elnor appears out of nowhere to assist his former teacher. In another brutal moment of absolute candor, Elnor tells the former senator, “Please, my friend. Choose to live.”

The elder Romulan turns to attack Picard once again, and in a split-second Elnor has decapitated him while calmly saying, “I regret your choice.” It’s a beautifully-scripted scene and a defining moment for Elnor, illustrating the swift and impactful decision-making — and methodical killer precision — he now possesses.

Elnor announces to the shocked onlookers and to Picard that he has bound himself to Picard as qalankhkai, meaning any attack on Picard will be answered by him — incensed at the death of the Romulan, once the pair beam aboard La Sirena Narek (Harry Treadaway) feels the pressure as Narissa (Peyton List) expresses her displeasure. (CBS All Access)[/caption]

Over on that big Borg cube, Soji (Isa Briones) is finally starting to question exactly who her new pointed-eared boyfriend is — and what his true intentions towards her may truly be.

While her suspicions paint Narek (Harry Treadaway) as a member of the Tal Shiar, only the audience — along with his sister, Narissa (Peyton List) — knows his true alliance is to the ultra-secret Zhad Vash, and he’s being pushed to accelerate his efforts to use Soji to find a “nest” of Dahj-like synthetics.

Narek’s slow burn with Soji gets kicked up a notch when he plants the first seeds of doubt into her programming, challenging her assertion she traveled to the Beta Quadrant three years ago prior — about the same time Jurati estimated Dahj’s first activation — aboard a starship that has no record of Dr. Asha’s transit.

Soji (Isa Briones) and Narek continue their work aboard the Borg cube. (CBS All Access)

The gambit is a risky one for Narek, who is trying to avoid triggering her activation protocols (like Dahj, when she was threatened in her apartment) — but lucky for him, the agitated Soji doesn’t leave, thinking he can help satisfy her insatiable curiosity about the fate of assimilated Romulan vessel Shaenor, and all that “destroyer” talk from Ramdha last week.

Their storyline is rather dense, and even a bit repetitive across the last four hours, but it does seem to be heading somewhere — albeit slowly — as Soji’s research on “the destroyer,” or the Seb-Cheneb, is apparently responsible for bringing about Ganmadan: the day of annihilation for all life, when the “shackled demons break their chains.” That can’t be good.

Before we leave this week’s story behind, the last few minutes of La Sirena‘s time at Vashti brings us a thrillingly-staged battle, as our heroes face off against an Original Series-era antique Romulan Bird-of-Prey, flown by a local warlord who terrorizes the system in the power vacuum left behind by the Federation’s retreat.

La Sirena takes fire from an antique Bird of Prey. (CBS All Access)

As the two ships battle each other — while each trying to avoid the weapons fire from Vashti’s planetary defense system — a third ship joins the fray, helping to fend off the Bird of Prey, but not before getting critically damaged itself. Moments before that ship implodes, the lone pilot calls for a beam-out…

…and Seven of Nine (Jeri Ryan) materializes on La Sirena’s flight deck, to the stunned surprise of Jean-Luc Picard. “You owe me a ship, Picard,” says the former Tertiary Adjunct to Unimatrix Zero-One, moments before she collapses to the floor. It’s an emotional wallop, and an iconic moment, that long-time fans could never be fully prepared for (though the surprise was slightly undercut by Jeri Ryan’s name flashing up in the episode’s opening credits).

Exactly how did Voyager’s resident Borg end up flying through the former Romulan Neutral Zone, fending off space pirates all by herself… and how will the first conversation between Star Trek’s most famous 24th century characters play out?

We’ll find out next week when Ryan — and director Jonathan Frakes — return for the fifth episode of the season.

Jeri Ryan returns as Seven of Nine. (CBS All Access)

Here are a few stray observations we picked up en route to Vashti:

  • Santiago Cabrera debuts two more of the ship’s holographic crew: a hospitality coordinator (“Mr. Hospitality,” per the closed captioning) with a nebulous North American accent who’s in charge of programming the on-board holodeck, and a Spanish-speaking emergency tactical hologram (EMT, or Emmet) who manages the ship’s phaser array.
     
  • Soji’s (supposed) journey to the Beta Quadrant was by way of the starship Ellison, likely named for the famed science-fiction writer who, of course, wrote the classic Original Series episode “The City on the Edge of Forever.”
     
  • We learn that the massive fleet of ships built for the Romulan relocation effort were Wallenberg-class transports, likely named for Swedish humanitarian Raoul Wallenberg, who lost his life saving tens of thousands of Jews in Hungary while the country was under Nazi control in the 1940s.
     
  • La Sirena has an armory station to the port side of its wide transporter pad.
     
  • Picard repeats the Romulan greeting “Jolan Tru” several times while visiting Vashti, a native phrase first introduced to the man when he visited Romulus itself in “Unification.”
     
  • The Vashti system is one of many patrolled by the Fenric Rangers, a freelance group working to keep the peace in the formerly-Romulan frontier.
     
  • Starfleet combadges apparently have built-in Bluetooth by 2385, as Picard learns about the attack on Mars from a message received by earpiece (as his combadge and jacket lay on the ground).
“What happened to shooting them?” (CBS All Access)

“Absolute Candor” is an astute title for an episode of Star Trek: Picard that moves rapidly and is filled with clever quips from showrunner Michael Chabon. It’s heart, emotion and thrills perfectly sets up next week’s continuation of Seven of Nine’s astonishing return to Star Trek in “Stardust City Rag.”

Star Trek: Picard returns next week with “Stardust City Rag,” debuting February 20 on CBS All Access in the US and CTV Sci-Fi Channel in Canada, and following globally on Amazon Prime Video on February 21.

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.

INTERVIEW: Evan Evagora is Elnor of the Qowat Milat, STAR TREK: PICARD’s Resident Romulan

We’re just under four weeks into the Star Trek: Picard adventure, and the show continues to slowly introduce the new series cast – and this week’s episode, “Absolute Candor,” brings with it the second Romulan regular to the Star Trek franchise in the form of Elnor, a young swordsman played by actor Evan Evagora in his first American television role.

The youngest of seven siblings, the 23-year-old Melbourne native began his career in modeling before enrolling in film school, landing a role in the upcoming Blumhouse film adaptation of Fantasy Island which arrives in theaters this weekend.

No stranger to science fiction – thanks to some help from his family – Evagora told us how he first became acquainted with the Star Trek franchise before getting the opportunity to join it himself.

Elnor (Evan Evagora) aboard La Sirena. (CBS All Access)

“I was fortunate enough to have my mum who’s a very, very, very big sci-fi nerd,” Evagora told us during January’s Star Trek: Picard press tour. “She actually came to the premiere with me — she lost her mind  when she found out [I was doing Star Trek], and then lost her mind again when she found out I was working with Jeri Ryan!

I grew up watching the Original Series movies, and some of Next Generation. My oldest memory of Star Trek is actually The Search for Spock, but my favorite episode, only just because I watched it the other day – and because I finally got to meet [Jonathan Del Arco] – I’d say is ‘I, Borg,’ just to see where Hugh’s come from; otherwise, ‘Tapestry.’”

https://www.instagram.com/p/B8UbxCCBHQ0/

Evagora was filming on location in Fiji for Fantasy Island when the Star Trek: Picard opportunity came his way, as the series producers searched across internationally for Elnor’s casting.

“They found me in, like, the final hour,” he said. “I came back home to Melbourne for like two weeks in between filming, and I was given this script — big pages — but my character breakdown was very, very, very small. And all it said was Sir Patrick Stewart, the new Star Trek, and it had ‘Drawing Room’ [as a working title].

I started reading it, that was kind of what hooked me, the writing. I did the audition, didn’t think I landed it, went back to Fiji – and then I got a phone call from the producers and they were like, ‘Oh, we’d like you to re-tape [your reading] with these notes.’ I redid [the audition] and sent it off.”

Elnor stands ready for battle on planet Vashti. (CBS All Access)

Still not sure if he nailed the audition, Evagora returned to work, waiting to hear about his chances.

“I was really sick as well; I’d just gotten a chest infection. I was feeling like crap – when it rains, it pours,” he laughed. “But then I got a call like two days later: ‘Yeah, you’ve got the gig.’ It was like five in the morning, I had just wrapped filming, I was exhausted and just told them, ‘Yeah, okay, cool.’

I woke up the next day thinking, ‘Was that a dream? Am I doing Star Trek?’ The whole cast and crew I was working [on Fantasy Island] found out, and everyone was just so excited for me. And back home, everyone was too – I got back [to Australia] and packed up my stuff from Sydney, moved back home to Melbourne… and then like two weeks later, I was in LA. Very, very quick.”

Once the young actor made it to the finish line, he then had to learn what it meant to be a Romulan – especially one living in the aftermath of the supernova disaster which destroyed the once-powerful Romulan Empire and upended the secretive race’s isolationist culture.

Elnor as a child, raised by the Qowat Milat religious order. (CBS All Access)

“My character kind of went against everything I knew about Romulan culture,” Evagora shared. “I kind of found myself having to be… not re-educated, but I had to learn a lot more. I can’t say too much without revealing too much about my character, but [Elnor] is an expert in hand to hand combat, raised as the only male in an all-female sect of warrior nuns known as the Qowat Milat [pronounced Koh-wat Mih-laht] on the remote colony planet Vashti.

He’s pretty good with a sword; he’s got long hair. The production team was very collaborative as well, especially when it came to the design of that weapon, because it needed to be usable — but it also needed to look cool, and they were very open to my opinion on it, which was very nice.

In terms of creating an understanding of my character, I’ve got like five sisters and my mother — I’m the youngest as well — so I know exactly what it’s like living with a household of women! It’s very much a matriarchy in my household.”

Jean-Luc Picard (Patrick Stewart) sits with Elnor. (CBS All Access)

Like Raffi Musiker (Michelle Hurd) before him, Elnor is another character who formed a relationship with Jean-Luc Picard during the years after we left the Enterprise captain following Star Trek: Nemesis, where the Starfleet admiral met the young Romulan during his work helping to evacuate the impacted population from the path of the Romulan supernova.

“I would say I’m very loyal and dedicated to Picard,” the actor explained. “I’d say he’s even kind kind of like a father figure, almost. I knew him — we encountered each other — when I was younger, and [the Star Trek: Picard story] picks up after not having seen each other for a while; it picks up on that relationship, and the history there, as well.”

https://www.instagram.com/p/B4kKLlFBG53/

While this week will be the Star Trek community’s first experience of Evan Evagora’s character, the actor has certainly been ready to beam into the future for years, and Picard will finally let him live out that hope.

“I’ve been a big sci-fi and fantasy fan, thanks to mum, through reading and watching, and now I feel like this is where I’m at home the most. I love it, and now we’re doing it – so it’s like a dream come true.”

Evan Evagora makes his Star Trek: Picard debut as Elnor in “Absolute Candor,” arriving Thursday on CBS All Access in the US and CTV Sci-Fi Channel in Canada, following Friday on Amazon Prime Video around the world.

STAR TREK ONLINE 10th Anniversary Giveaway!

This year marks the tenth anniversary of Star Trek Online, and as part of the long-running game’s decade celebration, we’ve got another giveaway for PC-gaming players to commemorate the occasion!

This contest has now ended, and winners have been notified.

But it’s not just in-game goodies you have a chance to win this time around: as part of the 10th anniversary event kicking of Star Trek Online: Legacy, three of our winning entrants will win special-edition Star Trek Online Starfleet delta badges from Perfect World Entertainment!

In this big giveaway, we’ve got three tiers of prizes ready to beam out to more than 500 winners!

The limited-edition Star Trek Online anniversary badge

Three (3) Gold Prize winners will win a limited-edition Star Trek Online anniversary badge, along with in-game codes to unlock the massive Federation Fleet Admiral Faction Pack for PC, which includes:

– T6 Valiant (Escort Vessel)
– T6 Andromeda (Cruiser Vessel)
– T6 Pathfinder (Science Vessel)
– 2 Ship Slots
– 1 Caitian Bridge Officer

– Racing Uniform
– 1 Exocomp Pet
– Title: Voyager
– Title: Seeker
– Title: Pathfinder

The Europa-class Heavy Battlecruiser

Fifty (50) Silver Prize winners will get their hands on an in-game code to acquire the T6 Europa-Class Heavy Battlecruiser for your fleet.

The Europa-class Heavy Battlecruiser is well-suited to the frontiers of the Federation, whether the mission is one of exploration or defense efforts. It is named after the U.S.S. Europa, a Nimitz-class vessel lost at the infamous “Battle at the Binary Stars” under the command of Admiral Brett Anderson in 2256.

This modern 25th-century counterpart to that ill-fated flagship of yesteryear has been fully outfitted with the latest in team support capabilities, and a substantial array of versatile armaments.

Up to five hundred (500) winners will be awarded the Bronze Prize, which consists of a Federation Elite Starter Pack containing the following:

– T6 Reliant-class
Advanced Light Cruiser
– 12 Inventory Slots
– 12 Bank Slots

– 2 Bridge Officer Slots
– 1 Borg Bridge Officer
– 13 Mark II Very Rare Space Gear
– 7 Mark II Very Rare Ground Gear
– Starfleet Academy Uniform

Our Star Trek: Online 10th Anniversary giveaway begins today — just email us here for your chance to win!

This contest will run through February 25. On February 26th, we’ll contact our winners via email — and if you’re selected as a Gold Prize winner, we’ll request mailing information for your Star Trek Online badge prizes at that time.

All winners will be emailed the in-game code and instructions how to add the bundle to your Star Trek Online account. Good luck to all!

Star Trek Online — Legacy is now live on PC and launches on PlayStation 4 and Xbox One on March 3.

New Photos for PICARD 104: “Absolute Candor”

This week brings us to the fourth episode of Star Trek: Picard, and we’ve got your next round of new photos from “Absolute Candor” today — which introduces us to the next major cast member in the series, Evan Evagora as young Romulan warrior Elnor, as well as brings longtime Star Trek director Jonathan Frakes being the camera for the first time in this series.

This week, we’ll see how Jean-Luc Picard (Patrick Stewart) came to know Elnor during the course of his work spearheading the evacuation of Romulan space from the impending supernova disaster, traveling to colony world Vashti on the edge of what was then the Romulan Neutral Zone.

Here are seven new photos from this week’s episode, along with six previously-released images for “Absolute Candor.”

Revealed in the Star Trek: Picard press kit for this opening season, Elnor spent his youth growing up on Vashti under the care of the Qowat Milat, a local sect of all-female Romulan religious scholars.

A bit of Elnor’s history revealed in the ‘Picard’ press kit. (CBS All Access)

Of note in the photo gallery is a moment where Soji (Isa Briones) and Narek (Harry Treadaway) share a bottle of Romulan Ale; this blue beverage appears in its traditional tier-topped bottle, seen first all the way back in Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan.

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

ABSOLUTE CANDOR — The crew’s journey to Freecloud takes a detour when Picard orders a stop at the planet Vashti, where Picard and Raffi relocated Romulan refugees 14 years earlier. Upon arrival, Picard reunites with Elnor (Evan Evagora), a young Romulan he befriended during the relocation. Meanwhile, Narek continues his attempts to learn more about Soji while Narissa’s impatience with his lack of progress grows.

Written by Michael Chabon. Directed by Jonathan Frakes.

Star Trek: Picard returns Thursday, February 13 with “Absolute Candor” on CBS All Access and CTV Sci-Fi Channel, following internationally on Amazon Prime Video on February 14.