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STAR TREK: PICARD Premiere Promotional Roundup

The first week of Star Trek: Picard is finally over, and after the premiere episode debuted this Thursday on CBS All Access and CTV Sci-Fi — and on Amazon Prime internationally — the Picard content didn’t stop when the closing credits of “Remembrance” rolled!

New video releases, podcasts, and promotional events continued to debut throughout the week — and we’ve got a full wrap-up of the Picard tie-in events for you today.

https://www.instagram.com/p/B7qptLrBfNn/

Thursday morning brought us the debut episode of The Ready Room with host Wil Wheaton, the weekly Picard after-show which is scheduled for release at 10AM after each new Picard episode drops on CBS All Access.

Arriving on Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, and of course CBS All Access, the first half-hour presentation featured guests Hanelle Culpepper (episode director) and Michael Chabon (series showrunner), and included some behind-the-scenes footage from production and a peek at next week’s episode, “Maps and Legends.”

Thursday afternoon brought the surprise debut of the official Star Trek: Picard Podcast, a joint production between CBS All Access and the entertainment trade Deadline, which will be a weekly release covering each episode of the first season of Picard.

Seemingly a replacement for the planned Prime Directive podcast announced back in August (that was supposed to launch in late 2019), the Deadline-hosted Picard Podcast is hosted by that publication’s editors, Dominic Patten and Geoff Boucher, and is described as “a weekly series of in-depth and informed discussions with the stars and creative team behind CBS All Access’ anticipated series on the ideas, strategies and geopoetics” behind the show.

The first episode, which can be listened to here or on Spotify, includes guests Alex Kurtzman, Akiva Goldsman, Michael Chabon, Hanelle Culpepper, Patrick Stewart, and more.

CBS All Access also took over New York City on Thursday, with a Star Trek: Picard publicity blitz ranging from the NYC Subway system to the middle of Times Square itself.

Underground, fans of Star Trek: Picard could pick up a pair of Picard-themed MTA transit cards at six subway stations — conveniently selected to form a Starfleet delta on NYC maps.

Meanwhile, in Times Square, a Picard photo station was set up for fans to drop by and get their picture taken in front of a massive Starfleet delta, as well as pick up an exclusive poster available only at the brand activation location.

A similar event is planned for Sunday, January 26 in Los Angeles.

Finally, out in San Diego on Thursday and Friday, the Comic Con Museum hosted a gallery of Star Trek: Picard costumes and props, many of which were being showcased in public for the first time.

Along with costumes for many of the main cast in the series, the gallery also included props used by the squadron of Romulan black-ops agents sent to capture Dahj in “Remembrance.”

Special thanks to Todd Felton and Shawn Richter for sharing these photos with TrekCore.

Star Trek: Picard continues next Thursday.

Return to STAR TREK: DEEP SPACE NINE in IDW’s Upcoming Odo-Centric Comic, TOO LONG A SACRIFICE

2019 brought us a series of both highs and lows for fans of Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, from the long-awaited arrival of the What We Left Behind documentary in the spring, to the sad passings of both Aron Eisenberg and Rene Auberjonois, both beloved cast members well-known to Star Trek convention-goers.

2020, however, is already showing signs that the universe is tilting back to the positive side of things for fans of the space station series, as IDW Publishing this week announced an upcoming four-issue comic miniseries centered around the good Constable Odo, Too Long a Sacrifice.

Debuting in April, Too Long a Sacrifice is set during the latter half of the series, while the Dominion War is raging and station Deep Space 9 is on the front lines, and will feature art by illustrator Greg Scott.

Artwork by J.K. Woodward.

“Set during the most difficult hours of the Dominion War, Too Long a Sacrifice shows the station during trying times: a series of mysterious and seemingly unsolvable terrorist attacks just as the war has everyone strained to the breaking point,” said writer David Tipton, joined as always in his writing duties by brother Scott Tipton.

“We’ll get to see the darker side of life on the station as Odo leads the investigation, with increasingly desperate conditions forcing him and others to deal with new and unexpected allies and to use unusual tactics in their efforts to stop the attacks.”

Star Trek: Deep Space Nine — Too Long a Sacrifice #1 will be available with multiple cover variants in April 2020, including a variant by artists Ricardo Dumond and two variants by J.K. Woodward.

DISCOVERY Season 2 Soundtrack Coming to Vinyl in March

Composer Jeff Russo’s score for Star Trek: Discovery Season 2 arrived in digital form back in July, and now we’ve learned that Lakeshore Records is getting ready to send out the show’s sophomore soundtrack in a collectible vinyl release this spring!

In an exclusive reveal here at TrekCore, we now have all the details for this limited-edition release — which follows the Discovery Season 1 vinyl release from 2018 — which will be produced as a two-album product in a unique “Interstellar Splatter” design.

Due to the size limitations of the product, the vinyl release will contain 27 of the full 39-track Season 2 soundtrack collection, with these selections included:

Side 1: 18+ minutes

1. The Final Frontier 4:32
2. Christopher Pike 2:21
3. What’s Wrong 1:28
4. All Of Them 2:41
5. I’m Coming Back 1:40
6. Flashback 3:30
7. He’ll Never Know Me 1:20

Side 2: 17+ minutes

8. The Sphere 0:44
9. Questions 1:23
10. Airlock 2:04
11. Airiam in Space 2:36
12. Fiercely Loyal 3:06
13. What Do They Call You 1:38
14. Pillar of the Past 5:01

Side 3: 21+ minutes

15. I Lied 3:56
16. Red Angel 3:29
17. She Was Right 2:57
18. Discovery To Enterprise 3:42
19. Goodbyes 3:00
20. Pike On The Bridge 3:07

 

Side 4: 18+ minutes

21. Ready 3:15
22. Time Traveler 2:45
23. Goodbye, Pike 3:41
24. Spock’s Personal Log 4:43
25. End Credits (Season 2 Finale) 1:05
26. Many Mudds 1:00
27. End Credits (Lounge Version) 1:34

The album will be available exclusively in FYE stores in North America (and wide in all stores internationally), beginning March 6 — but you can preorder from FYE now ahead of March’s debut. If you’re in the UK (or elsewhere internationally), you can preorder from Amazon UK starting today.

Unfortunately, there’s still no word on Discovery’s Season 2 soundtrack coming in a compact-disc format, but for you vinyl collectors, this will give you a chance to continue growing your Star Trek record sets with the addition of this release.

S1 Soundtrack: Chapter 1

S1 Soundtrack: Chapter 2

S2 Soundtrack

STAR TREK: PICARD Producers Talk NEMESIS and B-4, Plus: Isa Briones on Learning About Her Unexpected Role

Star Trek: Picard premiered this morning on CBS All Access and fans are already speculating about how the story will unfold over the next nine episodes of the season — and last week at the Picard press tour we got a chance to hear from the series’ producers on how “Remembrance,” and Season 1 as a whole, will tie back into the last Captain Picard adventure.

SPOILER WARNING: This article contains major spoilers for “Remembrance,” the first episode of ‘Star Trek: Picard.’

Captain Picard (Patrick Stewart) tries to explain the situation to B-4 (Brent Spiner). (Paramount Pictures)

In 2002’s Star Trek: Nemesis, one of Data’s final acts is to take his personal programming — in the form of ‘memory engrams’ — and transfer a copy to the prototype android B-4, in an attempt to upgrade his ‘younger brother’ to be as functional as Data himself.

DATA: Captain Picard agrees that the B-4 was probably designed with the same self-actualisation parameters as myself. If my memory engrams are successfully integrated into his positronic matrix, he should have all my abilities.

LA FORGE: Yes, but he would have all your memories as well. Do you feel comfortable with that?

DATA: I feel nothing, Geordi. It is my belief that with my memory engrams he will be able to function as a more complete individual.

After Data was killed destroying the Scimitar at the end of the film, B-4 began to mutter the words to “Blue Skies” — the song sung by Data in the opening of the movie — offering a glimmer of hope that the fallen officer might not be gone forever after all.

B-4 in storage at the Daystrom Institute in Okinawa. (CBS All Access)

Jumping ahead now to Star Trek: Picard, the former Enterprise captain encounters B-4 again years later — only this time, finding the android disassembled and under the care of Dr. Agnes Jurati (Alison Pill) at the Daystrom Institute in Okinawa, Japan.

Despite the hope offered at the end of Nemesis, Jurati explains that Data’s transfer to B-4 didn’t quite work out as hoped.

JURATI: He’s an inferior copy. Data tried to download the contents of his neural net into B-4 just before his death… almost all of it was lost. Ultimately, B-4 wasn’t much like Data at all; in fact, no other synth has been.

Producer/director Akiva Goldsman and ‘Picard’ showrunner Michael Chabon. (CBS)

While on the surface, this reveal of B-4’s ultimate failure may seem to cut off the thread that Star Trek: Nemesis left hanging, we caught up with series producers Akiva Goldsman and Michael Chabon at the Los Angeles press tour and heard about how that seemingly-closed story from Nemesis may not just be over quite yet.

AKIVA GOLDSMAN: There are so many implicit assumptions in that [idea that] I cannot confirm or deny!

MICHAEL CHABON: We had to start [with ‘Nemesis’ because] if you’re going to continue to tell the story of Picard, you have to look at the last time you saw him. So the events and conclusion of ‘Nemesis’ were always part of the recipe for us.

GOLDSMAN: I think we’re dancing around [something] that’s an assumption in terms of what [story points] we’ve closed off… and what we haven’t.

CHABON: It’s a question we want you to be asking!

GOLDSMAN: I mean, it’s funny, in serialized television, your first three episodes are like your first act. Any good first act sets up some things that are seemingly apriori, and then it’s like, “Oh well, maybe that’s not accurate.” Remember, part of what we’re doing is making it for [fans], but also for my wife who has never seen an episode of ‘Star Trek,’ right?

So the reestablishment of the baseline — in order to create expectations — is really complex, where you have something that some people love so deeply, and then there are some people have no understanding [of why] that [Data to B-4] download is significant.

The downloads from ‘Nemesis’ will continue to be significant.

Isa Briones as both Dahj and Soji Asha. (CBS All Access)

While B-4’s part in the Star Trek: Picard story remains to be seen, the android connection to Data continues in the dual lives of Dahj and Soji Asha, a pair of synthetic twins created by cyberneticist — and one-time Next Generation guest character — Bruce Maddox.

Both “daughters of Data,” as Picard speculatively calls them, are portrayed by actor Isa Briones in a secretive dual role only revealed in the final moments of “Remembrance.” The actor told us during the lead-up to the series premiere about how even she was kept in the dark about her two-part performance until late in the audition process.

ISA BRIONES: Um, well I think the, the interesting part about it, funny, I didn’t know I was going to be playing two characters until I was auditioning. I didn’t know until finally, one of the casting people was like, “Oh yeah, one of the things that is really big for the character is, you know, the twin thing.” I was like, “I’m sorry?”

So that was kind of a, you know, a learn as you go situation. Because going into it, I didn’t know, but I think you’ll definitely see a lot of [Soji]; she is kind of your point person for who this girl is.

It’s also so cool to learn how to make that dynamic work, of how I am going to portray that these are two separate people — and that was definitely a learning process. But hey, I got to see Brent [Spiner] doing that all the time when I went back and watched ‘The Next Generation’ — so I had the best people to learn from.

As Briones notes, her double duty as a pair of similar synthetics echoes the many times Brent Spiner played one of the various members of the “Soong family” — Data, Lore, B-4, and even Noonien Soong himself — often being on-screen more than once at a time.

Brent Spiner as both Data and Lore in “Datalore.” (CBS)

While Dahj’s story seemed to meet its end at the climactic rooftop fight in “Remembrance,” we don’t know yet if Soji Asha is the only version of Briones still out there in the Star Trek: Picard world; with the many references to a population of “synths” leading up to the events of 2399, perhaps we’ll see even more copies of Maddox’s work as the series continues.

Star Trek: Picard continues on January 30 with “Maps and Legends,” the second episode of the season.

STAR TREK: PICARD Premiere Review — “Remembrance”

If there is one thing Star Trek: Picard needed to accomplish to overcome the Dyson Sphere-sized expectations of fans, it was to recapture the power and essence of the character of Jean-Luc Picard on screen. Of course, that might be easier said than done when considering the enormous toll that could potentially take on a 79-year-old leading man, even one as accomplished as Patrick Stewart.

After viewing the first three episodes of the new CBS All Access series, Stewart’s return to one of television’s most iconic roles just might be the highly anticipated series’ greatest success.

NOTE: The following review contains SPOILERS for “Remembrance,” but also includes non-spoiler impressions from Episodes 102 and 103 of the series, which encapsulates a complete ‘first chapter’ of the new series.

From the first few scenes, Patrick Stewart’s staggering performance helps invigorate the character with the vitality, wisdom and empathy that helped define him so well across 176 episodes of Star Trek: The Next Generation and four feature films.

Jean-Luc Picard (Patrick Stewart) speaks with Romulan confidants Zhaban (Jamie McShane, left) and Laris (Orla Brady). (CBS All Access

He is the captain we remember… even if we do find him in a wholly unfamiliar place as the series opens. He’s at home, on Earth, quietly ruing decisions of the past and what he has become, saying to Romulan friends — and attendants at Château Picard — Laris (a wonderfully-lively Orla Brady) and Zhaban (Jamie McShane) that while his dreams are lovely, “It’s the waking up that I’m beginning to resent.”

The melancholy opening of the series features one of those dreams, concluding with a series of massive explosions from the surface of Mars (first seen in the “Children of Mars” Short Trek) that destroys the Enterprise-D and ends a game of poker with Data (Brent Spiner), a game he’d said only moments before, he didn’t want to end.

(It’s a clever opening that literally begins where Nemesis ended 20 years prior, with a rendition of “Blue Skies” crooning in the background.)

The destruction on Mars, it turns out, is very real — and is the first of several big surprises in store for fans throughout the series’ first hour. We knew coming into the show that Admiral Picard’s mission to help save the Romulan people from the Hobus supernova — a disaster introduced in 2009’s Star Trek film — was going to be at the crux of his falling out with Starfleet.

The retired admiral gazes out over his family vineyard at Château Picard in France. (CBS All Access)

What we didn’t know was that the mission would never even get off the ground after Starfleet canceled plans to put resources toward that humanitarian duty because of an attack by “rogue synths,” or androids, that destroyed the beloved Utopia Planitia shipyards and set the red planet ablaze.

Stewart has spent the last few weeks talking about how Picard would touch on a myriad of real-world challenges being faced in the year 2020, and this attack on Mars nicely teases many of them: refugee relief, reductive border protection policies, debates on technological advancement, and more. Picard is even forced to emphasize the standalone word “lives” when an interviewer derisively says the scuttled supernova relief efforts were only designed to save “Romulan lives.”

It’s a dynamic jumping off point for a story that quickly unfolds over the first hour. Picard soon meets the mysterious Dahj (Isa Briones), who was recently triggered into a fight in which she methodically killed everyone involved in self-defense, before an innate sense guided her to find Picard, who she simply and eloquently describes later as “the great man.” An apt description.

Troubled young Dahj (Isa Briones) finds her way to Picard’s home. (CBS All Access)

Beyond the amazing performance from Stewart, the introduction of Dahj is likely the most successful element of Star Trek: Picard. Played by television newcomer Isa Briones (pronounced EE-sa, not EYE-sa) with an exciting mix of pathos, danger and enlightenment, Dahj’s character is fascinating from the start. Her introduction eventually leads to several surprising and rewarding connections to Star Trek’s past, and her ultimate fate serves as the launching point for the series’ central mystery.

Briones’ character, like the whole series, is imbued by the touch of showrunner Michael Chabon, the famed Pulitzer Prize-winning author, and Star Trek superfan, empowered with guiding us on Picard’s journey late in life.

The script from Akiva Goldsman and James Duff ripples with literary influences. Here’s Picard quoting his beloved Shakespeare, “There is no legacy as rich as honesty.” And Dahj describing her awakening “like lightning seeking the ground,” and later asking of Picard, “Have you ever been a stranger to yourself?”

When Dahj is ultimately faced with the truth of what she is — seemingly, a sentient android “lovingly and deliberately created” by the infamous Bruce Maddox in his final attempt to replicate Data and the Soong-type androids –there is no better guide for her than Picard, who emotionally vows that, “If you are who I think you are, you are dear to me in ways you can never understand. I will never leave you.”

Picard tells Dahj who — or what — she may really be. (CBS All Access)

As a man who once lived an entire lifetime of memories in the span of 30 minutes, there is no one more suited than Jean-Luc Picard to help Dahj as she realizes that the memories she is recounting to him are not “real.”

“It’s a beautiful memory and it’s yours,” he tells her in support. “No one can touch it or take it away.”

The moment is truly special and hearkens back to one of The Next Generation’s crowning achievements, 1992’s classic episode “The Inner Light.” Whether it be Data’s paintings, or Maddox, or a subtle reference to a lifetime Jean-Luc lived in his head 20 years prior, the Picard series connects in deep and layered ways with past Trek that are wholly unexpected. Is the series a sequel to TNG? Of course not. But does it feel like an organic continuation of Rick Berman-era Star Trek? It sure does.

That association to Trek’s past is also on full display in the Starfleet Archive Museum, where the gift of Trek’s history is provided with a simple glance around the room as Picard attempts to unravel the mystery of one of his dreams. Stargazer? Check! “Captain Picard Day” banner? Check! There is even a quick glimpse of a model of the Sovereign-class Enterprise-E, making its first television appearance nearly 25 years after it was introduced in Star Trek: First Contact.

And whether by design or not, the backstory of Starfleet withdrawing from efforts to help save as many Romulan lives as possible dovetails quite nicely into the creation of the Kelvin Timeline, where we had previously learned that Spock was basically on an against-all-odds, one-man mission to try and nullify the effects of the supernova. His failure, and Starfleet’s now established abandonment, leads Nero on a path of Romulan revenge to eradicate Vulcan and Earth in the past. It’s all connected.

That failure to save Romulus, and his failure to help Dahj when she needed it during the episode’s rooftop battle, eventually springs Picard into action when he realizes he’s been: “Sitting here, all these years, nursing my offended dignity… writing books of history people would prefer to forget. I never asked anything of myself, at all. I haven’t been living; I’ve been waiting to die.”

Narek (Harry Treadaway) finds Soji (Isa Briones) at the heart of a Borg Cube. (CBS All Access)

Ultimately, it all leads to a staggering conclusion at a “Romulan Reclamation Site” in space, where we meet another new regular cast member: a shady Romulan named Narek (Harry Treadway), who barely conceals his obvious ulterior motives… as he introduces himself to Dr. Soji Asha, played by Isa Briones in a surprise double role.

“So… there’s another one,” notes Picard, as he realizes that Maddox’s work gives him at least one more chance to learn about the mysterious “daughters” of Data; Soji is revealed to be Dahj’s twin sister, and at the core of everything happening in the series’ first three episodes.

As the two are chatting on an open walkway in the massive ship, director Hanelle Culpepper’s camera pulls back as composer Jeff Russo’s thumping score helps reveal one of the most iconic images in Star Trek’s illustrious history: an abandoned and damaged Borg cube now under the control of Romulan forces.

The moment is incredible, regardless of how many times you’ve previously seen the cube in trailers, and guided expertly by Culpepper’s direction, which helps unify the series’ first three episodes with consistent and assured camerawork — while refraining from some of the more avant-garde angles and movements seen frequently in Discovery.

Picard meets Dr. Agnes Jurati (Alison Pill) at the Daystrom Institute in Okinawa. (CBS All Access)

This first hour of the series also introduces us to Dr. Agnes Jurati (a delightful Alison Pill), a Maddox-recruited expert in advanced synthetic research, who explains that the androids who attacked Mars came from her and Maddox’s base of research at the Daystrom Institute in Okinawa.

Along with a boxed-up B-4 — the prototype Soong android introduced in Star Trek: Nemesis — Jurati and her tiny staff are allowed only to operate theoretically on their work, but Maddox has long since disappeared after the ban on synthetics (a mystery that will be more fully-explored as the series proceeds).

Missing from the series premiere are former Starfleet officers Raffi Musiker (Michelle Hurd) and Cristóbal Rios (Santiago Cabrera), two other newcomers who will join the story over the next two hours. Musiker’s backstory with “J.L.” Picard, first teased in the Star Trek: Picard — Countdown comic miniseries, satisfyingly fills in some of the gaps between Nemesis and Picard, while Rios’ introduction is done in such a smart and fun (and very unexpected) way, he is likely to become a fan favorite.

Missing from the first three hours is swordsman Elnor (Evan Evagora), a young Romulan recruited by Picard from a all-female sect of “warrior nuns” known as the Qowat Milat; likely he’ll be joining the adventure in hour four or five of the season.

Cris Rios (Santiago Cabrera), Raffi Musiker (Michelle Hurd), Elnor (Evan Evagora), Seven of Nine (Jeri Ryan), and Hugh (Jonathan Del Arco). (CBS All Access)

Of course, two other well-known characters are also returning to the Trek collective in Picard: Seven of Nine (Jeri Ryan) and Hugh (Jonathan Del Arco). Only Hugh is seen in the opening three chapters of the series (Ryan makes her first appearance in Episode 104), but the influence of supervising producer Kirsten Beyer’s place as the voice of Star Trek: Voyager in the novels is something we look forward to seeing unfold.

Beyer is credited for the first time on Star Trek: Picard with a “created by” title, a culmination of her own amazing journey in Trek.

Images in the ‘Picard’ credits sequence include a Borg cube and the destruction of Romulus. (CBS All Access)

The series’ opening credits are very much in the style of Star Trek: Discovery and other modern ‘peak television’ shows, with abstract visuals that begin with a fragment from a crack in the sky falling toward a vineyard and across a Borg cube and a strand of DNA (among other items) before reforming into a complete image of our titular captain.

The music throughout the series’ first hour is also an inspiration, with Russo’s distinctive style landing in an understated and ethereal way, while standing clearly apart from his work on Star Trek: Discovery. His Picard series theme is wafting and poetic, and very different from any Trek theme that has come before. It is stripped down and quiet, beginning with a subdued piano and a graceful woodwind combining to make a distinct statement that this unique version of Trek is about one man’s journey.

The violin-heavy theme is so light and airy that some viewers may struggle to even find the “theme” in the first few listens, but once you land on the way Russo uses his string and reed sections to ever-so-slightly build toward a peak, you’ll find yourself humming it in no time. And as he did with the Discovery theme echoing a few cords of Alexander Courage’s original Star Trek music, Russo again echoes another Trek master as the Picard theme closes with a hint of Jerry Goldsmith’s famous theme from Star Trek: The Motion Picture, which of course was used to open each episode of The Next Generation.

Ultimately, Russo’s new music for Picard’s opening credits is so strong, there is every chance it will become the musical cue that you most associate with the character of Jean-Luc Picard — even when taking into consideration the uber-popular Jay Chattaway suite from “The Inner Light”. It’s that memorable.

Dreaming about better times aboard the Enterprise-D. (CBS All Access)

Star Trek: Picard never feels nostalgic, but instead plots a completely unique course forward for the franchise while simultaneously incorporating deep layers from Trek’s past. It’s an amazing feat, propped up by standout performances from Stewart and Briones. The mysteries are intriguing (and instantly satisfying), and Chabon’s nuance on the page is impactful.

Against the heavy weight of expectations and anticipation, Star Trek: Picard is an unqualified success.

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.

Feast Your Eyes on the STAR TREK: PICARD Title Sequence

Early this morning — in the United States, that is — the premiere episode of Star Trek: Picard finally beamed down to CBS All Access, and now we finally have our first look at the series’ new main title sequence and theme as Jean-Luc Picard returns for the first time in two decades.

While composer Jeff Russo’s ethereal score plays, the camera follows a piece of a fractured blue sky pass through the Picard family vineyard in La Barre, France and then moving through the ground to find a digital rendering of a Borg cube.

As the shard continues its journey through the cube, we pass by a pair of crystalline geometric shapes, floating in the void among strands of what appears to be strands of genetic code, eventually forming the iris of a human eye.

After a brief transition into a technological sphere, the eye flashes into the form of planet Romulus, shattered in the wake of the Hobus Supernova (first seen in the 2009 Star Trek film).

Finally, those destroyed fragments of Romulus and the still-floating piece of French sky come together to form the face of Jean-Luc Picard (Patrick Stewart), who stares deep into camera as the updated title card for Star Trek: Picard appears.

Of note, the new Picard title card is a slight change to the treatment we’ve seen used in CBS marketing over the last several months; while the Original Series-style typeface has been in place since mid-2019, the new design updates the Star Trek text to match the same styling as Star Trek: Discovery.

The Starfleet delta in Picard then expands into a starfield for the last moments of the credits, and as with Discovery’s echo of the classic Trek theme, we get a few bars of the Star Trek: The Next Generation theme song to close out Jeff Russo’s score.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8hWux9BoC3U

We got a chance to talk to composer Jeff Russo about his scoring at the Los Angeles premiere event last week, where he explained how he settled on the new theme for Star Trek: Picard.

JEFF RUSSO: Here’s the thing. We were trying to tell this story that was a lot more intimate, and a lot more emotional because we’re telling one man’s story. One man’s journey. To do that, it didn’t need to be this big, like, frolicking… I wrote a version like that, you know?

We looked at it, and we were like, “Yeah, this is good, but this version of this is not quite right for the way we’re trying to tell the story.” And I was like, “I know what you mean.”

Like, that was my first instinct to write a “Star Trek theme.” So I went back and used the same melodies, but kind of re-did the whole thing to be a little more ‘in our world’ and what I came up with is what you’ve heard. And it definitely tells I think, our story, the way our story needs to be told.

Whether or not people are going to understand or get that, you know, who knows. But that is the story that Alex [Kurtzman] and Michael [Chabon] wanted very much to tell. It also has a ‘heartstring’ feeling to it, which is the other thing we really wanted to pull on, heartstrings.

What do you think about the new credits sequence for Star Trek: Picard — does it meet with your approval or are you disappointed? Sound off in the comments below!

Patrick Stewart Invites Whoopi Goldberg to Join STAR TREK: PICARD Season 2

As we set off to warp speed for the launch of Star Trek: Picard this week, the series’ production team has already starting looking ahead to the next season of adventures — and today, one more classic Star Trek: The Next Generation character is in the mix for Season 2’s storyline.

Appearing as a guest on The View to promote the new series today, Patrick Stewart reminisced with host Whoopi Goldberg — who of course, portrayed the enigmatic bartender Guinan through six years of the show and two Next Gen films — about their time on Trek together, and on behalf of Trek franchise boss Alex Kurtzman, formally invited the actress to return to the 24th Century.

STEWART: I’m here with a formal invitiation. It’s for you, Whoopi. Alex Kurtzman, who is the senior executive producer of ‘Star Trek: Picard’ — and all of his colleagues, of which I am one — want to invite you into the second season.

Please say yes!

GOLDBERG: Yes!

STEWART: Yes!

JOY BEHAR (CO-HOST): You’ll have to tell her to get rid of that [white] hair though, right?

STEWART: She can do whatever the hell she wants!

GOLDBERG: This was one of the great experiences, from beginning to the end, you know? I had the best, best time, the best time ever.

STEWART: Well it was wonderful having you, and we cannot wait to have you with us again one more time.

Judging by Goldberg’s emotional reaction, this is the first time she’s gotten the formal invitation to join the show — certainly it’s the first time publicly she’s been invited, at least — and it’s likely to be some time until we know anything about how Guinan will play into Star Trek: Picard Season 2.

We’re just glad to know that the special relationship between Picard and Guinan will be seen once again, even after so many years.

Star Trek: Picard debuts January 23 on CBS All Access and CTV Sci-Fi Channel, and January 24 on Amazon Prime Video outside of North America.

STAR TREK: DISCOVERY Funko POP! Figures Announced

Nearly four years since the last wave of Star Trek characters made their way into the wildly-popular line of Funko POP! vinyl collectible figures, the company announced today that the leads of Star Trek: Discovery will make their way into the four-inch product line.

As part of a wave of announcements from the London Toy Fair, Funko today revealed their first images of a pair of Star Trek: Discovery character POP! figures: Commander Michael Burnham (in sciences silver) and Commander Saru (in command gold), as seen in Star Trek: Discovery Season 2.

These are still pre-production graphics, and as noted on the image, they are subject to change before their final release — notably, Saru’s uniform reads much too yellow in this graphic compared to the real Starfleet uniform worn by actor Doug Jones, which is lined in metallic gold.

At present, only the Burnham and Saru figures have been announced by the company. We first heard word of their impending release a few weeks ago, and as of yet there’s been no indication that other characters from Discovery are currently being planned for the POP! line — but of course, if that changes, we’ll let you know.

The last round of Star Trek Funko POP! figures were released in 2016 in conjunction with Star Trek Beyond, and that line of 11 products included the main film cast, along with a pair of variant Captain Kirk and Ensign Chekov figures exclusive to various retailers.

Once we have more images of the final product, as well as more information on the release date of these Discovery character figures (some retailers are listing a June 2020 target date on preorders currently), we’ll make sure you hear about it!

STAR TREK: PICARD Character Posters Debut in London

Star Trek: Picard made its London debut this past Wednesday, as Amazon brought the series to the UK for the first of several international premiere events ahead of this Friday’s January 24 launch on their Prime Video service — where Picard will be found outside of the USA and Canada.

To promote the impeding launch of the new show, the company transformed the city’s famous Picadilly Circus station from a normal London Underground stop into a tube station from the future, dubbing it “Picardilly Circus” for several days this week.

The station was filled with new Amazon-branded posters and key artwork for Star Trek: Picard, from video screens and giant applications of Picard (Patrick Stewart) and Seven of Nine (Jeri Ryan) in the escalator corridors to a series of Star Trek: Picard character posters featuring the main cast of the series.

Returning Trek star Jeri Ryan even stopped by to find out what it’s like to see herself in the unique promotional venue:

Those character posters have now made their way online, and include green-themed designs serving to promote the upcoming Amazon Prime Video debut on Friday. Included are posters for Jean-Luc Picard (Patrick Stewart), Seven of Nine (Jeri Ryan), Dahj (Isa Briones), Captain Cristobal Rios (Santiago Cabrera), Raffi Musiker (Michelle Hurd), Dr. Agnes Jurati (Alison Pill), and Romulan regulars Narek (Harry Treadaway) and Elnor (Evan Evagora).

Along with these new posters, a set of isolated character photography has also been released, which will surely be a boon to those who dabble in Star Trek fan artwork. While we’re presenting scaled-down versions of these graphics here, full-sized editions are available in our Picard image gallery, along with previously-released photography.

Again, the Amazon Prime Video branding is used to represent the show’s international roll-out, debuting on that streaming service on January 24.

In the United States, Star Trek: Picard will be released Thursday mornings — beginning January 23 — on CBS All Access, and on CTV SciFi in Canada.

Prelude to PICARD — Retro Review: “Destiny”

Half a decade after the Dominion War and more than a year after the rise and fall of Praetor Shinzon, the galaxy’s greatest scourge, the Borg, returns to wreak havoc upon the Federation — and this time, its goal is nothing less than total annihilation.

Elsewhere, deep in the Gamma Quadrant, an ancient mystery is solved. One of Earth’s first generation of starships, lost for centuries, has been found dead and empty on a desolate planet. But its discovery so far from home has raised disturbing questions, and the answers harken back to a struggle for survival that once tested a captain and her crew to the limits of their humanity.

From that terrifying flashpoint begins an apocalyptic odyssey that will reach across time and space to reveal the past, define the future, and show three captains that some destinies are inescapable. For Captain Jean-Luc Picard of the U.S.S. Enterprise, defending the future has never been so important, or so personal — and the wrong choice will cost him everything for which he has struggled and suffered.

For Captain William Riker of the U.S.S. Titan, that choice has already been made — haunted by the memories of those he was forced to leave behind, he must jeopardize all that he has left in a desperate bid to save the Federation.

And for Captain Ezri Dax of the U.S.S. Aventine, whose impetuous youth is balanced by the wisdom of many lifetimes, the choice is a simple one: there is no going back — only forward to whatever future awaits them. . . .

We’re counting down to the impending return of Jean-Luc Picard by revisiting some of the pivotal stories about the beloved Starfleet captain from across the last three decades of Star Trek: The Next Generation published fiction.

Welcome to the next entry in our retro review series Prelude to Picard!

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The Star Trek: Destiny trilogy by David Mack – Gods of Night, Mere Mortals, and Lost Souls – is the best Star Trek story ever published in prose. A stunning achievement of audacious scale, I doubt anything will quite shake Destiny from the top spot of my all-time favorite Star Trek books.

And given that Star Trek: Picard looks to include some Borg elements in it, what better book to finish this series than with the Star Trek novels that gave us an origin story for the Borg, and a totally satisfying ending to the Borg arc?

It is highly unlikely that anything seen in this novel will become part of the Star Trek canon when Picard airs – just the fact that a Borg cube exists twenty years after Star Trek: Nemesis is incompatible with how Destiny ends – but this trilogy and the new show look like they are preparing to explore some similar themes and ideas.

With returning characters from The Next Generation, and the addition of Seven of Nine, in some ways, Picard is shaping up to be a 24th century Star Trek crossover. Destiny is the ultimate crossover for the continuity established in the novels, pulling together in three main strands (The Next Generation relaunch, the Titan series, and the Deep Space Nine relaunch): the USS Enterprise-E commanded by Jean-Luc Picard, the USS Titan commanded by William Riker, and the USS Aventine commanded by Ezri Dax.

In addition, the story has a Star Trek: Enterprise relaunch tie-in as well, with the inclusion of Captain Erika Hernandez and the NX-02 Columbia, who play an important role in the creation and ultimate destruction of the Borg Collective.

After years of attempting, and failing, to assimilate the Federation, the Borg return to Federation space with a new mission: its total annihilation. Arriving with overwhelming force and a singular mission, the Borg cut vast swathes of destruction across the Alpha and Beta Quadrants. David Mack has, over the years, earned himself the nickname “Angel of Death” among Star Trek novel fans, and nowhere is that title more deserved than in Destiny.

As the Federation struggles to mount a last stand and its losses mount, Picard, Riker and Dax find themselves in three corners of the galaxy unpicking a mystery that could be the Federation’s only hope. The mystery involves the fate of the Columbia two hundred years prior, which was discovered in the 24th century wrecked on a planet in the Gamma Quadrant.

Destiny is huge, spanning three books, three ships and crews, and cameos from across the pantheon of Star Trek literature that fold in established and original characters and take us from one corner of the Star Trek universe to the other.

Despite its galactic scope, however, the story never loses sight of the smaller character threads that it is interested in exploring; Riker and Troi’s difficulty conceiving a child, Erika Hernandez’s guilt over her decisions, Picard’s struggle to move on from the Borg, and Dax’s feeling out of place as a new captain on an important mission are just some of the character stories that play themselves out over the course of the book.

Many of these subplots build upon the previous books in their respective series. And given the grand sweep of Destiny and the galactic-level stakes, you might have forgiven Mack for setting aside some of those character stories. But it is to his credit that he does not. Through the small moments in which characters learn something about themselves or advance their relationships, the stakes for the wider story become both clearer and more poignant.

The Borg trying to wipe out the Federation is a huge story, but it would feel much emptier without the small stories that tie the characters together. For example, the resolution to the book is not as meaningful if we don’t experience every agonizing choice made by Hernandez from the moment her ship is attacked by Romulans to when it meets its tragic fate.

Perhaps the most interesting character arc in the novel, however, is Picard’s. Mack does not try and make Picard the ultimate hero of this trilogy. The final resolution is one to which Picard is largely a bystander to ideas generated and carried out by others. And while that might seem like an odd choice, it absolutely works within the context of this story.

Picard has always struggled to overcome his history with the Borg. The events of First Contact plainly show he is a deeply troubled man by his experiences. While that might not ultimately affect his judgement or his actions in his everyday life, when faced with the Borg it clearly does.

The possibility he is faced with, that all sentient life in the Federation is being exterminated, just as he has found happiness with Beverly and is building a family, is utterly soul destroying. More than any of the major protagonists of Destiny, Picard comes closest to giving into despair about the unstoppable nature of the Borg.

There are so many ways this story could have gone wrong and fallen utterly flat on its face. And none more so than the decision to give the Borg an origin story. But the story, as it unfolds over the course of the three books and you come to realize with horror humanity’s role in the origin of their greatest enemy, works on every level.

Destiny gives the Borg a full arc, reconciles many of the more curious and contradictory elements of the race as seen on screen, and gives them an extremely satisfying send off. The book also deftly answers the question about why the Borg are so obsessed with Earth and humanity, in a way that feeds into the story’s emotional depth.

And in addition to giving us a full explanation of who the Borg are what motivates them, Destiny also succeeds in making the Borg scary again. Through the run of Voyager, there was a growing criticism that the Borg were becoming less scary and threatening, as they were defeated time and again. But the Borg of Destiny are a horror show, dialing up the creep factor and providing plenty of good reasons why the Borg should be feared.

As Star Trek novels transition away from developing their own continuity and back towards serving as companions for the current on-screen material, it is likely to be a long time before anything like Destiny happens again, if it ever does.

Destiny is the ultimate expression of confident storytelling from Star Trek authors given a free hand to chart a course for the characters and stories we love so much. And while the Star Trek canon may go in a totally different direction with what it tells us about the Borg, Destiny will remain an excellent trilogy and totally worth your time.

If Star Trek: Picard finds a way to be even half as good as the Star Trek: Destiny trilogy, we’re in for a real treat.