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Review: Eaglemoss’ STAR TREK: DESIGNING STARSHIPS

The Eaglemoss Official Star Trek Starships Collection is one of the single best licensed products in Star Trek history in terms of quality, price point and Trek nuance. Since debuting in 2012 and running through the production of more than 100 different ship models to date, anyone who has picked up a sample  — or collected them all — will attest to the care and accuracy put into the final product.

With the model collection as a backdrop, Eaglemoss has released Star Trek: The Official Starships Collection — Designing Starships, two hardcover volumes which feature production details for the bulk of their model designs. The majority of articles featured in the Designing Starships double set are reproductions of the lead article in the carefully crafted 16-page magazines that accompany each model.

But it’s not just the magazine content alone — in addition to those reprinted articles (combined here in two beautiful hard-bound editions), however, each volume also features expanded original content in the opening section that breaks down the design history of some of Star Trek’s most famous ships.

*   *   *

Volume One opens with an expansive, detailed history of the Enterprise. From immaculately reproduced Matt Jefferies sketches and notes that were part of his original Enterprise design to a complete section on Ralph McQuarrie’s re-imagining of the ship for the failed Planet of the Titans reboot, no detail is missed when it comes to the original Enterprise designs.

There’s even a rarely seen look at Matt Jefferies’ redesign of the Enterprise for the 1970’s Star Trek: Phase II television series that never saw the light of the day!

From there, the book breaks down Andrew Probert’s contributions to the refit design which debuted in Star Trek: The Motion Picture, and his work in creating the the iconic Enterprise-D for Star Trek: The Next Generation.

The first 50 pages are rounded out with sections on the Enterprise-C, -D, and -E, and Jonathan Archer’s Enterprise NX-01, featuring the amazing work of John Eaves and Doug Drexler. (Of course, they are featured throughout each book, an overall highlight of the two volumes.)

An early design of the ‘NX-Alpha’ test-bed vessel from “First Flight.”

The rest of Volume One features 158 pages of design secrets on more than 20 other ships and shuttles, dissecting everything from deep-cut choices like the USS Dauntless from Voyager’s “Hope and Fear,” to Annorax’s Krenim weapon (“Year of Hell”) and the redesign of the Tholian starship featured in Star Trek: Enterprise (“In a Mirror, Darkly”).

No ship is too abstract for Ben Robinson and his Eaglemoss team, who do an excellent job of breaking down each ship design with creative notes and interviews with the designers throughout. Each article reveals something you didn’t know about the creative process in one ship after another.

Volume Two contains the same level of quality, opening with a 20-page expansive section on Rick Sternbach’s iconic USS Voyager design, which is followed by a plethora of Delta Quadrant ships in the opening 50 pages of the book, including the never-seen-on-screen Aeroshuttle, the Delta Flyer, Neelix’s shuttle Baxial (“The Chute”), the USS Raven (“Dark Frontier”), the USS Prometheus (“Message in a Bottle”) and the ill-fated USS Equinox (“Equinox”).

More abstract choices in the 160-page second volume include three standout Xindi ships (Insectoid, Reptilian and Aquatic) from Star Trek: Enterprise‘s third season, designed by Eaves, Drexler and Eaves again, respectively. More Enterprise-era choices include the Andorian Battle Cruiser (“Cease Fire”), the NX-Alpha (featured in the standout episode “First Flight”) and the sleek Enterprise-J (“Azati Prime”).

The story behind each of these designs echo every article in the book, from early sketches to finished product with detailed notes and sketches.

The list and themes of other ships included in each book run the gamut from Romulan — the Drone Ship (“Babel One”), 22nd-century Bird of Prey (“Minefield”), the 24th Century D’deridex-class Warbird (“The Neutral Zone”) and the Valdore (Star Trek: Nemesis) — to Vulcan Suurok-class (“Breaking the Ice”), as well as the Vulcan D’Kyr-type (“Shockwave, Part II”) and Vahklas transport ship (“Fusion”).

In discussing Andrew Probert’s original Romulan Warbird (D’deridex-class), a fascinating sketch is featured of his original vertical design, which had the same general look and feel of the final horizontal design, but standing on one end. Those stark images and details are a highlight of Volume Two.

Andy Probert’s original vertical Romulan Warbird concepts.

One other section in Volume Two deserving of a callout is a 20-page section on V’Ger (Star Trek: The Motion Picture) and the design elements included in the flight inside V’Ger. This original section features artwork from the great Syd Mead and Robert McCall, integrated with the visual effects of Doug Trumball. It’s a wonderful oral history of the visuals from the first Star Trek film.

*   *   *

The most notable item missing from the reprinted articles on each design is the section detailing the appearance history of each ship, a valuable resource summary for some of the lesser-known ships. It’s understandable that it wasn’t included in these reprinted articles. After all, these books are obviously about designing the ships, where no stone is left unturned in breaking down the creation of more than 67 ships in the two volumes.

Ultimately, while these volumes aren’t necessarily essential if you’ve collected the 16-page magazines included with each ship, these two volumes are an excellent addition for the completest collector of the Eaglemoss starship models.

For fans in the United States, you can order the Designing Starships books here at Eaglemoss’ US store; in the UK, you can order through their local store (Volume 1 and Volume 2).

In Eaglemoss’ US store, TrekCore readers can use promo code TREKCORE at checkout for 10% off any ‘Star Trek’ collectible purchase $50 or greater (Starships, Plaques, Binders, Graphic Novels).

PC Gamers: TREK ONLINE Son’a Battlecruiser Giveway

TrekCore is hosting another new Star Trek Online contest to celebrate the recent release of Season 13.5, and today we’re giving away five Son’a Intel Battlecruisers for PC players!

The contest has ended! All winners – Achim, Jake, Leona, Mark, and Mike – have been notified by email.

These powerful vessels are the vanguard of the Son’a fleet – as seen in 1998’s Star Trek: Insurrection – and they’re capable of withstanding heavy fire while simultaneously undermining their foes’ ability to put up a strong fight – all without sacrificing offensive firepower.

Son’a Intel Battlecruisers come equipped with the Console – Universal – Subspace Barrier Agitator. Building from their knowledge of dangerous subspace weaponry, the Son’a developed this specialized piece of deflector technology capable of analyzing localized space near an enemy to find weak points in the barrier between normal space and subspace.

Then, using an automated quantum drill, these weak points are violently torn open to create volatile anomalies that will seek out enemies and damage them while draining their subsystem energy.

To enter the contest, just email us with your name by August 8, after which five names will be randomly selected to win one Star Trek Online Son’a Intel Battlecruiser. All winners will be emailed the in-game code and instructions how to add the ship to your Star Trek Online PC account.

Good luck to all!

Alex Kurtzman & Akiva Goldsman on Making DISCOVERY Contemporary

Thanks to all of you for hanging with us this past week as we’ve been covering all things Star Trek: Discovery at San Diego Comic-Con! Today we’ve got our final interview from the Discovery press event, with series executive producers Alex Kurtzman and Akiva Goldsman.

TrekCore contributor Sam Darragh of the Trekkie Girls was our roving reporter at Saturday’s press junket, and she met up with the pair of producers to get their take on staying true to Star Trek‘s legacy but updating the series for modern times.

TREKCORE: My question is, how much of producing “Star Trek: Discovery” has been a balancing act between the desire of fans, the network requirements — and the perceived will its creator, Gene Roddenberry?

KURTZMAN: I think we’re very in sync about staying consistent with Roddenberry’s vision, and I think everyone also recognizes that in order to make show relevant, it has to exist in a world in which television and film, the line between the two has become very blurred.

So, from a production point of view, the demands of the network have been, ‘Let’s make it worth the money.’ And I mean, the money I mean, worth the [subscription] money that people spend to watch the show. And no one has ever questioned the core of what “Trek” needs to be.

So it’s not like we got some notes that the studio is asking us to do that is fundamentally changing the nature of what “Star Trek” is.

So, we are, in a weird way, our own biggest police – and the debates that we have in the room and with each other about what’s right for “Trek” and what “Trek” means is… in a way, we’re harsher on each other, probably, than anybody else.

GOLDSMAN: I think what Alex said is entirely true. We are constantly alive in our process, our ability to tell stories that are REALLY “Star Trek” and also do it in a way that is contemporary and reflective of what we’re going through today – both culturally and politically.

It’s a great opportunity for us, as we’re big fans, and we delight in the chance not to screw it up! (Laughs)

Keep coming back to TrekCore as we approach Star Trek: Discovery‘s debut September 24.

STAR TREK: DISCOVERY’s Anthony Rapp on Fan Passions and Social Media

Comic-Con may be over, but our Star Trek: Discovery coverage continues today with another interview with new cast-member Anthony Rapp, who takes on the role of Starfleet scientist Lietuenant Paul Stamets in the upcoming series!

TrekCore contributor Sam Darragh of the Trekkie Girls was our roving reporter at Saturday’s press junket, and she connected with Rapp to chat about his character and his desire to connect with fans via Twitter and on other social media, and his understanding of fan passions ahead of the new series.

TREKCORE: You seem very engaged with fans on social media, which we’re all very grateful for. You seem genuinely proud to be part of the ‘Star Trek’ universe. How much does that mean to you?

RAPP: It means the world to me. I feel like this experience is all ‘bonus round’ experience, because I had a genuinely peak experience in my mid-20’s when I got to be a part of [the original Broadway cast of] “Rent” — and that was in the early days of the internet. I was, uh, I met people through AOL chat room and message boards!

You know, it would be a little harder to really participate in message boards these days. I wouldn’t be allowed to, because of any chance of spoilers or whatever, but I do visit them, and I’m so curious, always, about the opportunity as artists that we have to interact with our audience.

We are all human beings on this planet, and we are all passionate about things we’re passionate about. And as a fan myself of many things, I follow things on social media, so I’m really happy to — and honored that people are interested in interacting with me on Twitter and Instagram and stuff like that, and to get to share glimpses [of the show].

And we’re going to get to share more now, we’re going to be a little more public about some stuff.

TREKCORE: We look forward to it!

RAPP: It’s been really, really gratifying to get to see the enthusiasm, and even — I understand there’s skepticism, understandable, we get how passionate people are, and that they don’t want anything to be ruined, so they feel protective.

I get that. I fully know that that’s the case, and I pledge from my heart and soul that we are doing our very best to bring this, the most full life that it can be.

We’ve only gotten a brief glimpse of Rapp in Discovery so far, appearing in just a few frames of the Comic-Con trailer alongside Rekha Sharma’s Commander Landry, escaping in a shuttlecraft with Cadet Tilly (Mary Wiseman) and Commander Burnham (Sonequa Martin-Green).

While we know he’s an astromycologist – an expert in unearthly fungus – and that he works in the Discovery engineering section with Tilly, but past that our information of Lt. Stamets is limited… but that will soon change, when Star Trek: Discovery debuts September 24.

Mary Wiseman on DISCOVERY’s Young Cadet, Sylvia Tilly

Our Star Trek: Discovery Comic-Con coverage isn’t over yet! This time we’ve got a brief interview with the youngest member of the USS Discovery’s crew, Starfleet cadet Sylvia Tilly, played by Mary Wiseman.

TrekCore contributor Sam Darragh of the Trekkie Girls was our roving reporter at yesterday’s press junket, and she caught up with Wiseman just for a moment at the end of the press session to see what we could find out about this Starfleet hopeful!

TREKCORE: Could you tell us something about Cadet Tilly? We barely know anything about her so far!

WISEMAN: Cadet Tilly is a fourth-year cadet at Starfleet Academy, and she’s working on the DISCOVERY. She ends up being roomates with Michael [Burnham] and Michael becomes kind of a mentor to her, and a very unlikely friendship ensues.

She works in engineering, with Lieutenant Stamets (Anthony Rapp)… and she’s a cool girl!

Sylvia Tilly (Wiseman) worries about Burnham (Sonequa Martin-Green) sharing a bunk space.

We got our first on-screen glimpse of Tilly a shuttle wearing hazard gear, along with (as she describes above) her time with roommate Michael Burnham (Sonequa Martin-Green) soon after her arrival on the Discovery.

Our Star Trek: Discovery content continues tomorrow!

James Frain on Inheriting the Role of ‘Sarek’ for STAR TREK: DISCOVERY

We continue our ongoing Star Trek: Discovery Comic-Con coverage with another new interview, this time with the series’ resident Vulcan, actor James Frain – taking over for Mark Lenard as Ambassador Sarek.

TrekCore contributor Sam Darragh of the Trekkie Girls was our roving reporter at yesterday’s press junket, and she caught up with Frain to chat about his character and his desire to both pay tribute to Lenard’s original performance, but to also make this Sarek his own.

TREKCORE: Sarek has almost two rather different characters from different timelines. How much creativity have you had in creating your own Sarek, and how much do you think is drawn from the previous two [Mark Lenard and Ben Cross]?

FRAIN: Well, I feel a great sense of responsibility to Mark Lenard’s performance because he was the first to establish the character, and did such a fantastic job. So, I had him very much in mind but I also felt like, we change so much in our lives.

[Mark Lenard’s performance is] where he ends up, but he’s lived for 200 years. So who was he 50 years, or 100 years before that? Like, who is this guy who marries a human being, when humans have an emotional culture, and Vulcans believe that emotion causes war?

It simply has to be repressed, because it’s dangerous, yet here he is, playing with danger – that seems to me to be kind of exciting… and kinda sexy, dare I say it!

Revealed in yesterday’s SDCC panel was the surprising news that not only does Sarek take an active role in Michael Burnham’s (Sonequa Martin-Green) life, but in fact he is portrayed as an adoptive father in Star Trek: Discovery — and like you, we’re eagerly awaiting how the writers fit this new twist into the Trek history we all know and love.

SCOOP: Shazad Latif on DISCOVERY’s P.O.W. Survivor, Lt. Ash Tyler

After yesterday’s big San Diego Comic-Con panel for Star Trek: Discovery, we hopped backstage with the cast and crew for time in the press room to find out more about these characters and their role in the Trek universe!

Shazad Latif, originally cast back in December into one of the show’s Klingon roles, later moved to the role of a Starfleet lieutenant this spring in a bit of a surprising switch.

TrekCore contributor Sam Darragh of the Trekkie Girls was our roving reporter at yesterday’s press junket, and she caught up with Latif to chat about his character, Lt. Ash Tyler, and the change in position within the Discovery cast.

TREKCORE: Thank you very much for talking to us. Just interested to learn about your character, Lietenant Tyler.

LATIF: So I play Lieutenant Tyler, he’s a Starfleet officer. We meet him as a P.O.W. in a prison cell.

TREKCORE: A P.O.W.!

LATIF: Prisoner of war.

TREKCORE: Okay, yeah.

LATIF: He’s gone through some horrible things and we follow him as he as he tries to find the sort of man that he is as he comes back to the ship and that’s about as much as I can say!

TREKCORE: That’s quite a lot, actually – quite a lot! You were originally cast as one of the Klingons.

LATIF: Yeah, so I arrived in Toronto where we started to get the scripts in early for rehearsal, and this character of Tyler was open, and the producers said, “Would you like to try out for this?” and I went, “Yes!” It’s a great looking part. So we did that, and it worked out, and it was a good [fit].

TREKCORE: And what’s your position on board?

LATIF: I’m a security officer.

TREKCORE: Security officer, oh well we look forward to learning more about you, and thank you so much for talking to us!

This brand-new information about Latif’s character plays into the war with the Klingons expected in the new series, which Discovery’s Captain Lorca (Jason Isaacs) blames on Michael Burnham (Sonequa Martin-Green), as seen in the newest trailer for the series.

We haven’t seen Lieutenant Tyler on-screen just yet, but that’s sure to change as we approach the September 24 launch date of Star Trek: Discovery.

Breaking Down the DISCOVERY Comic-Con Trailer!

Now that we’ve gotten our best look yet at the brand-new Star Trek: Discovery trailer from Saturday’s panel at San Diego Comic-Con, it’s time to do what you know we do best: digging into the images revealed to find out what story points we can uncover!

First, if you haven’t seen ’em, check out our new gallery of screencaps from the new trailer, which we’ll be using below!

Note: our analysis will be arranged in our best guess at story order — and we will be including a few caps from the first trailer from back in May as well, for additional context — so if you are watching out for spoilers, be warned!

While this is mostly our speculation, we feel pretty good about much of the below ideas – but if things don’t turn out quite this way in the finished episodes, well, it’s certainly possible! (After all, we freely admit that we may have a few things out of order here – or may be totally incorrect in some spots – but isn’t that half the fun of this kind of analysis?)

Thanks to Alex Perry for the assistance!

*   *   *

In a flashback to childhood, we see Sarek (James Frain) discover a young Michael Burnham – we know from today’s panel that her parents are killed, likely in this incident – and Sarek initiates a mind-meld to connect with the child.

An attack (?) leaves this location in flames – note steps up to the triangular lit area, and steps apparently down into each circular division.

Years later, Burnham (Sonequa Martin-Green) is seven years into her tenure serving under Captain Philippa Georgiou (Michelle Yeoh), aboard the USS Shenzhou.

On an away mission to a desert planet, where the two avoid contact with the crepuscular alien which has a mass of tentacles and a tail that truly makes this non-humanoid appear dangerous.

During this mission they must fashion a sign for the Shenzhou to location them and extract them from the surface. Following Georgiou’s lead, Burnham trudges through the desert, chatting about the first officer’s career path and such…

…until she hears a noise overhead: the Shenzhou breaking through the clouds above.

The Shenzhou arrives. (Trailer 1)
Up to the ship they go, Burnham surprised by her captain’s plan. (Trailer 1)

The Shenzhou then breaks orbit, revealing that Georgiou and Burnham were creating a Starfleet delta in the sand with their footsteps.

Meanwhile, Klingon T’Kuvma (Chris Obi), who hasn’t had great luck in his past — attacked and beaten by others — has now risen to power as leader of his house.

T’Kuvma seeks to unite the warring factions of the Klingon Empire, so he locates and takes over the ancient Sarcophagus ship, parked on a desolate planet.

As part of his goal to “Light the Fire” — a ritual that “sounds the call for all [Klingon] houses to unite” (per SDCC display signage) — T’Kuvma and his house gather aboard the vessel after piloting it to a distant star system to commit one of their own warriors to the Sarcophagus.

This dead (?) Klingon is interred in the Sarcophagus, which is floated up to be released to space after being turned into the Torchbearer — who then wears the armored suit only available to “a warrior… who is chosen through a sacred ritual.”

As the warrior is sacrificed to become the Torchbearer, his fellow Klingons cry out to Sto’vo’kor to announce his impending arrival.

Meanwhile, the Shenzhou arrives at that distant star system, where they detect an “object of unknown origin” and investigate (from Trailer 1) – the Klingon oblisk seen in concept art.

Oblisk concept art detailed at StarTrek.com today.

Burnham jets over in her Starfleet spacesuit (after persuading Georgiou to let her check it out), and finds the ancient Klingon obelisk — possibly launched from the Sarcophagus ship? — where she inadvertently interrupts the Klingons’ ritual and encounters the Torchbearer.

(Trailer 1)
Burnham’s helmet heads-up display, with the Shenzhou appearing in graphical form.
(Trailer 1)

She clearly doesn’t do well in the encounter, as we then see her tumbling off into space with cracked and damaged suit, her heads-up display failing.

Presumably she’s rescued from this dangerous state, as she lies getting scanned for injuries in the Shenzhou medical bay – note Martin-Green’s short hair, which she wears during her time on the Shenzhou.

(Trailer 1)

Burnham has a conversation with Sarek about their encounter with the Klingons, and learns from the Vulcan that “the Klingon Empire has been in disarray for generations…”

…and that (as detailed in May’s trailer), “great unifiers are few and far between, but they do come… often such leaders will need a profound cause for their followers to rally around.”

(Trailer 1)

Who do we know is a “great unifier,” but T’Kuvma, who has been described as someone who seeks to unite the Klingon houses together. Drawn to the Shenzhou by the Torchbearer’s encounter on the oblisk — perhaps while Burnham is still away from the Shenzhou — T’Kuvma and his Sarcophagus ship confront the Federation vessel.

“We have been waiting for someone worth of our attention,” T’Kuvma states ominously.

T’Kuvma communicates to a set of Klingons via hologram – very fancy dressers. High Council?

At some point after the Sarcophagus ship arrives, Burnham and Georgiou beam over to that Klingon vessel to try and stop T’Kuvma’s actions, and are attacked by the Klingons on site.

After their return to the Shenzhou, possibly after learning some crucial information that drives her decision-making process, we believe at this point is where Burnham makes the big choice that drives the ongoing arc of the season.

It’s something that seems to clearly disadvantage the Shenzhou against the Klingons — after pleading her case (and failing) with Georgiou (that ‘cut off the head’ speech in Trailer 1), Burnham decides to take action on her own.

Burnham makes her big gamble. (Trailer 1)
…and the crew realizes that’s done something seriously wrong.

After she takes unauthorized action, Burnham is escorted off the bridge by security.

During this affair, a fleet of Klingon battle cruisers arrives on the scene — likely drawn by “the Fire,” that white-hot energy that affected the crew in Trailer 1 — as Ensign Connor’s sensor display is flooded by incoming warp signatures.

Meanwhile in the Klingons stop playing nice and attack the Shenzhou, leading to a big space battle.

The battle between the Klingons and the Shenzhou rages as weapons fire is exchanged on both sides.

Burnham is talking to another officer who is blasted into space when a hull breach forms nearby — and the explosive force from the Klingon’s weapon knocks Burnham unconscious while trapped inside a forcefield.

…and the force of that last Klingon volley does a number on the Shenzhou, blowing up half the consoles on the bridge.

At some point the USS Europa — another Starfleet vessel — collides with a massive, cloaked Klingon ship when responding to the Shenzou‘s notice of engaging the armada.

Perhaps this occurs if the ship arrives in response to Georgiou’s signal to Starfleet.

The green energy seen rolling up the ship may be a cloaking field collapsing.
A ‘USS Europa’ marking can be seen at the base of the nacelle strut.
…as seen from the Shenzhou’s bridge: an enormous Klingon vessel is revealed.
The USS Europa is split in two by the collision…
…and ultimately destroyed.

Shocked but resolved to keep fighting, Georgiou looks to be engulfed by more explosions on the bridge.

Burnham finally awakes, shocked to find that she’s surrounded on all sides by hull breaches to the vacuum of space.

As the crew begins to evacuate the Shenzhou

The only option Burnham has to survive is to blast herself through hard vacuum to the main part of the ship, so she can reach the escape pods.

After making that journey, she evacuates the Shenzhou with the rest of the crew.

*   *   *

Some time – or years – later, we find Burnham locked up in prison for her actions that lead to the end of the Shenzhou, where Gabriel Lorca (Jason Isaacs) comes to recruit her for a new mission.

“You chose to do the right thing,” Lorca says, “even at great cost to yourself.” Admitting, perhaps, that her actions lead to the Shenzhou‘s abandonment?

“You helped start a war,” Lorca continues. “Don’t you want to help me end it?”

We now follow Burnham aboard the USS Discovery, where Lorca has claimed that they “are creating a new way to fly” – whatever that means.

While we see Lorca poking around a force field in some kind of laboratory, Burnham (still in her gold prison jumpsuit) finds herself sharing a room with Cadet Sylvia Tilly (Mary Wiseman), and seeing some odd science.

Note now that for all scenes post-Shenzhou, Martin-Green sports a different hairstyle.

Exploring the Discovery, Burnham find a large agricultural lab which confuses the heck out of her – perhaps something astromycologist Lt. Stamets is studying?

 

Finally, in what seems to be the big second-half action sequence, Burnham — along with Tilly, Lt. Paul Stamets (Anthony Rapp) and security officer Landry (Rekha Sharma) — appears to return to the not-actually-destroyed Shenzhou for some mysterious reason.

Whatever happens over there can’t be good, as it leads to Burnham and crewmates sprinting through the corridors, tearing through the Jeffries tubes and yelling at her new crewmates to blast off in their shuttle.

The shuttle crew makes it back to the Discovery, and the ship goes to warp:

Later — and we suspect this occurs in a subsequent episode — Burnham somehow encounters Harry Mudd (Rainn Wilson) in the first of what is rumored to be several appearances this first season.

Note the curiosity of Burnham’s now-silver uniform highlights — also seen in this production photo released Saturday — and only three shoulder stripes compared to her previous four gold ones.

“I’m Mudd!”

Remember, as we said in the beginning: this is just our speculation about how this story goes, but with the evidence at hand we feel pretty good about this layout — but we’ll see how things play out when Discovery arrives in September.

Sound off in the comments below with your thoughts on what you’ve seen so far!

Mudd and More in New DISCOVERY Photos, Poster

The Star Trek: Discovery whirlwind isn’t finished yet! After today’s cast panel at San Diego Comic-Con, CBS has released a new grouping of photos from the show’s upcoming first season, as well as a brand-new promotional poster for the series.

Rainn Wilson debuts his take on TOS-era con man Harry Mudd. (CBS)
Captain Georgiou (Michelle Yeoh) with phaser at the ready. (CBS)
Michael Burnham (Sonequa Martin-Green) ducks for cover. (CBS)
The Klingons scream to sto’vo’kor in front of the mysterious sarcophagus. (CBS)
Captain Gabriel Lorca (Jason Isaacs) taps on a force field. (CBS)

Along with the new photos, CBS also dropped this new Discovery series poster, again focused on Martin-Green’s Michael Burnham.

Still more to come tonight – stay tuned!

STAR TREK: DISCOVERY Reveals at SDCC: New Trailer, Spock’s Sister (!), and More!

It’s been months of buildup, but Star Trek: Discovery‘s big day at San Diego Comic-Con has arrived – and the new series took Ballroom 20 at SDCC by storm this afternoon!

The 45-minute panel opened with a brand-new look at the upcoming series, showcasing a trailer full of new footage from Discovery, including our first live look at Jason Isaac’s character (Captain Gabriel Lorca of the USS Discovery), along with our first glimpse of Rainn Wilson’s Harry Mudd.

After first hitting the Discovery prop, art, and costume gallery earlier in the day, Discovery cast members Sonequa Martin-Green (Burnham), Jason Isaacs (Lorca), Anthony Rapp (Stamets), Doug Jones (Saru), Shazad Latif (Tyler), and Mary Wiseman (Tilly) joined Rainn Wilson (Harry Mudd) on stage to discuss the series and answer fan questions submitted prior to the event.

Also joining the crew are producers Aaron Harberts and Gretchen J. Berg, as well as Alex Kurtzman.

Martin-Green reveled that she first got the call confirming she won the role of Michael Burnham while she was traveling in Buenos Aries, describing her reaction as one where she both “screamed, then cried” after learning the news.

On the changes to, producer Alex Kurtzman reiterated that the production and writing team are “all huge fans of the original series and obviously want to be accurate… we are within canon. It’s a little bit larger… in scale but we are very consistent with our origins.”

Regarding Gabriel Lorca, actor Jason Issacs admitted that his character is probably more “fucked up” than previous captains, and that he’s not trying to either look or sound like some of his Star Trek predecessors in the command chair.

Martin-Green reiterated previous comments about diversity being a central tenant of Star Trek, with Martin-Green saying that if viewers “say they love the legacy of Star Trek but don’t love [the diversity], then you’ve missed it. I encourage you to come on that journey with us.”

Producer Gretchen Berg said that the Klingon cast will be speaking Klingonese in the snew series, and that “you’ll have to get out your glasses, you will be reading” – meaning lots of subtitles for the warrior race! She continued, “we’ve gone to great lengths to be accurate with our Klingon language.”

She did also go on to say that they don’t want Klingons to be portrayed as “thugs of the universe” and that the team is working to “expand the culture” of the species. “The Klingons have their own pride, interests & talents,” said Berg.

Three Klingons in ‘Star Trek: Discovery.’

Doug Jones next spoke about his character Lt. Commander Saru, who as a Kelpian stands nearly seven feet tall on set – and has not just an alien face, but wears hooves for feet! (Guess he doesn’t get some of those cool Discovery uniform boots we saw at the costume gallery!)

https://twitter.com/TGVIA/status/888879687174410240

Aaron Harberts described the series central storyline as trying to show how conflict can be solved by peace; even though some parties may “make mistakes along the way” – and how in the end, it’s about “understanding each other.”

Lt. Paul Stamets – a.k.a. actor Anthony Rapp – spoke next, revelaing that “love interest and partner” on the series will be Dr. Hugh Culber, played by actor Wilson Cruz, last seen in Netflix’s 13 Reasons Why earlier this year. “I play the first openly gay character in the history of TV Star Trek,” Rapp commented, and “I’m very proud of that – and that he’s a scientist.”

Finally, revealing some backstory on Michael Burnham, Martin-Green detailed that her character’s parents were killed during her childhood, which lead to Sarek (James Frain) taking her up as a surrogate father – and then connected her with Michelle Yeoh’s Capt. Georgiou as she grew older.

Frain spoke about his inheritance of the Sarek role, previously played by both Mark Lenard and Ben Cross (in Trek ’09), finding it to be a “fascinating and complex” role – portraying a Vulcan now forced to raise a fully-human child.

So this means that yes, Spock has a human, adopted sister we’ve never heard about — the producers say to “stick with [them],” and that this new family dynamic will be explained in the upcoming series. “You’ll see where it’s going,” says Alex Kurtzman, “but we are staying consistent with canon.”

Making a surprise announcement on the panel is news that composer Jeff Russo — best known at present for his work on FX’s Fargo and Legion — will be taking over the music for Star Trek: Discovery, and that the team behind the series has already started to put together the show’s title sequence.

Alex Kurtzman continued to implore  fans to stick with the series throughout its first year, promising  that there will be “big reveals at several points though the course of season… a lot of surprises along the way.”

Martin-Green leaned heavily on the team spirit found in her castmates, staying quite humble as the “lead” of the series:

“I promise you that we passionately believe in what we are doing,” said Anthony Rapp. “We want to do something meaningful, and honor what came before [Discovery].”

Stay tuned as we hit the press room at San Diego Comic-Con and speak with the show’s cast and crew!