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Ira Behr’s DEEP SPACE NINE Documentary Launches Crowdfunding Campaign

FEB. 10 UPDATE: The “What We Left Behind” campaign has hit its original $150,000 goal in less than 48 hours – and has now published expanded “stretch” goals at the $250k, $350k, $425k, and $500k levels to expand the production and scope of the documentary project.

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If you know our us, we don’t typically cover fundraiser campaigns – but with Star Trek: Deep Space Nine showrunner Ira Behr’s previously-announced documentary on the acclaimed series, we’re excited to see what the team is putting together and wanted to spread the word!

First announced back in August, “What We Left Behind” has now launched a crowdfunding campaign to help with both post-production costs and licensing fees required to allow Deep Space Nine photo and video content to be included in the documentary project, similar to 455 Films’ previous Trek-related documentary, the Leonard Nimoy biopic For the Love of Spock.

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From the Indiegogo campaign page:

Our documentary film, What We Left Behind: Looking Back at Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, will take a detailed look at this historic series and consider the reasons Deep Space Nine went from a family outcast to a Star Trek mainstay. The film will also contain a “what if” segment in which the original writers brainstorm a theoretical 8th season of the show.

Spearheaded by original show-runner Ira Steven Behr, directed by Adam Nimoy (For the Love of Spock), and with a handful of key interviews already ‘in the bag,’ the #DS9Doc now needs YOUR HELP to reach completion by finishing filming, editing, and post-production.

As an independent film team without the same resources of a large movie studio, we are counting on the support of fellow DS9 fans to take part and show their interest by helping to complete and release the film, and receiving valuable perks and rewards in return.

Filmmaking is an expensive venture, and while many of our team members and cast have already generously offered much of their own time (and money!) into the filming of the documentary, the post-production phase is a lengthy and technical process involving many aspects which we simply don’t have the ability to fund without outside help.

Our goal of (just under) $150,000 is the minimum we’ve calculated necessary to complete post-production, license all necessary music and footage, and release a high-caliber film. However, further funding will allow us to do more and release more exclusive rewards just for you, the backers (keep an eye out for our STRETCH GOALS, coming soon!).

The initial fundraising goal is just under $150,000 USD, and there are a variety of reward packages available to donors, based on contribution amounts, including special screenings, Blu-ray and DVD copies of the documentary, and other items.

Based on the Indigogo campaign page, What We Left Behind appears to be targeted for release in early 2018. As more information becomes available, we’ll continue to update you here on this exciting Deep Space Nine retrospective project!

STAR TREK ONLINE Elachi Ornash Battlecruiser Giveaway

TrekCore is hosting a Star Trek Online contest to celebrate the recent release of Season 12 – Reckoning. We’re giving away 5 Elachi Ornash Battlecruisers, which are one of the rarest ships in the game.

FEBRUARY 22: Winners have been contacted!
Congratulations to Spencer D., Morgen S., Charles M., Carlos O., and Paul.

A tough and versatile design, the Tier 6 Ornash-class battlecruiser is a capable and deadly opponent – alone or as part of a unified force. It can swiftly deploy an array of support craft through the use of an Enhanced Elachi Subspace Transceiver, adding instant backup to the battle.

This starship features a Lieutenant Command Tactical/Command Bridge Officer Station and a Lieutenant Universal/Command Bridge Officer Station.

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Season 12 puts out a desperate call to captains across the galaxy to battle the powerful Tzenkethi, a highly-intelligent, militant warp-capable species. The mission begins when the Lukari set out on a journey to investigate some unusual activity in an unexplored region of the Alpha Quadrant.
 
Upon further inspection, they discover data that suggests weaponized use of protomatter and request immediate assistance from the Alliance. Captains must work together with the Lukari to prevent a looming cataclysmic attack from the Tzenkethi.
 
To enter the contest, just email us with your name and email contact info by February 21. On 2/22/17, 5 names will be randomly selected to win one Star Trek Online Elachi Ornash Battlecruiser. Those winners will be emailed the in-game code and instructions how to add the Elachi Ornash Battlecruiser to your Star Trek Online account.
 
Good luck to all!

FIRST LOOK: New DEEP SPACE NINE DVD Collection

The new Star Trek: Deep Space Nine DVD box set hits stores next Tuesday – the first reissue of the popular Trek series in North America since the original 2003 release – and today we’ve got the first hands-on photos of the new collection!

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This new space-saving box set contains all seven seasons in three DVD cases, with two three-year Epik Pak cases and the final season of the show in a traditional seven-disc pack.

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The cover art for each case is, frankly, gorgeous – the colorful, stained-glass look to each design (and the outer box, as well) gives the impression of looking through one of the mystical Orbs of the Prophets, with those distinctive crystal facets on every face of the packaging.

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Inside each case, the artwork contains the colorful patterns – along with a breakdown of each disc’s video content.

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As expected, the discs themselves are identical to the original 2003 DVDs released in North America – save for the lack of disc art found on those first sets – right down to the on-screen menus.

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The familiar DVD menus carry over to the new ‘Deep Space Nine’ collection.

Like those 2003 sets, all of the special features released through Best Buy-exclusive bonus discs (seen below) are not contained in this new collection. While they are part of the standard Deep Space Nine DVD sets outside of North America – due to different contractual requirements in Europe and elsewhere – they’re not part of this set.

(Fortunately for Enterprise and The Next Generation, the Blu-ray sets for those shows contained all the original Best Buy content in their HD collections.)

Also left out is David Livingston’s audio commentary track on “Crossover,” recorded specifically for the Alternate Realities Fan Collective DVD set back in 2008.

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The Best Buy bonus discs – released in 2003 – remain excluded from the new box set.

Despite the exclusion of the Best Buy content, this new North American DVD box set is the most affordable way ever to bring the entire Deep Space Nine saga home for fans in the USA and Canada – for a sale price of under $100 USD, this entire collection is near or below the 2003 single-season DVD prices.

And while the series is, of course, available through a multitude of streaming platforms, the DVDs are the highest-quality presentation of the spin-off series available in the marketplace, since the outlook for a future high-definition remastering doesn’t appear to be coming anytime soon.

So if you’ve been holding off for all these years on buying Star Trek: Deep Space Nine – or if your old season sets have started to fall apart (something affecting many!) – now’s a great time to revisit the Bajoran sector.

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You can order this new box set through our link below. Otherwise, you’ll find the box set (as well as newly-packaged individual seasons) in stores February 7.

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Order the
DS9 Companion

Order the
Deep Space Nine
DVD Collection



Order the
DS9 Documentary


STAR TREK: VOYAGER Soundtrack Arriving This Month

As first teased over a year ago, La-La Land Records today has finally announced the debut date of their long-awaited Star Trek: Voyager expanded soundtrack release – coming on February 28.

This four-disc set is the first full Voyager music release since the original “Caretaker” soundtrack album all the way back in 1995, and something many Voyager fans have been asking for with bated breath!

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While La-La Land has not yet released their track listing, we’ll bring that to you in a follow-up report as soon as they’ve made those details public.

In the meantime, mark your calendars for the end of the month – the Voyager collection will go up for order at LaLaLandRecords.com at that time.

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Star Trek: Voyager
A Vision of the Future



Star Trek: Voyager
Complete Series on DVD



Star Trek: Voyager
A Celebration



Trek Comics Review: NEW VISIONS #14

nv14-coverBuy New Visions #14

I’ve always wanted to see more of Captain Kirk’s family than just the brief glimpse of Sam Kirk’s corpse in the TOS episode “Operation: Annihilate” – and I’ve finally gotten my wish in New Visions #14.

The real joy of John Byrne’s photo-realization of new adventures of the TOS milieu is that he gets to take us back to the possibilities that we never thought could happen. After all, he has the entire time surrounding the three seasons to play with in his work. The stories are endless, only limited to what he can imagine.

These are veritable episodes – not issues. Byrne has crafted each story to resemble an episode from the original series. The introduction completely mirrors the same few pre-credit moments when the story’s objective is revealed and you can almost hear the theme music preparing you for another adventure in Federation space.

In this episode, one of the engineering staff at Starbase 11 is dead and George Samuel Kirk is at the scene, confessing to be the murderer. The Enterprise is rerouted to rendezvous and bring Kirk – the Elder – back to Earth to stand trial for his crime. Of course, when a Klingon battlecruiser, commanded by none other than Commander Koloth, is in the neighbourhood, then there might be more to Sam Kirk’s story than meets the eye.

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What I have a problem with is how does Byrne manage to source the general type of photos he needs to work with? Even though he isn’t drawing this book, the photo-manipulation alone must take a tremendous amount of time; more so, I’d wager just that to draw it. For instance, Sam Kirk is really just William Shatner’s face and body in a different outfit and a heavier hairstyle and beard. Though it’s ingenious in its simplicity, that’s just one of the many details that Byrne edits to make the pictures for this story work.

Other minor examples are Spock’s calculating device, the addition of an unidentified security officer, the interior of the Klingon battlecruiser and the repurposing of William Campbell’s likeness from episodes of “The Squire of Gothos” as well as “The Trouble with Tribbles.” After all, even though Campbell originally played Koloth, there couldn’t have been enough Koloth images for Byrne to use; he had to take them from Campbell’s Trelane character as well, though some image editing in terms of facial hair and costume would have been employed.

I’ve read – and heard – criticism of Byrne’s work on this book take the form of questioning why he isn’t drawing the book. There are a number of responses to this. First, while Byrne is more than a capable artist, this is another field of visual representation that he is challenging himself to employ. An artist is always looking for new mediums of expression and Byrne has chosen this one tell these stories. Even though I am a faithful devotee to his artwork, I’m not going to criticise an artist for exploring new ways of expression – especially not John Byrne.

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Secondly, there is Byrne’s own modest discomfort of wrestling with likenesses. Again, I’m not going to disagree with an artist of his status, even though I’ve always been impressed with his work. I felt his rendering of Majel Barret Roddenberry as Number One from the original pilot episode was spot on and Leonard McCoy, Frontier Doctor also serves to challenge his own opinion of his work. Still, who am I to argue with Byrne’s own self-judgment?

Finally, there’s also the notion that Byrne gets to use the original images of the cast and pay homage to their performances in bringing them to life once more. While we may have lost Nimoy, Kelley and Doohan, in these pages they live again. We also get to see Shatner, Takei, Nichols and Koenig in the prime of their lives, recreating the roles that made them famous. Byrne has gifted them with a limited form of immortality. Only a true fan would be able to present such a gift.

Though I would love to see Byrne’s penciling again, one has to respect the artistic integrity that goes into the construction of this book. It’s a rare thing to see your heroes in their original roles as they were in their youth and this immediately brings me back to the days of my youth, watching Star Trek in its syndicated time, insisting that my mother hold supper for another ten minutes while I watch Shatner, Nimoy and Kelley polish off the last witticism that concludes yet another adventure in space.

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Byrne is honing his storytelling talents as opposed to his skill at visual recreations. He shows us his intimate knowledge of the franchise by referring to the Organian Peace Treaty and even goes as far as to modify that major TOS story development. He also demonstrates his knowledge of the characters by resting the story on the relationship between the Kirk brothers. There was a falling-out between the two that wasn’t able to be properly explored in the original series and wasn’t able to before Sam’s death on the Deneva Colony. Byrne hints at this difficulty, adding not only a note of authenticity but a tantalizing view of their relationship, which is something that every Star Trek fan would be eager to see more of.

Still, Byrne could go one step more. Will there be another appearance of Sam Kirk? Jim Kirk’s loneliness is an identifying hallmark of his character. He is isolated by the weight of his command, but the absence of family and love in his life is a tragic feature that Byrne is highlighting by simply hinting at the estrangement of the two brothers. There probably won’t be another appearance of Sam Kirk after this issue as that would de-emphasize Captain Kirk’s character at the expense of his fans’ desire of a happy ending for him.

We can’t see more of Kirk’s family, even though we may want to out of a sense of seeing him happy. James Kirk isn’t supposed to be a happy man. He is a good and brave man; a fine commander who cares for the welfare of his ship and crew, and will lay his life on the line for his family and his values.

But he is not a man who will find happiness in the comfort of family life and Byrne knows this.

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The only way to present this is by capturing the photo-images of Captain Kirk and by creating images of what Sam would look like in order to tell this story. Byrne’s strengths in this book are his love of the fandom and his epic storytelling talent, which is only limited by his imagination in manipulating the stock images at his disposal; and if he can repurpose them to tell more stories of the Original Series, well, then that’s just fine by me.

…after all, I never thought I’d actually see more Original Series episodes again. Thanks, John Byrne.

STAR TREK: DISCOVERY Set Footage Revealed

In a dramatic new trailer released today by CBS, we finally get our first look at Star Trek: Discovery in production after last week’s launch!

Glimpses of new alien costuming, Starfleet uniforms, set designs and digital creations, this new video finally gives us the first real look at the upcoming Trek television revival.

For those of you who can’t view the video due to region restrictions, it may be able to be watched through CBS’s official Star Trek: Discovery Facebook page:

 
We’ll have screencaps of this new trailer soon, but for now, sound off in the comments with your thoughts on this new look at Star Trek: Discovery!

UPDATEWe’ve now got a gallery of high-definition screencaps from the trailer above. Click through to our caps below!

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Trek Comics Review: STRANGER WORLDS #2

gl2-coverBuy Stranger Worlds #2

One of the least expected pieces of dialogue I’ve ever read in a comic was Hal Jordan expecting Sinestro to plant a bat’leth in his back.

It’s an unexpected and unlikely piece of comic engineering to meld these two properties together, but that’s the type of thing you’ll read in Stranger Worlds #2, this month’s chapter of the new Star Trek / Green Lantern crossover.

And it works.

Mike Johnson delivers another entertaining fun story in his treatment of these two properties; and while you can’t take this as canon, it’s definitely enjoyable.

Don’t get me wrong – Johnson isn’t disrespectful to either of these two properties; just because they don’t play a part in each other’s mainstream universes, it doesn’t mean that Johnson is forcing them to fit into each other’s respective continuum. In fact, it’s the opposite, with care, he finds details that from each continuum that make the story work in this issue.

For example, in the opening sequence, we see a classic match-up between arch-nemeses, Jordan and Sinestro fighting over the Manhunter relic they discovered. It holds a clue to restoring their partially-functioning rings in this universe. This scene is filled with classic repartee that you would expect from any regular Green Lantern book. However, we also see Kirk’s tactical response to the situation coupled with Spock’s cool reasoned advice. This all takes place in a matter of a few panels but already a reader gets a sense of the familiar qualities that make both these properties memorable.

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The main objective in this issue is to find the Oa that exists in the new reality the Green Lanterns have found themselves in. If it exists, then all of the Lanterns, regardless of their place in the spectrum, would be able to recharge their dwindling rings.

Of course, if Sinestro gets to it first, then his ability to lead the Klingon Empire to dominance in the galaxy is certainly assured.

Both Star Trek and comics fans are incredibly attentive to their continuities. It’s these two groups that writers in both fandoms respect and fear. The respect comes from their historical knowledge of the property and their awareness about the subjects. A real comic reader would not only have an innate sense of the correctness of the characters but also the plausibility of their responses to a given situation.

There’s no way that the other Green Lanterns could ignore a threat like Atrocitus. So when word of his attack on a starbase gets back to Earth, Kilowog, Guy Gardner and John Stewart take the first warp-capable transport to rendezvous with the Enterprise. It’s not only understandable but expected.

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IDW is making the most out of its Star Trek license. But this isn’t just about the respectful way in which the license if being maintained, it’s also an example of the savvy relationship-building with other publishing houses like DC Comics. This is fine collaboration – a literal creative nexus point combining the properties and talents of three dynamic idea factories. If you think about, this comic – while fun and entertaining in its own right – is an example of what other creative companies should be doing with their properties.

Mike Johnson makes the two properties work seamlessly. Kirk completely respects Jordan’s impulsiveness and Carol Ferris’s relationship with Montgomery Scott is completely acceptable. Mike has made permutations of the character relationships that I wouldn’t have expected but am completely entertained by.

So when a fateful villain arrives unexpectedly at the end of the book, released by Atrocitus, the leader of the Red Lanterns of rage, I was completely taken by surprise. Even though that particular incarnation of the villain is a tender spot with me, Johnson exploits it well for this particular storyline. I need to sit on his shoulder and watch him create. It would be a lesson, that’s for sure.

Turning to the art, Angel Hernandez’s clean, dynamic lines serve this book very well. His paneling paces the action well and accelerates the reader through the story. Hernandez’s art makes this book flow.

As usual, there are a variety of covers to go with this title.

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  • The regular cover by Angel Hernandez is a fateful one with Sinestro in the foreground and a crashing Enterprise behind him. Definitely a very dramatic cover and certainly captures the accuracy and the intensity of the story.
  • The artist’s edition variant cover – also by Hernandez – is a deliciously evil rogue’s gallery of villains. Sinestro, Larfleeze, and Atrocitus, grinning and standing menacingly over an outstretched Star Fleet hand must have been a lot of fun for Hernandez to draw. The black and white compilation really shows off Hernandez’s skill to its best. Out of the three covers, this is the one I enjoyed the most.
  • The retailer-incentive cover by Jen Bartel is also enjoyable. A stylized rendering of Carol Ferris as Star Sapphire and Lieutenant Uhura fighting alongside each other is dynamic and striking.

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This book is a delight to read. It’s an unexpected combination of franchises, but the combination of talent and careful attention to characters and the qualities that these successful properties possess make it a successful one.

FIRST LOOK: New ENTERPRISE Blu-ray and DVD Box Sets

The first Star Trek box sets of 2017 are in stores now, and it’s a return to the 2150’s with Enterprise on DVD and Blu-ray!

After more than a decade, CBS has released the first North American re-issue of Star Trek: Enterprise on DVD (though multiple sets have been put out in Europe over the years), as well as the first complete-series Blu-ray collection of the show since the season Blu-ray sets finished their run in 2014.

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Both new box sets contain the full four-season run of the prequel Trek series, with all of the previously-released DVD and Blu-ray disc content from past sets. Not included on the DVD collection are the Best Buy DVD bonus discs from the original 2005 debut, however those video features are part of the Blu-ray contents.

In addition, Shuttlepod One: Declassified – the only bit of retailer-exclusive bonus material from the 2013 Season 1 Blu-ray release – is also missing from the sets, a Best Buy-only streaming presentation never released on disc in North America. While this is a disappointment, it’s not a surprising exclusion based on previous CBS home releases.

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The Enterprise DVD collection is comprised of 27 discs across two disc cases; a now-familiar, oversized Epik Pak case holds the first three seasons, while a standard six-disc case contains Season 4 inside the glossy slip box.

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The cover artwork for each case is certainly a striking design, featuring both the ship and crew in some of the best-looking Enterprise packaging CBS has ever released.

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As we’ve seen throughout the last year, CBS really loves the Epik Pak case style, and the first three seasons are stacked up in the removable disc trays inside the first large case.

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As for the new four-season Blu-ray collection, the smaller number of discs (only 24, compared to the DVD set’s 27) means that the whole series can fit into one Epik Pak case, with the same artwork as the outer slipcover.

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Unlike the UK Enterprise Blu-ray box first released in 2013, the North American set doesn’t arrive inside a heavy, protective outer box; this new set has just a simple paper slipcover to surround the plastic disc case – which easily starts to show damage around the thin edges.

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As with all the other Epik Pak releases, the full Enterprise Blu-ray disc stack is removable from the outer case, so be careful when you’re opening the shell case so the discs don’t fall to the floor.

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If you’ve been holding off on picking up Star Trek: Enterprise, now’s the best time to pick up these seasons in these full-series collections – and unless you prefer to import from the UK (as the Blu-ray discs are region-free), this is the cheapest price the series has ever featured in North America on either disc format.

The hours of newly-filmed bonus features created for the Enteprise Blu-rays alone make the set worth the sub-$80 price — from the hour-long ‘In Conversation’ discussion with Rick Berman and Brannon Braga, to the full-cast reunion roundtable, to remarkably-candid interview segments with the cast and crew (including the rarely-heard-from Jolene Blalock).

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Netflix and other streaming services will always allow for quick and convenient revisitation to Star Trek: Enterprise, but with the depth of behind-the-scenes material on the Blu-ray release, we’re always going to recommend you invest in the full story of Star Trek: Enterprise for your home collection

The new Enterprise DVD set is available now, and while the Blu-ray box is exclusive to Best Buy for a few more weeks, you can preorder the Amazon release (due February 14) from our link below.

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Order the
Star Trek: Enterprise
DVD Collection!



Order the
Star Trek: Enterprise
Blu-ray Collection!


Trek Comics Review: WAYPOINT #3

waypoint3-coverOrder Waypoint #3

Set in the milieus of Voyager and Deep Space Nine, the two stories included in this month’s Star Trek: Waypoint #3 are equal measures of sweet and simple.

While these stories are hardly the edge of adventure or Borg-defeating action stories, they have an appeal that reminds us of the relationships formed between these characters. Every now and then, it’s good to remember that Gene Roddenberry wanted to export humanity to the stars, bringing with them their vices as well as their virtues.

Is that wrong for Star Trek? I don’t think so. The great thing about having fifty years of this amazing universe is that there are a great deal of settings in which to create stories. It’s a writer’s delight and there’s plenty of room for a couple of charming tales.

The other thing that I really appreciate about this comic is that it gives writers and artists a good amount of exposure. The Star Trek angle aside, I see what IDW is doing with this and it’s a damn good thing.

The first story is titled The Wildman Maneuver and features everyone’s favourite Captain’s Assistant, Naomi Wildman in a carefree child’s fantasy tale in which only she can rescue Voyager by securing the vital coffee needed by Captain Janeway to wake up and save the crew from enslavement.

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Written by Mairghread Scott and drawn by Corin Howell, this story gives some love to one of the show’s minor but adorable cast members. Anyone who has known a precocious and imaginative child can’t help but be amused by the adventure of young Miss Wildman. There is a precious innocence about this story that is not only refreshing but enough to give you that ‘feel-good’ vibe for the rest of the day.

This isn’t a sophisticated story by any stretch of the imagination, but its virtue is that it forces the reader to enjoy simpler things. Plus, the ‘comic-within-a-comic’ definitely has a witty but subtle appeal that is impossible to overlook. Corin Howell’s work demonstrates wonderful alacrity in the way she switches from the child-like etchings of Wildman’s (sorry … ‘Wild-Man’) comic to the rendering of Naomi’s actual life on board Voyager.

The second story, Mother’s Walk, has more serious overtones about Major Kira’s observance of Bajoran ceremony that highlights the bonds between mothers and daughters. With the loss of her mother during the Cardassian Occupation, of course this is a ceremony Kira believes she will be unable to perform, yet for the steady stream of volunteers from her DS9 crewmates to stand in her mother’s stead.

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Cecil Castellucci is the writer behind this tale and she strikes a chord with many female Trek fans as they reflect upon their own relationships with their own mothers. But moreover, there is a military theme in this short story as well when a reader considers the resiliency of women in occupied warzones. What is striking in this story is the mention of how threatened the Cardassians felt by the collective willpower of the Bajoran women determined to observe the rite of Shar D’an.

As usual, IDW has a variety of covers for their titles.

  • The standard cover by Daniel Warren Johnson is a generic scene of the Voyager bridge crew crash-landing on a planet’s fiery surface. Aside from the obvious Voyager story in the book, there is no other relationship, so it seems somewhat of a capricious choice.
  • The subscription cover is another generic one; the assemblage of the DS9 crew as featured in the latter seasons of the show, as indicated by Kira’s hairstyle. Drawn by David Messina, this is a solid piece of work.
  • The retailer incentive is a gorgeous photograph of Jeri Ryan’s Seven of Nine. While I tend not to like photos on comic covers, for some reason, I really couldn’t find anything disagreeable with it.

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The commonality between the two stories is the close-knit bonds amongst both crews. Though the lion’s share of attention tends to fall on TOS and TNG, it is good to see these two worthy franchises represented. But of course, this is the whole purpose of Waypoint: to enjoy a wider range of Trek and to allow a variety of fan preferences. After all, there is a whole wide universe of Trek to ejoy out there.

Simple and sweet. Yeah … that’s how I’d see this pleasant section of the Star Trek universe.