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STAR TREK: DISCOVERY Series Finale Review — “Life, Itself”

Endings are hard. For every truly great series finale, there’s one terrible one… and about eight perfectly okay ones. Every finale is expected to tie up its own stories, but “Life, Itself” has the added pressure of wrapping up the first series of the modern Trek era.
 
“Life, Itself” is not a great finale, but it’s not a terrible one either. It’s fine — somewhere in the middle of that eight out of ten — and if they had just let it be done when it was done it might have been near the top. Star Trek: Discovery has been a divisive show, but also an incredibly important one, and awareness of its importance and its legacy might explain why it made some of the choices it did.
 

Inside the Progenitors’ realm. (Paramount+)

We begin right where we left off in “Lagrange Point,” as Captain Burnham (Sonequa Martin Green) emerges into the Progenitor’s realm: a seemingly endless space filled with floating walkways that reach to the horizons and windows leading to other worlds.

It’s sleek and high-tech, but there are natural elements as well. It’s very cool looking and well designed, and aesthetically and mechanically it immediately feels like a videogame. I don’t say this as a criticism — I spend a lot of time playing and enjoying video games — just that it’s where my mind went.

Burnham’s fights with one of the Breen who first entered the portal (and later Moll), using wind-gust-enabled super jumps and the strange gravity of the place only reinforced that impression for me. It’s the first time in my many decades of watching Star Trek that I’ve thought, “This is a video game!” It’s after this elaborate fight that takes Burnham and Moll (Eve Harlow) from the “lobby” through to other worlds and back again that the two finally settle on a truce — if they’re focused on fighting each other, neither of them are ever going to get out of here, much less find and activate the Progenitors’ technology.

Nhan (Rachael Ancheril) and Saru (Doug Jones) on their mission. (Paramount+)

Outside the portal, Discovery watches as the Breen dreadnought quickly recovers from its skewering to be a threat again, both the ship itself and also the swarm of small fighters it launches.

Commander Rayner (Callum Keith Rennie) wants to be able do it all — stay near the portal, keep the dreadnought away from the portal, keep those fighters at bay, try to communicate with and/or recover Burnham, and stay alive and in the area for when Tahal arrives in a dreadnought of her own — but realizes that he’s got one too many things on his plate. He’s going to need to drop one if he wants to keep everyone alive.

With the opportunity to kill multiple fighters with one detonated plasma cloud too good to pass up, Rayner decides he can’t afford to keep Discovery near the portal. Book (David Ajala) and Culber (Wilson Cruz) of all people — who insists against Stamets’ objections that he needs to come along — stay behind in a shuttle to guard the Progenitor portal.

Meanwhile, Saru (Doug Jones) and Nhan (Rachael Ancheril) are doing their part to defuse the situation as well. Talking to Tahal while he heads to the black holes at high warp, Saru offers her an exclusive trade route in exchange for her turning back from Ruhn’s dreadnought. When she declines, Saru goes in for the kill, calling her a coward and telling her he knows about her secret bases in that same stretch of space. If she doesn’t turn back now the Federation will destroy those bases and will start a war with the Breen.

He’s later described as ‘Action Saru’ again, but really this is Predator Saru. “Look into my eyes and tell me I’m not serious.” Oh he is, and she turns away, leaving just a small cloaked (but detected) scout ship in the area.

Saru’s shuttle, and Book’s as well, saw the NX-02’s distractingly-flashy bridge lighting and said “Hold my Romulan ale.” I already wasn’t a fan of that shuttle design (why is it so empty and cavernous inside?) but now that they’ve added a huge panel of pulsating lights that sits right in the middle of the frame I really don’t care for it.

Combine this with director Olatunde Osunsanmi’s decision to film much of Saru’s scene through a constantly moving sea of flashes and streaks and what looks like rippled, warped plexiglass, and I found parts of the sequence to be visually unpleasant.

Burnham (Sonequa Martin-Green) and Moll (Eve Harlow) examine the console. (Paramount+)

Back in the portal, Burnham and Moll have finally found the Progenitors’ technology. The console is simple, just a surface with nine moveable triangles on it. Burnham shares the final clue (or riddle, really) with Moll, that they need to make the one between the many. Moll interprets this one way, but Burnham’s not so sure. Not wanting to wait any longer, Moll knocks Burnham out and gets to work at the controls. Oops, her solution is wrong, and things start to hit the fan.

I understand how and why the five scientists created tests of ethical and moral fortitude to safeguard the Progenitors’ technology — and ensure that only someone trustworthy would be able to find and access it — but the fact that they added one last obstacle that entirely hinges on just how literally someone is going to be with an abstract riddle is a little strange. Moll’s solution, to make a solid triangle with the pieces, is perfectly reasonable; any “chosen one” of otherwise impeccable character who had passed all the other tests could easily have made the same mistake without any bearing on their worthiness to wield Excalibur, as it were.

I know we’re supposed to see that Moll is being punished for her impatience, but really it seems like a flip of the coin whether the “good” person is or isn’t going to pick the right solution to an open-ended riddle. “Ah, so close, we think you’re great… but it’s actually a young woman instead of an old crone so we’re going to have to kill you now.”

Moll’s incorrect usage of the console kicks it into life, but in what appears to be an uncontrolled way. Outside in space, the portal starts drawing energy (and mass) from one of the black holes, pulling it closer and closer to the event horizon and threatening to destabilize the system.

Book (David Ajala) and Culber (Wilson Cruz) on the shuttle. (Paramount+)

From his shuttle, Book struggles to get a tractor lock on the portal, but Culber comes to the unlikely rescue. In a moment of epiphany which seems almost magical, he pulls a precise harmonic frequency out of the ether and it works, allowing the shuttle to hold the portal in place and stop its fall.

Was this a moment of divine inspiration? A glimpse of the universe telling Culber its secrets? Well, no, it’s actually just a surfaced memory from his Trill zhian’tara experience with Jinaal, who’d found himself in the same scenario 800 years prior. While this is a perfectly good, logical explanation for Culber’s actions in the moment, is that really it for his larger story arc? Has Culber been dipping his toe into existential questions of religious faith all season because of one nagging Trill memory, or is there more to it?

It feels as if the show wanted something bigger and grander and more mystical to be happening, and then remembered at the last minute that this is Star Trek and we don’t do that here. If this was a plotline I cared more about I would be disappointed with its conclusion, but as it is my response is just a big “Okay.”

Even with the Breen fighters destroyed, the dreadnought — and Tahal’s lingering scout ship — are still a big problem, so Rayner comes up with an equally big solution. Separating Discovery’s saucer and the drive sections and maneuvering them into position on either side of the dreadnought, he essentially uses the ship a huge pattern enhancer, “beaming” the dreadnought to the galactic barrier by initiating a spore jump between Discovery’s two sections. It’s crazy, it looks cool, and it works.

It’s also a harbinger of how Discovery is going to address the other of its two big storylines: simply erasing it from the board.

Jumping the Breen off the board. (Paramount+)

Inside the portal, Burnham regains consciousness, removes Moll from where she’s been stuck to the console, and comes up with the correct configuration of the little triangles (negative space triangle instead of Moll’s positive space one)… and a Progenitor (Somkele Iyamah-Idhalama) appears.

This is it, the moment the entire season has been leading up to, and it is suitably profound. We watch Burnham have a conversation with someone who’s been dead for four billion years about the nature of life itself, and the revelation that the Progenitors didn’t create this technology — but instead found it just the way Burnham has — hints at the existence of (a) God and also makes me want to play through the Mass Effect trilogy again.

There’s a wrinkle in all of this, though: according to the Progenitor, for completing the quest to access the technology, Burnham is the person who can it. That’s a lot. It’s, understandably, too much. She doesn’t have to use it now, she can come back later, but she cannot, it seems, hand this off to someone else within the Federation. It cannot be a collective venture, it is power for Burnham to wield alone.

And so, she decides to destroy it.

Her reasoning for not wanting to use the technology is valid — and strongly Star Trek. We already have infinite diversity in infinite combinations, and thus we don’t have need for the power of creation. There’s nothing that needs to be added. That works for me as an overarching explanation for why Burnham doesn’t start spinning up new planets for fun.

We know from the Progenitor that the technology can’t really bring people back from the dead — sorry L’ak! — but maybe it can cure disease? Solve any lingering scarcity problems? Something else noble and positive and exhilarating? As Stamets (Anthony Rapp) excitedly announces, it represents the most significant scientific discovery of their lifetimes.

A Progenitor (Somkele Iyamah-Idhalama) arrives. (Paramount+)

From a storytelling perspective, the decision not to use — and in this case going even further and deciding to destroy — the Progenitors’ technology is kind of the only choice they have. If the technology is really as powerful as it seems, it comes with the thorny side affect of either solving all plots before they exist or making all plots about itself. It’s not uncommon for television shows to introduce notably powerful characters or objects and then, once their immediate dramatic purpose is fulfilled, de-power or defuse them.

Sending the spore drive into the 32nd century where it can’t “bother” any of the rest of Star Trek’s long history of traditional warp drive is a perfect example of doing just that. But Stamets is also right in his disappointment, this is a scientifically unsatisfying conclusion and one that, the more I think about it, becomes a narratively unsatisfying one as well.

What are we doing here narratively if, after all the effort to get there (both in-universe but also in the crafting of the story itself) we end up at “Eh, never mind!” after 30 seconds of thought? A story is much more than its ending, but if, as this one was, it’s a story predicated on solving a puzzle and finding an answer, it does need a meaningful conclusion of some sort to be satisfying.

If the presence of the Progenitors’ technology was really such a problem for the story, maybe the writers should have chosen a different puzzle to solve in the first place. Instead, it seems as if Discovery is saying that yes, all jokes aside, the enormous godlike power and incredible scientific breakthroughs really are the friends we made along the way.

This is not the first time Star Trek has shown its characters, who are otherwise on a mission of exploration and the pursuit of knowledge, decide to turn away from that knowledge because gaining it is simply too dangerous. Captain Janeway does just that in “The Omega Directive,” stating that it would be “arrogant” and “irresponsible” to “risk half the quadrant to satisfy [their] curiosity” about the Omega molecule, the most powerful substance known to exist at the time.

But that was one installment of episodic television, not the conclusion to a highly serialized season-long arc, and the Omega molecule remains in existence as something that can be studied at a later date. Not to mention, the central purpose of the story is the discussion of scientific ethics. It’s not an afterthought, it’s front and center and characters spend time debating it.

Burnham congratulates T’Rina (Tara Rosling) and Saru. (Paramount+)

The Breen have been dispatched with, the Progenitors’ technology is gone, Moll is in custody, and the Red Directive is over. Things are settling back down, so it’s time now for the epilogue, tying things up for our characters and the series as a whole.

And then it turns out that Kovich (David Cronenberg) is actually Daniels, the futuristic temporal agent who visited Captain Archer throughout the four seasons of Star Trek: Enterprise! I never thought we’d hear about this guy ever again! His time-traveling ways explain a lot about his collection of era-spanning relics, his knowledge of centuries of Starfleet history, and his love of black outfits. (I asked for a bit more background to flesh out Kovich, and the Discovery writing team certainly delivered, dang.)

Several weeks later, Saru and T’Rina (Tara Rosling) are having lovely beachside wedding. Saru’s wedding attire is gorgeous, T’Rina’s is suitably bizarre — Vulcan’s are, for all their claims of logic, big fans of “more is more” when it comes to women’s fashion and we love them for it — and everyone’s in a good mood at the reception discussing their future plans. It sounds like Rayner (who survived, thank you!) is getting roped into a mentorship role at Starfleet Academy, and Burnham and Book are officially back together.

They talk of the future and literally walk off into the sunset together as they head toward whatever the next mission brings. The end… wait, that wasn’t the epilogue? There’s more? Why is there more? That was a perfect ending!

Book and Burnham, decades later. (Paramount+)

ONE LAST DANCE

The show jumps decades into the future, as we find a grey-haired Burnham and Book living a semi-retired life on the red-forested planet first visited back in “That Hope is You, Part 1.” Book has planted the last bit of Kweijanian World Root, Burnham is good at mending fences from interloping space deer… and then their grown son, a Starfleet captain, arrives to ferry Admiral Burnham to another Red Directive mission.

I’ll be blunt, I really don’t think show needed this epilogue. It was fine — nothing that happened was terrible — but it seemed completely unnecessary for the episode, the season, and the series as a whole. Watching the pair walk down the beach wondering what the future holds would have been a perfectly satisfying ending, leaving viewers with the hint that the exploration of the galaxy will go on, and that our characters will be the ones doing it, but without creating an unrealized cliffhanger.

Instead, we get a 20-minute setup for 2018’s “Calypso.” Really? The Short Trek that had already been given a perfectly satisfying nod earlier in the season when Zora asked if seeing Burnham and Rayner in the disastrous future was another dream — not to mention that many viewers around the world never even saw “Calypso” thanks to the limited Paramount+ distribution at the time, and minimal DVD release outside of North America.

Yes, there is more to the epilogue than that, but none of what we see is particularly unexpected, nor does it really tie up any loose ends. Burnham and Book live happily ever after? That was implied by them walking away together on the beach, thanks. Tilly (Mary Wiseman) teaches at the Academy still, decades later? Okay cool. Starfleet continues to cycle through new uniforms? Got it.

Admiral Michael Burnham. (Paramount+)

Burnham sits in the captain’s chair one last time to send Zora (Annabelle Wallis) and an un-refitted (antefitted?) Discovery off to sit somewhere so an 18-minute Short Trek from six years ago can occur, she drifts off into memories of her time aboard Discovery — and then shifts into a recollection of the crew that has the unfortunate feel of someone with dementia recalling people they used to know, but can’t quite remember the context for anymore.

It’s clear that this was not a memory of an actual occurrence, but instead Burnham’s mind lining up her former crew for one last mental goodbye, everyone laughing at jokes that no one’s told, bathed in glowy golden light, sharing hugs that don’t feel rooted in any real event. The whole thing goes on far too long and feels incredibly strange.

Burnham just talked with Tilly last week, why is she remembering their younger selves saying goodbye to one another? Is Discovery, the ship, being put out to pasture, or is Burnham?

OBSERVATION LOUNGE

  • Fan-predicted things that did NOT happen this episode: none of the notable Discovery characters were killed, L’ak was not revived, and Book did not use the Progenitor’s technology to restore the Kwejian homeworld.
  • This episode’s opening credit sequence includes elements from all four prior seasons of the show. A spacesuit helmet, Klingon weaponry, and an Original Series communicator represents Season 1; the Red Angel suit, the Enterprise captain’s chair, the transporter room animation and the original Starfleet delta emblem represent Season 2; Book’s ship represents Season 3; the Zora voice modulation graphic represents Season 4.
  • Those portable pattern buffers sure are handy. Phasers, dermal regenerators, ham sandwiches — something for every situation!
  • L’ak’s body makes an appearance, but actor Elias Toufexis did not actually return to Toronto for this episode, he revealed on social media. 
  • Culber gets a nice little McCoy homage with his “I’m a doctor, not a physicist” line.
  • Nhan tells Saru, “Remind me to never play you in Ferengi rummy,” a game never previously mentioned in Trek.
  • Stamets, Tilly and Adira (Blu del Barrio) find a way to quantum entangle the spore drive’s magic mushrooms, split the ship in two, and surround the Breen dreadnaught to jump it away from the dual singularities. Federation starships really do move at the speed of plot!
Discovery splits in two. (Paramount+)
  • Discovery separates its saucer and secondary hull for the first and only time in the series. (I don’t think we even knew the ship was capable of separation!)
  • Force-jumping the Breen dreadnaught was ridiculous, but man did it look cool!
  • When the Progenitor gives Burnham a taste of the technology’s power, she sees many past versions of herself: as a young girl, in her Season 1-2 uniform and hairstyle, wearing her yellow Starfleet prison jumpsuit from “Context Is for Kings,” and her Season 3 courier look.
  • A reversed clip from Season 1’s “Will You Take My Hand?” is used in the Progenitor sequence — specifically the pullback from 23rd century Paris into Earth orbit, showing Spacedock under construction.
  • It seems like the Discovery writing team seemed to have completely forgotten that Adira Tal hosts a Trill symbiont, with the many lifetimes of knowledge and experience that come with a joining. “When did you get so wise?” Stamets asks. Um, when they got a Trill symbiont two seasons ago, people!
  • Familiar Star Trek items seen in Kovich’s office include a Terran Empire dagger, a TNG Season 1 “dustbuster” phaser, a bottle of Chateau Picard wine (vintage 2249), and a VISOR like the one worn by Geordi La Forge.
  • Agent Daniels’ last appearance — prior to Season 3’s “Die Trying,” where we first
    met Kovich — was the 2004 Star Trek: Enterprise episode “Storm Front, Part 2.”
Agent Daniels (Matt Winston) as seen in ENTERPRISE, and as code-named Kovich (David Cronenberg). (Paramount+)
  • I’m happy for T’Rina, but I did NOT love her wedding hair — yikes! I don’t know if her wig was slipping back under the weight of the headdress or if they just decided to give her a new haircut, but man those bangs were severe.
  • Book mentions that he encountered a group of Talaxian pirates on the way to Saru and T’Rina’s wedding.
  • The Starfleet officer who notifies Admiral Burnham that her shuttle is about to land
    is voiced by Star Trek: Discovery showrunner Michelle Paradise.
  • The space deer outside of Burnham’s fence is named Alice, named for the main character of Burnham’s favorite childhood book.
  • The 33rd century coda introduces yet another new Starfleet uniform design, complete with rank pips under the wearer’s chin (uncomfortable when looking down, no doubt), upside-down trapezoids on the arms, and one more Starfleet combadge redesign. An Admiral’s badge can even initiate an entire costume change, apparently!
  • Captain Leto Burnham (Sawandi Wilson) is named for Book’s nephew Leto, who perished when Kwejian was destroyed in Season 4.
  • Leto’s next mission is to the planet Crepuscula, which is the desert world where Burnham and Captain Georgiou were visiting in the opening moments of “The Vulcan Hello.”
33rd century Starfleet uniforms. (Paramount+)
  • Admiral Vance remains on active duty in the 33rd century, and Tilly is the longest-serving Starfleet Academy instructor in history. (Gee, I wonder if she’ll be in the Starfleet Academy series? Hmmmmm!)
  • The USS Discovery’s physical arrangement is fully reverted to its original configuration — including the elimination of programmable matter and the “-A” designation on the outer hull, and restoration of the original command chair control panels — to align with the continuity of “Calypso,” which was filmed between Seasons 1 and 2.
  • It seems kind of cruel to leave Zora alone for 1,000 years just to wait for Craft, right? Like, she’s a computer but she’s still a sentient being!
  • Due to scheduling conflicts, Wilson Cruz was not available when the final ‘crew reunion’ on the Discovery bridge was filmed in 2023. Culber is represented by a stand-in during wide shots and a digital composite of Cruz from archival footage in his close-up — with his white uniform CGI’d in place.
  • Detmer (Emily Coutts) and Owosekun (Oyin Oladejo) both say the word “happy” when we see them during the farewell montage. Are they happy… together???
  • It may have taken five seasons and 900+ years, but as we see Discovery fly out to complete its last mission, somebody FINALLY remembered to shut the cargo bay door.
A restored Discovery flies off to the “Calypso” future. (Paramount+)

Discovery ushered in the modern era of Star Trek, something I truly never would have thought possible before it was announced back in 2015. I simply didn’t think there would ever be any new Star Trek after Enterprise’s fourth season came to an end in 2005.

I am so grateful for Discovery, not only for opening the door to so much new Trek — but also for bringing so many new fans into the fold. I know so many people in my personal life who started with Discovery and have gone on to watch and love everything else Star Trek as well. That’s huge, and Discovery did that.

Despite my personal quibbles with elements of “Life, Itself”, it feels like the right finale for Discovery — an episode that only this series would build towards and do. Lest anyone think I’m giving a backhanded compliment here, I’m not.

“Life, Itself” is the show that Star Trek: Discovery set out to be, unapologetically, and how great is it that it got the opportunity to realize itself?

Star Trek: Discovery may be over, but later this year we’ll be back with episodic reviews of Star Trek: Lower Decks and Star Trek: Prodigy when their next seasons debut.

STAR TREK: STRANGE NEW WORLDS Wrapping Up Season 3 Production, Anson Mount Expects to Film Season 4 in Spring 2025

Six months after filming began back in December 2023, production on Season 3 of Star Trek: Strange New Worlds is starting to conclude — and the cast has begun to return to Earth for a well-earned respite from the final frontier.
 
Series lead Anson Mount (Captain Pike) shared a video as he departed the Toronto-based Strange New Worlds lot on May 23:
 

Before retuning to her native Australia, Jess Bush (Christine Chapel) also celebrated the end of her work on Season 3 with a photo of the huge stack of scripts she used throughout year’s 10-episode run.

Mount followed up with a second post on May 28, bidding Canada farewell for the season — and sharing that work on Strange New Worlds Season 4 is set to begin in the spring of 2025, giving he and his fellow Enterprise crewmates a good 8-10 month break.

Once everything on set is done for good, post-production on Season 3 will continue for several months as the show’s heavy-duty VFX work (among other components) get their finishing touches — however new episodes of Strange New Worlds are not expected to debut on Paramount+ until sometime in 2025.

Keep checking back to TrekCore for the latest Star Trek franchise news!

WeeklyTrek Podcast #248 — Oscar-Winner Holly Hunter Will Lead STAR TREK: STARFLEET ACADEMY

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On this week’s episode of WeeklyTrek — TrekCore’s news podcast — host Alex Perry is joined by Infinite Diversity co-host Thad Hait to discuss all the latest Star Trek news.
 

 
This week, Alex and his guest discuss the following stories from TrekCore and around the web:

In addition, stick around to hear Thad’s theory about how Yellowstone and Star Trek could crossover, and Alex’s thoughts on what the ratings success of Star Trek: Discovery means for Star Trek: Strange New Worlds.

WeeklyTrek is available to subscribe and download each week on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, and Spotify — and we’ll be sharing the details of each new episode right here on TrekCore each week if you’re simply just looking to listen in from the web.

Do you have a wish or theory you’d like to share on the show? Tweet to Alex at @WeeklyTrek, or email us with your thoughts about wishes, theories, or anything else about the latest in Star Trek news!

New STAR TREK: DISCOVERY Series Finale Photos — “Life, Itself”

Star Trek: Discovery’s five-season adventure comes to an end this Thursday, and today we have new photos from “Life, Itself” for your review!
 
In the series finale, Captain Burnham (Sonequa Martin-Green) finds out what’s inside the Progenitor realm, after following Moll (Eve Harlow) into the mysterious portal. Outside, Rayner (Callum Keith Rennie) and the Discovery crew face off against Breen forces, and Book (David Ajala) heads into danger to help Burnham from afar.
 
Here are just two new photos from this week’s finale:
 

Saru (Doug Jones) and Nhan (Rachael Ancheril) at Starfleet Headquarters. (Paramount+)

Captain Burnham (Sonequa Martin-Green) has one last mission. (Paramount+)

LIFE, ITSELF — Trapped inside a mysterious alien portal that defies familiar rules of time, space, and gravity, Captain Burnham must fight Moll – and the environment itself – in order to locate the Progenitors’ technology and secure it for the Federation. Meanwhile, Book puts himself in harm’s way to help Burnham survive and Rayner leads the U.S.S. Discovery in an epic winner-takes-all battle against Breen forces.

 

Written by Kyle Jarrow & Michelle Paradise. Directed by Olatunde Osunsanmi.

And in case you missed it, here’s a sneak preview for “Life, Itself” from last week’s episode of The Ready Room with Wil Wheaton, and the official Paramount+ trailer for the finale as well.

Star Trek: Discovery’s five-season run concludes with “Life, Itself” on Paramount+ May 30, followed the next day on SkyShowtime in other regions.

Vice Press Reveals Newly-Remastered STAR TREK III: THE SEARCH FOR SPOCK Posters

Following Vice Press’ earlier steps into the final frontier with The Motion Picture and The Wrath of Khan, the UK-based art group is once again bringing the next entry in their remastered Star Trek poster series to fans with a return to the Genesis Planet.

Debuting for the film’s 40th anniversary, artist Matt Ferguson’s remastered edition of Bob Peak’s original Star Trek III: The Search for Spock theatrical poster hits the Vice Press website next week.

The standard SEARCH FOR SPOCK poster. (Vice Press)
The foil SEARCH FOR SPOCK poster. (Vice Press)

The ‘standard’ print of Star Trek III’s one-sheet poster will be available for a limited time — with sales open from May 30 through June 6 — and a short-run reflective foil variant will be limited to a total number of 175 prints. Each will measure 24″ x 36″ and sales will begin at 6PM (GMT) / 1PM (ET) / 10AM (PT) on May 30.

The film is also headed back into UK-based theaters in June, and Ferguson has created a new original poster design for Star Trek III to celebrate that event. Vice Press will have that going up for direct sale a bit later this summer, so watch for more news on that one in July.

Ferguson’s original STAR TREK III poster design, coming in July. (Vice Press)

In addition, Ferguson’s newly-designed Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan posters will be available at Vice-Press.com starting June 10.

As a reminder, Ferguson’s remastered Star Trek III: The Search for Spock poster releases will launch at the Vice Press website at 6PM (GMT) / 1PM (ET) / 10AM (PT) on May 30.

Come back to TrekCore often for all the latest in Star Trek merchandise news!

STAR TREK: DISCOVERY Review — “Lagrange Point”

A lot both happens (and doesn’t happen) in the appropriately titled “Lagrange Point”, an episode that moves the season’s plot forward… without really moving anywhere at all. It’s a fascinating and well-executed example of a show not spinning its wheels, but levitating in place, carefully setting things up for a season — and series — finale showdown.
 
We open on a Federation Headquarters that is positively buzzing with the news of Primarch Ruhn’s death and the fact that Primarch Tahal intends to absorb Ruhn’s people into her own faction, probably forcefully. This means she’s unknowingly on her way to the location of the Progenitor’s technology, which is a problem. HQ sends this information on to Discovery, still undergoing emergency repairs — and Captain Burnham (Sonequa Martin-Green) orders a jump now, even if the landing isn’t going to be perfect.
 

(Paramount+)

Perfect it is not, the ship materializing far too close to not one but two enormous primordial black holes. After Tilly (Mary Wiseman) does some quick calculations the ship stabilizes and is no longer in danger of falling into the singularity. There are two things about this scene I want to mention, starting with the incredibly gorgeous visual of it. Wow! The semi-translucent cloaked Discovery maneuvering with those glowing black holes in the background is one of the most memorable and beautiful space shots of the whole season for me — and maybe even the whole series. The effects crew has done a standout job this season, and this scene is no exception to the high quality of their work.

The other thing is the way in which Tilly arrives at the solution to their predicament. I’ve criticized the show in the past for leaning heavily on 32nd century technology to do the solving such that the human characters seem almost extraneous, and Tilly’s actions in this scene are the perfect example of what I’ve been wanting the show to do instead. She splutters and stumbles — not because she’s flustered or nervous — but because she is someone whose brain is going into overdrive with the amount of information it’s trying to process.

This is a person who is thinking, really hard and really fast and about a lot. And she’s doing it herself because she’s smart and capable and Star Trek is about, among other things, smart capable people doing science. It’s great to see again.

(Paramount+)

With the ship stabilized, they quickly find the Progenitor’s technology, suspended in a Lagrange point (one of several points of gravitational equilibrium between two large orbiting bodies where an object can “float” instead of falling into one or the other). Or, they find something surrounding the Progenitor’s technology, a rather unremarkable looking cylinder with a keyhole where the completed puzzle fits. As one more layer of protection, the five scientists built a box around it.

Before Discovery can bring it aboard, Ruhn’s – now Moll’s – dreadnought swoops in and grabs it. Not knowing that Discovery is nearby, they stick around to examine it, which gives a small team from Discovery a chance to sneak aboard and steal it back. They’ll fly a small shuttle through a gap in the dreadnought’s shields and then the two teams will beam aboard; Burnham and Book (David Ajala) are one team, and Adira (Blu del Barrio) and Rhys (Patrick Kwok-Choon) make up the other.

Easily disguised as Breen thanks to the fact that, well, it’s pretty easy to disguise yourself as a member of a group that spends all their time fully covered head to toe, Book and Burnham head to the shuttlebay to prepare the cylinder for a beam out while Adira and Rhys head to the bridge to disable the shields.

The decision to use what I’m going to call “Tony Stark cam” to give us a view of our heroes while they’re stuck in those Breen helmets for most of the episode makes total sense. Even with it, we still spend a lot of time looking at nearly identical Breen (and “Breen”) as they walk around and go about their business. Unfortunately, the end result doesn’t always look so great.

(Paramount+)

The views of Book and Burnham look alright, the edges of their faces blurred or dimmed a little to provide a less stark contrast to the black void that they loom out of, but oof, then we get to Adira. There’s almost a mime-like quality to their scenes, and at one point we even see a clear glimpse of the black stocking cap they wore while filming.

The trek from the beam-in point to the shuttle bay takes Burnham and Book a while, giving them plenty of opportunities to bark insults and commands at Breen rightly confused by their presence, and also to get stuck in a lot more chit chat than I was expecting from such a gruff people. The Breen’s repeated “Hey you going to the BBQ this weekend?” — or the Breen version of it anyway — is a way for the episode to inject a little humor, but it also provides an interesting contrast with the strict authoritarian temperament we’ve seen.

It’s honestly a little shocking that shooting the breeze with your coworkers while on duty is okay in a society that’s also okay with shooting your coworkers while on duty, but I kind of like it. Maintain a strict social hierarchy on penalty of death, but also feel free to get flirty and invite the new guy to your oil bath, no biggie.

This beneath the surface casualness also shows up in the way Moll (Eve Harlow) and her unnamed Breen counterpart examine the cylinder. After opening it up, they find an ominous and entirely unidentifiable glow inside. Someone’s going to need to get a little closer to examine it, so Moll tells her Breen friend to step right up. He immediately passes this job off to another guy who passes it off to another guy who gets sucked into the glow — it’s a transdimensional portal — and disappears. It’s subtle, but there’s a humor in this that makes me want to know more about how Breen are behind the scenes.

(Paramount+)

In an effort to stop — or at least slow down — Tahal as she makes her way to Discovery and Moll’s dreadnought and to show the nervous planets near Breen space that the Federation is on the job, President Rillak (Chelah Horsdal), T’Rina (Tara Rosling), and Saru  (Doug Jones) decide to send just a single shuttle to intercept her and hopefully force a diplomatic conversation. Or get blown to smithereens, both seem equally possible. Saru volunteers, as the ambassador to the aforementioned worlds and also as a former crewmember of Discovery.

As Saru prepares to depart, he shares a lovely scene with T’Rina. We’ve seen plenty of examples of Vulcans in relationships before, and especially so in relationships with members of other species. That said, T’Rina and Saru have felt fresh since the moment they first made respectful eyes at each other, and this scene has helped me finally figure out why.

It is so nice to see a Vulcan who has the emotional maturity not to pretend they’re above the emotions inherent in a relationship (especially one with a non-Vulcan whose emotional needs are going to be different than a Vulcan’s). Sarek with both Amanda and Perrin, T’Pol with Trip, even Strange New Worlds’ Spock with Chapel, they’re all heavily occupied with staying as stoic as possible around their partner — Spock’s weird fabrication of human dating mannerisms aside, which in a way proves my point in its artificiality.

All of this makes sense, these people are Vulcan! But sometimes it’s a little much; there’s restrained and then there’s repulsed. T’Rina’s characterization has managed to find a good middle ground; she still feels very Vulcan, she’s simply not so cold about it. Perhaps it’s because she’s a Vulcan of Ni’Var who lives alongside more emotionally open Romulans or maybe it’s just how she is, but it’s really illuminating to see that a Vulcan relationship can include open but still appropriately subdued affection.

(Paramount+)

Back aboard the dreadnought, Burnham and Book also take the time to have a conversation about their relationship (as Discovery is wont to do), with Burnham imparting some of what she learned in her mindscape about herself and her feelings and fears. On one hand — and she does acknowledge this — Michael, this is the worst possible time for you to talk! But it really is a conversation that needs to happen and at this stage there isn’t any other opportunity within the episode for it to take place. So be it.

Burnham and Book get to the shuttlebay, though not without a fight as their disguises aren’t good enough to fool an entry scan — while up on the bridge, Adira and Rhys are ready to bring down the shields. But Burnham needs a little more time to deal with a forcefield the Breen have erected around the cylinder, so Rayner (Callum Keith Rennie) decides to give it to her in the boldest way possible: by revealing Discovery and telling Moll that Tahal is on her way.

The reveal works in that it gives Burnham the time she needs, but Moll doesn’t buy Rayner’s offer of shelter from Tahal (which is fine, she wasn’t really supposed to). Unfortunately, Burnham and Book get caught before they can beam themselves and the cylinder back to Discovery.

Here’s where things start to move fast. Adira and Rhys? Gone, they beam back to Discovery. Rayner? He’s a wild one and we love him for it, and that’s why he’s A-OK with the plan that Burnham, in code, tells him over an open comm — ram the whole damn ship through the dreadnought’s shuttle bay forcefield and get the cylinder that way. Full speed ahead into a relentless salvo from the dreadnought, and coming in at just the correct angle, they manage to pierce the field and fly completely into the other ship. It’s badass. Rayner is badass for doing it. Burnham is badass for coming up with it.

It’s also a move that telegraphs itself to anyone in the shuttle bay, which gives Moll a chance to figure out what they’re doing and act. Reactivating the portal, she jumps through, and Burnham knows that she has to follow. With one last look at Book, she’s gone.

(Paramount+)

Unfortunately, Discovery doesn’t quite catch the cylinder as it’s blown into space by the shuttle bay’s decompression, and the cylinder itself quickly decompresses, leaving the entrance to the portal exposed and sitting in space, with no way to know where it leads or what’s on the other side.

Rayner has spent this entire episode resolutely refusing to sit in the captain’s chair, instead stalking around the bridge like a caged animal. I’ve noted this quirk in previous reviews, and it turns out the characters themselves have also started to take notice. Tilly, in her hand-picked capacity as acting first officer, tries to coax Rayner into the chair at one point, offering words of support that he does indeed belong in that chair.

She’s not wrong in her read of the situation, but unfortunately for her she’s talking to the one guy on the ship who doesn’t go for that whole “talking about your feelings” thing. “I chose you to be my first officer because you’re smart and I trust you and if we were stuck in a foxhole together I wouldn’t kill you… unless, that is, you give me more of that warm and fuzzy stuff that I don’t need.”

If that seems like it would be Rayner’s best line in the episode, just you wait. Seeing the predicament they’re in, with Burnham gone who knows where through a transdimensional portal and Tahal on the way, Rayner digs deep into his collection of old Earth sayings and pulls out the most iconic of them all. From Apollo 13 (among many other missions) White Team Flight Director Gene Kranz’s mouth to Rayner’s, failure is not an option.

And with that, he finally allows himself to sit in the captain’s chair.

(Paramount+)

I really like Rayner. As individual components of the season go, his inclusion is the best decision the writers and producers have made. He brings such a welcomed, necessary dash of acid to the flavor of the show, one that doesn’t contradict or overpower the established emotional tone of the show with its presence, but highlights and enhances it. Without some contrast, Discovery can become stagnant at times, even stifling, and Rayner provides that contrast while still respecting show’s established storytelling priorities.

Also, he’s funny! What I’m trying to say here is that I have a fully-developed crush on him at this point, and that if anything happens to him in the finale I will be very, very unhappy about it. Let the grumpy guy survive for once, instead of sacrificing himself so the not-grumpy people can live. Grumpy guys deserve the chance for a future as well. This has been a message from the People for the Ethical Treatment of Grumpy Guys.

(I have not seen the finale as of the time of this writing, so truly, I have no idea what his fate will be. I just know TV loves to kill a grumpy guy.)

OBSERVATION LOUNGE

  • Hello to Commander Lorna Jemison (Zahra Bentham) at the conn! A nice nod to NASA astronaut, medical doctor, and Next Generation cameo alum Dr. Mae Jemison, who appeared in “Second Chances.”
  • This week’s entry into the annals of strange beaming is Adira walking through the corridors to Discovery’s shuttle bay while chatting with Culber and Stamets… and then beaming themselves to their destination instead of continuing the walk. Huh. Maybe they just like to beam!
  • Regarding Book distracting the Breen guard while Burnham brings down the forcefield around the cylinder, I’m just going to say it: I’m over the “Ha ha awkward gay flirtation” trope. It’s common, I get it, but it feels out of place in Star Trek in 2024, and especially Discovery.
(Paramount+)

So, where does that portal lead? What is the Progenitor’s technology, how does it work, and what does it really mean for the future of the Federation and the galaxy as a whole?

Discovery has saved all the biggest questions for its series finale, along with (hopefully) a wedding, a showdown with the Breen, closure for Moll and L’ak, and also the conclusion of Culber’s existential awakening (since it didn’t come up in “Lagrange Point”). And, of course, a goodbye to the characters and the series as a whole.

Next week is going to be packed!

Star Trek: Discovery’s five-season run concludes on May 30 with “Life, Itself.”

Holly Hunter Cast as STAR TREK: STARFLEET ACADEMY’s Chancellor

We’ve got our first casting news about the upcoming Star Trek: Starfleet Academy series today, as Paramount+ has announced Academy Award-winning actor Holly Hunter will take on a lead role in the show.
 
Enrolling as the Chancellor of Starfleet Academy in the Star Trek: Discovery future era, Hunter’s character will be a Starfleet captain who oversees the campus, faculty, and student body in the 32nd century.
 
In the official statement today, co-showunners Alex Kurtzman and Noga Landau said: “It feels like we’ve spent our entire lives watching Holly Hunter be a stone-cold genius. To have her extraordinary authenticity, fearlessness, sense of humor, and across the board brilliance leading the charge on Starfleet Academy is a gift to all of us, and to the enduring legacy of Star Trek.”
 
Hunter is one of the biggest names to join a Trek production, having won an Academy Award and BAFTA for 1994’s The Piano (with three other nominations over her career), plus two Emmy Awards (with four additional nominations to boot).
 
Still in pre-production, Starfleet Academy will take over Pinewood Studios in Toronto — the former home of Star Trek: Discovery — where filming is expected to begin later this summer. The studio will house the largest standing set ever used in a Star Trek production, as we reported back in March:

“Plans [include] the series’ central academic atrium, a sprawling, two-story structure that will include a mess hall, amphitheater, trees, catwalks, multiple classrooms and a striking view of the Golden Gate Bridge in a single, contiguous space. To fit it all, they plan to use every inch of Pinewood Toronto’s 45,900 square foot soundstage.”

Star Trek: Starfleet Academy “introduces viewers to a young group of cadets who come together to pursue a common dream of hope and optimism. Under the watchful and demanding eyes of their instructors, they discover what it takes to become Starfleet officers as they navigate blossoming friendships, explosive rivalries, first loves and a new enemy that threatens both the Academy and the Federation itself.”

Keep checking back to TrekCore for all the latest Star Trek: Starfleet Academy news as it breaks.

New STAR TREK: DISCOVERY Photos — “Lagrange Point”

Star Trek: Discovery’s fifth and final season nears its conclusion this Thursday, and today we’ve got new photos from “Lagrange Point” for your review!
 
In the series’ penultimate episode, Captain Burnham (Sonequa Martin-Green) and the Discovery crew must find a way to get to the Progenitor technology before the dangerous Breen can use it. Meanwhile, back at Federation Headquarters, Saru (Doug Jones) proposes to take on a risky mission.
 
Here are 14 new photos from this week’s episode:
 

LAGRANGE POINT — After Moll and the Breen capture a mysterious structure that contains the Progenitors’ power, Captain Burnham must lead a covert mission to retrieve it before the Breen figure out how to use it.

 

Written by Sean Cochran & Ari Friedman. Directed by Jonathan Frakes.

And in case you missed it, here’s a sneak preview for “Lagrange Point” from last week’s episode of The Ready Room with Wil Wheaton.

Star Trek: Discovery Season 5 continues on Paramount+ May 23 with “Lagrange Point,” followed the next day on SkyShowtime in other regions.

STAR TREK: DISCOVERY Review — “Labyrinths”

“Labyrinths” clocks in at a little over an hour in length, and while it isn’t notably longer than other episodes this season, those few extra minutes give this week’s story a leisurely feel, even when the action is intense. Given the subject and also the setting, this isn’t a bad thing, however; even when you’re in a hurry, rushing through a library would feel wrong.
 
Before heading into the Badlands for the next and final clue, Discovery hails the Archive and is greeted by someone named Hy’Rell (Elena Juatco), who is so precise in her greeting that I thought at first she might be a holorecording of a docent. She’s not — she’s very real and she’s great — and she’s more than happy to welcome Captain Burnham (Sonequa Martin-Green) and the rest of Discovery to the Archive, but not before she rattles off a few more legal disclaimers. The Eternal Gallery and Archive is not responsible for any death or dismemberment which may occur while traveling through the Badlands, thank you for visiting.
 
It’s a rough trip and Hy’Rell’s “helpful” attempts to provide directions aren’t actually all that helpful at all, but Discovery gets there in one piece. The Archive is a huge Emerald-City-like structure floating in an oasis of calm — though maybe Azure City is more like it given the Cherenkov radiation that bathes the whole region in a blue glow.
 
Burnham and Book (David Ajala) beam over to the Archive; while the captain wants to take a look at Dr. Derex’s manuscript, while Book follows a request from Hy’Rell to examine a rare Kwejian artifact in their collection.
 

Book, Hy’Rell, and Burnham in the Archive’s massive library. (Paramount+)

I want to be clear that I love the Archive — as a concept, as a physical space, as a place to work and study and just be. I want to visit the Archive, I want to work at the Archive, I want six seasons and a movie about the Archive. That said, I do have a question. This place has been around for a thousand years or more and serves half the galaxy, so why is it exclusively filled with regular books?

Every item on the shelves looks like something produced by western Earth bookbinding techniques. Maybe the section our characters are walking through is the Earth section, but even so where are the clay tablets and the scrolls and the accordion bindings? Why does a Betazoid manuscript from the 24th century use the same binding techniques and have the same physical appearance as something created at a medieval European scriptorium?

I understand that all else aside, Discovery is a television show that needs to use visual language to quickly communicate concepts to its viewers, all of whom reside on Earth (or very near Earth, it’s possible astronauts aboard the ISS are watching Discovery, I don’t know). So on that level I get why the library is filled with regular old bound folios — plus, of course, it was filmed at a real library at the University of Toronto (more about that below).

But this is also Star Trek, and if there’s one thing Star Trek loves to do it’s to take everyday objects and make them look silly and futuristic — Burnham’s 23rd century copy of “Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland”, for example, had noticeably translucent binding. Sometimes those efforts can result in props and art direction that end up being a little distracting, but in this case it was the lack of them that I found to be so.

Turn it up. I love that Star Trek portrays a future where physical books are still read and published and valued, but I wanted to see a little more. Show me what a Cytherian bookshelf would look like. Maybe they store all their soup recipes as holographic text floating in transparent cubes or something.

Book holds the last piece of his homeworld. (Paramount+)

As Burnham begins her examination of “The Labyrinths of the Mind”, Hy’Rell leads Book to a different reading room to take a look at the Kwejian artifact. It’s a carved wooden box containing two cuttings of his homeworld’s Worldroot, the expansive tree system that once encompassed the entire planet. As it is essentially the last physical remnant of Kwejian, the planet and its culture, and as Book is one of the last remaining Kwejian people, Hy’Rell and the Archive as a whole offer the artifact to Book, and he gratefully accepts.

Hy’Rell’s characterization leading up to this moment has walked such a fine line — bubbly and customer service-y and unconcerned about urgency or danger — between interesting and potentially annoying, but between the writing and the performance I actually think they nailed it. She is peculiar in a way that seems realistic for someone who’s lived their whole life as sort of a wizardy space monk, but without going to the expected stereotypes of quiet sage or uptight librarian.

Hers is a temperament we don’t see much on Discovery and as such it immediately stands out; it’s nice to meet a new character and not immediately know what character trope they’re going to fill. Stopping to correct her own joke about throwing the Breen in the dungeon — “It’s really more of an oubliette” — and being the only person who even gets that it’s a joke in the first place? Love it.

Over in her reading room, Burnham finds an inscribed metal card tucked into the binding of the manuscript. Touching the card knocks Burnham out via a nucleonic beam (I love Star Trek) that puts her in a sort of mind palace where she must pass a test in order to find the next clue. She finds herself in a distorted, almost kaleidoscopic version of the Archive, and the caretaker of this mindscape is a program that, for Burnham, has taken the face of Book. He’ll answer Burnham’s questions – but not too many – and he’ll tell her if she’s passed the test but not what that test is.

Book… but not Book. (Paramount+)

I enjoyed David Ajala as the cool, unflappable proctor of Derex’s test. Unlike Wilson Cruz’s portrayal of Jinaal earlier this season, this performance is still similar enough to the real Book that it doesn’t feel like we’re seeing an entirely different character, but an alternate take on him. This Book is calmer but also sassier in a way, not rude by any means but also not as concerned about being diplomatic in how he speaks with Burnham. I wonder how much of the proctor’s personality is the program itself, and how much is brought by the person generating it; how much of this Book is created by Michael’s perceptions of the real one?

Burnham tries a few different tactics with the test, first thinking that the clue will be hidden in the history section of the library because learning from past mistakes is how one avoids repeating them. No dice though. She then takes the “labyrinth” part if the clue literally and suddenly the Archive expands itself out into the maze that it’s always been. With the help of some sand to track her path, Burnham methodically and intellectually tackles this too. And again she fails. Or, not so much fails but simply succeeds at the wrong task.

The light in her mind palace is fading, and she begins to understand that she may die in here, stuck in her own mind, if she can’t figure out what the real test is. Outside in the real world, the Breen are on their way — and Rayner (Callum Keith Rennie) and Culber (Wilson Cruz), who’d beamed over to the Archive after Burnham fell unconscious, can only afford to give her five more minutes before waking her up.

Primarch Ruhn wants the Progenitor’s tech no matter the cost. (Paramount+)

Aboard the Breen dreadnought, Primarch Ruhn (Tony Nappo) has been taking full theatrical advantage of having a dead scion at his disposal, making speeches and acting like he’s already got the imperial throne in the bag. And Moll (Eve Harlow) has made a few speeches of her own, to Ruhn’s surprise and disgust, attempting to remind the gathered crowd that the scion — her beloved L’ak — can do more for their cause alive than dead. It appears that spending just this small amount of time around Ruhn has made her realize how truly bloodthirsty and out for himself this guy is, which doesn’t bode well for her but also doesn’t bode well for the currently-dead-but-hopefully-not-for-long L’ak.

When Ruhn threatens to destroy the Archive if they don’t hand over the clue, Moll looks quietly horrified, which provides some new insight into a character who up until now has projected a tough exterior and, aside from when she was with L’ak, not much else. We see this again later when Ruhn threatens to destroy Discovery.

The Breen manage to tunnel through the Archive’s shields and get a few troops aboard, but Rayner and Book quickly dispatch with them and things honestly seem pretty okay for a Breen showdown, as far as these things go.

Burnham explores her mental version of the Archive library. (Paramount+)

In Burnham’s mind, the Archive has gone completely dark, only the lamps on a single table lit. Burnham, frustrated with the puzzle (and with herself) and sad that she’s about to fail the mission, has a spark of realization that this clue which was hidden by a Betazoid might require some emotional reflection to find. So she psychoanalyzes herself, again methodically and intellectually, while “Book” looks on, endlessly patient but also a little bored.

It’s not until she begins to really look at her own fears — and how they drive her to pull away from things (and from Book), and make her feel small and weak and inadequate — that she earns the clue. The program had to know that whoever came looking for it would use the technology that it led to with good intentions. Honesty and clarity about one’s weaknesses was the test, both question and answer.

Now that everyone’s awake and back aboard Discovery, and with the puzzle finally complete, it seems that the best way to deal with the Breen is to see what the puzzle says and then simply hand it over. The puzzle displays a holographic map of star systems that Tilly (Mary Wiseman) is able to quickly decipher, giving Discovery a destination for a quick escape jump that’s configured to make it appear as if they’ve been destroyed, and boy they nearly are!

Unfortunately, the jump doesn’t quite land them on target and Discovery needs some serious repairs, so their head start might not end up being quite as big as it could have been.

The Breen invade. (Paramount+)

OBSERVATION LOUNGE

  • With her long pale hair and contact lenses, Hy’Rell appears to be an Efrosian, an alien race seen in Star Trek IV aboard the USS Saratoga, and more notably as Star Trek VI’s Federation President.
  • One of the titles checked out by Marina Derex was “The Comprehensive Guide to Talaxian Hairstyles”, which I have to assume is only about three pages long as there’s not a whole lot of variety there.
  • For “Labryinths,” Discovery filmed on location at the new rare books section of the University of Toronto’s Robarts Libary — with the help of some digital set extensions to fill out the massive Archive.

  • The Betazoid mindscape was zapped into Burnham’s mind using a nucleonic beam, the same technology which sent Captain Picard into his life on Kataan in “The Inner Light.”
  • The holographic star map from the completed puzzle appears to include a pulsar map similar to the one first engraved on the Pioneer 10 plaque (and then repeated on Pioneer 11 and the Voyager Golden Records) which uses very precise information on pulsar rotation speeds and relative distances to allow the user to triangulate a specific point in space.
  • Discovery actor Patrick Kwok-Choon (Commander Rhys) shared on social media today that while he was sitting in the command chair aboard Discovery playing 32nd century make-believe, his wife was in labor with their first child.

  • Jett Reno mentions a visit to the party-loving planet Hysperia, which just happens to be the Ren Faire-like homeworld of one Andy Billups of the USS Cerritos.
  • Looks like Discovery’s last stop-off for repairs involved refilling the bridge’s propane tanks. It was like Truckasaurus back there with those huge open flames shooting around while they made their way through the Badlands! Whatever subsystem that is could maybe use a redesign.
  • How cool was that new visual effect shot of Discovery spore jumping out of their diversionary explosion?!
Moll won’t stand for Ruhn’s unnecessary aggression. (Paramount+)

Back at the Archive, Ruhn shows just how ruthless he is and decides to destroy it anyway — regardless of the oath he’d sworn not to. Moll can’t just stand by for this and tries to foment a quick mutiny, killing Ruhn in the process. She seems fully aware that she might have pushed things too far this time, but her reminders about the scion and the fact that Ruhn didn’t care about any of them anyway are enough to get the ship on her side. That was a close one.

It makes complete sense that despite her bravado, Moll wouldn’t actually be supportive of the man who made L’ak’s life miserable and, at least indirectly, led to his death. But her naked concern for the wellbeing of the Archive and the apparent destruction of Discovery is something I wasn’t expecting. Up ‘til now she’s seemed perfectly comfortable with leaving as many bodies in her wake as necessary to achieve her goals. But now? It appears that maybe Moll has started to grow a conscience. She’s still desperate, but no longer quite so indifferent.

Next week we head into the final stretch. Where exactly that’ll take us we don’t know, but the Progenitor’s technology will, hopefully, still be there waiting when Discovery gets there.

Star Trek: Discovery Season 5 continues on Paramount+ May 23 with “Lagrange Point,” followed the next day on SkyShowtime in other regions.

STAR TREK: DISCOVERY Spoiler Discussion — “Labyrinths”

The newest episode of Star Trek: Discovery — “Labyrinths” — 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!

Go check out our review of “Labyrinths” now!