It looks like Star Trek virtual reality gaming won’t simply be limited to the home console-based Bridge Crew for much longer, as a new Star Trek: Discovery-themed VR experience is coming to major cities later this year.
Gaming company Sandbox VR has partnered with CBS to create the first “holodeck” experience in the form of Star Trek: Discovery — Away Mission, an immersive VR game set to launch in the company’s San Francisco and Hong Kong locations in the fall of 2019, with additional locations already slated for expansion.
In the game, players (in groups of up to six) will become crewmembers on the USS Discovery where Ensign Sylvia Tilly (voiced by Discovery actor Mary Wiseman) will guide the team to beam down to an alien planet and solve a mystery using tricorders, phasers, and other familiar Starfleet gear.
Built in partnership with CBS Interactive, Star Trek: Discovery Away Mission fully immerses you in the world of Star Trek like never before. You and your friends will join the crew aboard the U.S.S. Discovery.
In your role as Starfleet officers, you’ll have the chance to stand on a transporter pad with your own two feet and get beamed to your Away Mission. Guiding you on your mission is Starfleet officer Sylvia Tilly (voiced by Mary Wiseman). As an Away Team, you will investigate a mysterious distress signal originating from an unexplored alien world.
Using iconic Starfleet equipment like the phaser and tricorder, it is up to your crew to work together to solve the mystery and survive the perils along the way. Coming soon to a Sandbox VR location near you!
Past the first two launch cities, additional locations where the Away Mission has been planned for next release include Los Angeles, New York City, Austin, San Diego, and Chicago over the following months; the company also has facilities in Vancouver, Jakarta, Macau, and Singapore which may see Away Mission arrive in future expansions.
'Star Trek: Discovery - Away Mission'
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Promotional poster
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What do you think about this new gaming project — if you live near one of the planned cities, will you check out Away Mission? Let us know in the comments below!
This Sunday at the annual Star Trek convention, showrunner and creator of Star Trek: Lower DecksMike McMahan took the stage in Las Vegas to introduce the forthcoming new animated series to assembled fans.
Only the second public event for the show — following the first reveal at San Diego Comic Con in July — McMahan and his writing team spent nearly an hour telling us all he could about the animated adventures of the USS Cerritos crew.
McMahan, who got his start in Trek with this book Warped: An Engaging Guide to the Never-Aired 8th Season, graduated to the televised side of production last year with the Short Trek episode “The Escape Artist,” which he briefly discussed at the beginning of his stage panel.
That was super fun. I mean that was the very first time I got to play in the real ‘Star Trek’ world — and it was also the first live action thing I’ve ever done. Getting to work with Rainn [Wilson] and the Secret Hideout [production] folks, getting to go to set in Toronto, the [‘Discovery’] set, you can just keep them running in circles around it.
Like, everything is connected. So I would FaceTime my son back in Los Angeles being like, ‘Hey, I, I’m still at work, I’m still on a spaceship!’ and I’d just be walking the corridors and he’d be wide eyed. Like, well, this looks amazing. It was awesome.
Mike McMahan beams into the Star Trek Las Vegas convention.
Before Warped, of course, McMahan first started flexing his Star Trek comedy muscles through his TNG Season 8 Twitter feed, which he described as having been borne out of a spec script he wrote some years ago.
When you’re trying to find a writing job, you have to, like, write pilots, and get your voice out there — and you have to choose between writing an original thing, or writing your version of something that already exists. What I really wanted to do was write a ‘Star Trek’ script and like get it out there, like a comedic version of it.
I wrote one, and I’d given it to my manager, and her first note was, ‘Why are these people on a spaceship?’ And I was like, Oh crap, I should maybe not be trying to get a job off of writing comedic ‘Star Trek’ — or I needed a new manager.
Instead, I started all of the things I wanted to write for that script I would pour into this Twitter feed. The thing I really liked about it was like they were always a stories that sounded like a real ‘Star Trek’ episode… and then it was a funny story that was like about Geordi and Data, which is what I’m there for. That’s what I like.
The producer also shared his thoughts on the humorous aspects of Trek that drive his enjoyment of the franchise.
The fun thing about that was being like, to me, ‘Star Trek’ is funny. When you’re watching a TNG episode and there’s funny stuff happening in it, that’s intentional. That’s what I really love about ‘Star Trek,’ and I think [that while] we all [ask questions like], ‘What’s your favorite episode?’ or ‘What’s your favorite series?’ or ‘Who’s your favorite captain?’… my favorite thing about ‘Star Trek’ are the B-stories.
When you’re watching an episode [and] Picard is being tortured for information by aliens who have have tricked him into not even knowing that he’s being captured, [I] love that story. But then when they’re flipping over [to the other story] and it’s like, ‘Data accidentally locked himself in the bathroom, and he’s freaking out!,’ that’s what I’m there for.
The low-ranking friends who serve as the focus of TNG’s “Lower Decks.”
He also revealed that the Next Generation episode from which this new series gets it’s name — Season 7’s “Lower Decks” — is his favorite entry in the franchise to date.
That ‘Lower Decks’ episode is so deep into the run of TNG, and [the writers] were firing on all cylinders in a lot of ways — the actors were so comfortable in their roles, the stories they had told were like… they knew what they were doing.
‘Lower Decks’ is my favorite episode of TNG — and of any ‘Star Trek’ — [because] it’s like, we get to see the characters… on the Enterprise that felt like if I were on the Enterprise, that would maybe be me.
‘Lower Decks’ writers Garrick Bernard, M Willis, Chris Kula, Ben Rodgers, Ann Kim, and McMahan round out the panel.
Joining McMahan on stage were five members of the series’ writing team: co-executive producer Chris Kula, story editor M Willis, and staff writers Garrick Bernard, Ann Kim, and Ben Rodgers made their first public appearances representing the show — and McMahan described some of the challenges that go into forming a comedy show’s writers room.
I’ve put together comedy rooms before, and it’s really hard. It’s really complicated, because there’s just a lot of stuff that you’re trying to balance.
You want people that are going to write towards the voice of the show that you pitched, but you also want to bring in people that have different comedic voices and different kind of access points — and you want to put together a room that like isn’t gonna mind being together for 12 hour days to solve problems together.
On top of that, we have an animated ‘Star Trek’ show that isn’t for kids. That is a comedy that’s 20-something minutes long, [and] we want to get a full dramatic ‘Star Trek’ episode happening in it, but [just] not focusing on it. What we’re focusing on are the social, emotional stories happening to the ‘Lower Decks’ crew.
[…]
While staffing this group of people, I wasn’t just looking for people who absolutely knew everything about ‘Star Trek,’ because what I wanted to do was put together different comedic voices and people who just felt like they either love ‘Star Trek,’ or they wanted to watch it all the time and learn about it as we were writing it — because the folks who wrote the first ‘Star Trek’ didn’t have ‘Star Trek’ to base it on.
‘Lower Decks’ writer Ann Kim: ‘Star Trek’ expert.
Writer Ann Kim spoke about her fairly recent introduction to the world of Trek, having only come to the franchise as a viewer thanks to her participation in Lower Decks — sporting a fun STAR TREK EXPERT hat on stage.
I feel like his hat is ironic, but also it’s the most earnest hat ever — because the past six months in my life have been dedicated to ‘Star Trek’ in the most passionate way….
Growing up it wasn’t really something that I was exposed to… when I had my first staffing meeting on the show, to prep for it, I watched an episode that my friend recommended — “Darmok” — and literally cried. I’m a very emotional person to begin with, but it truly affected me in a way that I was so shocked by.
It’s amazing how like my mind is just kind of been blown by this entire experience, and even my writing style has changed, and I feel like I can be like… parallel dimensions and universes? Before, I’d been like, ‘Whoa, that’s so crazy,” [and now] I’m like, “Oh yeah, been there, done that,” like I’ve watched somebody else said it.
I just feel like a different brand new person.
Story editor M Willis revealed that early on in the pre-production process on Lower Decks, she distributed copies of the late Michael Piller’s in-depth book on screenwriting, Fade In: The Making of Star Trek: Insurrection, to the staff for review.
I sent that [book] on our first day to the writing staff, and Ann read it in one night.
McMahan and Garrick Bernard shared a laugh over Bernard’s first experience with Star Trek: Voyager after the young writer joined the Lower Decks team.
McMahan: Garrick, you gotta tell them about watching that episode of ‘Voyager.’
Bernard: “Oh my god — the first episode I watched [from] ‘Voyager’ was ‘Living Witness.’ I go in watching Janeway be, like, this badass, she’s like, ‘I’ll just kill whoever, I don’t care!’ And I was like, ‘I love ‘Star Trek’ now!”
McMahan: “Garrick came in and was like, ‘I’ve now seen ‘Voyager,’ and it is awesome!’ Then he came in the next day and was like, ‘Not every ‘Voyager’ is like that episode.’
The title treatment for ‘Star Trek: Lower Decks.’
The showrunner moved on to talking about the crew of the USS Cerritos, the hero ship of the series, a new-design California-class support ship operating in Starfleet during the year 2380 — and referenced others in its fleet, such as the USS Fresno and USS Sacramento — operating under a mission of “second contact” with new alien races.
‘Lower Decks’ takes place on a ship called the USS Cerritos, and it’s new class of ship, [one] that’s always been out there, but maybe [just] hasn’t been important enough to have had screentime yet. A called the California class of ships… and the specialty of the Cerritos is second contact. That’s their gig.
It’s super important! You show up to [a new alien planet for] first contact, super important, really dangerous. You don’t want to set off any wars. You don’t want to ruin anybody’s lives. Second contact, you’re showing up to the planet, you’re finding all the good places to eat, you’re setting up the communication stuff.
(Writer Chris Kula jumps in: “Find the good breakfast spots!”)
Yeah, you’re like the Yelp of Starfleet. I mean, it’s still important. I want to do explore like, oh, first contact happens, but then when you’re starting to join the Federation, you already have warp capability. That’s the only reason they’re talking to you. You don’t wanna break that Prime Directive…. but, like, what’s happening next?
The characters of STAR TREK: LOWER DECKS (L-R): Ensign Tendi, Ensign Rutherford, Ensign Mariner, Ensign Boimler, Lt. Shaxs, Captain Freeman, Commander Ransom, and Dr. T’Ana.
While no new ship or character artwork was revealed to the Las Vegas audience — as McMahan said he preferred to show off the series “for what it’s supposed to be, instead of what it could be [at this early stage]” — the now-familiar character cards were at least updated with animated blinking effects.
Before involving the writers in talking about each new character, McMahan spoke for a moment for the philosophy behind the crewmembers, how even though they may be low-ranked officers, they still embody all the great things about Starfleet that we’ve come to know.
An important part of this show is figuring out how can you be Starfleet but also be funny because as [‘Lower Decks’ writer] Dave Wright says often, you don’t want a mortgage your characters for the sake fo the story you’re writing.
What we want to do on ‘Lower Decks’ [is make it feel] like you were watching a fast good episode of TNG — and what that means is that there’s nobody in Starfleet, no matter what deck you work on on the ship, that isn’t excellent, who isn’t the best of us… who doesn’t embody that optimistic goodness. That is what we love about ‘Star Trek.’
So when writing a comedy about ‘Star Trek,’ you can’t be “punching down” on ‘Star Trek’ stuff. All of the people you’re writing about have to love Starfleet as much as we do, which is why we love watching [these] stories.
Ben Rodgers spoke about Ensign Beckett Mariner, voiced by Tawny Newsome, a character who’s been demoted from higher ranks multiple times but is “the Star Trek nerd” of the group.
She’s kind of a classic ‘Star Trek’ hero — she’s a little bit Kirk, a little bit Riker. [She] doesn’t really play by the rules necessarily, thinks outside the box a little bit, but gets the job done and is really, really good at Starfleet stuff. She’s like the ultimate ‘Star Trek’ nerd.
She knows a little bit about everything… but she has been demoted so many times, [and] that’s why she’s on a lower deck. Despite knowing everything, she is really bad at taking orders — she’s kind of like Maverick from ‘Top Gun’ a little bit.
Ann Kim weighed in:
She also reminds me a little bit of an Ensign Ro… that vibe of, ‘I’m really talented, I’m really smart, I know what I’m doing, but this institution is flawed and I’m going to have to kind of bend the rules to make things work the way they should — at least in my opinion.’
Writer Chris Kula spoke about Ensign Brad Boimler (voiced by Jack Quaid), a “straight shooter” who’s “neurotic” and “obsessed with rank.”
He is our by-the-book, obsessed with rank, wants-to-be-a-captain-one-day [character] and thinks that following protocol is the only way he’s going to get there. He’s wound super-tight, which makes him a perfect foil for Mariner who is more and more freewheeling, you know, [that] ‘Maverick’-type spirit.
He will get in the captain’s chair one day… if he can take a page from [Mariner] and learn there’s more to Starfleet than just following the rules.
Green-skinned Ensign Tendi (voiced by Noël Wells) was the next subject of conversation, was officially confirmed to be Orion by showrunner Mike McMahan:
Let me just say, Tendi is, intentionally, huge ‘Star Trek’ fan — so to speak — who has just gotten into Starfleet. [She] is anOrion, and this show is her first day getting to work on a Starfleet ship… and it is wish fulfillment [for us]. It is!
We are channeling the feeling of, like, what if one of us got to be on a Starfleet ship? [That’s] the original pitch for her — there’s no job too ‘lower decks’ that she isn’t losing her mind with joy over.
[It’s] like the optimism of Starfleet was turned into a person.
Ann Kim continued:
[Tendi] just brings joy to any scene [because] there’s that happiness and joy there that is not annoying, somehow. Like, you think that it would be, but it just comes from such a real place of being such a fangirl for this amazing institution that is [Starfleet].
McMahan then touched on Ensign Rutherford (Eugene Cordero), a member of the USS Cerritos’ engineering team that isn’t exactly a miracle worker.
[Rutherford] just recently became a cyborg and isn’t used to it yet — [he’s] only complaining about his implant because he doesn’t really understand how to use it. He’s kind of like a Geordi La Forge [who doesn’t] always solve the problem in 40 minutes.
It’s fun cause every episode he’s like, “I got this!’ but he sometimes does NOT have it and it’s fun to see. ‘Oh crap, we have to figure something else out. I don’t know what I’m doing anymore.’ It’s like, ‘I need 20 minutes’ and [the captain says] ‘Well, you have 10!’ [and Rutherford will say,] ‘No, seriously — I need the full 20…. I probably need 30.’
Moving to the USS Cerritos’ bridge crew, McMahan spoke towards the inclusion of a Caitian (in the form of Dr. T’ana), a species first seen in the 1970’s Animated Series, and how she won’t be the only familiar alien we’ll see as Lower Decks moves forward.
The original Animated Series — it has its ups and its has its downs — but it was important to us to feel like when you’re watching our show that it treats all of ‘Star Trek’ equally. So we have characters and alien designs — [some seen only] casually and [others] featured — in our episodes that are from TOS and TNG, and from the Animated Series showing up.
So it really feels like we’re kind of like tightening the bootlaces on like making the Animated Series feel like it’s actually even more canon than it was before.
Story editor M Willis gave a brief description of each of the command staff, starting with Lt. Shaxs (Fred Tatasciore) and Commander Ransom (Jerry O’Connell):
We’ve got Lieutentant Shaxs who is our beefcake Bajoran right there, and then we have Captain Freeman in the middle, and then commander Ransom, who I think Mike described at Comic Con as a kind of ‘California Riker.’
(McMahan: “Like a chill, smug Riker!”)
Yeah, yeah… and then we’ve got Dr. T’Ana… our doctor.
McMahan went on to describe Dr. T’Ana (Gillian Vigman) further, comparing her to cranky Star Trek physicians of years gone by — and how Captain Freeman (Dawnn Lewis) isn’t quite as important as leaders of series past either:
[T’Ana] does not purr. She is not friendly. Like, M’Ress [from the Animated Series] was on the bridge being like, ‘Prrrr… Oh, captain!,’ you know, Dr. T’Ana is more like, ‘Get out of there!’
She’s a bit more of like a Bones McCoy or a Pulaski. She’s kind of like a Super Pulaski, like a cat from a junkyard. She’s not purring at anybody — she’s a good doctor, but she’s unpleasant.
Captain Freeman is as capable as a Starfleet captain as you would want [one] to be, but she’s just not on the most important ship in the fleet — and the stories we’re telling about these guys are like, you know, the show is about the lower decks of a ship, but since the ship is in charge of second contact, these guys are kind of the ‘lower decks’ of crews too.
The panel then shifted to Q & A time, where the writing team laughingly told the audience — in response to a fan question — that the worst jobs on the USS Cerritos include “scraping carbon off of slightly harder carbon” and “cleaning the holodeck… a lot of weird stuff happens in there.”
One fan wondered why after more than fifty years of Star Trek, it’s taken until now until a series has been created as a “purely comedic Trek,” to which McMahan addressed thoughtfully:
We’re all reading the 50-year history right now, and doing a deep dive on what the thinking was, on where every series of ‘Star Trek’ [came from]…
When I met with Secret Hideout, I never expected the show to get made. So I went in and just told them — as a fan of the show and as a writer of animated comedies — what my personal dream ‘Star Trek’ would be: one that is straight-up comedy, but has ‘Star Trek’ in it, and doesn’t “punch down” on ‘Star Trek.’ If you watched it and you had never seen ‘Star Trek,’ you would go, ‘Wow, I want to watch as much Star Trek as possible!’ after that.
I think the reason is Gene Roddenberry didn’t want to write comedies, and everybody that was writing ‘Star Trek’ before, [those shows were] their voice. It was coming from their specific joy of writing, and what kind of stories they want to tell. And ‘Lower Decks’ is [just] what my voice is, and I’m just executing it in a way that brings me joy as a Trekkie.
[…]
Before, you had to have a ‘Star Trek’ that spoke very clearly, ‘This is Star Trek!,’ this fits in a box. But now, it’s like, let’s let people who love ‘Star Trek’ explore a different side of ‘Star Trek’ in all these different [upcoming] shows. And my voice is just the comedic one of them.
‘Star Trek: PIcard’ will see fan-favorite characters return, but what about ‘Lower Decks’?
One of the big questions about Lower Decks — especially because there’s no need to worry about an actor’s aging or need for makeup effects — is if there will be any returning players from the franchise coming back to voice their characters in the animated show.
McMahan got excited when a fan asked about that very subject, but wouldn’t let slip any specifics about what might be happening behind the scenes.
I mean, come on, if you don’t think that we’re trying to get everybody in… like, oh man, I wonder if we should try to get Patrick Stewart? [Laughs]
Yeah, we’re trying to get everybody. I don’t want to tease anything yet, but all I want to say is… it’s our dream. These are all our heroes. We would, if we could figure out a way to not mess up the show and get to geek out over a working with all of these people that we love, we would do it.
All I’ll say to it is the show takes place in 2380 [two years after ‘Voyager,’ and a year after ‘Nemesis’] and we’re trying to make it as in-canon as humanly possible… because why do a ‘Star Trek’ show unless we’re going to be in-canon? It’s part of what makes it great, right? ‘Star Trek’ is about the characters, and even if there’s a bad episode of ‘Star Trek,’ I don’t care. I’m watching it because I love the characters.
Our TNG crew is out there in 2380 – that’s all I’ll say. I will tell you, Mariner gets drunk at the bar and will start going, like, ‘You guys know who Worf is?’ And they’re all like, ‘Yeah, we know Worf, we’re friends.’ She’s like, ‘I love Worf so much.’
Our ‘Lower Decks’ characters are fans of these heroes, and Starfleet too.
Sometimes we’ll be writing something, and everything is going exactly right, and it just feels really Starfleet to us. And then we’ll send [David] Mack the script, and he’ll give us a note and we’ll be like, ‘Oh, we should not have been calling that character ‘Lieutenant.’ It doesn’t make any sense.’
What Mack is amazing at is taking what we’re doing and really like clicking it in place [so that] you can watch a TNG episode, and then bounce to [‘Lower Decks’], and back to TNG and it doesn’t feel like you’re making two different kind of entities.
"Star Trek: Generations" was to feature a set of new Starfleet uniforms, dropped before primary production began due to budget issues – but they were seen on the Playmates Toys #StarTrek TNG action figures from the film, and in one brief shot of @levarburton, cut from the movie. pic.twitter.com/iZTZjQhKse
Next, the design of the Lower Decks crew uniforms came up from an audience question; a fan asked about influences that lead to the new Starfleet look for this show. McMahan explained how
It was important to me to mirror, to match [the styling to what has come before in ‘Trek’]. There were designs that weren’t used for [‘Star Trek: Generations’] and [there have been designs] used across all the series — and we wanted to do something that felt like if you saw somebody cosplaying it, you’d immediately be like, “Wait a minute, that’s [like] TNG… and that has to be the animated show.” But it doesn’t NOT look like Starfleet, you know?
Plus I just love that [jacket] flap. Like, when they’re like getting down and dirty, and unbutton that flap, you know, it just looks awesome…. and Ithink on the bottoms of the [matching boots] is the Starfleet delta.
After the questioning fan somewhat uncomfortably tried to press McMahan about if the Lower Decks uniforms were really going to be “officially canonized” as Starfleet’s style after the Star Trek: Nemesis time period, the producer responded diplomatically:
All right, listen. [Audience laughs]
There’s a lot of stuff going on with [‘Star Trek: Picard’]. ‘Picard’ is doing a lot. What I’ll say is: if you’re on a California-class ship in the year 2380, you’d better be wearing [this] uniform.
Finally, a fan asked McMahan how the Lower Decks writing would differentiate itself from Seth MacFarlane’s The Orville, a comedy space show which has been frequently compared to Star Trek: Discovery since each premiered in 2017.
Seth MacFarlane is the perfect person to be doing [‘The Orville’] because that guy literally used to build Enterprises in his basement made out of cardboard, and he obviously has such an opinion on the kind of show he wants to make. I think what he’s doing with it, it’s like magical. Like I can’t believe that show exists, because it’s like it fell out of another dimension from the 1990s. It’s insane.
My comedic voice really different from his, and the types of stories we’re doing… like, if ‘Deep Space Nine’ feels like drinking a nice cup of coffee, just expertly made, [‘Lower Decks’] feels like getting a cup of coffee thrown in your face and then you fall down stairs, and you’re like, ‘What the hell just happened?’ But you still got the coffee!
I just think that there’s like a million different reasons why the shows are gonna feel different… we’re doing different things, but it’s a great time to be a comedy sci-fi nerd all of a sudden.
Wrapping up, McMahan summed up his thoughts on why he cares so much about Star Trek, and how even with an added focus on humor, this animated crew will still be one of aspiration and hope:
I mean, listen, how many ‘Star Trek’ episodes have you seen where the point of it — especially if Q is involved — that humanity is out in space, but we haven’t abandoned what makes us human? To me, it’s really important right now, especially when you’re talking about what ‘the best of us’ is, is that yeah, we have paths.
We have all this amazing technology, but the world is an uncertain dark place, and so to me when, when we’re telling a ‘Star Trek’ story, it’s important that people feel like people, that they have emotional things going on, and that they’re funny — and they CAN be funny, [or] they can be serious and be doing sci-fi stuff — but you’re reminded all the time why they’re human and why we’re following these characters, or human-adjacent characters, that we love.
Star Trek: Lower Decks is in production now and is slated to arrive on CBS All Access sometime in 2020.
Announced today at the annual Las Vegas Star Trek convention is the news that the second year of Star Trek: Discovery is due to arrive on home media in just a few months: the Blu-ray and DVD release of Season 2 is beaming down on November 12.
Including audio commentaries, behind-the-scenes features, deleted scenes, and a gag reel, the four-disc Blu-ray set will include all 14 episodes from Season 2, and (as of this writing) two of the four filmed “Short Treks,” the Tilly-centric “Runaway” and the Saru-centric “The Brightest Star.”
(We’re already investigating the status of “Calypso” and “The Escape Artist, and will report back once we know more.)
The Blu-ray set has been announced to include all of these behind-the-scenes features:
• ENTER THE ENTERPRISE – Captain Pike shepherds U.S.S. Discovery through Season Two, but must return to his original command on the U.S.S. Enterprise. The production designer, builders, actors and producers discuss the daunting task of reviving the iconic ship’s bridge.
• PUTTING IT TOGETHER – Follow the real life Discovery crew through preparation, shooting and posting the amazing Season Two finale. A true in-depth look at the many talents that come together to bring Discovery to life.
• THE RED ANGEL – A major plot point of the season is the Red Angel. Go behind-the scenes with producers, directors and Sonequa Martin-Green, along with the craftspeople that created it and made it come to life.
• DESIGNING DISCOVERY: SEASON TWO – On a show where no location exists in our world, the production and lighting design teams must create every space. Look at the locations and spaces created for Season Two.
• PROP ME UP: SEASON TWO – Propmaster Mario Moreira takes fans through the world of Discovery props.
• DRESS FOR SUCCESS: SEASON TWO – Each species has its own fashion style dictated by both culture and physical attributes. Gersha Phillips and her team discuss how costumes inform a character and how they create a spectacular array of clothing, uniforms and armor for every kind of species.
• CREATURE COMFORTS: SEASON TWO – Producers, craftsmen and actors discuss the design process, the implementation and the performance required to bring characters to life. Fans can also catch a one-on-one discussion with makeup artist James McKinnon and L’Rell actress, Mary Chieffo.
• CREATING SPACE – There are some shots that simply can’t be done practically when you are set in space. The VFX team, headed by Jason Zimmerman, pushes the envelope every week to create amazing computer graphics to give fans a realistic feel of space.
• STAR TREK DISCOVERY: THE VOYAGE OF SEASON TWO – A look at the adventures and plot twists encountered in Season 2 by the crew of the Discovery.
• Cast and crew audio commentaries on four episodes
• Deleted scenes and Gag Reel
The set will also include four audio commentary tracks (which include contributions from Captain Pike actor Anson Mount as well as episodic director Jonathan Frakes).
In addition to the on-disc details, we’ve also learned when most international regions will see the Star Trek: Discovery Season 2 set will beam down overseas.
• United Kingdom – November 18, 2019
• Italy – November 19, 2019
• Germany – November 21, 2019
• Spain – November 22, 2019
• Nordics – November 25, 2019
• Belgium, The Netherlands & Luxembourg – November 27, 2019
• Denmark – November 28, 2019
• France – December 4, 2019
• Japan and Australia – Date to be announced
We’ll be sure to bring you preorder links for the Star Trek: Discovery Season 2 sets as soon as they go live — and if there’s news of a Season 2 Steelbook set announced (to match the special Season 1 release) we’ll keep you posted on that too.
While the status of the 1970’s Star Trek Animated Series’ status in Trek canon is murky at best — most agree that the events of that series are not to be taken as a literal part of in-universe history, save for perhaps the D.C. Fontana-penned “Yesteryear” — the franchise is returning to that format for next year’s Star Trek: Lower Decks, and this week the leader of that show Mike McMahan clarified how his show will fit into the franchise.
McMahan, who started his path into Star Trek with the parody Twitter account TNG Season 8 a few years ago — which lead to a book deal on the subject, resulting in Warped: An Engaging Guide to the Never-Aired 8th Season — is the showrunner and creator of Lower Decks, which we learned at San Diego Comic Con will be set in the year 2380, just after the events of Star Trek: Nemesis.
Mike McMahan at San Diego Comic Con 2019. (Photo: CBS)
Speaking with ComicBook.com this week, McMahan shared how he decided when the series should take place, picking a spot in the Trek timeline that is both familiar but not something that would step on the events of previously-released on-screen adventures, saying he’s looking to bring viewers “a mix of the familiar and the new.”
I wanted to choose a year that was kind of untouched, was kind of blank slate, that didn’t touch on anything that they might be doing for whenever Picard takes place but also doesn’t get in the middle of anything that was like, ‘Oh, this was happening during the Dominion War.’ Or, you know, ‘This would be happening during [Star Trek: First Contact].’
For me, it was like what was a little spot where our characters on a less important ship could be having adventures and doing their thing that wouldn’t break anybody else’s favorite show. Everybody else, there’s so many fans. There are people who are huge fans of ‘Deep Space Nine.’ I love ‘Voyager’ and ‘Enterprise’ and everything that came around there, those shows are all amazing.
I didn’t want anybody to feel like I was trying to subvert their favorite show by what we were doing. Also, because [the TNG timeframe] was my favorite era, I was like, ‘I’m going to slip in at the very end and get to do just one more little piece of that era. Just one more little growing of the world, just in this different format.’
The characters of STAR TREK: LOWER DECKS (L-R): Ensign Tendi, Ensign Rutherford, Ensign Mariner, Ensign Boimler, Lt. Shaxs, Captain Freeman, Commander Ransom, and Dr. T’Ana.
As for the dreaded “Will it be canon?” question — meaning, will these events be “real” Star Trek history like the live-action shows, or not? — McMahan was clear that he wouldn’t be doing this project if it wasn’t going to “count” in the overall story of the Star Trek universe.
It’s important to me that canon and ‘Star Trek’ really go hand-in-hand. It’s important, to me. It’s not worth making a ‘Star Trek’ show unless you are at least trying to make sure that it fits into the canon because the canon is part of why I and everybody else loves ‘Star Trek.’
It feels like, that is what is kind of the original shared world of all these different shows. Now you’re seeing it in the Marvel movies and the DC movies and all of that, but in the very beginning you had [TOS] and then it became TNG and all the other series reference each other, and the movies reference each other. To me, that was the original fandom and if you’re not trying to fit into that stuff and not being careful, it’s kind of not worth doing. That’s part of the joy of doing it. It’s not a constraint.
So the trick with ‘Lower Decks’ is that our characters are, our stories and our characters are definitely in canon. Ours, they’re just a little bit more aware and self-referential. Our guys might talk about the characters from the other shows that they’ve heard about because they are as big a fan of ‘Star Trek’ as I and my writers are. They don’t get to do as important stuff. It’s almost like our characters are aware that they’re in canon, and some of them are geeking out over it.
McMahan wouldn’t say if we’ll get to revisit any of the well-known Star Trek locations established in the previous television shows or films — or if any of the franchise’s prior stars will be back to voice their characters in the animated show — but as we get closer to 2020, we’re sure to learn a lot more about the series.
Sunday, in fact, will be the first big Star Trek: Lower Decks panel at the Las Vegas Trek convention, where McMahan and the entire Lower Decks writing team will be on stage to discuss the upcoming show, where we expect to learn a lot more — and maybe even see some new artwork from the upcoming show.
In the meantime, keep it locked here at TrekCore for all the latest news on Star Trek: Lower Decks as it decloaks!
Following in the footsteps of his co-stars Jason Isaacs, Rekha Sharma, and Mary Wiseman, Star Trek: Discovery star Anthony Rapp will be bringing his on-screen counterpart Paul Stamets to the world of Star Trek Online later this year.
Even though the Discovery has warped off to the far future — thanks to the events of Season 2’s finale — Lt. Commander Stamets will arrive to Star Trek Online in holographic form, where Rapp will voice his character in the newest expansion of the game: STAR TREK ONLINE – AWAKENING, arriving first for PC players on September 10.
'Star Trek Online - Awakening'
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Star Trek Online developers Perfect World Entertainment and Cryptic Studios announced the news earlier this week, and shared this description about the upcoming Awakening storyline.
Following the epic conclusion to the multi-part saga, Age of Discovery, the free-to-play Star Trek MMORPG will return to its original timeline in the 25th century. When Awakening releases this fall, players will warp to the year 2410, where they will embark on a mission to recover stolen Mycelial technology from J’Ula and the Klingons, with the help of Lt. Commander Paul Stamets (voiced by Anthony Rapp from ‘Star Trek: Discovery’) in holographic form.
Captains can also access Awakening to participate in a series of exciting patrols to repair time rifts, a brand new Task Force Operation and a special Mycelial Event which rewards players with a new T6 Elachi ship for completing missions.
During Age of Discovery, players witnessed J’Ula and her Klingon forces stealing Mycelial technology, which pulled them forward to the year 2410. Captains must now follow this ruthless Klingon matriarch back to the 25th century to ensure she doesn’t corrupt the entire Mycelial Network in pursuit of her own dangerous agenda. Unfortunately, the insurmountable threat J’Ula poses to the universe also draws out the Elachi, who fear her actions will lead to the destruction of their home planet – and they will stop at nothing to protect it.
In order to complete their mission, Captains must rely on the help of an astromycologist expert, a sentient hologram of the legendary Lieutenant Commander Paul Stamets from the U.S.S. Discovery (voiced by Anthony Rapp), to help them track down J’Ula and repair the tears she’s caused in the fabric of space.
These events transpire over the course of a new episode debuting with Awakening this fall. The update also introduces a series of new patrols, which will send Captains on a mission with Stamets and Star Trek Online luminaries like Lukari Captain Kuumaarke to reverse the damage the Klingons have caused to the Mycelial Network. With them come a revamped Patrols System, which has been updated to allow better access to the game’s patrols and yield new rewards.
Finally, players will also be able to participate in a new 5-player Task Force Operation and a special Mycelial Event, which allows them to earn a new T6 Elachi ship by completing the new episode, patrols and TFO. Additional details will be released when Awakening launches on PC September 10.
Along with the announcement of Rapp’s participation, the studios also released a new launch trailer for the Awakening event.
Anthony Rapp will be appearing on stage at the Las Vegas Star Trek convention this weekend where he’ll join the Star Trek Online development team to talk about his participation in the new storyline.
Keep your sensors locked on TrekCore for all the latest Star Trek news as it breaks!
Today at the Las Vegas Star Trek convention, the team at the forefront of Trek publishing took the stage to lay out some of the upcoming plans for tie-in print offerings coming up for Star Trek: Picard, the legacy Trek shows, and even the Kelvin Timeline!
Gallery Books senior editor Ed Schlessinger was joined on stage by authors John Jackson Miller, Robb Pearlman, and IDW Publishing’s Chase Marotz and Mike Johnson to talk about a number of things that are set to hint print over the next year, from tie-ins we’ve known about for a while to some new announcements.
Robb Pearlman, Ed Schlesinger, John Jackson Miller, Chase Marotz, and Mike Johnson.
First up is the launch of Star Trek: Picard tie-in publishing, starting with STAR TREK: PICARD — COUNTDOWN, a new comic miniseries from IDW that will launch in November 2019 ahead of the debut of the upcoming series. This three-issue tale, written by Johnson and Picard supervising producer Kirsten Beyer, will center around “a mission that would go on to change the life of beloved Star Trek captain Jean-Luc Picard,” set in the years ahead of the new television show.
In February 2020, returning Trek author Una McCormack’s THE LAST BEST HOPE will be the first Star Trek: Picard tie-in novel, which will “lead directly into the show and continue to introduce fans to brand new characters featured in the series.”
No cover artwork for either of these Star Trek: Picard releases has been unveiled yet, but as soon as that becomes public we’ll certainly bring you those updates — but in the meantime, you can preorder The Last Best Hope at Amazon ahead of the February release.
Old 2010-era cover artwork for the upcoming Kelvin Timeline novels.
One of the biggest surprises out of the Trek publishing panel was the announcement that two of the long-thought-dead Kelvin Timeline novels — first announced in 2010 (and later cancelled) — are coming back from the black hole they disappeared into for the 2020 publication schedule.
Alan Dean Foster’s novel The Order of Peace (originally titled Refugees) and David Mack’s story More Beautiful Than Death are slated for resurrection next year, scheduled for an April and August release.
David Mack followed up on this announcement on Facebook:
Ten years ago, I wrote a Star Trek “Kelvinverse” novel set after the 2009 feature film, showcasing the new characters and situations of that movie. For behind-the-scenes reasons unrelated to my work, my book and three others in that setting were abruptly cancelled.
It was announced today at Star Trek Las Vegas that my novel, MORE BEAUTIFUL THAN DEATH, will be published next year, in August 2020, as a trade paperback.
I’m very excited by this news, because I have always been pleased by how that book turned out. I felt that it was a faithful continuation of those characters’ stories, one that could not be possible in the original series incarnation of Trek. Next year, fans of the films and the books will get to decide for themselves whether I succeeded, and if the book was worth the wait. 🙂
These two books mark the very first official Kelvin Timeline-based Star Trek tie-in novels, and may mark the start of a Kelvin line of ongoing publications. New cover artwork for both stories is expected to be released before these books hit stores next year.
The next new reveal was official cover art for David Mack’s upcoming Star Trek: The Next Generation novel COLLATERAL DAMAGE, announced some time ago but not seen until today’s panel.
Scheduled for release in October 2019, Collateral Damage(which can be preordered at Amazon now)will serve as “the culmination of 16 years of storytelling,” said Schlesinger, going all the way back to the early 2000’s A Time To… novel series; the editor also shared how the Collateral Damage novel will be an “intense legal drama” where Captain Picard will finally have to face the consequences of his involvement in recent Federation events.
Additionally, the panel also announced the release of two more Star Trek: The Original Series novels: March 2020 will bring us Christopher L. Bennett’sThe Higher Frontier, and we’ll get another classic Trek tale from Dayton Ward in June with Agents of Influence.
In honor of the 40th anniversary of Star Trek: The Motion Picture — and the 40th anniversary of Star Trek tie-in publishing — a re-release of Gene Roddenberry’s novelization of the first Trek film will be arriving in October, and for the first time an audiobook edition of that book will be available as well.
We also got confirmation today that Star Trek: Voyager storyteller Kirsten Beyer — who has been hard at work on Star Trek: Discovery and Star Trek: Picard — will finally have her long-awaited novel To Lose the Earth arrive in 2020.
Finally, while there were no announcements or specifics, Schlesinger responded to an audience question about potential young-adult tie-in books for Star Trek: Lower Decks and the upcoming Nickelodeon Star Trek animated series by saying that there are “active discussions” on that subject.
The last subject to be discussed was the state of the long-generated Star Trek novel continuity, as 24th Century Trek is about to return to the screen in Star Trek: Picard — Schlesinger commented that “We are taking [the status of the books] very seriously, and we are not looking to do anything to jeopardize our relationship with the fan base… stay tuned.”
Panelist John Jackson Miller commented that there are “a lot more opportunities to integrate things [between books and television] now… you guys want it to work, and WE want it to work. The stories that matter to you will still matter in some form [even if it may not be neat and tidy]…. keep in mind Star Trek is a multiverse.”
In addition, Trek novelist Dayton Ward — who was not in attendance at this panel — weighed in on Facebook with his take on that issue:
My various consulting duties for CBS involve working with certain licensing partners to help develop tie-in opportunities, primarily as they pertain to the new shows but also the older series as appropriate.
One of those tasks – indeed, one of the very first things I was asked to help tackle when they hired me – was to work with S&S *and* CBS and figure out a path forward for the novels as they pertain to the new Picard series.
From the minute this came up, I’ve approached it as one thing and one thing only: the most epic fucking ‘Star Trek’ storytelling challenge ever.
There have already been several discussions on this topic, going back more than a year – even before I started developing the storyline for what became my TNG novel AVAILABLE LIGHT – about how we might proceed. A lot of the earlier conversations didn’t have the benefit of knowing just what the new show was going to do, so we ended up with a lot of talk about pretty much anything you can think of with respect to these books.
Well, it’s a year later, and we know a whole lot more than we did then.
As our editor, Ed Schlesinger, and John intimated, it’s a complicated process with ongoing conversations (David Mack and I had a pretty drawn-out talk about this very thing at the recent Shore Leave con, and that was basically “part 1”), and everyone involved is taking it very seriously because we all want to do it right.
So, as has been said in somewhat joking fashion before now but which I’ll re-iterate with absolutely no snark: We’re working on it. Honest.
Keep your sensors locked here at TrekCore for all the latest in Star Trek book news!
In advance of next year’s Star Trek: Picard premiere, CBS and Paramount’s home entertainment divisions are rolling out a new Star Trek: The Next Generation Blu-ray set focused on Captain Jean-Luc Picard’s time aboard his two Enterprise starships.
The Star Trek Picard Movie & TV Collection arrives this October in the US — and will follow later with international releases — combining the ‘feature-length’ edits of “The Best of Both Worlds” and “Chain of Command” and the four Next Generation feature films into a six-disc Blu-ray set.
If you missed it back in 2013, five of TNG’s season-ending cliffhangers were issued as separate, standalone releases which included edits of each two-episode pairing into two-hour presentations — this set includes the “Best of Both Worlds” and “Chain of Command” edits as previously released.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=48o-iuuXzEM
While there is no new on-disc content set to be included in this repackaged release, the companies have partnered with IDW Publishing to pair this set with an exclusive 16-page Star Trek: The Next Generation comic book — “Sky’s The Limit” — which will be a new story not previously released by the comic publisher.
This Blu-ray set isn’t yet available for preorder, but will arrive in the US on October 15, and follow overseas in the UK on October 21, Australia on October 23, and in Germany on November 7.
To celebrate this year’s 40th anniversary of Star Trek: The Motion Picture, special-event theatrical distribution company Fathom Events is bringing the inaugural Trek film back to cinemas for two nights only this September.
Returning to theaters on September 15 and 18 across the United States, Fathom Events has announced that the 1979 theatrical edition of The Motion Picture will be back on screen for fans to revisit for this year’s big anniversary. Along with the film, the special presentation will include a screening of “The Longest Trek: Writing the Motion Picture,” a special feature included on the Blu-ray edition of the movie.
Celebrate the 40th anniversary of Star Trek: The Motion Picture on the big screen with the original 1979 theatrical cut, featuring Jerry Goldsmith’s rousing overture.
When an unidentified alien destroys three powerful Klingon cruisers, Captain James T. Kirk (William Shatner) returns to a newly transformed U.S.S. Enterprise to take command. The legendary cast of the original Star Trek television series, including Leonard Nimoy, DeForest Kelley, George Takei, Nichelle Nichols, Walter Koenig, and James Doohan, mobilize at warp speed to stop the alien intruder from its relentless flight toward Earth.
This is not going to be the 2001 Directors’ Edition of the film, recently announced as being considered for a 4K remastering — from comments made by the team involved in those negotiations with Paramount, the earliest a release of that (still-unofficial) remaster of The Motion Picture could come to market would be sometime in 2020.
Tickets for the Motion Picture screening events are available for purchase directly from hosting theaters, and will become available through Fathom Events’ website on August 2.
We finally got our first good look at Star Trek: Picard at San Diego Comic Con in that trailer that still as Trek fans buzzing – and now there’s some more detail about the team that’s bringing the upcoming series to life.
Spreading out from his work on Star Trek: Discovery, Emmy Award-winning composer Jeff Russo will be bringing his musical talents to the show as he takes on the job of scoring Picard, news that arrived courtesy of Film Music Reporter last week.
While CBS hasn’t officially made an announcement of their own, the composer himself took to Twitter to confirm the news.
Though the California-based Russo is spreading his wings to a second Trek series, some other production professionals familiar to fans from Discovery – who are needed at the Toronto-based stages – have newly-identified counterparts working on Picard, thanks to first-episode director Hanelle Culpepper.
https://www.instagram.com/p/B0XhzlQpq04/
Jeff Lombardi is serving as Picard’s property master (Discovery counterpart: Mario Moreira), the lead designer for any physical props for the series, including the Starfleet Command visitor badge worn by Patrick Stewart in the trailer – and given away as replicas to fans at Comic Con.
https://www.instagram.com/p/B0Up_HkJhdg/
Christine Bieselin Clark takes the lead as Picard’s costume designer (Discovery counterpart: Gersha Phillips), responsible for not only the look of Picard, Seven, and the cast’s civilian styles, but also the briefly-seen new Starfleet uniforms and Romulan garb sported by the Vulcanoid refugees.
Production designer Todd Cherniawsky, who began his time on Trek during the first year of Discovery before ceding that show over to Tamera Deverall, is master of all things set design for Star Trek: Picard.
Keep checking back to TrekCore for all the latest news on Star Trek: Picard‘s production!
The just-concluded San Diego Comic Con Star Trek Universe panel may be over, but there’s still much more to talk about — and thanks to the cast, we now know a bit more about the new characters we’ll be meeting in Star Trek: Picard.
Along with Patrick Stewart and the show’s production leadership, fans were introduced to Star Trek newcomers Isa Briones, Santiago Cabrera, Michelle Hurd, Alison Pill, Harry Treadaway and Evan Evagora in San Diego, where we got to learn about the role each will portray when the new show arrives on 2020.
Patrick Stewart as Jean-Luc Picard. (CBS)
Patrick Stewart, of course, returns as Jean-Luc Picard, a retired Starfleet admiral who is drawn back into space life after an encounter with an unexpected visitor.
Retirement is not what he was looking for, not what he wanted. It was an impulsive act that put him in this situation and he has regretted it and lived with a certain amount of guilt about it for many years…. and that’s where we pick up the show.
Asked about the new ragtag crew that Picard finds himself leading in the new series, Stewart remarked that — without giving any story details away — that he’ll be asked that question by Jonathan Frakes, when Picard encounters Riker in an upcoming episode.
“On Monday, we’re shooting a scene in which Riker, who is in the series, he says to me, “Your new crew, what are they like?” and I do actually describe them as ‘motley.'”
Stewart and Isa Briones. (CBS)
Isa Briones is Dahj, a young woman who seeks out the retired Picard for answers after facing a “big event” in her life.
Evan Evagora, Alison Pill, and Stewart. (CBS)
Evan Evagora is Elnor, a young Romulan who is an “expert and hand to hand combat” and is “fiercely loyal to Jean-Luc Picard” (according Evagora in a post-panel interview) — and Alison Pill is Dr. Agnes Jurati is a researcher, and someone “who’s confused with her place in the world,” said Pill on stage.
Stewart, Evagora, Santiago Cabrera, and Michelle Hurd. (CBS)
Santiago Cabrera (center) is Cristobal “Chris” Rios, a former Starfleet officer and pilot who at first is reluctant to help Picard — and Michelle Hurd (right) is Raffi Musiker, a character who knows Picard from some time in their shared past.
Harry Treadaway as Narek. (CBS)
We don’t know much about Harry Treadaway’s character Narek yet, aside from the fact that he’s a Romulan.
Frequent television guest star Peyton List. (CBS)
We also spotted in the new series trailer guest star Peyton Listas a Romulan who seems to be working with Narek…
Jeri Ryan as Seven of Nine. (CBS)
…and of course, the surprising return of Jeri Ryan as Seven of Nine rounds out the new production photos released by CBS this afternoon.
UPDATE: CBS also released this set of quick clips with the Picard crew, where they briefly introduce their characters.
https://www.instagram.com/p/B0KEfYxhAWP/
Keep it locked here at TrekCore for all the continuing Star Trek news as it breaks!