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STAR TREK: DISCOVERY Renewed for Season 3

It’s official: the mission of the USS Discovery won’t end in 2019, as CBS has announced that Star Trek: Discovery has been renewed for a third season, as we’ve been expecting for some time.

While the writing team is already hard at work in Los Angeles to break out the storyline for next season’s Discovery adventure (as hinted by a few social media comments), full production is expected to begin on the show this summer in Toronto.

In addition, CBS has confirmed that current Discovery showrunner and Star Trek franchise boss Alex Kurtzman will remain in the role going in to the third year, and he’ll be joined by new co-showrunner Michelle Paradise who has been with the show in a writing capacity, scripting the upcoming ninth episode of Discovery Season 2 (“Project Daedalus”), airing next month.

Here’s the official release from CBS:

CBS ALL ACCESS RENEWS “STAR TREK: DISCOVERY” FOR THIRD SEASON

Feb. 27, 2019 – CBS All Access today announced the third season renewal of its hit original series STAR TREK: DISCOVERY. It was announced that Michelle Paradise will join Alex Kurtzman as co-showrunner of STAR TREK: DISCOVERY’s third season. In addition to his role as showrunner of STAR TREK: DISCOVERY, Kurtzman will continue to oversee the expansion of the growing “Star Trek” universe for CBS Studios.

“Michelle joined us midway through season two and energized the room with her ferocious knowledge of ‘Trek,’” said Alex Kurtzman. “Her grasp of character and story detail, her drive and her focus have already become essential in ensuring the ‘Trek’ legacy, and her fresh perspective always keeps us looking forward. I’m proud to say Michelle and I are officially running STAR TREK: DISCOVERY together.”

“The massive success of STAR TREK: DISCOVERY’s second season launch exceeded our expectations in both driving subscriber growth and generating a phenomenal response from ‘Star Trek’ fans,” said Julie McNamara, Executive Vice President, Original Content, CBS All Access. “With Alex Kurtzman and Michelle Paradise at the helm, we look forward to continuing STAR TREK: DISCOVERY’s journey, growing the ‘Star Trek’ franchise on CBS All Access and bringing fans new ‘Star Trek’ stories for many years to come.”

Prior to serving as co-executive producer on STAR TREK: DISCOVERY’s second season, Michelle Paradise was co-executive producer on the television series “The Originals” on The CW. She also wrote for the series “Rogue” on the Audience network and The CW’s “Hart of Dixie.” Additionally, Paradise created, wrote and starred in the MTV/Logo series “Exes & Ohs.”

The third season of Discovery is likely to return for new episodes in mid-2020, after the first season of the still-untitled Picard Star Trek series completes its first season — that show is expected to enter active production in April 2019.

As for this season of Star Trek: Discovery, the show returns with “Light and Shadow,” the seventh episode of the year, this Thursday on CBS All Access and Space (and on Netflix this Friday).

Star Trek: Discovery
Season 1 Blu-ray

Star Trek: Discovery
Season 2 Blu-ray

Star Trek: Discovery
Season 3 Blu-ray

New Photos: DISCOVERY 207 — “Light and Shadows”

Star Trek: Discovery continues this week with “Light and Shadows,” the seventh episode of the season, and we’ve got a set of new photos from the journey home to Vulcan — and the long-awaited arrival of Spock to the series.

This week we’ll see Michael Burnham (Sonqeua Martin-Green) return to the home of Sarek (James Frain) and Amanda (Mia Kirshner) on Vulcan, last seen in flashbacks in the season premiere “Brother,” and our first in-episode look at Spock (Ethan Peck) after half a season of searching.

We also get to see Burnham paying a visit to Section 31 agent Georgiou (Michelle Yeoh) in a mysterious corridor, while Tilly (Mary Wiseman), Stamets (Anthony Rapp), Saru (Doug Jones), Tyler (Shazad Latif) and Pike (Anson Mount) work aboard the USS Discovery.

And in case you missed it, here’s the video preview for the episode, which features Pike, Tyler, and Discovery chasing a dangerous spatial anomaly, and Burnham both quoting from Alice in Wonderland and fighting Section 31 agent Georgiou.

 

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LIGHT AND SHADOWS — Burnham goes to Vulcan in search of Spock, where she unearths surprising family secrets. In researching what is left of the Red Angel’s signal over Kaminar, Pike and Tyler end up in battle with time itself. Georgiou has a few tricks up her sleeve for Leland and Section 31.

The episode features a story by Vaun Wilmott & Ted Sullivan, with teleplay by Ted Sullivan, and is directed by series newcomer Marta Cunningham, who also happens to be the wife of Discovery actor James Frain.

https://www.instagram.com/p/BuVDhOsA01R/

“Light and Shadows” debuts this Thursday on CBS All Access and Space, and beams to Netflix around the world on Friday.

 

STAR TREK: DISCOVERY Review — ‘The Sound of Thunder’

In this week’s Star Trek: Discovery, “The Sound of Thunder” tackles the impact of Saru’s vahar’ai on the people of Kaminar, following his unexpected transformation in “An Obol for Charon” earlier this season.

It’s a story we knew would be told eventually, but unfortunately “The Sound of Thunder” tells it too soon — and too quickly. Unlike most episodes, which have had ‘A,’ ‘B,’ and sometimes ‘C’ stories all cross-cutting one another, the run time of “The Sound of Thunder” is almost entirely focused on one relatively straightforward story.

Even so, this episode felt so rushed that at one point, I wondered if my screener was missing a few scenes or had skipped ahead without realizing it.

Another new red signal appears, this time above the Kelpien homeworld of Kaminar, which we last visited in December’s Short Trek, “The Brightest Star.” Despite the restriction on visiting the planet that Georgiou told us about in the short, Captain Pike (Anson Mount) immediately sets Discovery on course.

Once they arrive, Saru’s (Doug Jones) new and more assertive temperament becomes apparent when the mysterious Ba’ul warn Discovery away from the planet. Disagreeing with Pike’s decision not to send him to the planet’s surface with Michael Burnham (Sonequa Martin-Green), Saru snaps at the captain in an increasingly uncomfortable display that verges on insubordination.

Pike backtracks on his decision and allows Saru to accompany Burnham, but only under strict orders not to reveal the true nature of the vahar’ai — they’ll “stretch General Order 1,” he says, but not “break it.”

In what is easily the most successful scene of the episode, melancholy pours off of Saru as he shows Burnham around the outskirts of his superficially idyllic lakeside village. (Side note: I do not know how Doug Jones walked on the loose sand of that shoreline in those hoof shoes.)

Sirrana’s (Hannah Spear) reaction to learning that her brother has been traveling the stars since his disappearance 18 years prior — and has brought an alien colleague home with him — is simply delightful. Instead of fear, she greets Burnham with warmth and welcome. Saru and Burnham learn that Sirrana saw the red signal in Kaminar’s sky, and beam back to Discovery to report their findings.

The Ba’ul, the predator species who have placed ‘Eye of Sauron’-style spires in each village — which the Kelpiens call “The Watchful Eye” — learn of Saru’s place aboard Discovery, and break their previous silence to demand Saru’s return from Starfleet custody.

Using only audio communication, the Ba’ul’s hissing, gravelly voice immediately comes across as cartoonishly sinister, like a goth teenager using a cheap voice distorter from a Halloween store to try and scare the neighbor’s kids. (Trust me, I say this from embarrassing personal experience.)

To prevent the Ba’ul from making good on their threat to destroy Saru’s village, Saru defies orders and beams over to a chamber inside one of the Ba’ul ships, which turns out to be located deep under the surface of the lake near his home village.

Finally, we get a chance to see the Ba’ul, and let me tell you, if I thought they sounded cartoonishly sinister they look even worse. Pointier versions of Armus — the tar monster that killed Tasha Yar in Next Generation’s “Skin of Evil” — with a flair for melodramatic hand acting, the Ba’ul check off every single box on the list of “theatrically evil horror movie monster,” and then write in a few more at the end.

The art design of the Ba’ul is so excessive that I thought it must have been deliberately over-the top; for the rest of the episode, I was expecting a surprise twist that played on the human tendency to ascribe sinister motives to monstrous things. Like the salt vampire in “The Man Trap,” or the Horta in “Devil in the Dark,” I thought perhaps this episode was going to demonstrate to the viewer that with context, monstrosity or otherness often does not equal moral evil.

Nothing like that happened though, and instead we were just left with adversaries that looked silly for no reason. I mean, the Ba’ul literally leaves the room by wrapping itself up in its long fingers like a vogue-ing Dracula, sinking back into its tar pit.

Here the story really picks up — to a fault — and massively consequential actions are proposed, decided on, and executed in a matter of minutes. Looking through the data from the sphere the crew encountered the other week, Burnham, Tilly (Mary Wiseman), and Airiam (Hannah Cheesman) find that 2000 years ago, the situation on Kaminar was very different. Post-vahar’ai Kelpiens were common, and Ba’ul were not.

Coming to the conclusion that the Ba’ul were at one time the prey species — and boy, is this a lot of conclusion to draw just from raw population numbers — they propose to free the Kelpiens from subjugation by using Discovery’s technology to immediately trigger the vahar’ai in all Kelpiens.

Pike has misgivings about potentially endangering the Ba’ul (but apparently not about shredding General Order 1!), but accepts Burnham’s dubious assurance that the difference in technological advancement between the two cultures will protect the Ba’ul for a few generations, giving everyone enough time to figure out how to peacefully coexist.

With Saru only able to warn Siranna of the painful surprise about to hit, Pike gives the order and suddenly every Kelpien on the planet is caught in the throes of vahar’ai as their entire cultural and biological understanding of themselves is upended in a matter of agony-wracked minutes.

The Ba’ul respond by powering up their spires with dangerous energy, preparing to exterminate the Kelpien race in retribution, but just as things are at their most bleak, the Red Angel appears outside the window of Saru’s cell and lingers long enough to give him — and us — the distinct impression that the Angel is actually a humanoid in a protective suit.

The Angel then detonates an energy blast, generating an electromagnetic pulse strong enough to disable all of the Watchful Eyes, stopping the Ba’ul attack.. Post-vahar’ai Kelpiens emerge from their tents looking like they just had a nice, relaxing massage instead of appearing as if they just lived through the most significant event of the last 2000 years! — and one that was facilitated by extraterrestrials, knowledge of whose existence alone would be culture-shattering!

After a quick visit to Saru’s quarters aboard Discovery, Siranna happily volunteers to help post-vahar’ai Kaminar find its way — organizing head-dart target practice sessions, maybe? — and Discovery sets off on its next adventure. What do the Ba’ul think of any of this? I don’t know, because we never hear from them again.

The only other storyline that gets any screen time in the episode is a brief scene in sickbay in which Hugh Culber (Wilson Cruz) is visibly disturbed by the realization that after his return from the mycelial network last week, his body is entirely new and that while his mind is still his own, he may not be the same person he once was.

This scene comes at the beginning of the episode and transitions into Saru learning more about his own transformation, tying Culber’s discomfort into the events of the rest of the episode, but not informing them in any way. It’s almost as if Culber’s experience was meant as foreshadowing, but the episode forgot about it and never completed the through-line.

With the signal that appears over Kaminar, any notion that the signal’s locations are random has essentially been put to rest. The question now, as debated between Captain Pike and a back-in-uniform Ash Tyler (Shazad Latif) is whether or not the Red Angel is a benevolent figure. Does it direct would-be saviors to places in need of emergency assistance, like in “New Eden,” or does it cause the emergencies themselves?

As one would expect given their allegiances, Pike takes the more optimistic view, Tyler the more cautious. The episode’s title is a direct reference to the Ray Bradbury short story of (almost) the same name which originated the concept of the “butterfly effect,” the idea that consequences of seemingly insignificant actions can snowball in importance.

Though the Bradbury story concerns the unanticipated effects of a time traveler’s innocent actions unleashed upon the future, I have to wonder if a similar “ripple effect” is being hinted at for Discovery‘s upcoming exploration, either from the (possibly) time-traveling Red Angel, or the sudden Kelpien evolution.

I also wonder why the decision was made to introduce and resolve Saru’s storyline so quickly, and while so much else is happening on the show. Considering how deeply emotional the events of “An Obol for Charon” were for the character, it seems that Saru’s personal journey of understanding how to live his post-vahar’ai life could easily have taken place over the course of an entire season — after which he could be Kaminar’s guide to the new Kelpien existence.


I hope the events of this episode will be revisited, or at least reassessed, later in the season, providing some much-needed conclusions — and consequences. Even if there is payoff in the future, as a standalone episode, “The Sound of Thunder” leaves me cold.

I understand that in serialized storytelling, the “single bite” that is an episode is just one part of the meal, but that bite still needs to be appetizing on its own. If “The Sound of Thunder” retroactively becomes a better hour because of something that happens later, I’ll be pleased, but it’s a risky move to require the viewer to sit in hope of a hypothetical.

To return to my rather clunky meal metaphor, I don’t really want to eat a bite of food that tastes bad, even with assurance from the chef that doing so will make a future bite taste especially good, and in the case of “The Sound of Thunder” that assurance isn’t even there. There has to be a better way to arrange and prepare the ingredients on the plate to avoid such a bitter mouthful.

A few other musings:

  • “The Brightest Star” and “The Sound of Thunder” were filmed at the same time, on location at an outdoor set built at Scarborough Bluff outside of Toronto, with Kelpien huts being modeled after the angular look of Saru’s makeup design.
     
  • While there’s something to be said for dynamic camera movement, the constantly-roving Steadicam work in the early-episode sickbay and ready room scenes was really quite jarring. Some of the more creative camera angles seen so far this season have been great, but the rapid spinning around Pike’s desk was certainly a bit dizzying.

  • The interior of the Ba’ul vessel, where Saru and Siranna are held captive, is a very obvious redress of the Discovery transporter set — made even more noticeable as Saru beams from Discovery right to the Ba’ul chamber.
     
  • Siranna wears the same flowing white robes of her father Arridor, who was village leader in “The Brightest Star.”
     
  • The red flower of Kaminar, called the “fredalia,” is named in honor of Frederick Kim, Star Trek fan and friend of Discovery writers Bo Yeon Kim and Erika Lippoldt who passed away unexpectedly a few years ago.

  • When Saru recounts the tale of his rescue by then-Lieutenant Georgiou, he makes note that she was serving aboard the USS Archimedes, a new ship to Trek canon. While the flashback to her shuttle’s landing is a re-use of footage from “The Brightest Star,” the SHN designator — from the Shenzhou — has been erased from the hull.(The Shenzhou was not mentioned in dialogue in “The Brightest Star,” so this seems to be a VFX correction from the December short.)

Finally, speaking of Lieutenant Georgiou, we wondered why the rules of General Order 1 — which were so strict when it came to her visit to Kaminar in “The Brightest Star” — weren’t much of an issue for Captain Pike, who was ready to send Burnham down to the surface after only a moment’s discussion.

We know many of you may be asking the same thing, so we reached out to episode writers Bo Yeon Kim and Erika Lippoldt for some insight.

Captain Pike’s decision to send a team down to Kaminar isn’t so much the result of a change in General Order One itself as it is a difference in circumstances, and in the captain who is interpreting the rule.

In “The Brightest Star,” Georgiou was just a Lieutenant asking permission to make an exception for Saru. Here, Pike is the captain, and he’s on an express mission to investigate the signals.

Therefore he makes a judgement call to carefully make contact anew, knowing that the Kelpiens have been aware of the existence of warp technology for 20 years now (when the Ba’ul became warp-capable) — but only in order to pursue his stated mission.

That’s it for “The Sound of Thunder,” now it’s time for your take on this week’s episode! Share your thoughts in the comments below, and then watch for more updates through next week as we approach “Light and Shadow,” the next episode of Star Trek: Discovery.

STAR TREK at ToyFair 2019: QMx, WizKids, The Coop, McFarlane Toys and More

We wrap up our ToyFair 2019 coverage this afternoon with a roundup of all the other Star Trek licensees on the scene in New York City, including QMx, gaming vendor WizKids, and we even stopped to check in on McFarlane Toys before we exited the event.

Our first stop was with the New Zealand Mint, which has been putting out high-grade silver Star Trek silver products for the last few years. On display at ToyFair was their 10cm, 15-gram pure silver Captain Kirk and Mr. Spock sculptures, which retail at a whopping $550 each. (While the detail is impressive for the size and material, they’re probably out of many casual collectors’ price range!)

They also showed us some of their silver foil Original Series character notes — with an expectation of Next Generation editions yet to come — as well as some of their Juan Ortiz TNG silver foil posters… with Original Series versions from that collection set to arrive in the coming months.

We also looked in on QMx, who had only a limited selection of products on display, including their recently-announced Star Trek: Discovery Terran Empire and USS Enterprise insignias, set to roll out in the spring.

While the pins featured aren’t the official, final designs — the red cross on the medical badge may end up being black to match the Discovery line, and the bronze Terran badge color is still being tweaked — these look to be a nice addition to the existing range of QMx Trek badges.

There were no sign of upcoming 1:6-scale character figures, though we did confirm that the next ones planned are Original Series Hikaru Sulu and Uhura figures, and then the company expects to prioritize some of their previously-featured Wrath of Khan characters.

(No sign of that Captain Georgiou we saw at Comic Con, unfortunately!)

Next up is NJ Croce Co., a smaller company just entering the second wave of Star Trek products with an upcoming bendable Next Generation Captain Picard doll, rather unusually clad in his Season 1 uniform with the low collar.

The company previously released a few Original Series bendable figures — Captain Kirk, Spock, McCoy, and Scotty — and this new Picard release is expected to retail at about $8.99 later in 2019.

Gaming licensee WizKids had a number of new Trek items on display, including a few new additions to its line of Star Trek: Attack Wing products — including a new addition to the Unpainted line of Trek gaming models, a Cardassian Nor-class station for collectors to decorate however they see fit.

Also new to the Attack Wing line is their Kelvin Timeline Faction Pack — featuring two Trek ’09-style Constitution-class and Klingon ships — and new character figures including prototypes of Commander Shelby and the Mirror Broken-style Will Riker from IDW’s comic series.

Lastly, a new tabletop strategy came called Star Trek: Conflick in the Neutral Zone, where players use tokens to act out space battles in a Next Generation-era setting. Here’s the official description of the game:

In this simple flicking game, players will flick discs representing the various ships found within the Star Trek universe. These ships are used to collect resources or attack other ships.

Collecting resources (energy and command points) is accomplished by bringing a collector ship within range of an energy or command point planet. To attack, you must use your attack ship to hit an opponent’s ship off the planet or board. Successfully attacking an opponent will award a command point.

Our friends at The Coop also gave us a peek at what they’ve got coming up in 2019, with their next pending release to be a Borg Cube insulated lunchbag just about ready to hit stores.

Also on the way this year — though product photos were not yet available — include a black backpack inspired by the Discovery away gear seen in “Si Vis Pacem, Para Bellum” last season; a Discovery version of The Coop’s Starfleet uniform shoulder bags (complete with silver Commander sciences badge and delta patterns), a pet collar-and-leash set themed like the classic Enterprise warp nacelles, a Borg Cube pet squeeker toy, and an 8″ plush Discovery shuttlecraft (for both pets and owners alike).

As more on these products become available, we’ll keep you updated!

As many of you hoped, we did have a few minutes to chat with the team from McFarlane Toys, who have been fairly quiet on the Star Trek front since early last summer when — despite their work at modifying the product to resolve the issue — their planned Star Trek: Discovery phaser was disappointingly cancelled due to legal restrictions which impacted retail release of the product.

While the phaser seems to be officially ‘dead’ at this point, we also had a chance to ask about the status of additional Star Trek character figures to follow their 2018 release of Captain Kirk and Captain Picard — though despite their previews of Spock, Burnham, T’Kuvma, and more characters over the past two years, the company didn’t have any new announcements to make at the event.

All that being said — and contrary to some speculation we’ve seen around the web — the McFarlane Toys team told us that they are continuing to explore possibilities of new Trek releases with both their retailer and CBS licensing partners  — “We hear you! We hear all the fans!,” they told us, when we mentioned their swath of active licenses with the franchise.

So the news may not be much from the McFarlane corner right now, but we don’t think they should be counted out just yet — we’ll just have to wait and see.

Finally, briefly made contact with Diamond Select Toys, whose recent Kelvin Timeline Kirk and Spock figures we reviewed earlier this month. They didn’t have anything new on display this year — their previously-previewed Enterprise-C and Reliant models still are unscheduled, though hoped for 2019 — and their next planned release is the deluxe Borg drone figure they’ve showcased before.

The company announced just last week that they acquired the consumer side of Gentle Giant Ltd., who released some Star Trek: Discovery sculptures like the San Diego Comic Con-exclusive Commander Saru bust last summer.

One of Gentle Giant’s planned Discovery releases was their set of “Fleet Flyers” ship models announced last February; unfortunately we confirmed just ahead of the acquisition announcement that this product line has been placed on indefinite hold — so we don’t expect them any time soon, if ever.

That’s it for our 2019 ToyFair coverage – but you can be sure we’ll bring you all the latest news on the next round of Star Trek merchandise announcements as soon we have them!

STAR TREK at ToyFair 2019: Factory Entertainment

Newly-minted Star Trek licensee Factory Entertainment made their first foray in to the final frontier at ToyFair 2019 this past weekend, as the California-based company showcased its upcoming Trek products in New York City.

The company has been producing tie-in products for the Game of ThronesJurassic Park, and James Bond franchises for some time, and will be expanding into the Star Trek realm starting in early 2019 with a line of “Kuzos”-branded die-cast metal sculptures.

Set to be priced around $10 each upon release, the first prototypes showcased at their booth — measuring about 3″ tall each — include Captain Kirk’s command chair, the Nomad probe, a Horta, and a Star Trek: Discovery phaser.

Also coming in 2019 are a set of vinyl character figures the company has branded “Revos,” constructed on convex bases so that they can’t be knocked over when on display. The company has a few sets of these “Revos” figures already for sale from other properties; the Captain Kirk and Gorn versions they featured at ToyFair are expected to retail for around $15 each.

For the animal lover, a Star Trek version of Factory Entertainment’s “Pawzplay” plush dog dolls are also set to arrive later this year, with prototypes representing Captain Kirk, Lieutenant Uhura, Captain Picard, and Lt. Commander Data showcased at the expo.

No pricing was set for these, but other “Pawzplay” products in their webstore look to be somewhere in the $15-$20 range.

Something that got us excited was the company’s plans to expand in to Trek desktop diorama sculptures — a product line they have already started with Batman ’66Game of Thrones, and Jurassic Park recreations as pictured above — so we’re looking forward to what familiar Trek settings might come out of their efforts down the line.

Along with these featured items from their ToyFair display, the company also plans to roll out Star Trek-themed keychains, bottle openers, and other products as we move further in to 2019 — and as these new releases head to stores, we’ll bring you more details as we have them.

Keep checking back to TrekCore on more from ToyFair 2019 as the week rolls on!

More STAR TREK: DISCOVERY Season 2 Episode Titles

Like the last round of new reveals back in late January, we can now bring you the next set of Star Trek: Discovery Season 2 episode titles thanks to Canada’s newly-updated television listings!

Thanks to TV Passport, five more of Discovery’s 2019 outings can now be identified, each with its own mysterious title — and one not-so-mysterious one — to take us through the end of March.

Episode 207: “Light and Shadows” (February 28)
Episode 208: “If Memory Serves” (March 7)
Episode 209: “Project Daedalus” (March 14)
Episode 210: “The Red Angel” (March 21)
Episode 211: “Perpetual Infinity” (March 28)

“Light and Shadows” looks like it may be the first Spock-heavy entry of the year, as the first promotional photo of actor Ethan Peck in costume, released all the way back in October, is from the seventh episode of the season.

While the character could still appear in this week’s “The Sound of Thunder,” of course, all signs indicate it being a Kelpien-heavy outing, so we’re not sure how Spock might fit into Saru’s story on Kaminar.

While there have been no images from “If Memory Serves” yet released, this may be a big Spock / Burnham episode, as a play of the same name by Jonathan Tolins centers around a grown son remembering — or possibly mis-remembering — the troubles of his youth.

We know that an unspecified, upcoming episode features Sonequa Martin-Green filming a scene with Liam Hughes, as the two actors appeared in costume in an on-set photo together. Perhaps Burnham experiences a mind-meld or other type of memory-inducing event that allows her to share the screen with young Spock?

“Project Daedalus” is director Jonathan Frakes’ second outing in Discovery Season 2 — an episode written by Michele Paradise — and looks to have been named after a British study from the 1970s about the feasibility of getting an interstellar probe to another star within a single human lifespan.

With the reference to Emory Erickson, the inventor of the transporter, in the show’s opening credits, perhaps this will center around some sort of new development in transporter technology — as he was featured in the Enterprise episode “Daedalus.”

The big mystery of the season may be addressed head-on in “The Red Angel,” another episode from which we have a single promotional photo of Spock.

We know so little about this elusive being so far this year, and kicking off the last third of the year with a big “answers” episode might be a good idea.

Finally, the last episode of March is “Perpetual Infinity,” a title which might refer to one of the tenants of Jaina mathematics, which views the universe (and the souls within it) as a continual, unending existence without beginning or end. Pretty trippy.

We’ll find out more about these upcoming Star Trek: Discovery adventures as the season continues!

New Photos: DISCOVERY 206 — “The Sound of Thunder”

Star Trek: Discovery continues this week with “The Sound of Thunder,” the sixth episode of the season,” and we’ve got a set of new photos from the crew’s journey to Saru’s homeworld of Kaminar from in this week’s adventure.

Back in December’s “The Brightest Star,” we learned about life on Kaminar and how Saru ventured out to the stars, leaving behind his family and Kelpien race, and this week’s episode brings us back to his home and to his sister Sirannah (Hannah Spear).

Along with what looks like a visit from Sirannah to Saru’s quarters aboard the Discovery, this week’s photos also give us a look at Ash Tyler (Shazad Latif) back in Starfleet uniform — albeit with a Section 31 black badge — and Airiam (Hannah Cheesman) at work in the off-bridge science lab.

And in case you missed it, here’s the video preview for the episode, which features a decidedly horrifying alien race — perhaps the Ba’ul species, which has preys on the docile Kelpiens.

https://www.instagram.com/p/BuE6bKYnqe_/

THE SOUND OF THUNDER — When a new signal appears over Saru’s home planet, Burnham, Saru and the crew embark on a perilous mission that puts Saru in danger and raises questions about the Red Angel’s intentions. Hugh struggles to come to terms with his new reality.

The episode is written by Bo Yeon Kim & Erika Lippoldt and directed by Douglas Aarniokoski.

“The Sound of Thunder” debuts this Thursday on CBS All Access and Space, and beams to Netflix around the world on Friday.

STAR TREK at ToyFair 2019: New Looney Labs Games

Our 2019 ToyFair coverage continues with a look at what’s on the way from gaming company Looney Labs, who broke into the Star Trek arena last year with their Fluxx card game.

As we reported back in January, the company will be expanding their Trek Fluxx line into the Bajoran sector this year, with Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Fluxx set to arrive later this spring.

While the packaging is still being signed off by CBS’s licensing team, they were able to show us some final, approved card game artwork featuring some of DS9’s more familiar faces, all part of the Fluxx set.

The Deep Space Nine Fluxx game is expected to hit stores around April or May 2019, but don’t think this will be the end of the line, as we learned that a Star Trek: Voyager edition of the game is also being tentatively planned for 2020.

(We’ll bring you more info on that game if and when it is formally announced.)

The Looney Labs team also gave us an exclusive preview of another new Star Trek card game they have in the works, based off of their existing line of Chrononauts games: ChronoTrek, which brings together every single temporal anomaly and time travel event from across the franchise into one clock-bending game.

In ChronoTrek, a time-travel game similar to Chrononauts but set in the ‘Star Trek’ universe, each player becomes a ‘Star Trek’ character with a unique identity and a secret mission.

During the game, players travel backwards and forwards through history, doing all those things people have always dreamed of using time travel to do: Visiting the great moments of the past, peeking into the future, collecting up artifacts, coming to grips with the paradoxes of time travel, and of course, changing pivotal events and altering the course of history itself.

Explore the history (and alternate history!) of the entire ‘Star Trek’ universe in this version of Chrononauts. Try to alter history to restore your specific timeline! Maybe you need to ensure that the Federation gets founded, or just retrieve the Orb of Time and some tea. Earl Grey. Hot.

While the game does exclude both the Kelvin Timeline and Star Trek: Discovery, ChronoTrek weaves together famous and often-forgotten Trek temporal hijinks into one gameplay adventure — including moments from episodes like “City on the Edge of Forever,” “Time’s Arrow,” “Past Tense,” “Future’s End,” and “Carpenter Street” — while players must struggle to maintain the integrity of the Trek timeline.

The Looney Labs team playtests ‘ChronoTrek’ in November 2018. (Source)

While artwork and official release details are still being ironed out, we expect ChronoTrek to be ready for players by August, just in time for the annual Star Trek convention in Las Vegas.

We’ve got more ToyFair 2019 coverage coming, so keep checking back to TrekCore throughout the week!

STAR TREK: DISCOVERY Canon Connections: “An Obol for Charon” and “Saints of Imperfection”

“An Obol for Charon” and “Saints of Imperfection” were two acting masterclasses from Doug Jones, Mary Wiseman, Anthony Rapp, and Wilson Cruz, framed around the Discovery experiencing technical difficulties due to an encounter with a planet-sized lifeform and a dark journey into the mysterious mycelial network.

The episodes gave us a fun new technical challenge – a malfunctioning universal translator – that we had never really seen before in Star Trek, laid down new lore for Section 31, and more, along with giving us plenty of references to the previous canon, including the return of a fan favorite character not seen on screen in five decades.

Let’s dive in!

Number One

Returning to the franchise for the first time since 1965 is the character of Number One, the executive officer aboard the USS Enterprise. Played originally by Majel Barrett, the Discovery-era interpretation of the character is played by Rebecca Romjin.

Though we only get to see the character for one scene in “Obol,” more appearances are likely.

That Damned Holographic Comm System

Pike instructs Number One to remove the holographic communications system from the Enterprise. “I never much liked the damn thing anyway,” he tells her. Assuming the system is not restored to the ship, it explains why we never saw holographic communications aboard the Enterprise in the Original Series.

Perhaps the problems experienced with the system aboard the Enterprise later spread to the rest of the fleet, explaining why the technology was later considered “new” again in the 24th century.

Classic 23rd Century Design

Number One beams aboard with a large PADD, very similar in style to the clipboard-sized data slates seen in the Original Series – though with seemingly more functionality than those devices were shown to have, thanks to the advances in real-world technology since the 1960s.

Fun with Foreign Languages

Contact with the unknown sphere causes the Universal Translator on Discovery to malfunction, rendering the speech of the crew into multiple different languages. In addition to a number of Earth languages, Klingon and Andorian are also heard.

Detmer also points out that her controls are rendered in the language of Tau Ceti, the home star system for the freighter Kobyashi Maru (Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan), and Jean-Luc Picard introduced Jack Crusher to Beverly Howard on Tau Ceti III (“Conspiracy”).

EPS Grid

The virus infecting Discovery causes the EPS conduits to overload, the first reference in Discovery to the electro-plasma distribution network, the primary means of distributing energy throughout a starship.

Cortical Implant

To be able to communicate with the mycelial lifeform that was manifesting to Tilly as May, Stamets and Reno develop a plan to place a cortical implant into Tilly’s brain. Cortical implants are a technology used by the Borg, and in the 24th century were used by the Breen to probe the mind of prisoners.

Eject the warp core!

In order to escape the lifeform’s hold on Discovery, Pike orders Detmer to eject and detonate the warp core. At various points in Star Trek history, notably in “Star Trek: Insurrection,” “Day of Honor,” and “Renaissance Man,” the warp core has been ejected, normally to avoid a warp core breach destroying the ship.

Medkit

In order to snap out of a hallucinogenic trip caused by the Jah’Sepp cocoon, Stamets reaches into the Engineering medkit for a hypospray. Though we have seen plenty of sickbay scenes since the start of Discovery, this is the first call out to the medkit specifically in the show.

Cestus III

After capturing Spock’s shuttle in the opening of “Saints of Imperfection,” which was being piloted by Emperor Georgiou, Captain Pike is confronted by her superior in Section 31 – Leland. Pike and Leland clearly have a pre-existing relationship, as Pike says the last time he saw Leland was “wrestling alligators on Cestus III.”

Cestus III is the site of a Federation colony that would later be destroyed by the Gorn in the Original Series episode “Arena.”

Hyronalin

As Pike tells Burnham about Tyler’s assignment to the Discovery by Section 31 in “Saints of Imperfection,” an intercom message reminds the crew that they need to ensure they have had their hyronalin treatments – a drug seen a number of times during the Star Trek franchise (first referenced in The Original Series episode “The Deadly Years”) as a medicine used to counter the effects of radiation sickness.

Type III Phaser Rifle

“I’m holding a Type III phaser rifle. It is more powerful and generally larger than the Type I or Type II, which I guess is why they call it a three,” Tilly tells May of the phaser rifle she is carrying as they walk through the corridors of Discovery after it breaks through into the mycelial network in “Saints of Imperfection.”

The term “Type III” to identify the rifle-style weapon was first used in Voyager’s “Phage.”

“What Kind of Communicator is That?”

With Discovery at risk of sinking fully into the mycelial network and killing members of its crew in “Saint of Imperfection,” Tyler reveals that the Section 31 black badges are actually chest communicators — precursors to the familiar commbadges worn by Starfleet officers in the 24th century.

Deneva

As Georgiou works to convince Leland to try to maintain their tractor beam longer to prevent Discovery from falling into the mycelial network in “Saints of Imperfection,” she tells him she knows he made a mistake involving the “wrong ambassador” on Deneva.

Deneva is a Federation planet first seen in The Original Series episode “Operation – Annihilate!” and is referenced in Deep Space Nine and Enterprise.

Article 14, Section 31

Pike beams aboard the Section 31 ship at the end of “Saints of Imperfection” to meet with Admiral Cornwell and Leland. Cornwell tells Pike that “we have more pressing priorities than debating Article 14 of Starfleet’s charter.”

She is referring to the section of the Starfleet charter that authorized the creation of Section 31, which is a call back to the Enterprise episode “Divergence” where Harris also cites the same reference to the charter.

Tachyons

In the same scene at the end of “Saints of Imperfection,” Cornwell tells Pike and Leland that the red signals leave behind a tachyon signal. They theorize that the presence of tachyons could imply the involvement of time travel.

Tachyons are a frequent cosmic byproduct of time travel, as seen in episodes like Voyager’s “Future’s End, Part I and II,” “Fury,” “Endgame,” and Enterprise’s “Cold Front.”

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We’ll be back with more Canon Connections after the next few Star Trek: Discovery outings, this week’s “The Sounds of Thunder” and next week’s “Light and Shadows.”

STAR TREK at ToyFair 2019: Polar Lights Models & Mego

This weekend brought the annual ToyFair trade show back to New York City, and our team hit up the Big Apple to see what’s on the way for this year in new Star Trek merchandise from some brand-new and familiar Trek licensees.

First up is our visit with long-time model company Round2, who already has four new Star Trek kits on the way under their Polar Lights branding for 2019.

Just out is their new 1:3200-scale D’Deridex-class Romulan Warbird, a 12-3/4″ full-build kit of the Next Generation-era Romulan design.

Coming in February is a snap-together 1:2500 Galaxy-class Enterprise-D kit, a 10″ snap-together set to recreate the Federation flagship of the 2360’s.

Unlike their Oberth-class model from last year, however, there are no alternate labels to make your own USS Yamato or USS Odyssey if you were looking to put a twist on the build.

March brings a great-looking 1:1000 Star Trek: Enterprise kit, which will allow fans to snap together Jonathan Archer’s Enterprise NX-01 — and the 8-78″ set will also include alternative labels to become Erika Hernandez’s Columbia NX-02, along with the Terran Empire’s Enterprise and NX-09 Avenger.

There will also be additional model parts included to build Doug Drexler’s NX Refit Enterprise, for those who want the next iteration of Archer’s ship in their collection.

Finally, Polar Lights enters the Star Trek: Discovery game this April, with a 1:2500 Crossfield-class USS Discovery snap-together kit, complete with intricate labels to recreate the high-tech design of the ship’s hull patterns.

While these models are all headed your way this year, we’ll have a look at a full-build of last fall’s Star Trek: The Motion Picture-era Klingon K’Tinga-class ship from our own John Kirk in the next few weeks, a massive 1:350-scale build with internal lighting.

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We also stopped to check in on Mego, who returned to the Trek merchandise market last summer with the relaunch of their classic Original Series dolls, now expanded to include 18 different classic Trek figures nationwide.

At ToyFair, we got a few minutes to chat with Mego founder Marty Abrams, who told us that the doll line will be expanded to The Next Generation and other pre-Discovery series during 2019, and he also showed us early prototypes of large-scale 14″ Original Series dolls set to land in stores sometime this year.

Mego founder Marty Abrams.

These four 14″ figures are still in the development stage, with the illustrative examples shown at ToyFair built using old Star Trek: The Motion Picture character heads, and preliminary packaging which inaccurately measures the dolls at only 8″ in its text.

We’ll bring you more details on the larger-sized Mego figures, as well as any additional releases outside of the Original Series lineup as things develop this year.

Stay tuned for more ToyFair 2019 coverage, as we check in with QMx, The Coop, our gaming friends at Looney Labs, a new licensee or two — and we’ll even bring you an update on what’s been happening over at McFarlane Toys.

In the meantime, let us know what you thinks of these new products in the comments below!