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STAR TREK LOST SCENES Book To Cover TOS Cut Scenes

If you’re a longtime visitor to TrekCore, you know how obsessed we are with the many deleted scenes from Star Trek production history, from our unveiling of the TNG deleted scenes that influenced the Next Generation Blu-ray sets to the uncovering of the at-the-time unseen Star Trek Into Darkness cut footage.

Now, thanks to the team behind StarTrekHistory.comDavid Tilotta and Curt McAloney — and our friends at publisher Titan Books, we’re about to get a huge archive of newly-revealed and professionally restored Star Trek: The Original Series cut frames and sequences detailed in a brand new book coming this summer: Star Trek Lost Scenes.

Here’s Titan Books’ original preview information in 2016.

Think you’ve seen every episode of Star Trek: The Original Series and know everything about them? Think again. Star Trek: Lost Scenes is packed with hundreds of never-before-seen colour photos and new details about television’s popular science fiction series.

The photos – from frames of 50-year-old production film that have been digitized and professionally restored to their original, vibrant colours – are used to chronicle the making of the series, reassemble deleted scenes that were left on the cutting room floor, and showcase bloopers from the first pilot through the last episode. Whether you’re a new Star Trek fan or a seasoned veteran, this book is a must-have.

Takes an unprecedented look at more than 50 deleted scenes, many for the first time, assembled from hundreds of photos and original script excerpts Goes behind the scenes of the Original Series with previously unpublished photos of the optical effects, filming miniatures, makeup, exterior shooting locations, bloopers and more.

Packed with more than 700 full-colour photos from the actual production film, restored to pristine condition, the majority of which have never been seen before.

The above cover and preview images were released by StarTrek.com today, detailing that the 272-page hardcover book will arrive this August. You can check out even more preview images at the StarTrek.com article.

We don’t have preorder links available yet but rest assured we’ll let you know when you can lock in your claim for this sure-to-be-fascinating release!

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The Roddenberry Vault

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Star Trek Lost Scenes

DISCOVERY 111 Spoiler Discussion: “The Wolf Inside”

The newest episode of Star Trek: Discovery — “The Wolf Inside” — has just debuted, and we’re sure you’re ready to dive into a discussion on all the events that just took place.

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 episode, that’s your last warning!

This thread will remain open until our episode review is posted, later this week.

Novel #4:
"The Way to the Stars"


Novel #5:
"The Enterprise War"


Novel #6:
"Dead Endless"


SPOILERS: Familiar Races Return in “The Wolf Inside”

We’re just a few hours away from Star Trek: Discovery’s eleventh episode, and while they were teased in the preview for tonight’s new episode — “The Wolf Inside” — Entertainment Weekly has released a set of new photos from the upcoming hour featuring the return of some very familiar Star Trek alien species.

The new photos feature a meeting between Michael Burnham (Sonequa Martin-Green), Ash Tyler (Shazad Latif), and members of the Mirror Universe’s alien rebellion — including a goateed Sarek (James Frain) and a version of Voq (insert real or fake actor name of your choice here) at the table…. along with our first representatives of the Andorian and Tellarite races we’ve seen in this iteration of the series.

Compared to the much-discussed ‘visual reboot’ of the Klingon makeup design, the updated Andorian and Tellarite looks follow much more closely to the last time we saw each species back in Season 4 of Star Trek: Enterprise.

While the Andorians have some additional facial features and brow enhancements (replacing eyebrows with a forehead appliance) and the Tellarites appear to now feature stunted tusks around the cheek areas, each new design certainly feels much more like the races we know than the redesigned Klingon looks.

We’ll see much more of these new races tonight in “The Wolf Inside,” which debuts on CBS All Access and Space, and arrives on Netflix Monday.

Novel #4:
"The Way to the Stars"


Novel #5:
"The Enterprise War"


Novel #6:
"Dead Endless"


STAR TREK: DISCOVERY’s Canon Connections: Episode 110

Wow! Star Trek: Discovery rushed back onto our screens last weekend with a barnstormer of an episode filled with surprising twists, turns, and quite a lot of fun as our crew discovered their final jump at the end of “Into the Forest I Go” landed them in the deadly Mirror Universe, home to the Terran Empire.

I’m excited to see where things go next, but before we do let’s take a look at the connections between “Despite Yourself” and the wider Star Trek canon!

Quantum Signature

The crew of the Discovery figure out that they have traveled to an alternate reality by comparing their quantum signature with that of the space around them, and finding they are different.

The idea of quantum signatures being a way of determining whether you have traveled to an alternate reality is a key plot point of the “Star Trek: The Next Generation” episode “Parallels,” when Worf finds himself randomly shifting between realities.

Organia

Early in the episode, while trying to determine where the USS Discovery has jumped to, the crew discuss Federation fleet activity around Organia.

Ten years after the events of this episode, Organia will be hotly contested between the Federation and the Klingon Empire as part of the Star Trek: The Original Series episode “Errand of Mercy” when growing tensions between the two powers threaten to reignite into war.

Alien Rebels

Shortly after arriving in the Mirror Universe, the Discovery is attacked by a Vulcan ship — identified as being Vulcan rebels — by the nearby Terran starship ISS Cooper. In the Star Trek: Enterprise episode “In a Mirror Darkly” we see a rebellion against the Empire being conducted by Vulcans, Andorians, Orions, and Tellarites, including a scene in which the ISS Avenger is under attack from a Vulcan starship.

Apparently, the still rebellion continues nearly a century later — now including members of the Klingon race.

Isik For Your Thoughts?

Burnham approaches Tyler in the mess hall following his encounter with L’Rell, and asks him “Isik for your thoughts?” She claims it is an old Vulcan saying.

An isik is a unit of currency used by the Vlugtans, first mentioned in the Star Trek: Deep Space Nine episode “Rivals.”

The Terran Empire

The Terran Empire has ruled supreme for centuries in the Mirror Universe.

The brutal, fascistic power seen in the Enterprise two-parter “In a Mirror Darkly” and the classic Original Series episode “Mirror, Mirror” has all the hallmarks of those earlier appearances – including the Nazi-like salute, “Long live the Empire!”, using murder as a means of advancement, and familiar characters in surprising roles.

While the majority of Terrans live under the rule of the Klingon-Cardiassian Alliance by the 24th century, Earth remains a Terran stronghold, as depicted in the recent “Star Trek: TNG – Mirror Broken” comic series.

ISS Discovery

As part of concealing themselves in the Mirror Universe, the Discovery crew even take the step of removing the “U” — for ‘United ‘– from the USS Discovery registry on the outer hull, and replacing it with an “I” for ‘Imperial.’

As as a vessel of the Terran Empire, all ships carry the ISS designation, dating back to the days before Empress Sato took command of the Empire in the 22nd century.

USS Defiant

One of the biggest — and in my opinion, the coolest — callbacks in the episode to previous Star Trek canon was the identification by the crew of the Discovery of the existence of the Constitution-class USS Defiant, a ship from their future, somehow made its way to the Mirror Universe’s past — an event we learned about in the Enterprise “In a Mirror, Darkly” two-parter back in 2005.

Lorca suggests that if they can learn how the Defiant arrived in the Mirror Universe, they can find a way back home without the Discovery’s spore drive. In “In a Mirror, Darkly,” it is revealed that Tholians “detonated a tricobalt warhead inside the gravity well of a dead star” to open an interphasic rift between dimensions.

“Star Trek: Discovery” writer/producer Ted Sullivan confirmed on Twitter that the Defiant seen in this episode was its current state, after a century of Terran Empire modifications.

Agony Booth

The final shot of the episode shows Captain Gabriel Lorca locked inside an agony booth, screaming in pain as it attacked the various nerve clusters in his body.

Agonizer technolgoy has appeared in previous Mirror Universe episodes as a tool of oppression and discipline by the Terran Empire, designed to keep starship crews and subjugated species in line.

“The booth” was developed by Malcolm Reed and Phlox’s mirror counterparts in the 22nd century, and handheld agonizers were seen in use aboard the ISS Enterprise in “Mirror, Mirror.”

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We can’t wait to see what else Star Trek: Discovery’s writers bring to the table in this weekend’s new episode, “The Wolf Inside.” Keep your eyes peeled for more canon connections in the future!

Novel #4:
"The Way to the Stars"


Novel #5:
"The Enterprise War"


Novel #6:
"Dead Endless"


Previews of Six 2019 STAR TREK Calendar Options

We’re only a two weeks into 2018, but already the first calendar options to Trek up your 2019 are here! From the traditional wall calendars to the desktop page-a-day options, here’s your first look at next year’s choices from licensee Universe Publishing.

First up is a perennial favorite, the Star Trek Daily Calendar, featuring tear-off pages for each day of the year. As this first preview image shows, this cycle will include details from Star Trek: Discovery along with all the other chapters from the Trek franchise.

This desktop calendar will be available July 31 and can be preordered at Amazon.

Trek artist Juan Ortiz takes over the annual poster calendar with his own featured release in 2019, with his now-familiar Original Series episodic designs spanning the year. Each poster page has perforated top and bottom edges for removal and display.

This hanging calendar will be available August 7 and can be preordered at Amazon.

The second season of Star Trek: Discovery is likely to arrive in 2019, and you’ll be able to spend the year revisiting Season 1 with the monthly wall calendar. Each month will likely mirror the 2018 release, showcasing one Discovery publicity photo per page; the placeholder cover design is likely to be updated with a new look closer to release.

This wall calendar will be available August 7 and can be preordered at Amazon.

2018’s weekly calendar focused on the Kelvin Timeline films, but the early preview of 2019’s Star Trek 16-Month Weekly Calendar will return to a wider range of Trek television imagery, as it will include 40+ images from the six live-action series.

This desktop calendar will be available August 7 and can be preordered at Amazon.

Another year, another trip back to the 1960’s with the Star Trek 2019 wall calendar – this twelve-month hanging calendar spends the year focused on Captain Kirk and crew with a dozen glossy publicity photos from the classic Trek series.

This wall calendar will be available August 7 and can be preordered at Amazon.

The annual Star Trek Ships of the Line calendar doesn’t have a finalized set of preview images yet — this cover featuring the Enteprise-E at the second Deep Space 9 station is sure to be replaced closer to this calendar’s release — but the fan-favorite wall calendar returns for its 19th year with what is sure to be a great series of poster images from around the Trek universe.

This wall calendar will be available August 7 and can be preordered at Amazon.

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For 2018, a series of additional calendar options came from a series of European licensees later in 2017 — so if and when there are additional choices available, we’ll be sure to bring you that update here at TrekCore!

New STAR TREK: DISCOVERY Photos for “The Wolf Inside”

The second half of Star Trek: Discovery’s first season marches on, and today CBS has released a set of new publicity images from the eleventh episode of the year, this Sunday’s “The Wolf Inside” — which continues the Mirror Universe adventure of the Discovery crew.

Along with these preview photos, the Netflix Star Trek: Discovery Facebook account has also released a preview clip from the episode (rehosted below via Twitter user Discovery1031):

In addition, the network has also put out a set of behind-the-scenes images from director Jonathan Frakes’ time on the set of last Sunday’s episode, “Despite Yourself.”

“The Wolf Inside” debuts on CBS All Access and Space this Sunday, and arrives on Netflix for global viewers on Monday.

Novel #4:
"The Way to the Stars"


Novel #5:
"The Enterprise War"


Novel #6:
"Dead Endless"


Award Nominations for DISCOVERY and MIRROR BROKEN

Two of this past year’s big Star Trek projects each got a spotlight shown on them this week, with both Star Trek: Discovery and 2017’s Star Trek: The Next Generation – Mirror Broken comic named as contenders for notable industry awards.

Costume designer Gersha Phillips discusses the new Terran Empire uniforms. (CBS)

Star Trek: Discovery costume designer Gersha Phillips was recognized for her work creating the new wardrobe for the freshman Trek series.

Nominated by the Costume Designers Guild in the category of Excellence in Sci-Fi/Fantasy Television, Phillips is going up in competition against Game of Thrones (HBO), Once Upon a Time (ABC), Sleepy Hollow (FOX), and coincidentally, the “USS Calister” episode of Black Mirror (Netflix).

In addition, IDW Publishing comic series Star Trek: The Next Generation — Mirror Broken picked up two nominations from the 2017 Diamond Gem Awards, which are selected by comic book specialty retailers and celebrated within the comic book industry as an important award honoring sales success.

Written by Scott and David Tipton with art by J.K. Woodwardthe debut issue released in May was nominated for “2017 Best Free Comic Book Day Book,” and Mirror Broken #1 has been nominated as “2017 Comic Book of the Year” for issues priced under $3.99.

Speaking of both Discovery and the Mirror Universe — here’s a new video detailing the behind-the-scenes process into developing this new iteration of Terran Empire garb.

REVIEW: ThinkGeek STAR TREK Federation President Rug

If you’ve been longing to turn your office or bedroom into the Office of the President of the United Federation of Planets, you now can with ThinkGeek’s exclusive Federation President rug. This large, impressive, comfortable rug will look great on the floor of your home or office – and how do I know this? Because I’ve got one on mine and I love it!

The thing that stands out most to me about this rug are the colors – the vibrant blue, white, and yellow color scheme really pop. It also stands apart from some of the other Star Trek rugs on the market, whose color schemes lean more heavily towards black and grey. If your home has a lighter color scheme and all that black and grey doesn’t suit you, consider this alternative instead.

The rug is bigger than I anticipated – measuring a full 48 inches in diameter – but is very well made, and comfortable to walk on. Sometimes with licensed products like these they can be more style than substance where the quality of the items themselves can be low, but that is not the case here. You aren’t just paying for the Star Trek logo with this one; for the $119.99 price point you are receiving a high quality, durable product.

The rug is also relatively easy to clean – the usual household debris that accumulated on it over the holidays came off with a quick swipe of a vacuum cleaner. I haven’t yet spilled anything on it, but the instructions are to treat immediately and blot with a paper towel, much like you would any similar product that was not also a very cool Office of the President of the United Federation of Planets rug.

You can really imagine something like this just out of shot during Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country or the Star Trek: Deep Space Nine episodes “Homefront” and “Paradise Lost.” The design of the seal of the Federation president is seen in those DS9 episodes, and is only slightly modified in rug form.

Jaresh-Inyo’s office with Office of the President seal. (DS9: “Homefront”)

When I first saw this item on ThinkGeek, I was surprised and excited by it because in canon there is not much attention paid to the Federation’s political structure. Over the course of the Star Trek franchise, we see only three Federation presidents – an unnamed human in Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home, an unnamed Efrosian in Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country, and the first president to receive a name, Grazerite statesman Jaresh-Inyo, in the previously mentioned DS9 two-parter.

(Also, if you choose to accept the biographical data about Jonathan Archer shown on screen in “In a Mirror Darkly,” he too served as President of the Federation later in life.)

We know relatively little about the position and its relationship to the rest of the structure of the Federation government from what we learn on screen. In addition to the Federation president, the Federation Council is seen in The Voyage Home, and frequently referenced throughout the later shows. It is unclear what relationship the president and the Council have – the appearance of the president presiding over the Council in The Voyage Home implies he acts more like a Prime Minister, but in subsequent appearances more like the President of United States would today.

Presidents Hiram Roth, Ra-ghoratreii — both names per Trek novels — and Archer.

Outside of canon, the Star Trek novels have a more fully fleshed our governance structure for the Federation that resolves these seeming inconsistencies, thanks to Keith R.A. DeCandido and his novel that focused exclusively on the politics of the Federation, Articles of the Federation. The president in that book, Nanietta Bacco, is a fan favorite for followers of the novels, and if that’s something you’re interested in exploring further, I recommend checking it out.

ThinkGeek have carved a niche for themselves as a hub for all kinds of interesting products to suit many fandoms, and their line of Star Trek products gets more diverse, exciting, and fun each year. The Federation President rug is no exception to that, and if you’re looking for some cool Star Trek decor for your home or office to show off your allegiance to the United Federation of Planets, look no further!

STAR TREK: DISCOVERY Review — “Despite Yourself”

The final minutes of “Into the Forest I Go,” Star Trek: Discovery’s mid-season cliffhanger, ask a lot of questions: Where is the Discovery? Did Captain Lorca send them there — wherever ‘there’ is — and if so, why? Who, really, is Lt. Ash Tyler? And what exactly is going on with Lt. Stamets’ silvery, Gary Mitchell-esque eyes?

“Despite Yourself,” the midseason opener, wastes no time answering most of these questions. In a mesmerizing ready room scene (and surely, it’s due to director Jonathan Frakes’ skill and experience handling Star Trek that we can use ‘mesmerizing’ to describe a ready room scene) the crew discuss their predicament and quickly realize they’re not where they expected to be.

The emblem of the Terran Empire. (CBS)

Additionally, because of Stamets’ condition, they’re probably going to be stuck wherever it is they are for a while.

Lorca seems to be as surprised as everyone else at the hostility found this alternate quantum reality — first introduced in 1967’s “Mirror, Mirror,” and revisited during the days of Deep Space Nine and Enterprise — so while his course “correction” made during the last spore drive jump of “Into the Forest I Go” was intentional, it certainly doesn’t appear that this is where he intended the Discovery to arrive.

Once the crew of the Discovery figures out where they are — not just in the Mirror Universe, but in the midst of a large debris field — they quickly set about retrieving a Klingon/Vulcan computer core from a wrecked ship that’s drifting nearby.

From the computer core we learn that this universe’s Michael Burnham, erstwhile captain of the ISS Shenzhou, is presumed dead, and that Lorca doesn’t captain the ISS Discovery… that duty falls to the alternate version of Cadet Sylvia Tilly, much to everyone’s surprise.

Tilly (Mary Wiseman) and Burnham (Sonequa Martin-Green) in their Terran uniforms. (CBS)

Tilly’s reluctant transformation into her formidable Terran Empire counterpart — nicknamed, among other amusingly over-the-top monikers, “Captain Killy” — is an instant classic addition to a half-century of Mirror Universe moments. Watching our Tilly have to playact as the evil Captain Killy is great fun, and it’s a testment to Mary Wiseman’s skills to see her turn on a dime from awkward junior officer to the badass “Slayer of Sorna Prime.”

We also learn that the Terran Empire’s not-so-secret weapon is the Constitution-class USS Defiant, the same ship recovered by the Commander Jonathan Archer and the crew of the ISS Enterprise during the events of 2005’s “In a Mirror, Darkly,” which got zapped through time and space after disappearing in the Original Series’ “The Tholian Web.”

The Defiant’s place in the Terran fleet is only briefly mentioned, but it will almost certainly become a significant plot point as the season progresses — and her wireframe computer image is already the center of much discussion among Trek starship aficionados.

The USS Defiant, last seen in the hands of Empress Sato in 2155 — now seen in 2256. (CBS)

There’s been some fan speculation that given his dark, uncompromising stance, the Gabriel Lorca we’ve seen through these first ten episodes may actually originate in the Mirror Universe; while “Despite Yourself” neither confirms nor denies the idea, Lorca certainly seems to have the most contemplative response to the opposite nature of the Mirror Universe.

For the rest of the Discovery crew, learning that their counterparts are ruthless, bloodthirsty stalwarts in the Terran Empire is oddly reassuring. If one’s Mirror self is bad, and the Mirror Universe is the antithesis of the Prime Universe, then by definition one’s Prime self is good.

Lorca, on the other hand, seems genuinely disturbed when he learns of his Mirror counterpart’s fate, specifically that Mirror Lorca couldn’t save the crew of the ISS Buran any better than Prime Lorca could the USS Buran. (Additionally, Mirror Lorca is presumed to have killed Mirror Burnham and attempted a coup against the mysterious Terran emperor.)

“Well, there’s to me hoping I’d find a better version of ourselves over here,” he says to an unsure Burnham, and a quiet disappointment hangs over Lorca for the rest of the episode. Perhaps Lorca thought a parallel universe held the key to his ability to save the crew of the USS Buran and atone for his past mistakes. I look forward to seeing how Lorca comes to terms with himself, and I hope “our” Lorca has been the Prime Lorca all along.

His emotional characterization would be far less interesting if he’s given an external reason to be the way he is… and before Lorca can spend too long meditating on his nature, he finds himself in an agony booth aboard the ISS Shenzhou.

Lorca (Jason Isaacs) finds himself in a world of hurt, sentenced to the agony booth. (CBS)

Burnham surprises the crew by showing up with Lorca in tow as her prisoner, and wastes no time attempting to regain command. Unfortunately, two things stand between Burnham and the captain’s chair: Captain Danby Connor (returning guest actor Sam Vartholomeos), whose Federation counterpart died during the Battle of the Binary Stars, and a tense turbolift ride down to the Shenzhou‘s bridge.

The turbolift fight scene between Connor and Burnham stands out as a highlight in a season of Star Trek that has easily featured the franchise’s best hand-to-hand combat sequences. The concept, direction, choreography, and performances are all superb, utilizing the entire (albeit small) set in the fight, including the futuristic tech behind access panels to trigger a disruption to artificial gravity.

I have only one complaint about the sequence, and it’s the slow clap from the bridge crew as they congratulate Burnham on her victory and return to command — I guess I shouldn’t be surprised that such a corny gesture comes right on the heels of a thrilling and emotionally charged scene, and in a galaxy filled with salutes, chanting, and golden armor, I suppose it’s going to get a little silly at times.

The ISS Shenzhou’s Troy Januzzi (Romaine Waite) leads welcoming applause to the returning Burnham. (CBS)

Unlike previous Star Trek series, which could spend an episode or two in the high camp of the Mirror Universe and then move on, Discovery is going to need to find a way to blend the historical campiness of the Mirror Universe with the serious dramatic tone that it’s already established.

The more episodic a series, the easier it is to play with tone from one episode to another without seeming inconsistent, so it’ll be interesting to see how the highly serialized Discovery continues to blend the two styles.

I started “Despite Yourself” cautiously optimistic about the Mirror Universe setting, but by the end I found myself towards the optimism and less towards caution — hopefully by the end of next week’s “The Wolf Inside,” I’ll have abandoned my misgivings about the setting entirely.

Another point of intense speculation that “Despite Yourself” all but confirmed is Lt. Ash Tyler’s identity as the Klingon Voq. I say “all but” because of my own nagging disbelief that a member of one species can be surgically altered to become a medically indistinguishable member of another species.

Tyler (Shazad Latif) reacts to L’Rell’s (Mary Chieffo) words. (CBS)

It’s every Star Trek fan’s sworn duty to obsess over that one piece of scientific wizardry they just can’t believe, while happily accepting 99 other pieces of equally unbelievable pseudoscience. Why this is where I draw the line, I don’t know. A vast mycelial system underpinning all quantum realities and allowing instantaneous travel between dimensions? Sure, why not.

Brute-forcing a member of one species into another apparently using nothing but mundane surgical techniques? No.

While the 1967 Trek episode “The Trouble with Tribbles” featured a Klingon agent transformed into a “human” named Arne Darvin, the vastly-different-from-human new look of Klingons in Discovery makes it much less compatible, Trek history aside. But putting my personal incredulousness aside, it’s clear the writers are telling us that one way or another the human Tyler was once the Klingon Voq. Got it.

Lt. Tyler is understandably shaken after an intense meeting with L’Rell in the brig during which she attempts to awake Voq’s dormant self within him — reciting T’Kuvma’s prayer from the opening episodes, and even shouting at him, “You have another name!”

Eventually, he takes his concerns to Dr. Culber. Culber reviews Tyler’s medical history and comes to the conclusion that Tyler is not himself, at which point Tyler promptly kills Culber by snapping his neck.

Dr. Culber (Wilson Cruz) is skeptical of Tyler’s concerns… for now. (CBS)

The episode spends just a few seconds lingering on this shocking event before moving on, and what little reflection the episode does show is framed from Tyler’s perspective, not Culber’s. Dr. Culber, along with Lt. Stamets, is one half of Star Trek’s first canon openly gay couple; I will let other, more qualified people discuss the representational significance of Culber’s untimely death, but I will at the very least say that this is a big deal.

Wilson Cruz, who plays the late (for now?) Dr. Culber, hinted strongly that we hadn’t seen the last of him on Discovery, and showrunners Aaron Harberts and Gretchen Berg also confirmed future appearances in statements made on both After Trek and pre-episode interviews which hit the web immediately following the US broadcast of this episode.

While I understand why they’d want to speak out, I would argue that the better a story is told, the less the need for audience reassurance when something unexpected happens. Culber’s death felt like a redshirt’s death: there to serve the story of the character who kills, rather than the story of the killed. Perhaps like Tasha Yar in The Next Generation’s “Yesterday’s Enterprise,” Culber will be given a chance to make up for the seemingly senseless death he was given.

There’s another issue with needing to assure the audience that everything will be okay in the end, and it’s that you run the risk of seeming dismissive toward your audience; that a hugely dramatic moment comes in the middle of a character’s journey — instead of its end — doesn’t diminish the impact that moment can have on the viewer.

Lorca prepares to leave the safety of the USS — er, ISS — Discovery. (CBS)

I defy anyone to watch Spock’s death scene in The Wrath of Khan and, because they know he’ll come back in The Search for Spock, to feel nothing. You wouldn’t dismiss a first-time viewer’s reaction to Spock’s death with a “Just you wait…,” you’d let them mourn — and probably be mourning yourself, even if you’ve watched the scene a dozen times and know the outcome.

Spock’s death and subsequent funeral don’t lose their potency just because we know he’ll live again. The power of storytelling doesn’t come from the final outcome, it comes from everything a character – and a viewer – endures to get there.

So far this season, we’ve learned a lot about who these characters are; now that we’re through the looking glass and in the Mirror Universe, we’re going to learn even more by finding out who they aren’t. Regardless of the isolated misgivings I have about “Despite Yourself,” it’s an exciting, fast-paced episode that sets up a compelling arc.

I can’t wait to find out what the rest of the season has in store.

Novel #4:
"The Way to the Stars"


Novel #5:
"The Enterprise War"


Novel #6:
"Dead Endless"


DISCOVERY Showrunners and Cast Talk Tonight’s [Spoiler!]

“Despite Yourself” was an episode filled with surprises for Star Trek: Discovery, with the launch of a Mirror Universe storyline that’s set to last for several more weeks — but perhaps the biggest shock of all was a scene that many never saw coming.

*   *   * MAJOR SPOILERS BELOW! *   *   *

Outed Klingon agent Ash Tyler (Shazad Latif) attacks and kills Dr. Hugh Culber (Wilson Cruz) in sickbay after the doctor uncovers the depths of physical and psychological manipulation that Tyler undertook at the hands of L’Rell, ending the first ongoing same-sex relationship seen in a Star Trek television series.

Harberts, Berg, Chieffo,, and Cruz join Matt Mira on “After Trek.”

As soon as the episode ended, showrunners Aaron Harberts and Gretchen J. Berg, along with actor Mary Chieffo and Wilson Cruz, all appeared on the post-episode After Trek discussion show, and much of the conversation centered around this fateful moment.

CRUZ: “They gave me a very lovely phone call… there were tears, I won’t lie. And before I get ahead of myself, it’s totally okay for [the audience] to be sad. It’s fine. I’m still here, I’m not going anywhere. This is a chapter in the [life] of this epic love story.

How did I feel about it? I was sad because I didn’t know exactly what was going to happen. I just know that I turned to these two beautiful people [Harberts and Berg] that I trust and love, and said that if this is the way it’s going to go, I’m going to give you everything that I have until I go. And I hope people saw that it was all ‘on the stage’ in this episode.”

Harberts was quick to both discuss and defend Culber’s fate, referencing both his own background and the strength of the Discovery characters.

HARBERTS: “Culber dies because he’s the smartest person on the ship. Anyone who would have come to that conclusion [about Tyler] and confronted Tyler on that would have died. It’s just that Culber was the person who was really drilling down on the mystery of what’s going on.

That was really important to us [because] we love – love – Stamets and Culber on the show. There’s no way, as an out gay writer with an ensemble that’s nothing but LGBT positive and a writing partner who’s supported me my entire career – in terms of being out – there’s no way that you hire Anthony Rapp and Wilson Cruz to play the first gay couple on Star Trek and have them go for 10 episodes and say, ‘It’s over.’

The whole point of this was, he’s the smartest one on the ship, putting the clue trail together. He was not just a hapless victim.”

Harberts also shared the showrunning team’s surprise at how quickly fans latched onto the Culber / Stamets relationship, perhaps sooner than expected to the writing partners:

HARBERTS: “We always knew that the appetite for a gay couple on Star Trek was, uh, tremendous – we never dreamed that people were going to fall in love with them out of the gate.

This has been the most tremendous experience because Gretchen and I have worked on a lot of shows, and we’ve had fantastic ensembles, but this ensemble has just been embraced. So we always felt, in terms of the storytelling, that the relationship between Dr. Culber and Stamets would actually start to gather a lot of followers and a lot of investment NOW.

We didn’t predict that it would happen the minute that we saw them brushing their teeth! So it’s almost like people jumped in a little early! [Laughs] But we really do see this as the catalyst to really start exploring that relationship.”

Concept artwork — ultimately unused — for a “Mirror Culber.”

With the jump to the Mirror Universe in “Despite Yourself,” After Trek host Matt Mira asked Cruz what he thinks this universe’s version of Culber might be like:

CRUZ: “I think he’s a bit of a mad scientist, probably doing like crazy, experimental things on aliens – kind of like the Germans did back in World War II.”

But that doesn’t mean we’ll be seeing an ‘evil’ Culber in Discovery’s future. While After Trek featured a creative — but ultimately unused — look at what Culber’s Mirror Universe look may have been like, Harberts explained why we won’t see Wilson Cruz saluting the Terran Empire.

HARBERTS: “As we started to think about Culber, and whether he would appear or not, it was [our decision] that we never see him in the Mirror Universe because we wanted to make sure that the image of Culber continues to stay pure, and absolutely not evil.”

Stamets (Anthony Rapp) and Culber take a moment. (CBS)

But is that really the end for the “pure” Hugh Culber of the Discovery universe? Harberts and Berg spelled it out:

BERG: “We will see Dr. Culber again. He is not 100% dead.”

HARBERTS: “Everything we do on Star Trek comes out of character and also, as much as we can, grounded in science. Get [the real] Paul Stamets’ book “Mycellium Running,” and give it a read – because his view on the mycellial network and the building blocks of life and how life and death are interwoven will give you very, very good hints as to what’s going to happen.”

*   *   *

In addition to their time on After Trek, Harberts, Cruz, and Berg also spoke to Buzzfeed’s Adam B. Vary about the well-known “bury your gays” trope, a disappointing cliche in which a television series kills off a homosexual character for shock value. Last year, CW series The 100 faced serious backlash from fans and critics alike after a similar event impacted a same-sex couple on that series.

Culber’s death may appear to be the latest in a long and unhappy trend of TV shows killing off their LGBT characters — a creative tic that approached epidemic levels in 2016, popularizing the trope “bury your gays” and sparking major fan outcry.

“I understand why people are upset,” said Cruz, who spent two years working as a GLAAD spokesperson. “I am familiar with the problematic tendencies of television shows to do away with their LGBT characters, especially people of color.”

But Cruz, Harberts, and Berg all insisted to BuzzFeed News that Culber’s death in Discovery will not be another “bury your gays” moment.

“I give you my word that this is not what that is,” said Cruz. “What’s being planned is something we haven’t really had an opportunity to see LGBT characters experience. I’m really excited about it.”

According to the showrunners, Culber’s death will not terminate the character’s narrative arc on the show, nor will it be the last time Cruz appears. “This is a beginning, rather than an ending,” said Harberts. “We’re more than happy to put our gay couple front and center and let them guide the audience on a story of love and loss and redemption and heroism and grief and life and all of those things.”

Knowing the potential for controversy, the team also shared the storyline with GLAAD to seek feedback on the impact of Culber’s death.

“You have to ask yourself, are you worried about an initial reaction, or are you worried about a macro experience?” said Harberts, who is openly gay. “We knew that our side of the street is clean. And we know that our actors understand what this journey is all about. We have faith that if our audience is so enraged and thinks that we would actually lean into a [bury your gays] trope, then they don’t really understand what we’re about as storytellers.”

Understanding the tricky factors at play with their decision, the producers did run it by GLAAD — and received the organization’s blessing. In a statement to BuzzFeed News, spokesperson Nick Adams said that GLAAD is “mourning … the death of a beloved groundbreaking character,” but went on to note that “death is not always final in the Star Trek universe, and we know the producers plan to continue exploring and telling Stamets and Culber’s epic love story.”

For Harberts and Berg, the wide open narrative possibilities presented by Star Trek — a sci-fi show predicted on boldly going where no one’s gone before — greatly outweigh any fear of immediate fan backlash, especially on a show with a serialized storyline that still has five episodes left in the season.

Wilson Cruz as Dr. Hugh Culber. (CBS)

We’ve got five episodes left in the first season of Star Trek: Discovery — so we’ll see what the rest of “Chapter 2” brings us on the fate of Hugh Culber.