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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! 
 

New STAR TREK: DISCOVERY Photos — “Labyrinths”

Star Trek: Discovery continues its fifth and final season this Thursday, and today we’ve got new photos from “Labyrinths” for your review!
 
This week — the Discovery crew races the Breen to a hidden library of galactic treasures which houses the last clue to find the Progenitors’ technology.
 
Here are seven new photos from this week’s episode:
 

LABYRINTHS — When Captain Burnham is trapped within a “mindscape” designed to test her worthiness to retrieve the Progenitor’s powerful technology, Book, Rayner, and the crew of the U.S.S. Discovery must hold off the Breen long enough for her to escape.

 

 

Written by Lauren Wilkinson & Eric J. Robbins. Directed by Emmanuel Osei-Kuffour.

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

Star Trek: Discovery Season 5 continues on Paramount+ May 16 with “Labyrinths,” followed the next day on SkyShowtime in other regions.

WeeklyTrek Podcast #247 — STAR TREK’s Long-Lost Enterprise Model Returns Home

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On this week’s episode of WeeklyTrek — TrekCore’s news podcast — host Alex Perry is joined by Trek Book Club host Peter Hong 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 Peter discuss his hopes that recent Star Trek novel announcements signal a more consistent publishing schedule moving forward, and Alex’s reflections on Alex Kurtzman’s comments several weeks ago about “filler” episodes.

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!

Master Replica Ending STAR TREK Starship Sales on June 15

Master Replicas has been selling stock of Eaglemoss-made Star Trek starship models since that company went out of business in 2022, giving fans who missed out on the original runs of the 200+ models to complete their collections.

Now, just over a year since the company took ownership of the leftover Official Starship Collection inventory, Master Replicas has announced that their license to sell the miniature spaceships is coming to an end in just over one month.

In an email sent out to their newsletter subscribers, MR says that while one Star Trek product line is going away, there’s still much more to come from the Trek franchise.

Here’s today’s full announcement:

The Clock is ticking! When Eaglemoss collapsed in 2022, we negotiated a deal with CBS and were appointed as the exclusive distributor for The Official Star Trek Starships Collection. That relationship comes to an end on June 15th, after which date the ships will no longer be available from MasterReplicas.com.

 

We’ll be running some promotions from now until then to help people fill any gaps in their collections, or to get that ship they’ve always wanted. Starting May 12 at 2pm ET / 11am PT / 7pm UK, for one week we’ve got a deal on all Starfleet ships: buy 3 for the price of 2, or 5 for the price of 3. As you can imagine, stock is low on a lot of items and everything will be available on a first come, first serve basis.

 

This is just the beginning for Master Replicas. We’ve signed many new contracts and are negotiating more. We have some amazing plans for Star Trek that we’ll be announcing very soon. Of course, we still have rights for other shows and are working on ships and much, much more for Stargate, Foundation, Blade Runner, Dune, and Doctor Who.

 

We believe that there haven’t been enough products for true fans — and we plan to do something about it.

Master Replica’s plans for the Trek product space may not include starship models any longer, but if their sold-out Star Trek: Lower Decks “Moopsy” plush is any indication, their creative team likely has some fun stuff in store for fans in the months ahead.

*   *   *

As part of the end of Master Replica’s Official Starships Collection program, we’ve partnered with them to give away one XL-sized USS Enterprise-E model to a lucky TrekCore reader!

The only requirement is that you must first sign up for the Master Replicas newsletter (at the bottom of the MasterReplicas.com homepage) to qualify. Once you’ve done that, please complete the below entry form and we’ll select one of you to win the model.

This contest has ended and our winner has been notified.

Check back to TrekCore often for the latest in Star Trek product news!

STAR TREK Franchise Earns Peabody Institutional Award

The Star Trek franchise was honored this week by The Peabody Awards, the 80-year-old cultural celebratory group who “champions the creativity and achievements of storytellers across television, streaming, radio, and digital media.”
 
The organization seeks to “illuminate social issues with depth and complexity as much as stories that entertain and inspire,” and this year the Peabody’s have decided not to just focus on a single episode of television — as when Star Trek: The Next Generation was awarded for “The Big Goodbye” back in 1987 — or a single series (like Star Trek Discovery‘s nomination in 2017).
 
This new Trek award came by way of the group’s Institutional Award, which celebrates the nearly-60-year-old franchise as a whole. The Institutional Award recognizes series, organizations, and institutions with an enduring body of work which impacts media and the public at large — fitting for the Star Trek franchise.
 
Here’s the formal announcement, made Thursday evening:

The original Star Trek television series aired on NBC for only three seasons, from September 1966 to June 1969. It was fresh, prescient, and so ahead of its time that it couldn’t quite capture the mainstream audience required for hits during a particularly insipid time in television. But fast forward nearly 60 years (perhaps through a space-time anomaly), and creator Gene Roddenberry’s vision is alive and well, having spawned a media franchise of 13 feature films, 11 television series, and numerous books and comics, with a legendary fan following. Today Star Trek is more vibrant, imaginative, funny, entertaining, and progressive than ever. And these days, we’ve got the special effects to make it look stellar.

 

The original science-fiction series was set aboard a starship, Enterprise, whose mostly human crew encountered alien life as they traversed the stars, led by the iconic Captain James T. Kirk (William Shatner). It was groundbreaking for its diverse cast and for its unapologetically progressive values—exploration over colonialism, cooperation over violence. Though the series wasn’t as popular as network executives hoped, the show spawned a passionate fandom with its own conventions and its own monikers. Although early fans were often the subject of ridicule, they’ve had the last word, helping to invent a model of fandom that has since taken over the world. (See: Swifties, Comicon.) As the fandom grew, movies followed, and soon new television versions with new crews aboard new ships, all building out the original Star Trek universe.

 

The successors to the original series have updated the franchise without losing its moral core—the dream of a future free from human destruction, poverty, and bigotry. Subsequent captains have served as models of ethical and diverse leadership: The Next Generation’s Jean-Luc Picard (Patrick Stewart), Deep Space Nine’s Benjamin Sisko (Avery Brooks), and Voyager’s Kathryn Janeway (Kate Mulgrew) among them. The humans have served alongside recurring characters from many other worlds, including the unforgettable Worf (Michael Dorn), a Klingon, and Data (Brent Spiner), an android whose struggles to become more human and to be allowed self-determination echo through to a 21st century full of developments in artificial intelligence.

 

With every passing decade, new versions have proliferated, attracting new generations of fans. Film reboots directed by J.J. Abrams and Justin Lin revived Kirk and his crew with new, young actors, zippier dialogue, and vastly improved effects in the 2000s and 2010s. The Streaming Era has brought a raft of reimaginings with a variety of sensibilities, from the dark and complicated Star Trek: Discovery to the crowd-pleasing prequel Star Trek: Strange New Worlds (featuring a young Spock!) to the hilariously meta cartoon Star Trek: Lower Decks. As the latest versions of Star Trek invite in a new generation of viewers, the interstellar travelers still encounter danger and difficulty, of course. But the Starfleet crew always comes out on top— and without sacrificing essential values that seem quintessentially human: valor, self-sacrifice, curiosity, compassion, broadmindedness.

 

For its enduring dedication to storytelling that projects the best of humanity into the distant future, the Star Trek franchise is honored with the Peabody Institutional Award.

The 84th annual Peabody Awards ceremony will be held in Los Angeles on June 9.

STAR TREK: DISCOVERY Review — “Erigah”

Three major plots — the Progenitor clue, the Breen, and the hunt for Moll and L’ak –come together in “Erigah,” an episode that annoyed me at times… but that also happens to contain ten of the best minutes of Star Trek in years.
 
Moll (Eve Harlow) and L’ak (Elias Toufexis) are beamed from their escape pod directly to Discovery’s locked down sickbay. With extra security courtesy of the returning Commander Nhan (Rachael Ancheril) — a welcome face which we haven’t seen in quite some time — Culber (Wilson Cruz) goes to work trying to treat L’ak’s wound. Meanwhile, Book (David Ajala) is hanging out outside trying to get access to Moll because he’s “spent more time with Moll than nearly anyone!” Buddy, pal, guy, I am begging you. It was like 20 minutes and Moll wasn’t even into it.
 

Moll and L’ak under guard. (Paramount+)

Discovery makes a quick jump to Federation Headquarters to retrieve an old Breen refrigeration suit to help with L’ak’s treatment, and this is where things hit the fan. A Breen dreadnought is headed their way, demanding that Moll and L’ak be turned over to them. Discovery can jump away and continue to draw this out, or they can stay and force things to finally come to a solution. Let’s go with the latter.

Star Trek is many things. Arguments about whether something qualifies as “real” Star Trek are generally absurd, given that the show has been everything from incredibly horny to deeply profound (and both in pretty equal measure). But there’s one element I think everyone would agree is central to Star Trek: diplomacy.

Diplomacy, though is hard. It’s high risk high reward from within the story — the other guy might not feel like talking — but it’s also risky from a writing perspective, especially as the stakes of the story reach a high point. Quite frankly, the audience also might not feel like talking, and redirecting the dramatic tension from the exciting promise of a firefight to the potential blandness of a negotiating table can be the thing that deflates a story. Not every episode of Star Trek that involves a bunch of people sitting around and talking about border disputes or trade routes are good ones. But a lot of them are. And some of them are really good. I think, other faults aside, “Erigah” belongs on that list.

The Federation’s decision to negotiate with the Breen is borne of two things: first, the Federation will always try diplomacy; and secondly, the Breen are some tough customers. The Federation has a very slim chance of coming out of a direct firefight with a Breen dreadnought and it knows it. Burnham (Sonequa Martin-Green) and Rayner (Callum Keith Rennie) saw this possible future back in “Face the Strange,” and they are not keen to bring it into being.

Rayner suggests aggression. (Paramount+)

Still, Rayner pushes — hard — for a direct confrontation. Even for him, he’s brash in his discussion with Burnham, Admiral Vance (Oded Fehr), and T’Rina (Tara Rosling), who is charge of the Federation side in for these negotiations. He’s almost out of control, interrupting and insulting the other participants. The Breen, he is adamant, do not negotiate; genocide is their Prime Directive, and even with only a slim chance of success, Starfleet has to strike first.

This is a bloodthirstiness that Rayner has never shown before, and it’s out of character enough that Burnham surmises that something else is going on here. She’s right. During The Burn, a Breen primarch called Tahal commandeered Kellerun, using up the people and the planet without mercy before moving on. Rayner is the only member of his family to survive the occupation.

The primarchs, one of whom is Tahal and another of whom captains the dreadnought, are all locked in a war of succession for the Imperium’s empty throne. But because none of the contenders are actually the direct blood descendants of the previous emperor, their claims are iffy at best. Whichever of them could get the endorsement of a blood descendant would have a huge boost.

This, Burnham realizes, is where L’ak comes in. Primarch Ruhn isn’t here to pick up a blood bounty, he’s here to pick up a meal ticket. And this is key to the Federation’s strategy.

(A side note, it is very funny to me that Breen society is obsessed with blood – blood bounties and blood descendants – given that anatomically they don’t even have blood.)

An injured L’ak faces his people. (Paramount+)

When he’d arrived, Ruhn had given the Federation an hour to turn over Moll and L’ak, and when that hour is nearly up T’Rina invites him over to negotiate. He is, understandably, very unimpressed. But then, he’s never met T’Rina and doesn’t know that she’s a stone cold badass. After a throwaway offer of some dilithium, which Ruhn expectedly rejects, T’Rina lays it all out. She knows why he wants L’ak, which is exactly why they’ve agreed to peacefully hand him over to Tahal instead. Oh, and no, you won’t attack us — you wouldn’t risk harming L’ak.

And then T’Rina really brings it home, telling Ruhn she’d be willing to reject Tahal’s offer and hold onto L’ak, keeping him off the board entirely and letting Ruhn duke it out using regular old Breen in-fighting. Unless, that is, he fears he cannot defeat her. Ruhn relents, on the condition that L’ak will not be harmed in Federation custody.

For a scene played between two central characters who hardly emote, one because they’re a Vulcan and the other because they’re wearing a refrigeration helmet, it’s absolutely riveting! The writing is sharp, the logical turns land like punches, Rayner’s personal insights into how ruthless Tahal is cut deep, and Tara Rosling, who has been fantastic as T’Rina from the start, is electric. This is some all-time Star Trek diplomacy; Jean-Luc Picard himself would be proud.

Of course it’s also all a bluff, but Ruhn doesn’t need to know that.

Tilly and Adira share a laugh. (Michael Gibson/Paramount+)

On the clue front, Stamets (Anthony Rapp) and Book are working to identify the object itself — a punch-cut metal “card” — while Tilly (Mary Wiseman) and Adira (Blu del Barrio) are working on the Betazoid phrase written on it: “The Labyrinth of the Mind”. Unfortunately, this week’s sleuthing didn’t work for me; as a concept a galactic puzzle is great stuff, but the execution is starting to feel more and more like last season’s deciphering of Species Ten-C’s language: an extremely difficult setup in theory and a conspicuously easy solution in practice.

Adira and Tilly work — well, “work” — with Zora (Annabelle Wallis) in a scene that is, I’m sorry, laughable. Zora announces that she’s discovered a vital piece of information, that the phrase is the title of a manuscript written by our previously identified Betazoid doctor, Marina Derex, and Tilly and Adira act like this is a huge breakthrough. Zora ran a basic search query, that’s it!

I don’t understand what Zora brings to this, or is it simply that no one can run any “internet” searches without Zora The Consciousness getting involved as the go-between? I know she’s the computer, but is she always the computer? Surely a bored ensign can access deeply personal files in their quarters without having to ask their sentient coworker Zora about them, right?

Anyway, there’s one search result for this phrase, and then when Adira asks Zora if there are any people — just in general — who know anything about handwritten manuscripts and where they might be located there is again, one search result. The fact that it’s Jett Reno of all people is somehow the least bewildering part of this whole thing.

Adira, Reno, and Tilly research the clue. (Michael Gibson/Paramount+)

Reno (Tig Notaro) tells Tilly and Adira about a place called the “Eternal Gallery and Archive,” a neutral all-worlds-welcome mobile archive that moves through space from one place to another every 50 years and uses metal catalog cards. We have a winner.

Again, all of this seems like information that would take anyone with halfway decent lookup skills a few minutes to find, which is way too easy for a puzzle of this magnitude and also way too basic for our characters to be this impressed to have solved. It falls flat for me as far as the mystery element is concerned and makes Tilly and Adira seem downright naïve.

Sick of being in sickbay, Moll and L’ak decide it’s time to make a move. L’ak injects himself with a full day’s worth of the compound he’s being given, and when the forcefields come down for Culber to treat his sudden distress, Moll slips out. Culber and Nhan put up a good fight, but Moll gets away, intent on grabbing a shuttle and getting the hell out of there. With the Breen dreadnought just outside it’s honestly not a great plan, but it’s keeping with the desperate seat-of-their-pants way Moll and L’ak operate.

Meanwhile on the card side of the puzzle, Zora is again using the power of super-intelligent AI removing some rows from an Excel spreadsheet at Stamets’ instruction, as he tries to pinpoint where the metal of the card came from. Book shows up to help because he’s antsy and needs to keep busy after his latest round of “I can help!” about Moll has been rebuffed. In a moment of inspiration Stamets realizes that Dr. Derex may have telepathically created a “transitive link” between the manuscript and the card that Book, who is empathic, might be able to read. I uh, didn’t know Betazoids could do that, but sure let’s go with it.

L’ak dies in Discovery’s sickbay. (Paramount+)

Book “reads” the card and sees images of turbulent red ionic storms and then he’s out. Moll’s escaped and so of course, he needs to be there to connect with her or whatever. He does help, convincing her to return to sickbay to be with L’ak in his final moments, but it’s not really due to any special insight Book has. Seems like anyone could have gotten through to her with “Don’t you want to be with your loved one when they die?” in this situation.

Moll enters sickbay to a small contingent of Breen, including Ruhn and a medic, administering aid to L’ak. It’s not enough, though, and L’ak dies, which is a really bad thing for the diplomatic situation. Ruhn doesn’t care that L’ak did this to himself, it’s the Federation’s fault anyway, and he prepares to leave with the corpse (even in death, L’ak can bring some weight to Ruhn’s claims to the throne).

But, Moll isn’t willing to leave L’ak and offers herself over to Ruhn. She tells him that she can help him find a source of incredible power, but perhaps more important is the fact that she and L’ak were joined in some capacity, married but also more, linked on some kind of genetic level perhaps, in a way that makes her a viable alternate as far as the bloodline descendant thing is concerned.

Book objects (of course Book objects…) and the Federation gets five minutes to decide what to do.

Burnham watches Moll confer with the Breen. (Paramount+)

OBSERVATION LOUNGE

  • Rayner references the Romulan saying “Never turn your back on a Breen,” which was introduced in Deep Space Nine’s “By Inferno’s Light.”
  • Rayner does another DS9 callback by suggesting the team use “thoron fields and duranium shadows” to bluff the Breen into believing Starfleet Headquarters is more heavily armed than in reality. This technique was first used in “Emissary,” and then suspected to be in use at Deep Space 9 by Martok in “The Way of the Warrior.”
  • Tilly mentions that the Breen destroyed a city during their last visit to Federation space; this seems to indicate that the Breen have stayed outside of Federation territory since they attacked San Francisco from orbit in “The Changing Face of Evil” some 800 years prior.
  • Except for Linus, it appears that Discovery has an entirely different bridge crew than it started the season with. Maybe this is just Delta Shift (why should 99% of the action on other Star Trek shows only ever take place when the “main guys” are on duty?) but still, it’s a bit jarring.
  • Though he does get a name drop, this is the third episode in a row without Saru (since Doug Jones was away for Hocus Pocus 2). Between his absence and the near-complete replacement of the secondary bridge crew, it’s feeling like the series ended early for a lot of actors.
  • The Badlands are an area of turbulent plasma storms situated near Bajor and Cardassia, which also served as a home for the Maquis rebellion during the early 2370s. Notably, this area of space is where the USS Voyager got pulled into the Delta Quadrant in “Caretaker.”
  • The Breen wear the spiked symbol of their species on their rugged uniforms, another logo first introduced in Deep Space Nine.
The six-pointed Breen symbol, introduced in ‘Deep Space Nine.’ (Paramount+)

After determining that Moll doesn’t have enough knowledge to endanger the search for the Progenitors’ tech, the decision is made. To quote my gal T’Rina, “There is little to be lost by allowing this and much to be lost by keeping her.” The Federation can’t take on the Breen now, just as they couldn’t when this whole thing started. Book continues to be flabbergasted, and I continue to wonder why he thinks he has any sort of say over Moll.

The Breen leave, and everyone breathes a sigh of relief before turning their focus back to the next clue — while Discovery prepares to head for the Badlands.

Star Trek: Discovery Season 5 continues on Paramount+ May 16 with “Labryinths,” followed the next day on SkyShowtime in other regions.

New STAR TREK: DISCOVERY Photos — “Erigah”

Star Trek: Discovery continues its fifth and final season this Thursday, and today we’ve got new photos from “Erigah” for your review!
 
This week: with the assistance of Nhan (Rachel Ancheril), the Discovery crew finally takes Moll (Eve Harlow) and L’ak (Elias Toufexis) into custody — but not before the Breen find out and demand their return. In the meantime, it’s up to Tilly (Mary Wiseman), Adira (Blu del Barrio) and Reno (Tig Notaro) to solve the latest Progenitor clue.
 
Here are thirteen new photos from this week’s episode:
 

ERIGAH — With Moll and L’ak finally in custody, the Federation is pulled into a diplomatic and ethical firestorm when the Breen arrive and demand they be handed over. Meanwhile, a frustrated Book looks for ways to help as Tilly, Adira, and Reno work to decipher the latest clue.

 

 

Written by M. Raven Metzner. Directed by Jon Dudkowski.

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

Star Trek: Discovery Season 5 continues on Paramount+ May 9 with “Erigah,” followed the next day on SkyShowtime in other regions.