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More Action, More Asteroids, and More Spock in New STAR TREK: DISCOVERY Season 2 Commercial

A new Star Trek: Discovery commercial debuted on television last night ahead of the coming January premiere of Season 2 of the sophomore series, with the first new footage from the new episodes since the last trailer at New York Comic Con.

Currently only available through third-party uploads, the newest look at Discovery Season 2 includes extended bits of action from the rescue of survivors from the downed USS Hiawatha — Burnham’s escape from the violent structural collapse of the crashed ship as first seen in the summer San Diego Comic Con trailer — more asteroid field action from the early moments of the season, and most notably, bearded Spock (Ethan Peck) making his escape from a Starfleet medical facility…

…and sporting a smile to his captain, Christopher Pike (Anson Mount).

 

Aside from the apparently happy Spock — something we certainly saw in “The Cage”, which takes place before Discovery, and again in both “Amok Time” and in The Motion Picture — this commercial also reveals that we’ll see Spock and Pike together while the interim captain of the Discovery is still in charge of the Crossfield-class vessel, as denoted by his appearance in the blue uniform we’ve now come to expect from the series.

We’re hoping for a more official upload of this commercial from CBS to make its way online soon, and if and when that happens, we’ll update this post with a better-quality video of the newest peek at Discovery.

Star Trek: Discovery returns to CBS All Access and Space with the next “Short Trek” mini-sodes on December 6 and January 3, followed by the debut of Discovery Season 2 on January 17 (to follow January 18 on Netflix globally).

Star Trek: Discovery
Season 1 Blu-ray

Star Trek: Discovery
Season 2 Blu-ray

Star Trek: Discovery
Season 3 Blu-ray

Win a STAR TREK ONLINE ‘Age of Discovery’ Tardigrade!

Once again, we’re partnering with our friends at Star Trek Online to celebrate the launch of “Age of Discovery” on Xbox One — the first major Star Trek: Discovery chapter in the STO story — with a new contest!

This contest has ended and all winners have been notified.

Starting today, we’ll be giving away 100 codes (for Xbox One redemption only), each redeemable for an “Age of Discovery” Verdant Tardigrade Pet and Title. The Verdant Tardigrade is a non-combat pet, exclusive to Star Trek Online players on Xbox One.

The STAR TREK ONLINE Xbox One Verdant Tardigrade.

Once claimed, it can be granted to all characters on a single account and isn’t restricted by faction. Each code for the Xbox One-Exclusive Verdant Tardigrade also grants players the new title of “Spore Engineer.”

Season One of Star Trek: Discovery introduced the multi-dimensional Tardigrades, whose genetic makeup granted access to the mycelial network. In Star Trek Online, Captains can commission these highly evolved beasts to accompany them on ground missions featured in “Age of Discovery” and beyond. These non-combat pets are not available for purchase in the game.

‘Ripper’ the tardigrade, as seen in STAR TREK: DISCOVERY. (CBS)

To enter the contest, just email us your name by December 4 — and on December 5, we’ll pick 100 names to win an “Age of Discovery” Verdant Tardigrade Pet and Title. All winners will be emailed the in-game code and instructions how to add the ship to your Star Trek Online account.

Good luck to all!

Win a STAR TREK: DISCOVERY Blu-ray Steelbook Set!

The first season of Star Trek: Discovery is finally out on Blu-ray, and to celebrate we’re giving away the complete Season 1 Steelbook collector’s set, courtesy of Paramount Home Entertainment!

The four-disc Steelbook set features all 15 episodes of Star Trek: Discovery Season 1 on region-free Blu-ray, and is exclusive Best exclusive to Best Buy in the United States, and globally via Zavvi in the UK and Amazon Germany for other parts of Europe.

For your chance to win, you’ll need to follow @TrekCore on Twitter and follow the instructions in this tweet: tell us your favorite Star Trek: Discovery episode using the hashtag #DiscoSteelbook — get your submission posted by Thursday, November 22 at 11:59PM ET and we’ll pick a winner before the weekend!

Good luck to all!

Open to all entrants worldwide via Twitter. Winner will be contacted via Twitter direct message (DM) on Friday, November 23 to obtain contact information for delivery.

Review — STAR TREK: DISCOVERY Season 1 on Blu-ray

Review by Ken Reilly and Jim Moorhouse

It’s been nine months since the Klingon War concluded, and finally the first season of Star Trek: Discovery has beamed down from the streaming cloud to arrive on home media for the first time.

Debuting on region-free Blu-ray this past Tuesday in North America — and landing in Europe this coming week — the newest iteration of the Trek franchise comes home in a four-disc set that includes not only all 15 episodes of Discovery‘s freshman season, but nearly three hours of behind the scenes interviews and deleted scenes from the initial year of the series.

(The series is also available on DVD for those of you who haven’t yet moved to high definition.)

In addition to the standard Blu-ray release — which comes packaged with a nice fold-out slipcover depicting the primary cast of Federation characters — Best Buy offers a retailer-exclusive Steelbook package adorned with a number of nice touches, including a debossed metallic rendering of the Star Trek: Discovery logo, and a pair of stylized renderings of the USS Discovery on the inner and rear panels of the metal case.

(For those of you outside of North America, the Steelbook release is coming to the UK via Zavvi, and is also available through Amazon Germany.)

Disc 1 includes “The Vulcan Hello,” “Battle at the Binary Stars,” “Context is for Kings,” and “The Butcher’s Knife Cares Not for the Lamb’s Cry.” Disc 2 continues with “Choose Your Pain,” “Lethe,” “Magic to Make the Sanest Man Go Mad,” and “Si Vis Pacem, Para Bellum.”

Disc 3 holds “Into the Forest I Go,” “Despite Yourself,” “The Wolf Inside,” and “Vaulting Ambition.” Disc 4 closes the season with “What’s Past is Prologue,” “The War Without, The War Within,” and “Will You Take My Hand?”

L’Rell (Mary Chieffo) considers her place in the Klingon Empire. (“Si Vis Pacem, Para Bellum”)

While Star Trek: Enterprise may have brought the franchise into the early days of high-definition television production back in 2001, it’s safe to say that on a technical level, Star Trek: Discovery is the best-looking entry in Trek TV to date — but this Blu-ray release is even a step up from the streaming platforms on which the show regularly lives.

Gone are the video compression effects from CBS All Access’ over-the-top delivery service (an experience which is somewhat improved when watching on Netflix internationally), as the high-capacity discs have the space to allow fine details to become more apparent, and low-light scenes to come out of the shadows a bit — especially the high-contrast lighting of the Terran Empire storyline in the back half of the season.

Burnham (Sonequa Martin-Green) and Mirror Saru (Doug Jones) on the ISS Shenzhou. (“The Wolf Inside”)

Depending on a viewer’s network capacity, many of the darkly-lit sequences in Discovery Season 1 could be difficult to make out — especially if your primary CBS All Access delivery device was a phone, tablet, or laptop — and being able to experience the show in its intended high-definition presentation is certainly a step up from the weekly releases.

(With Discovery Season 2’s switch to anamorphic lenses and framing, we are already looking forward to seeing next season get a similar Blu-ray presentation!)

There also seems to be a bit of minor color correction on the Blu-ray masters, as a slight yellow wash has been cleaned out of the image presentation, bringing a more natural look to skin tones, as can be illustrated in this comparison from the season finale:

Skin tones edge back towards a more natural look on Blu-ray. (“Will You Take My Hand?”)

Along with the video improvements, the set also brings English 5.1 DTS-HD Master audio, and a collection of standard foreign language tracks (German, French, Italian, Castilian, and Japanese 5.1 Dolby Digital).

Subtitles are available in English, English SDH, Italian, German, French, Castilian, Japanese, Dutch, Danish, Finnish, Norwegian Swedish, Brazilian Portuguese — and of course, Klingon as well.

Unfortunately, one glaring VFX error from the season finale (“Will You Take My Hand?”) remains in this final presentation of the season: the END SIMULATION graphic seen during the virtual destruction of Qo’noS remains misspelled “SIMULTATION” on Blu-ray.

Sonequa Martin-Green films the “Vulcan Hello” spacewalk in mid-2017.

The ten featurettes in the Discovery Blu-ray release cover a wide range of topics, from the filming of the zero-gravity spacewalk in “The Vulcan Hello” to the dining options of the Terran Empire — but with rare exception, the bonus material tends to stay centered around two parts of the season: filming of the two-part premiere (“The Vulcan Hello” and “Battle at the Binary Stars”) and the journey into the Mirror Universe.

Set design, props, and costuming are the main focus of the lengthy features, which unfortunately means there’s little time spent discussing things like filming on location in Jordan or the stunt work needed for the wild fight scenes in “Into the Forest I Go” or “What’s Past is Prologue” — topics addressed briefly in social media posts or After Trek segments.

A great deal of Discovery’s pre-production development came under the eye of long-departed series creator Bryan Fuller, and because of that, much of what you would expect to see in first-season Star Trek documentary content is somewhat noticeably missing, as “the Discovery story” picks up pretty much in tandem with filming on the series pilot episode (which began after Fuller’s departure).

It’s certainly not a surprise that Fuller isn’t part of the story, of course; his tenure on Discovery was plagued by budget overruns and multiple scheduling delays before CBS axed him from the show, so we never expected he’d be personally included here — but it’s a bit of a shame that the months of Discovery design and conceptualization material that were generated under his watch haven’t been made part of the Blu-ray set’s features.

The early Saru concept (being implemented here by makeup head James MacKinnon) was featured in a Facebook Live event in the spring, but disappointingly didn’t make the cut for the Season 1 Blu-ray set.

We hoped to see things like the first iterations of Discovery’s Starfleet uniform designs, as described by costume designer Gersha Phillips in her on-disc interviews, or the original look for Saru — an alien who had a ten-eyed, V-shaped head — which was featured on a Facebook Live video back in May 2018 but has been completely excluded from the Blu-ray feature on Discovery’s alien makeup.

The set also lacks any audio commentaries for Season 1’s episodes, which many of us physical media fans always look forward to for in-depth discussions from actors, writers, and directors on television series.

While a few of the show’s writers make appearances in some of the interview features — including Kirsten Beyer, Jordan Nardino, writing pair Bo Yeon Kim and Erika Lippoldt, and (now-departed) Season 1 showrunners Aaron Harberts and Gretchen Berg, there’s also virtually no interview time given to the Season 1 episodic directors, aside from repurposed EPK interviews with pilot director David Semel, and director-producers Olatunde Osunsanmi and Akiva Goldsman. (“Despite Yourself” director and Next Generation veteran Jonathan Frakes appears briefly, but only in B-roll footage.)

That all being said, let’s break down the ten Season 1 features:

Concepts and Casting (16:39)

The title of this vignette is pretty misleading — while it does tackle the concepts that birthed the series, it only very peripherally discusses the casting process for the series regulars. Mostly it serves as an unnecessarily long introduction or preview of “The Vulcan Hello.”

· The feature does include some enjoyable clips of the ‘Discovery’ cast meeting fans at the Los Angeles premiere of ‘Discovery’ in September 2017, but not nearly enough.

· The only two casting decisions highlighted in the piece are Sonequa Martin-Green as Michael Burnham and Doug Jones as Saru, but those interviews barely scratch the surface on their casting story. Where is the exploration of bringing Asian cinema superstar Michelle Yeoh or genre veteran Jason Isaacs to the franchise?

Creating the Sound for Discovery (8:06)

Excellent behind-the-scenes feature that focuses mostly on composer Jeff Russo breaking down his superb opening theme music for ‘Discovery’ note-by-note. The feature makes liberal use of episode clips and music tracks from previous ‘Trek’ episodes, and comprehensively defines Russo’s approach to joining the world of ‘Star Trek.’

· Russo, on his task: “How do you make new what has been done?… Create your own identity but understand your roots. And most importantly stand on your own.”

· In an introduction to the piece, Alex Kurtzman reveals that he is a “soundtrack junkie,” which is one of the reasons he hired Russo.

· Russo name drops three episodes that inspired his ‘Discovery’ work: “Space Seed,” “Mirror, Mirror,” and “The Best of Both Worlds.”

· While not an explicit focus of the featurette, it would have been nice to get some insight into the imagery of the ‘Discovery’ opening credits sequence here as well.

Creature Comforts (15:54)

If you are reading this article, we will assume that by now you’ve read and heard about much of the background design process relating to the “reinvention” of the Klingons.

In this solid featurette focused on the show’s creature design, it concisely breaks down how Alchemy Studios, behind make-up and creature design gurus Glenn Hetrick and Neville Page, accomplished that task. The feature also deftly weaves fun looks at Doug Jones (Saru) and Mary Chieffo (L’Rell) being made up and discussing their already iconic characters.

· Page, on the design process: “You’re always asked contradictory things: ‘I want to see something I’ve never seen before, yet it has to be familiar.’”

· Hetrick, on Klingon houses: “We wanted the houses to feel like they’d grown on multiple planets over a long period of time. Each house, in canon, have sort of looked the same. Until now.”

· Hetrick shows his excitement for ‘Star Trek’ and his role in ‘Discovery,’ saying: “You are going to see a lot more of (this) in Season 2 and in the future. We are just getting started!”

Designing Discovery (12:10)

One of the stronger features on the disc, “Designing Discovery” includes comprehensive interviews with production designers Terry Cherniawsky and Tamara Deverell, the first lead women production designer on ‘Star Trek.’

The feature includes dozens of early artist production design renderings of ship interiors and planet sets, including some never before seen. The interviews run the gamut of construction timelines and designing captain’s chairs and view screens, to creating Orion encampments on Qo’noS from scratch.

· Cherniawsky reveals that he handpicked Deverell as his replacement mid-way through the first season.

· On the impressive visual screens seen through the series, Deverell said: “The screens we have, which are actual see-through screens, which is very new, and I think there’s like six of them, and we have them all, in the entire world right now. … I think a lot of people look at them and go ‘It’s visual effects,’ but it’s actually playback that we use right there in the bridge and it makes it bright and beautiful and helps the actors interact with the story.”

· Tamara revealed that in designing the ISS Charon, she originated the idea of the large ship having a mini-sun or moon to power itself “and the writers took that and made it part of the story, which was the kind of thing that is just your dream as a production designer.”

Creating Space (13:07)

For fans of visual effects rendering and seeing how the most complicated special effects go from idea to reality, this feature is for you. The hefty piece focuses mostly on Michael Burnham’s space walk scene in “The Vulcan Hello,” showing detailed pre-visualization concept art matched up with the final images from the show.

Interviews with episode director David Semel and Visual Effect Supervisor Jason Zimmerman help reveal the mystery of how it was all put together, and an extended interview with Sonequa Martin-Green conveys her usual joy and enthusiasm for the project.

· Martin-Green in interviewed on the historic sets of Paramount, where much of the green-screen sequences for “The Vulcan Hello” were filmed, “I think it’s quite poetic actually, that ‘Next Generation’ and ‘Voyager’ shot a ton of stuff here So, these walls, they could speak to us, and they are going to take good care of us.”

· The piece includes some great aerial shots of Linda Jewell, Martin-Green’s stunt double doing extensive wire work for the episode.

· Martin-Green looks adorable wearing her gold space-walk cap throughout the sit-down interviews.

· Kurtzman reveals the entire space walk scene took 5 or 6 months to design and render, with the goal of putting “the audience inside her experience as she was going through the asteroid field. The sense of a lot of close calls, but mostly this incredible sense of speed and joy and delight.”

Prop Me Up (12:54)

A comprehensive interview with Property Master Mario Moreira, who details the challenges of creating props that they could reverse engineer from their Original Series predecessors with a modern aesthetic. If you want detailed, up-close looks at the show’s myriad of props, this is the feature for you. Everything is here from hand phasers to tricorders to Mirror Universe broad swords.

· Moreira woke up one morning from a dream that inspired him to put uniform ranks on the comm badges.

· The feature includes great close-ups of the design process for holstered Klingon weapons, including the bat’leth, which he discusses in detail as a newly conceived “defensive weapon.”

· In breaking down the Klingon weapons, Moreira reveals that different house have different designs for their hand weapons. “Rather than reinventing the Klingons, we wanted to re-explore the Klingons as a warrior race.”

Feeding Frenzy (6:41)

One of the quirkiest special features ever produced for a ‘Star Trek’ home video release, “Feeding Frenzy” has no introduction, but instead allows you to follow along and draw your own conclusions as ‘Discovery’s’ on set food stylists work to perfect (gulp) the perfect Kelpien ganglia.

· With a focus on the Mirror Universe meal shared by Emperor Georgiou and Michael Burnham, we learn that everything prepared for the actors not only had to look alien, but also be vegan to accommodate for Sonequa Martin-Green’s diet.

A Woman’s Journey (11:14)

Interviews with many of the women leading the creative charge for the first season of ‘Discovery’ include producers Heather Kadin, Gretchen Berg and Kristen Beyer, as well as executive story editors Bo Yeon Kim and Erika Lippoldt (pictured above), and on-camera performers Michelle Yeo, Mary Chieffo and Sonequa Martin-Green.

Needless to say, this feature props up the diverse storytelling at the center of ‘Discovery,’ perhaps best encapsulated by this quote from Chieffo: “It’s great to have so much nuance within the female characters, that there is not one way to be a strong female character.”

· In her interview snippet, Bo Yeon Kim highlighted the way that Michelle Yeoh’s dynamic presence on the set from the beginning of filming helped inform the way Georgiou would continue to affect character’s like Burnham and Saru throughout the first season.

· Kirsten Beyer discusses her realization during one storyboarding session that for the first time in the history of ‘Star Trek,’ a room of women were exclusively “deciding what the future of ‘Star Trek’ was, with nobody else in the room. It was a unique moment in history, for sure, and I was very much aware of it.”

Dress for Success (21:27)

After opening with an interview with Gersha Phillips about some of the inspirations for her Starfleet uniform designs, the featurette spends 12 consecutive minutes on the detailed and painstaking process to build the Klingon armor worn by T’Kuvma and L’Rell…. and by build, we don’t mean detailing the design process — what you might normally expect in this kind of piece, frustratingly missing from this feature — we mean literally 12 straight minutes inordinately going into hyper-specific details on how every seam and ridge in the armor was heated, pleated and molded.

An interesting, if oddly-detailed look into the process that could only make you wonder, as more than a half dozen costumers showcased their role in the armor’s production, is this level of detail worth it? From our end, the answer is “yes,” but we probably wouldn’t argue with you if you said “no.” (It would have been nice to get a similar look at construction on the new Starfleet uniforms.)

· Some fun sound bites from Jason Isaacs are included about uniform creasing when you sit and his inability to eat lunch while wearing the restrictive uniform (“I can’t eat a grape without looking pregnant. … I feel like a balloon animal.”), a toned-down version of the tale told in a bit more risque fashion at Isaac’s Las Vegas convention appearance this summer.

· Mary Wiseman on the Terran Empire uniforms: “Sexy gladiator murder gold. That’s how I would describe that uniform. It’s super fun to wear, you feel very big and broad, but it also feels very slick and slippery when you wear it and I think that echoes what it’s like to be a leader in that universe.”

The Voyage of Season 1 (40:49)

The longest special feature on the disk is a satisfying, but standard, recitation of ‘Discovery’s’ first season, with a few minutes of clips and soundbites dedicated to each episode. This 40-minute feature doesn’t tread any new ground, with most of the interviews focused on character arcs and motivations, but is still a fun way to refresh yourself on the twists and turns throughout the season.

· The only real examination of the relationship between Paul Stamets and Hugh Culber is part of this special feature, with both Anthony Rapp and Wilson Cruz offering their insights into how their partnership was portrayed on screen. The 90 seconds allotted to that storyline is all too brief and deserved more attention across all of the disc’s special features.

· Executive producer Heather Kadin and Rainn Wilson (Harry Mudd) discuss the casting of Wilson, who had excitedly reached out to the producers about getting involved when he heard about the new show.

· The feature includes sit-down interviews with co-executive producers Olatunde Osunsanmi and Jordon Nardino, two creatives behind the scenes who are rarely seen in this capacity.

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Also included are a few deleted and extended scenes from across the season, including former-Emperor Georgiou’s recruitment into Section 31, which was first released back in the spring — though a few known cut scenes, like an often-mentioned peace treaty signing filmed for “Will You Take My Hand?,” haven’t been included.

Deleted scenes are an interesting proposition when you are talking about a show that is not bound by the normal constraints of broadcast television running times. Instead of the question related to their inclusion being a decision between “Can we fit it in?” or “Should we fit in?” it almost unilaterally comes down to just “Should we?” And in regards to some of the scenes detailed below, the answer clearly should have been “yes.”

Young T’Kuvma (Thamela Mpumlwana) declares his destiny. (“Battle at the Binary Stars,” deleted scene)
  • “Battle at the Binary Stars” (1:25): Young T’Kuvma makes a declaration to his future self to restore the derelict Ship of the Dead ship to glory. This scene helps connect T’Kuvma’s backstory, and the strong performance by Thamela Mpumlwana (playing the young T’Kuvma) speaking Klingon deserves to be seen — but at least a take on this sequence was included in the IDW Light of Kahless comic storyline last year.
     
  • “The Butcher’s Knife Cares Not for the Lamb’s Cry” (2:11): L’Rell kills an ailing Klingon as Voq comforts him with T’Kuvma’s prayer. This sequence adds not only to the backstory of Discovery’s Klingons, but also to the reputation of L’Rell as a Klingon capable of anything. There’s no excuse to not have seen this as part of the finished episode.
     
  • “Choose Your Pain” (2:30): Three snippets of Saru feeling his way into his command role on Discovery include him recording a log entry, overriding a security lockout and receiving applause from his crew after a “job well done” speech. The three scenes feel choppy and out of place, and were wisely cut from the finished product — especially the rather awkward clapping scene on the bridge.
     
  • “Magic to Make the Sanest Man Go Mad” (1:12): Lorca, Stamets and Tilly discuss Burnham’s plan to sacrifice herself to entice Mudd to activate his time crystal one last time. This one is probably the best deleted scene included on the disc, adding an extra level of melancholy to further connect the characters.
     
  • “What’s Past is Prologue” (2:35): The first of two unrelated clips has Lorca freeing his Mirror Universe crewmates from their agony booths on board the ISS Charon; the second clip features a moment where Stamets tells Saru and Cadet Tilly about his interaction with Culber in the mycelial network (to their clear disbelief). Both short scenes add instantaneous depth to the motivations of both Lorca and Stamets, and it’s hard to imagine why they were left on the cutting room floor.
     
  • “Will You Take My Hand?” (2:37): The previously released clip of Section 31 operative Leland (Alan Van Sprang) approaching Mirror Georgiou in her Orion gaming establishment on Qo’noS, a tantalizing preview of what is sure to be a critical storyline in Season 2.
The Klingon ‘Ship of the Dead’ explodes after Discovery’s attack. (“Into the Forest I Go”)

In summation, if you enjoyed Discovery (or if you were holding out for physical release before diving into the show), the Blu-ray release is an easy recommendation to add to your collection.

Though most of the included bonus features don’t go far beyond scratching the surface of behind-the-scenes decisions — perhaps the singular disappointment on this set — the show has never looked better, and you’ll never need to remember if your streaming subscription is still active if you want to revisit the initial adventures of the USS Discovery crew.

If you think Star Trek: Discovery — Season One Blu-ray set is for you, you can order directly through the links below. In the meantime, here’s a selection of season-spanning screencaps of the Blu-ray episodes for you to explore.

Star Trek: Discovery
Season 1 Blu-ray

Star Trek: Discovery
Season 2 Blu-ray

Star Trek: Discovery
Season 3 Blu-ray

STAR TREK: DISCOVERY Season 1 Now on iTunes

The first season of Star Trek: Discovery finally beams down to Blu-ray and DVD next week (preorder below!), but for those of you who have left physical media behind, the series has now made its way to the iTunes store as well as the first digital delivery option outside of CBS All Access in the United States.

Available now for $2.99 per episode — or $34.99 for the full season — all fifteen chapters in Discovery Season 1 are up on Apple’s service for acquisition; the pricing is roughly equivalent to the Blu-ray sale price at Amazon (as of this writing).

‘Star Trek: Discovery’ Season 1, now available in the iTunes store.

While the iTunes package does include a number of short featurettes (each released online during the lead-up to Discovery‘s debut in 2017), the Apple offering does not include the extended bonus features set to be part of the Blu-ray release next week.

We’ll have our review of the Discovery Season 1 Blu-ray collection for you next week — and maybe even give you a chance to score a copy of the set yourself! — so be sure to keep an eye on TrekCore for all the latest news on this release!

Star Trek: Discovery
Season 1 Blu-ray

Star Trek: Discovery
Season 2 Blu-ray

Star Trek: Discovery
Season 3 Blu-ray

RUMOR: Is CBS Eyeing DISCOVERY’s Michelle Yeoh for a Georgiou/Section 31 STAR TREK Spin-Off Show?

Star Trek has been growing these past six months, from the moment that franchise overseer Alex Kurtzman landed a massive five-year deal with CBS to manage a planned expansion of the Trek universe with the studio.

Since early summer, we’ve gotten a series of new short adventures set in the realm of Star Trek: Discovery, the bombshell announcement that Patrick Stewart is returning as Jean-Luc Picard in a new series, the reveal of the animated comedy Star Trek: Lower Decks which is in development now… and a new report signals that another live-action series could be in the works as well.

Exiled Emperor Georgiou (Michelle Yeoh) is recruited into Section 31 by Leland (Alan Van Sprang). (CBS)

On Friday, Deadline Hollywood reported that Star Trek: Discovery actor Michelle Yeoh — who portrayed the late Captain Georgiou and returned late in Season 1 as her royal duplicate from the Mirror Universe — may be in negotiations for her own Trek spin-off series, following the former Terran Empire through her adventures as a member of Section 31.

The character was recruited into Section 31 following the events of “Will You Take My Hand?,” as revealed in the ‘secret scene’ former Discovery showrunners Aaron Harberts and Gretchen Berg debuted back at WonderCon all the way back in March, where the mysterious Leland (Alan Van Sprang) tracked down Georgiou on Qo’noS to invite her to join the clandestine organization.

Before being introduced in Discovery, Section 31 originated in Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, made a brief appearance in the final season of Star Trek: Enterprise, and later factored into the plot of 2013’s Kelvin Timeline film Star Trek Into Darkness. It has also been the focus of an ongoing series of novels set in the prime Trek universe, culminating in last year’s Section 31: Control.

Section 31 agent Georgiou makes her way to Qo’noS. (CBS)

Yeoh, who appeared in eight episodes of the show last year, is already set to return in Discovery Season 2, seen in the newest trailer encountering Captain Christopher Pike (Anson Mount) on the USS Discovery and travelling back to the Klingon homeworld.

While there’s been no comment from CBS Television Studios on the report, Deadline does note that Yeoh’s busy schedule may be a hurdle in landing the actor for a full-time series role, due to commitments to a planned Crazy Rich Asians sequel and an overall development deal inked with her production company earlier in 2018.

So will this Yeoh-led Star Trek series make it to actual production? Well, we’ll have to wait and see — but new CBS head Joe Ianniello, who is leading the company following the departure of former CEO Les Moonves — told investors on last week’s corporate earnings call that the company “expect[s] to have more Star Trek announcements coming shortly.”

While Burnham (Sonequa Martin-Green) knows the truth, Georgiou plays ‘the good captain’ to Pike (Anson Mount). (CBS)

What are your thoughts on the concept of a Georgiou-centric Section 31 Star Trek series? Let us know in the comments below!

STAR TREK: DISCOVERY Review — ‘Short Treks: Calypso’

Based loosely upon the Greek myth of the same name, as told in Homer’s The Odyssey, the second Star Trek: Discovery Short Trek outing “Calypso” is a radical departure from a traditional Star Trek episode.
 
This is a high concept 18 minutes of Star Trek, in which a man named Craft (guest star Aldis Hodge) is rescued in an escape pod by an unmanned USS Discovery 1,000 years in the future, where he befriends and almost falls in love with the ship’s almost-human artificial intelligence program who has named herself Zora (voiced by Annabelle Wallis), and then ultimately returns to his family.
 
This episode, written by Pulitzer Prize-winning author Michael Chabon from a story by Chabon and Sean Cochran, is like a visual short story. Many of the details, and much of the context is stripped away to efficiently tell a story of the relationship between one man and one machine. How did the USS Discovery find itself abandoned by its crew, and then left to gather dust for a thousand years? What has happened to the Federation? None of these questions are answered — and honestly, I don’t mind a bit.
 

Marooned soldier Craft (Aldis Hodge) finds himself under Zora’s (Annabelle Wallis) watchful eye. (CBS)

As I reflected upon the conversation that took place online following the release of the last Short Trek, “Runaway,” much of the discussion became hung up on a perceived lack of context. Where was Po transported to? Why didn’t Tilly report her presence to the bridge crew? But where a novel is designed to help immerse you into a rich story that provides deep and meaningful context, short stories are designed to ruthlessly and efficiently look at something very specific.

Both “Runaway” and “Calypso” had a clear focus – the relationship between two individuals (or one man and one AI, in the case of “Calypso”). Those are the important facets of the story, and while it might make me uncomfortable as someone who is used to getting all the answers that a 42-minute episode of television might afford not to get all of that context I am used to, it is a different storytelling format and style, that requires a different approach to judge.

That became much clearer to me when thinking about “Calypso” than it did “Runaway,” which seemed much more like the B-plot of a full episode stripped of the A-plot. “Calypso” resolutely stands alone and expresses no interest in providing you with any answers to understand where the story fits into Star Trek canon. It just exists, and it dares you to put aside many of your preconceived notions about what Star Trek is, and experience something that it could be.

Craft considers his departure. (CBS)

Is that successful, and do people like what they see? I am sure that opinions will vary significantly on that. But you cannot deny that “Calypso” is quite a break from a standard Star Trek episode. Ultimately, I applaud the confidence of Star Trek’s showrunners in trying something new and different, because through trying new things Star Trek will find the right way to continue to grow and remain relevant to an ever-changing audience.

While the setting may be both familiar and unfamiliar, the characters new, and the episode almost entirely devoid of any references to previous Star Trek canon, at the heart of the episode is a concept that the franchise has grappled with multiple times: can machines be people? Craft, through his isolation on the Discovery and because the ship’s computer is the only individual he can interact with, faces this head on. Ultimately, it’s unclear what he decides – Zora concludes he cannot love her, and so helps him return home.

The performances in this episode by Aldis Hodge and Annabelle Wallis are phenomenal – particularly Wallis’ moving depiction of the disembodied Zora as she grows to realize that Craft may be incapable of loving her fully. The direction by Olatunde Osunsanmi is also excellent; the far future elements, which make even the dusty sets of the Discovery feel totally unfamiliar, mixed with the anachronisms of a Betty Boop cartoon and the 1957 movie Funny Faces, create an ethereal mood to the production that made me feel both at home and in a strange place all at the same time.

Craft and ‘Zora’ dance together on the Discovery bridge. (CBS)

(Unfortunately, viewers outside the US and Canada still do not have access to Short Treks. On that point, I’ll say the same thing I said after the release of “Runaway”: fix it!)

“Calypso” is different and daring, and as a result is probably not going to be for every fan. But the franchise should be applauded for trying new things, and also for landing such a talent as Michael Chabon. Chabon brought a novelist’s perspective to telling this story, and if Short Treks can’t be used to try something different, when will Star Trek ever evolve like the Discovery AI?

Luckily for us, we know that Chabon is a member of the writers room on the Picard show, and so this will not be his only entry into the Star Trek legacy. In the meantime, Star Trek: Discovery returns in another month with the Saru-centric “The Brightest Star,” set to beam down to CBS All Access and Space on December 6.

SHORT TREK Spoiler Discussion: “Calypso”

The next Short Trek episode of Star Trek: Discovery — “Calypso” — 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 Short Trek episode yet, here’s your last warning!

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

Trek Comics Review: “TNG — Terra Incognita” #4

I’ve just finished reading another marvelously unique and authentic Star Trek: The Next Generation story from Scott and David Tipton — featuring the artwork of Angel Hernandez — in Terra Incognita #4, centering on everyone’s favorite ensign, young Wesley Crusher.

When TNG came out, my parents were endlessly entertained by watching me watch Star Trek. Mired in the throes of jealousy that a young Wil Wheaton got to sit on the bridge of that generation’s Enterprise, I was simultaneously annoyed and envious of Wheaton’s new claim to fame. I mean, I loved Stand By Me but it wasn’t enough to prevent me from criticizing Wesley Crusher’s performance as a provisional crew member.

However, as I’m now an older and arguably more mature Star Trek fan, I can now look at Crusher in a different light. In the course of the series, he grew up too and, in this issue, the spotlight’s not on the early-series ‘boy hero’ or under-confident Acting Ensign, but on the fully-commissioned, red-uniformed officer.

Ensign Crusher is on board the Enterprise in a training simulation, discovering that training decisions aren’t the same as real ones, and you can tell that this is is going to be a segue for an authentic Trek learning moment.

Scene change to the planet Faundor. What’s of note in this issue is the creation of an alien species that not only fits within the expectations of a Next Generation continuum, but also what the Tiptons have added to their own unique perceptions of the TNG universe. It’s a Trek story, but I also enjoy the Tiptons’ particular style in telling it.

This new species, known as the Administrata, not only provide the Federation with an accelerated way to manufacture new starships to buffet the diminished fleet (following the decimation at Wolf 359), but also give us a Trek story that allows for Wesley Crusher to illustrate one of the values that Roddenberry himself would have approved.

After all, it is the continuing mission to seek out new life, right? While Administrata may look like a cross between MC Hammer’s wardrobe adviser and DC Comics’ The Eradicator, their appearance contributes to the late 1980’s vibe that effectively displays that authenticity that I mentioned earlier.

The events of this story happen after the battle with the Borg in “The Best of Both Worlds,” which validates the underlying premise of the Tiptons’ universe at this time that the Federation needs to rebuild. This also made the incursive threats of the Mirror Universe a viable fear in their previous work, “Mirror Broken”. With the Mirror Barclay in the shadows, the storyline is rife with potential adventure.

Things go wrong during a diplomatic inspection of the Faundori manufacturing capabilities that cause the disappearance of one of the away team. Wesley’s challenge, while surprisingly and positively influenced by the villainous Barclay, is to learn what happened to her. During the course of the story, Wesley not only gains valuable mission experience but also manages to illustrate one of greatest values of Star Trek.

It’s more than just an entertaining story – it’s a true Star Trek story.

I like that the Tiptons think ahead and find new ways of showcasing familiar elements and motifs in Trek in their stories. There are so many possibilities that make this not just a great comic but a great promise of comics to come. I certainly hope that the good folks at IDW continue to allow them to continue their adventures in this universe.

Let’s take a look at the art for this book, where Angel Hernandez delivers another scintillating piece of work in this comic. His technique is comprised of simple, stark lines that produce accurate likenesses and a clear realization of storytelling elements that make for a fluid read. Hernandez gives us decent artwork that is easy to appreciate and enjoy.

The covers all seem to share a solid theme of character portrayals and we get a great selection of covers to enjoy. In fact, I have to say that for the first time, I’ve enjoyed all of the cover variants on this book, and that’s something that hasn’t happened in the past.

  • Tony Shasteen gives us the ‘A’ cover for this comic. Shasteen’s work is something that I always look forward to seeing. In this case, he gives us two perfect poses of Crusher and Riker on the bridge. While Crusher is at the helm station, Riker is in the typical Riker stance: leaning on his leg and looking in command. If there’s anything that Shasteen does well, it’s detail and that reinforces the authenticity of this book.
     
  • The ‘B’ cover is a photo cover, continuing the series of illustrated reproductions of archival Next Generation cast photography. While I typically don’t enjoy photo covers, the artistic effect seen in this line of alternate Terra Incognita covers is one I haven’t seen, and I like it — that’s a first.
     
  • Elizabeth Beals does a wonderful job with the retailer-incentive ‘A’ cover. This is a playful and enjoyable rendition from one of the Dixon Hill episodes that Jean-Luc Picard enjoys re-enacting on the holodeck. I don’t get the relation to this story and I think that covers should have a connection to the interior story, but there’s no doubting the absolute enjoyability of this cover. Beals decisively captures the expressions, features of the characters and the spirit of “The Big Goodbye” and that’s a something that any TNG fan can fully appreciate.
     
  • Finally, the retailer-incentive ‘B’ cover is painted by none other than J.K. Woodward, whose talent I can’t say enough of. This is a portrait cover that really portrays the essence of both of the central characters in this story. Woodward’s work has an ethereal quality to it that, despite its fantastic nature, still provides an effective and solid basis to thoroughly enjoy. The detail defies painting and while it must take longer, it’s an effect that is fully appreciated. It’s definitely my favourite of the four.

In short, all the covers are fairly basic in design, but that lends itself to reinforcing the concept of the authenticity of this book. It’s Trek and that’s what Trek fans want to enjoy. Their understanding of the characters makes this such a story, and it’s great to see Wesley Crusher grown up and in a command mode.

It’s something familiar and the Tiptons have their fingers on the pulse of this iteration of Trek and at the end of the day, that’s what fans want to read.

STAR TREK Returns to Animation in STAR TREK: LOWER DECKS

After forty-four years, the Star Trek franchise returns to the animated arena with the just-announced Star Trek: Lower Decks comedy series!

Developed and produced by franchise head Alex Kurtzman and Emmy-winning television writer Mike McMahan of Rick and Morty (as well as Mudd-themed Short Trek “The Escape Artist,” coming in January), the new series will be the first animated entry in the Trek universe since the 1970’s-era Star Trek: The Animated Series went off the air in 1974.

Lower Decks is said to center around “the support crew serving on one of Starfleet’s least important ships,” and will be a half-hour comedy series for at least two seasons on CBS All Access (in the United States; global release plans are currently unknown).

Interestingly, The Hollywood Reporter notes that the series was “taken to market before landing at CBS All Access” — meaning the network’s streaming service wasn’t the first-planned destination for the show — but with the addition of this and the still-untitled Jean-Luc Picard series added to CAA’s catalog, it’s certainly adding value to the service’s monthly subscription cost with each Trek expansion.

Along with Kurzman and McMahan, current franchise mainstays Heather Kadin, Aaron Baiers, Rod Roddenberry, and Trevor Roth will be part of the production leadership team, along with newcomer Katie Krentz who will be heading the newly-formed CBS Eye Animation division at the studio.

Here’s the full press release from CBS, which just arrived in our inbox:

“CBS ALL ACCESS” ANNOUNCES SERIES ORDER FOR ANIMATED COMEDY
“STAR TREK: LOWER DECKS”

From Emmy Award Winner Mike McMahan, “Star Trek: Lower Decks”
Marks CBS All Access’ First Animated Series

Oct. 25, 2018 – CBS All Access today announced a two-season order for STAR TREK: LOWER DECKS, a new half-hour animated comedy series developed by Emmy Award winner Mike McMahan (“Rick and Morty”).

The series will focus on the support crew serving on one of Starfleet’s least important ships and will be produced by CBS Eye Animation Productions, CBS Television Studios’ new animation arm; Secret Hideout; and Roddenberry Entertainment. Secret Hideout’s Alex Kurtzman and Heather Kadin and Roddenberry Entertainment’s Rod Roddenberry and Trevor Roth and Katie Krentz will serve as executive producers alongside McMahan. Aaron Baiers, who brought McMahan to the project, will serve as a co-executive producer.

“Mike won our hearts with his first sentence: ‘I want to do a show about the people who put the yellow cartridge in the food replicator so a banana can come out the other end.’ His cat’s name is Riker. His son’s name is Sagan. The man is committed,” said executive producer Alex Kurtzman. “He’s brilliantly funny and knows every inch of every ‘Trek’ episode, and that’s his secret sauce: he writes with the pure, joyful heart of a true fan. As we broaden the world of ‘Trek’ to fans of all ages, we’re so excited to include Mike’s extraordinary voice.”

“As a life-long Trekkie, it’s a surreal and wonderful dream come true to be a part of this new era of ‘Star Trek,’” said executive producer Mike McMahan. “While STAR TREK: LOWER DECKS is a half-hour, animated show at its core, it’s undeniably ‘Trek’ – and I promise not to add an episode at the very end that reveals the whole thing took place in a training program.”

STAR TREK: LOWER DECKS is not McMahan’s first “Star Trek” project. As a long-time fan of the series, in 2011 McMahan started a Twitter account where he posted episode plots to a fake season of “Star Trek: The Next Generation.” They were such a hit that Simon & Schuster hired him to write a readers’ guide to a fictitious eighth season of “TNG” titled “Star Trek: The Next Generation: Warped: An Engaging Guide to the Never-Aired 8th Season.” For television, McMahan recently served as head writer and executive producer on Adult Swim’s hit animated series “Rick and Morty” and co-created Hulu’s animated alien family show “Solar Opposites.”

“We couldn’t have imagined a better creative team to work with on CBS All Access’ first original animated series than Mike McMahan, Secret Hideout and Roddenberry Entertainment,” said Julie McNamara, Executive Vice President, Original Content, CBS All Access. “STAR TREK: LOWER DECKS is a fantastic complement to our growing lineup of original series and our ongoing expansion of the ‘Star Trek’ universe on CBS All Access.”

Release dates, story information, and artwork for Star Trek: Lower Decks haven’t yet been revealed, but rest assured that TrekCore will bring you all the latest on this new series as soon as we have it.

What do you think about this new addition to the Trek franchise? Sound off in the comments below!