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DISCOVERY Creatives Presenting in Toronto This Weekend

Once more, the creative minds behind the artwork, graphics, and production design on Star Trek: Discovery are bringing their expertise to the public to talk about their work on the series, and share some never-seen behind-the-scenes images from the Toronto-based production.

Like a similar panel at Fan Expo Canada in 2017, the talented artists and designers behind Discovery‘s look will be presenting a special evening of production secrets from the show, where nine of the leading contributors to the series will be on hand to answer audience questions and discuss their crafts.

At the event, attendees can expect to learn loads of behind-the-scenes details about how Star Trek: Discovery is brought to life, as well as see never-before-released production documents and images from the sets — like these designs for the Discovery shuttlecraft build from set designer Michael Stanek.

The Ontario chapter of the Directors Guild of Canada will bring production designer Tamara Deverell, supervising art director Joshu de Cartier, set designers Matt Morgan, Emilie Poulin, Michael Stanek, and Chris Penna, and graphic designers Andy Tsang and Timothy Peel to a presentation Saturday evening hosted by Discovery art director Jody Clement at the TIFF Bell Lightbox in Toronto.

Registration for the event is free, and can be submitted at this link.

Ahead of the event, Discovery set designer Emilie Poulin spoke at length with the Motion Picture Association’s The Credits about the new Kelpien homeworld of Kaminar, first seen in December’s “The Brightest Star” Short Trek, and set to return later this season.

Filmed at Toronto’s Scarborough Bluff, Poulin described how the on-location set came to life.

“It’s just a bunch of bluffs and beaches. I had a friend come with a drone and aerial map the whole place and try to figure out square footage and how many kilometers between this and this and how can we build and at this time of the year how high is the water. That was really challenging.

Because we have never seen the Kelpien world before, we were free of canon. We got to be pretty vast in our gathering of inspiration. I made the decision not to look at any ‘alien world’ precedents, and tap into my days of playing in the dirt.

My reference image library was composed mostly of armadillo and turtle shells, deep sea creatures, bio-luminescent algae, and African mud huts.”

For the Kelpien living quarters, Poulin started with the angular look of Doug Jones’ facial prosthetic.

“The structure we designed was a pair of 18 sided elliptical huts, so, if you imagine 18 slices of 3-dimensional pie curving up to a circular peak. For the pattern of the facade, I took inspiration from Saru’s face.

I loosely traced the geometry of his cheekbones, philtrum, and brow and then developed a series of iterations with them – extruded, stretched, and mirrored the linework until I came to a form that felt original and exuded the essence of the Kelpien race.

We had to think about how the Kelpiens would have realistically built the huts themselves. For our purposes, we needed to design a very detailed steel structure, with removable walls for the camera, spaces within the walls for electric requirements.

But to uphold the story, it needed to appear as though the characters had constructed the huts themselves out of indigenous materials such as mud, algae, sticks, and plant matter.”

TrekCore will be on the scene for the Saturday evening presentation, so watch for live coverage of the event on our Twitter feed!

Win a STAR TREK ONLINE ‘Mirror of Discovery’ Prize Pack!

Once more, TrekCore is teaming up with the team from Star Trek Online to offer another giveaway package to celebrate the launch of Mirror of Discovery, the newest expansion of the game!

This contest has ended, and winners have been notified by email.

To help kick off the expansion for PC players, we’re giving away 10 codes for an Engle-class Mirror Escort Cruiser, plus 100 codes for an NX-class Light Escort and Elite Services Pack.

The Engle-class Mirror Escort Carrier [T6] is retrofitted from a ship that crossed over from the 23rd century into present-day space. A fearsome Terran vessel, this starship’s capabilities and integrated technologies emphasizes the Terran Empire’s philosophy to not only crush the enemy — but make it hurt the entire way.

Hailing from Star Trek: Enterprise, the NX-class Light Escort [T1] sports the classic look of Earth’s starships from the 22nd century, but has been updated with modern technology to meet current Starfleet specifications for Lieutenant-rank missions.

The Elite Services Starter Pack contains 36 Inventory Slots, 36 Bank Slots, 2 Bridge Officer Slots, and 3 Captain Retrain Tokens.

For the first time ever, Star Trek fans will finally meet the Terran Empire’s dreaded Captain Killy — voiced by Mary Wiseman from the show. As commander of the I.S.S. Discovery, Killy’s ruthless reputation was described in Star Trek: Discovery Season 1, though her character was never shown on-screen.

Players unravel the mystery of what really happened to her and the crew of the I.S.S. Discovery, after it was summoned to the Prime Universe and never seen again.

To enter the contest, just email us your name by February 19, and on February 20, we’ll randomly select 10 names to win a Mirror of Discovery Engle-class Mirror Escort Carrier, plus another 100 names will be randomly selected to win a NX-class Light Escort and Elite Services Starter Pack.

All winners will be emailed the in-game code and instructions how to add the ship/starter pack to your Star Trek Online account — good luck to all!

DISCOVERY Canon Connections: “Point of Light”

We returned to the Klingon Empire in last week’s “Point of Light,” an episode with three distinct stories: L’Rell and Tyler’s attempts to consolidate power on Qo’noS, Amanda’s arrival on the Discovery looking for help in her search for Spock, and Tilly’s grappling with her visions of a dead classmate.

The Klingon story was by far the most canon heavy, with multiple references to Klingon lore from the previous shows. Let’s dive in!

Command Training Program Half-Marathon

Tilly begins the episode near the end of the Command Training Program (CTP) Half-Marathon. Though the CTP is new to ‘Star Trek,’ the use of marathons as a training tool for Starfleet personnel is not.

While at Starfleet Academy, Jean-Luc Picard was the first freshman to win the Starfleet Academy Marathon.

Klingon D-7 Battle Cruiser

In their opening scene, L’Rell and Tyler unveil the Klingon Empire’s newest ship design – the D-7 Battle Cruiser. The ship is a product of the engineering of the unified Klingon Empire, and returns to a design aesthetic not seen since the Empire was last united in the mid-22nd century.

House of Mogh

One of the members of the Klingon High Council is wearing the emblem of the House of Mogh. Though it is not named in the episode – and it may have a different name at this point in the timeline – the House of Mogh would later include the most famous Klingon of all: Worf.

Hair Today, Gagh Tomorrow

In Burnham’s call with Tyler she notes that “the Klingons are growing their hair again.” In this episode, we see many Klingons have regrown their hair in the postwar period.

Luscious locks and beards are in fashion in the Klingon Empire once again!

Kahless and Lukara

L’Rell tells Tyler that the love shared between her and Voq was like that of Kahless and Lukara. Lukara was first mentioned in the Deep Space Nine episode “Looking for par’Mach in All the Wrong Places” as Kahless’s romantic partner — and Jadzia took on her role in the epic Klingon love story during “You Are Cordially Invited.”

Shi’Kahr

Amanda reminds Burnham of a time when she was a child, shortly after Logic Extremists attacked the Vulcan Learning Center and nearly killed her, that she had attempted to escape Vulcan to Earth. Amanda says that Spock told Sarek and Amanda, due to a vision from the Red Angel, where Burnham could be found on the outskirts of the Vulcan capital city Shi’Kahr.

The city was first named in The Animated Series episode “Yesteryear,” and was later seen in the remastered edition of “Amok Time.”

Let the Pink Blood Flow

In the fight between L’Rell, Tyler, and Kol-Sha and his men, Klingon blood is shown to be pink, a call back to “Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country” when Klingon blood is also seen being pinkish-purple in color.

Section 31

Though we knew Section 31 would have a part to play in “Star Trek: Discovery” in the cut scene from “Will You Take My Hand?” that first debuted at WonderCon, “Point of Light” marks the first appearance in “Trek” television since “Star Trek: Enterprise” — though it appeared in the Kelvin Timeline film “Star Trek Into Darkness” in 2013.

Boreth

The child of L’Rell and Voq is sent to the Klingon monastery world of Boreth to be raised in secret away from the heart of the Klingon Empire. Boreth is the planet where Kahless is believed to return, and first appeared in the “Next Generation” episode “Rightful Heir.”

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We’ll be back next week with a dive into the Trek connections in “An Obol for Charon,” the next episode of Star Trek: Discovery!

More New STAR TREK: DISCOVERY Badges from QMx

Star Trek licensee QMx continues their line of Star Trek: Discovery magnetic badges in 2019 with two new sets of 23rd century products on the way this spring.

First up is a trio of Star Trek: Discovery Terran Empire badges, modeled after the inverted deltas featured in the first season of the series. While FanSets released ‘flat’ versions of these badges in their pin line last fall, the new mirror Starfleet offerings from QMx are highly-detailed magnetic-backed products, like their first Discovery badges.

All three divisions (command, operations, and sciences) are set at $14.95 each.

From the new season of Discovery, QMx also has the USS Enterprise crew delta badges set to beam down as well; a modern take on the classic Star Trek uniform patch seen in the Original Series.

Released in four division codings — command, operations, sciences, and medical — these magnetic badges also come with included lapel pin-sized replicas, at $19.95 per pair.

We’ll be at the annual Toy Fair expo in New York City next week, where we expect QMx will have these badges on display for closer inspection — so watch for more pictures from that event later this month!

Have you bought any of QMx’s other Star Trek badges? Will you be adding these to your collection? Share your thoughts in the comments below!

New Photos from DISCOVERY 204: “An Obol for Charon”

Star Trek: Discovery Season 2 continues to plow forward into February with “An Obol for Charon” this week, and today we’ve got a collection of new images from the upcoming episode which features the arrival of Number One and the return of Jett Reno!

The first officer of the USS Enterprise beams over to the Discovery this episode, marking the first reappearance of Number One (Rebecca Romijn) in Trek since 1966’s “The Menagerie.” While the character has been featured in several tie-in Original Series novels, second-in-command has been out of the picture since the very beginning of the franchise.

Also returning in “Charon” is Commander Jett Reno (Tig Notaro), who was rescued from the downed USS Hiawatha in the season opener. Naturally, the engineer is pictured in the Discovery engine room, seen with a previously-unseen bit of spore drive tech in hand.

Meanwhile, Stamets (Anthony Rapp) continues to help Tilly (Mary Wiseman) after extracting the spore-based life form from her body in last week’s “Point of Light,” as the alien blob seems to have attached itself to the young ensign’s right arm.

Finally, Captain Pike and his bridge crew face a crisis as the Discovery operates at red alert.

In case you missed it, here’s the preview for “An Obol for Charon” — and you can find our review of Discovery‘s next episode right here at TrekCore later this week.

https://www.instagram.com/p/BtejqNRnd-b/

“An Obol for Charon” debuts Thursday on CBS All Access and Space, and will arrive on Netflix Friday morning for Star Trek: Discovery viewers outside of North America.

DISCOVERY Video Roundup: Promos & Behind the Scenes

We’re a few days past last week’s “Point of Light,” and now that its story points have been revealed, episode director Olatunde Osunsanmi has shared a few looks behind the scenes from production — and we’ve also got a few new Season 2 promos.

Osunsanmi, who also wrote a lengthy breakdown of the episode’s filming for StarTrek.com last week, took to show off some self-shot video from the Klingon-filled production.

First up, discussing the impending stunt and fight work with the cast:

Next, the full-speed fight scene where Kol-Sha (Ken Mitchell) and the House of Kor takes on L’Rell (Mary Chieffo) and Ash Tyler (Shazad Latif):

He also shared this amusing photo of Chieffo and Latif off-stage, fighting through the heay of stage lighting and on-set fire.

Moving the final moments of the episode, Osunsanmi showed this interesting look at the two-tiered Section 31 ship set in action, while Tyler and Georgiou (Michelle Yeoh) discussed their situation.

He also revealed this fascinating look at the Section 31 command center — which began life as the USS Shenzhou bridge set last season — just prior to filming.

Moving forward from “Point of Light,” CBS has also released some additional promotion for the series – starting with this Spock-centric TV spot which aired during the Super Bowl on Sunday evening.

https://www.instagram.com/p/BtcN4LnAuPa/

Netflix, who distributes Star Trek: Discovery outside of North America, used this footage of Ethan Peck in a similar promotion back in mid-January when the new season kicked off.

https://www.instagram.com/p/BsyOrI2HPy1/

We also now have a standalone version of the Discovery 204 preview, for this coming Thursday’s “An Obol for Charon,” courtesy of Netflix:

https://www.instagram.com/p/BtejqNRnd-b/

There’s also new this Season 2 promo which includes some small bits of new footage from (we believe) Episode 206 “The Sounds of Thunder,” with Tilly talking about a ‘time tsunami,’ but also ends with a notable spoiler: Spock (Ethan Peck) and Burnham (Sonequa Martin-Green) speaking to Leland (Alan Van Sprang) aboard the Section 31 ship.

https://www.instagram.com/p/BtWJCFzA0my/

And finally, thanks to an early preview from StarTrek.com, we have a (low-resolution) look at Engineer Jett Reno (Tig Notaro), who remains aboard the Discovery after her rescue in “Brother,” the Season 2 premiere.

We expect to have a better view of this image, and more photos from the next Discovery episode, in the next day or two — so check back soon for more!

Star Trek: Discovery
Season 1 Blu-ray

Star Trek: Discovery
Season 2 Blu-ray

Star Trek: Discovery
Season 3 Blu-ray

STAR TREK: DISCOVERY Review — “Point of Light”

Star Trek: Discovery returns to its serialized roots in “Point of Light,” an episode that reaches back to the Klingon intrigue of the first season and forward to the mysteries of Spock and the Red Angel and more.

This week, we have three distinct and rather disconnected storylines: back on Qo’noS, High Chancellor L’Rell (Mary Chieffo) and her torchbearer Ash Tyler (Shazad Latif) struggle to maintain the unified Empire; aboard Discovery, Sylvia Tilly (Mary Wiseman) struggles with her sanity as she continues to be plagued by the ‘ghost’ of a former classmate; and Michael Burnham (Sonequa Martin-Green) gets a surprise visit from her mother, Amanda (Mia Kirshner), who brings news of Spock.

On the Klingon homeworld, L’Rell struggles to maintain control of a High Council full of once-disparate houses that remain quietly skeptical of one another and openly suspicious of the “human” Tyler, employed as an adviser. Kol-Sha, head of the House of Kor and father to Kol — played by the same actor, Ken Mitchell — refuses to remove his house warpaint and continues to agitate for revenge over his son’s death.

His machinations come to a head when he learns that L’Rell and Voq secretly produced a child during Voq’s transformation into Tyler. In an attempt to blackmail L’Rell into ceding chancellorship to him, Kol-Sha murders L’Rell’s uncle and kidnaps the child. The clashing groups fight — spilling conspicuously pinkish-purple blood, straight out of Star Trek VI — but just as Kol-Sha’s victory seems assured, a mysterious figure appears, quickly turning the battle against him.

Who is that leather-clad interloper? None other than “Starfleet security consultant” Philippa Georgiou (Michelle Yeoh). Her primary interest is in preserving the stability of L’Rell’s chancellorship, and to do so she believes two things need to happen: Tyler needs to leave L’Rell’s side, and the baby needs to fade from view.

Tyler agrees to leave with the former Terran Emperor, taking his infant son with him; the baby will be given the clerics at Boreth, and his father will join Georgiou and her new colleagues aboard their black-ops Section 31 vessel, led by Leland (Alan Van Sprang).

L’Rell makes great spectacle of the “death” of Tyler and her child; Klingons have always been nothing if not theatrical, and L’Rell is no different. Addressing the High Council, she holds up the severed heads of Tyler and the baby (!) — replicas provided by Section 31 — and, echoing Queen Elizabeth I’s self-stylings as being wedded to her kingdom, L’Rell announces that she is no longer Chancellor, but ‘Mother’ to the Empire. It’s a powerful moment.

The sudden introduction of the baby, only to have an equally abrupt exit from the story, struck me as overly convenient. However, if the baby, who shares his father’s unusually pale complexion, is indeed the Albino from Deep Space Nine’s “Blood Oath” — a fan theory bubbling up on social media — I’m okay with the whiplash, as it would make for a great call-forward to an episode that was itself a callback to the mid-23rd century.

“Point of Light” gives us a better look at the varied familial appearances of Klingons from the different houses, a subtle makeup choice that helps Klingons seem like a real group of people. Think the shared forehead patterns of Worf and Alexander, or in the siblings of the House of Duras. I’m thrilled to see Discovery continue this tradition, but let’s face it, some of the different prosthetics were less successful than others.

Kol-Sha and L’Rell look great, and both appear to have done away with the oddly-distended skull shape we saw in Season 1. A few of the others, though, look exaggerated to the point of deformity. In particular, the makeup for L’Rell’s uncle is distractingly odd, and one of the unnamed Klingons present at L’Rell’s final speech has such a bulbous nose and forehead that, in profile at least, I wouldn’t have identified him as Klingon if not for the context. I hope in future episodes the makeup is more consistent.

In addition to hair and makeup changes, L’Rell has an entirely new wardrobe this season. After spending half of last year in a Starfleet issue prison jumpsuit, L’Rell is resplendent in a variety of elaborate metallic gowns and headpieces. It’s a testament to Gersha Phillips’ incredible costume designs that L’Rell, Warrior Mother and Chancellor of the Klingon Empire, looks equally dressed to lead a society of fierce warriors or attend the Met Gala.

In fact, it’s the costumes in this episode that stick with me the most. From L’Rell’s to-kill-for wardrobe to Tyler’s strappy black leather cape ensemble, and Georgiou’s Section 31 uniform to Amanda’s understated cerulean cloak, the costumes in “Point of Light” are not only gorgeous to look at, they help tell us where these characters are in their lives.

And as a bonus for Tyler, it appears that his Qo’noS wardrobe will translate perfectly to life in Section 31. (Nothing more annoying than having to go clothes shopping when you get a new job!)

Meanwhile aboard Discovery, Tilly is also dealing with problems of her own. As we saw in last week’s “New Eden,” Tilly is plagued by a very insistent hallucination of former classmate May Ahearn (Bahia Watson). This week, the stress of being constantly chattered at by a bubbly ghost finally breaks Tilly during a Command Training Program exercise on the bridge, forcing her to admit her troubles and seek help.

Thankfully, the person she speaks with is Burnham, who jumps at the chance to help Tilly get to the bottom of what’s going on. Very quickly, the two of them realize that whatever Tilly’s seeing isn’t a hallucination or a ghost, but an entity connected in some way to the mycelial network and the dark matter asteroid. Enter Paul Stamets (Anthony Rapp), who diagnoses Tilly with a fungal hitch-hiker and quickly removes it.

The entity, now a floaty fungus bubble, waits patiently in a force field for whatever the next episode has in store for it…

Continuing the-season long Spock story, Burnham receives some unexpected help with her investigation into her foster brother and the mysterious Red Angel. After being denied access to her son, Amanda decided to steal Spock’s medical files; because the files are encrypted, she turns to Burnham for help.

The two of them convince Captain Pike to allow them to break protocol and decrypt the stolen files, and in doing so the mystery between Spock and Burnham deepens.

We still don’t know exactly what went on between the two of them, but we learn more about the severity of their break. We also get another mention of the Red Angel, which a young Spock said appeared to him one night when Burnham had run away from home. The angel, Spock said, told him where to find Burnham; Sarek and Amanda dismissed his visitor as a flight of childhood fancy, but Spock’s story never wavered.

As a human growing up on Vulcan, Burnham was routinely targeted by “logic extremists” — a Vulcan separatist group first mentioned in last year’s “Lethe” — and in an attempt to protect the younger Spock, Burnham did something drastic to drive him away from her. Just what she did is still unknown, but at this point the tension between the two characters is palpable and they haven’t appeared on screen together yet.

Dramatic tension is great, but I hope the mystery isn’t drawn out for much longer. The substance of the story is in how the two characters work through their past, not the repeated reminder that they have a past. Even if the source of their tension isn’t revealed for a while, I’d like to see these characters interact with one another, instead of Burnham interacting almost exclusively with her own thoughts and memories.

I don’t have any hypotheses about what Burnham could have done to so deeply fracture their relationship, but as it gets built up more and more I find my curiosity slowly turning into boredom instead of anticipation.

Even reaching back into Season 1, the most interesting component of Burnham’s family dynamic is that it inverts the relationship we see between Sarek and Spock at the time of “Journey to Babel.” Sarek has always been comparatively warm toward Burnham, and up until the end of “Point of Light,” it appeared that Burnham enjoyed a warm relationship with both of her adoptive parents. However, the chill that runs through Amanda as she leaves to continue her search for Spock seems to foreshadow the extremely distant relationship we expect between Sarek and Spock.

Up to now, we’ve seen a softer fatherly presence with Sarek, and it’s interesting to think that the first glimpse of the parent-child dynamic we expect to see in Spock’s family might come from Amanda and Burnham.

Each of this week’s three storylines dealt in some way with family and sense of self, but even so, I didn’t feel that the parallels were explicit enough for the through-lines to be as cohesive as I would have liked. In some ways, “Point of Light” felt like three episodes of the Short Treks series that had been woven together out of necessity, and not because the stories informed one another in a meaningful or significant way.

The one time we get direct interaction between the Discovery and Klingon storylines, director Olatunde Osunsanmi did something quite striking: as Tyler and Burnham talk via holographic projection, the cuts between Tyler’s chamber and Burnham’s quarters eventually merge into a single merged space that conveys the special intimacy the two characters share.

Cutting between the stories, at times I found the clash between the dark, baroque splendor of Qo’noS and the clean, bright white-and-blue of Discovery to be jarring. As the season moves into its more epic, sweeping story arcs, I hope Discovery remembers that small moments of connection between its characters are as essential to the story as the major plot points.

Star Trek: Discovery returns this week with “An Obol for Charon.”

Chieffo Heads to READY ROOM and LET’S MAKE A DEAL, Plus: CARPOOL KARAOKE With the Cast

It’s a big week for Star Trek: Discovery actor Mary Chieffo, as the lady behind L’Rell follows a leading role in this week’s “Point of Light” with appearances on the Ready Room after-show and heads to a Star Trek-centric game show on Monday.

 

The second week of The Ready Room post-show interview livestream launched this afternoon with Mary Chieffo as the starring guest, spending more than 35 minutes talking with host Naomi Kyle about L’Rell’s evolution and development into “Point of Light.”

Along with Chieffo’s usual exuberance, the web show also evolved to include behind-the-scenes footage of Chieffo, Shazad Latif (Tyler), and returning guest star Ken Mitchel (Kol’sha) on set filming this week’s episode.

Coming back to Earth, the actor will be helping to host a special Star Trek-themed edition of the long-running CBS game show Let’s Make a Deal on Monday, an event first announced back in August ahead if its late-summer taping.

The audience at the Trek taping was made up of dozens of Los Angeles-based Star Trek fans, in costume, representing ever era of the franchise from the Original Series through Discovery and even the Kelvin Timeline, and Chieffo helped out with some on-set Klingonese.

 
The show which just happens to air on CBS will air on Monday; check your local listings for specifics.

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Finally, Sonequa Martin-Green, Doug Jones, Mary Wiseman, and Anthony Rapp spend time driving – and singing – around Toronto in the latest episode of Carpool Karaoke, which released today for free on AppleTV.

The entire segment can be found through Apple Music at this link.

Keep coming back to TrekCore for the latest in Star Trek news!

Trek Comics Review: THE Q CONFLICT #1

The greatest Star Trek captains and their crew all together in one comic crossover? I’m getting shivers!

IDW’s Star Trek: The Q Conflict launches this month — from writers Scott and David Tipton and artist David Messina — promising of a cavalcade of talent that will prove to be unmatched in ambition by other Star Trek stories.

If you wanted to attempt a television story with four crews from different iterations of Trek — something akin to the current run of DC Comics superhero shows on The CW — there’s no way you could wrangle the casts from so many of the series for filming and de-age them to meet fans’ memories… but you can in the comics.

I remember Chris Claremont telling me that comics are a medium free of physical or monetary restraint. Comics are literally pure imagination-based storytelling vehicle that no film producer could ever hope to match. If you have the talent, anything that can be imagined, can be realized between twenty or more illustrated pages.

It’s a new level of cool when you apply that to Star Trek and you get to see the combined talent of multiple generations of Trek in one storyline. Instead of focusing on just one iteration, the Tiptons go all out to bring together the entire primary casts of the original Star Trek series, The Next GenerationDeep Space 9, and Voyager for this six-issue miniseries. (Enterprise is excluded since that crew had no contact with the Q.)

You see, here’s the thing: Star Trek loves to play with the idea of humanity challenging limits, including being with no limits. If you think back to classic Trek, there is an entire litany of characters with seemingly unlimited power at their disposal: the Metrons, Trelane, Apollo, and so forth. The introduction of Q in TNG’s “Encounter at Farpoint” shouldn’t have been a surprise; before the Enterprise-D had a chance to really show its stuff, it was already faced with an omnipotent — yet hardly omniscient — being ready torment and experiment.

Q is different from the array of Original Series omnipotents, in that unlike the one-shot, all-powerful villains, he returned over and over to became a fan-favourite. Of course, this means that he is the perfect conduit to introduce a conflict between his species and other similarly advanced races. In this comic, that conflict is responsible for a number of abnormal spatial anomalies — a collection of unnaturally occurring super-novae in a short window of time, just as seen in Voyager’s “The Q and the Grey.”

Of course, time means nothing to omnipotent beings — but as any long-standing fan knows, any conversation with Q leads to more complications, and the Tiptons pounce on that to create an ambitious story that any Trek-lover will thrill at seeing.

The Tiptons are comic fans at heart. While they love Star Trek, and there is no doubting their vast knowledge, they also know that an effective comic technique is a team-up – and this is an ultimate team-up. Make no doubt about it, Q reaches back, forward and sideways in time to bring four super-teams together to make for an awesome team-up that will make Trek fans delight in anticipating the story the combined abilities of these fan-favourite characters can deliver.

This is a set-up issue. It introduces the battlefield, the generals, and the soldiers in this conflict amongst all-powerful entities. But it’s a set-up issue that any comic reader and Trek fan can really get excited about as Picard’s steadfastness, Sisko’s bravery, Janeway’s cunning and Kirk’s — well, everything — combine to promise a story of Trek epic proportions.

David Messina has the art duties on this book. Messina’s been around and it must be a major joy for him to involved in a project like this. after all, he gets to work with not just one Trek crew, but four of them. Like I said, there’s a great sense of promise in this book.

  • Both ‘A’ and ‘B’ covers come from David Messina. The first sees a montage of cast from all four Treks with a menacing Q in the background. Spock, Seven, Odo and Captain Picard are featured, while  Sulu, Sisko, Chakotay and Data represented on the second with Ayelborne the Organian positioned behind them. I like the second cover out of these, because while Q is already mentioned, it’s exciting to see a bit of the story on the cover in learning that the peace-loving Organians as a source of antagonism to the Q Continuum.
     
  • The retail-incentive ‘A’ cover is absolutely stunning. George Caltsoudas gives us an amazing propaganda-style poster that features all of the advanced races: Q, Trelane, the Metron, and Ayelborne of the Organians enthroned and above the four captains stand over a banner that reads Virtute and Gloria. It clearly looks like a recruitment poster but the level of detail in this stylized piece captures a multiple of different vibes. It’s an incredible work.
     
  • The retail-incentive ‘B’ cover is a double-page spanning cover of all the casts and their adversaries in a true spectacular format. A grinning Q imposingly looms in the background creating the perfect atmosphere for this book. This is J.K. Woodward’s contribution, and it’s a real winner in my book — definitely my favourite.

Imagine a television episode like this. Well, you can’t. There’s no way that the casts could ever interact with each other in this format, given the disparity of the series, the fact that actors age – this is what comics are about. Legends from four classic Trek franchises – together for the first time. This will be an epic storyline.

The Tiptons are comic guys, but better, they’re Star Trek guys to boot. You can’t get better storytellers of a comic in this franchise than writers who are experts in their fields, but also dedicated fans as well. This is more than just a story though; with the level of talent on this book, this will be a labour of love.

STAR TREK: DISCOVERY Spoiler Discussion: “Point of Light”

The newest episode of Star Trek: Discovery — “Point of Light” — has just debuted, and we’re sure you’re ready to dive into a discussion about the story!

Here’s your place to take on all the new Trek lore this episode brought us, with no restrictions on spoilers. If you haven’t yet watched the new episode yet, here’s your last warning!

We also recommend checking out this new interview with Discovery composer Jeff Russo, who describes how the music of Star Trek: Discovery has changed in the new season:

This thread will remain open until our episode review is posted.