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Trek Comics Review #59: “Connection, Part 1”

It’s the penultimate issue of IDW Publishing’s ongoing Kelvin Timeline Star Trek comic series: the first installment of “Connection,” the next adventure in the new Five Year Mission.

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There’s four choices of comic covers to pick from this month:

Order Star Trek #59

  • The regular cover, by interior artist Tony Shasteen, is a wonderful surprise. This features the cast of the original Star Trek series imposed over half of the Enterprise. Kirk, Spock, McCoy, Uhura, Scotty, Sulu, and Chekov look terrific, with the good doctor sporting a smile that beams with charm. The coloring is also good, composed of a cool combination of yellows, oranges, and light pinks. This would make an outstanding print.
  • The subscription cover is by Josh Adams, with colors by Adam Guzowski. This is also a nice shot of the crew, but this features the current film stars on the bridge looking at something on the viewscreen. Every character’s stance and emotion tells reveals something about them: McCoy leans on a terminal, Scotty looks at Kirk’s action, the captain strongly points forward, Spock turns to watch Uhura, the comm officer’s mouth is agape at the vision, Chekov is startled, and Sulu bites his lip at the unknown. Nicely done. There’s a lot of space between the title and the characters; looks as if Adams misjudged the size of the logo. Still, a good cover.
  • IDW Publishing is celebrating the acquisition of the publication rights to ROM, and there’s one featuring art by Drew Moss and colors from Adam Guzowski. I like the Enterprise, the sky, and the monsters threatening ROM and Kirk. The heroes give me a bit of pause. ROM looks much smoother than I remember him being, with his suit almost appearing to be rubber. He’s also got a something in his hand that resembles a stick of dynamite. What happened to his neutralizer? Kirk is just in a funky pose. He’s too calm as he fires upon the horrors before him. I like ROM and I like Star Trek, but I was hoping for something better.
  • You’ll have to go online if you want a copy of the Supply Pod retailer variant by Tony Shasteen. This is a beautiful piece featuring the original McCoy, Kirk, and Spock in bust shots above a gorgeous Enterprise. There’s a star flare in the upper left corner that leads to the captain who’s surrounded by his two friends. The iconic ship takes up the bottom third of the cover as it speeds upwards diagonally. The colors, again, are really good on this, with McCoy looking the best and the red splay of energy whipping past the Enterprise gives it an excellent sense of motion. Again, this is print worthy.

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Mike Johnson finally gets to play in the best of both worlds: writing both the new and the old cast, side by side. “Connection” starts with Kirk waking up in his quarters… sort of. The entire issue is split down the horizontal center of book with the original series cast at the top and the film cast at the bottom.

Chris Pine’s Kirk has woken up in the Original Series’ Kirk’s quarters, while William Shatner’s Kirk is in the Kelvin Timeline. Though both characters are essentially doing the same things, this goes beyond a gimmick as Johnson shows the two thinking slightly different thoughts; his writing matches exactly how each interpretation of Kirk would think and speak in this situation.

Johnson does an exceptional job with these characters’ voices. Pine’s reaction to his uniform is “the colors and details were off,” while Shatner’s is, “the color are details were…unusual.” This slight tweaking echoes Shatner’s pauses and emphasis on certain words. As each man makes his way to a bridge that’s familiar, yet different, they become more alarmed. The character that each turns to in this situation was fitting, and their reactions to what they see on Page 6 cool.

What happens to each after this are very different, with certain crew members doing something to their obviously ailing captain; the dialogue at the bottom of 8 was spot on!

The reason for this switching of captains is revealed on page 11, and would work well enough for a movie premise. However, Johnson is not content to have just the captain switch places. On 12 many fans will have their longest dreams come true as one crew member goes somewhere not shown before. I laughed, was embarrassed, and felt sad at what occurs to the character at the top portion of the tale.

And it was impossible not to hear the bottom portion of this tale spoken in the actor’s voice. A third crew member also gets swapped, this time for humorous effect, and each behaves exactly as one would expect them.to; their final lines are 16 are perfection. The book has an excellent cliffhanger that leads into this series’ final issue.

Johnson captures each character’s voice and has quite a bit of fun swapping characters.

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What an usual assignment this must have been for Tony Shasteen.

First, getting only half the page to be able to communicate each story to the reader, and second, showing essentially the same story, though with one character flipped. This may seem like a simple thing, swapping out a character, but the amount of details that he had to keep track of must have been maddening.

Take for example the first page where Kirk wakes up: the Shatner’s Kirk has quarters that are littered with mementos, while the film version’s quarters would be spotless, and they are. I love all the bric-a-brac that surrounds the Pine-Kirk when he gets up. The look that each character has on his face upon seeing their surroundings starts this tale of confusion excellently.

Shasteen uses each character’s reactions superbly throughout this book; take, for example, when each considers their uniform, their stance in the turbolift, and their final panels on 3 — outstanding.

The character work on each page is terrific, with 6’s captains stellar, the smile from McCoy on 7 sweet, the top of 12 beautifully moody, the partner atop 13 and 14 dreamy, and the reactions on 16 great. The exterior shots of each Enterprise are too few, as Shasteen does a good job on these as well, with each releasing an object that’s drawn excellently.

Stylistically, I’m still not happy with Shasteen’s backgrounds, which are very sketchy when compared to the characters that inhabit them. They are instantly recognizable, but should be much tighter. Pages 4 – 7 and 14 & 15 are just too blurry, distracting the reader from the actions of the characters. And, good heavens, what in the world is happening behind Chekov on 19? That effect should have been toned down immensely.

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David Mastrolonardo nails the coloring of this book sensationally. The opening shots in the Kirks’ quarters uses many similar colors (flesh and reds), but tweaks them every so slightly to show the differences exist not only with the captains but the colors (Shatner is paler than Pine, and the Original Series’ quarters are darker).

Both men wear the same color of mustard on their uniforms, which unites the pair visually, but their backgrounds are so wholly different as to have the reader join in their confusion. There are a lot of lens flares on the bridge of the Enterprise from the films, and I wish they had been lessened; although this is yet another visual sign for the reader.

The bottom panel on 6 is a particularly slick bit of coloring for a mirror effect that’s sharp. The shots in space are also good, with violets used to show the difference between Treks.

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Captain’s (or is that “Captains'”?) logs, sounds, dialogue, yells, communications, and the tease for next month’s final issue all hail from AndWorld Design.

The logs and dialogue are the same font, differentiated only by the shape and color of their dialogue balloons, which works, though I would have rather seen a different font employed. The communications, which appear on 19 use a different font and balloon shape, so it could have been done with the logs. The yells are done for humorous effect and they are funny.

The opening alarms to wake the Kirks are different, which is a slick way to tell the reader that this will be a story about slight differences. Nicely done.

Another Hour of New TREK BEYOND Clips and Interviews

Another day, and nearly another hour of STAR TREK BEYOND videos to take up your Saturday afternoon!

First up is this new clip from the film, giving us our first good look at Lydia Wison’s character Kalara, a pink-skinned humanoid which many have noted shares more than a passing resemblance to Alan Rickman’s character in Galaxy Quest.

Here’s another short interview clip on Sofia Boutella’s Jaylah, featuring some snippets of new scenes from the film – including her holographic duplication technology, where she can seemingly fight three bad guys at once.

Barco Escape has released this new trailer showcasing their three-screen plans for BEYOND when it arrives in theaters next week, featuring some new shots of the Swarm attack on the Enterprise. If you are near one of their new theaters, go check it out!

Krall actor Idris Elba spent Wednesday in London, helping to sign off on this large outdoor mural of the international BEYOND poster – and then surprised fans at a local screening of the film.

Finally, if yesterday’s dump of long-form interviews with the cast and crew weren’t enough, here’s even MORE conversation with the BEYOND team, filmed this week at the Los Angeles press junkets.

Director Justin Lin:

Producer J.J. Abrams:

Chris Pine and Zachary Quinto:

Karl Urban and Simon Pegg:

Zoe Saldana and John Cho:

Idris Elba:

Sofia Boutella:

That should keep you all busy for today!

TNG Remastered: “Preemptive Strike” HD Comparison Video

After a long absence, newly-minted Lieutenant Ro Laren returns to the Enterprise where she’s given a dangerous mission: infiltrate the Maquis, a rebel group fighting against Cardassian encroachment on their colony worlds. But after seeing their struggle first-hand, Ro must make a life-changing choice: follow her new friends, or betray Picard!

Here’s Over an Hour of STAR TREK BEYOND Interviews

If you’re trying to pass the time until STAR TREK BEYOND beams down to a theater near you, then check this out: here’s nearly 75 MINUTES of interviews with the cast and production team behind the new film!

First up, however, here’s a great release of behind-the-scenes footage, featuring some on-set “B-Roll” shots of the cast and crew during the making of the film. Possible minor spoilers in this video.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iCi23U5dPjU

But here’s the biggest amount of content available now, more than an hour of insight from the people making this movie – and the best thing, for you patient people: NO SPOILERS!

Justin Lin, director:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NB17NMCx0Kg

Doug Jung, co-writer:

J.J. Abrams, producer:

Chris Pine, playing Jim Kirk:

Zachary Quinto, playing Spock:

Karl Urban, playing Dr. McCoy:

Sofia Boutella, playing newcomer Jaylah:

Simon Pegg, co-writer and actor behind Scotty:

Idris Elba, playing the villain Krall:

John Cho, who plays Hikaru Sulu:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qTDtWbfpF4w

Zoe Saldana, as Uhura:

While these interviews were filmed months ago – many on location in Dubai during filming – any conversation with Anton Yelchin has understandably been withheld from public distribution.

STAR TREK BEYOND Embraces Trek’s Fifty-Year Legacy

The tagline for next year’s much-anticipated CBS All Access Star Trek television series – “New Crews. New Villains. New Heroes. New Worlds.” – applies perfectly to STAR TREK BEYOND, the latest in a thirty-seven-year run of big screen Trek adventures, which arrives in theaters on July 22.

Directed by self-confessed “Star Trek kid” Justin Lin, who takes on his first science fiction motion picture after building Universal’s Fast and Furious franchise to staggering successBEYOND is an extremely satisfying deep-dive into five decades of Star Trek lore.

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Director Justin Lin consults with Chris Pine on set. (Paramount Pictures)

The film quite literally soars beyond expectations, giving fans a taste of modern-day, adrenaline-fueled, summertime fun mixed with the deep layers associated with sci-fi’s most cerebral franchise.

The pillars that have supported Star Trek’s longevity across five decades are on full display in STAR TREK BEYOND – from complex character motivations and reveals to strong continuity, the exploration and discovery at the core of the franchise’s best episodes and films is featured throughout the two-hour feature.

New Crews

Well, maybe not a new crew, exactly, but for the first time in the Kelvin Timeline, we find James T. Kirk (Chris Pine) and the rest of the Enterprise officers entrenched in their five-year mission of exploration.

Beginning nine hundred and sixty-six days into their mission (a cute reference to the September ’66 television debut of the Original Series), STAR TREK BEYOND is equal parts exciting and routine for the original seven – and in just a few short scenes, we get to see a slice of Starfleet life portrayed with a depth never before showcased in a Star Trek motion picture.

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The Enterprise crew at their stations – but something dangerous is headed their way. (Paramount Pictures)

Lin is well known for working with ensembles, and he exceeds all expectations in BEYOND by giving each Original Series crew member a critical role to play. Along with screenwriters Simon Pegg (pulling double-duty, also appearing as Scotty) and Doug Jung, the trio has placed our heroes in interesting combinations to not only raise the stakes, but dig deeper into their psyche.

We see Kirk mentoring Chekov (the late Anton Yelchin) extensively, hearkening back to original series episodes like “The Gamesters of Triskelion” and “The Apple,” and the film teams up Sulu (John Cho) and Uhura (Zoe Saldana) to face adversity together in dark, revealing ways.

In more than mere homage to the classic McCoy-Spock shenanigans from the Original Series, the paring of Bones (Karl Urban) and Spock (Zachary Quinto) – verbally sparring with each other in one film-stealing scene after another – is the heart and soul of BEYOND, providing a backbone for all of Kirk and Spock’s personal motivation.

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Anton Yelchin and John Cho share a fun moment of friendship on set. (Paramount Pictures)

The tragic loss of Anton Yelchin, who was sadly killed in June, is felt whenever he appears on screen interacting with his bridge mates – but thankfully, that twinge of sadness is often overshadowed by a role that ultimately is a celebration of the man and his craft.

While the entire ensemble continues to be a strength in these new Star Trek films, it is Pine who stands out in a way he hasn’t previously. Captain Kirk is in full hero mode throughout the movie: leading, cajoling, inspiring. His emotions run the gamut, but his internal crisis never approaches unsympathetic self-loathing.

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Kirk learns of a new mission for the Enterprise, in one of several new uniform designs. (Paramount Pictures)

Pine can thank Pegg and Jung for that – they have written a film that matches Lin’s frenetic direction and pacing with humor, action and reverence. While including poignant callbacks to “The Cage” and “The Wrath of Khan,” Pegg and Jung have enabled Pine, Quinto, and Urban to easily slip back into their original trinity roles by scrutinizing their core personality traits – with both heart and humor.

Callbacks to Trek’s past are layered throughout the prose and are too numerous to count – everything from names of obscure TOS redshirts to one particularly cheeky reference to the original crew’s adventures on Pollux IV – and if you’re a fan of the four-season Star Trek: Enterprise prequel series, you’ll definitely be pleased with the ingenious way that show has been infused throughout the film.

New Villains, New Heroes

Without giving too much away, it’s easy for us to tell you that Krall, played by multiple-Emmy Award nominee Idris Elba, is a villain for the ages.

Explaining the complexity of Krall’s backstory has been described by both Pegg and Jung as their biggest challenge in bringing this story to the screen. They are mostly successful, keeping heavy, exposition-laden dialogue to a minimum – just enough for audiences to connect the pieces – but understanding the full scope of just what he’s up to will likely take a second viewing for those not deeply versed in Trek lore… or some online research when you leave the theater.

Long-time fans of Star Trek, however, will be catching their breath once his mysterious motivations come into satisfying focus.

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Idris Elba (as Krall) takes direction from Justin Lin. (Paramount Pictures)

Elba’s performance is emphatic and unrelenting, and is matched only by his amazing makeup and creature design from Joel Harlow, who has created a number of remarkable aliens and makeups throughout the film. As part of the fifty-year celebration of Trek, the producers tasked themselves with creating 50 different alien makeups for the film, and many of them are showcased prominently.

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Just one of dozens of stunning new creature designs in the film. (Paramount Pictures).

At the top of that list are the sleek, cat-like black-and-white lines of Jaylah (Sofia Boutella), a mysterious alien who matches wits with Scotty and the rest of the crew in their battle with Krall.

If you’ve been following the film’s promotional path the last month and were worried that your expectations for Jaylah might be too high, you can rest easy: Jaylah is a character with purpose and very real emotional depth. None of her screen time is wasted as she seamlessly integrates herself into the crew dynamic.

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Jaylah lounges about in her favorite chair. (Paramount Pictures)

In fact, so successful is her presence, that if and when development starts on a fourth film in the Kelvin Timeline, you’d be hard-pressed not to include her in some capacity moving forward.

New Worlds

The visual effects in STAR TREK BEYOND quite simply set a new standard for Star Trek films. Double Negative, the effects house responsible for the award-winning work seen in Interstellar and Ex Machina, has created a new world in the Yorktown space station that rivals anything ever seen on screen.

Its expansive environment is well thought out and practical – clearly designed to take advantage of every bit of living space inside an artificial gravity sphere in the middle of space. The concept is grand and the visuals are a match. It’s an amazing achievement.

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Approaching Yorktown, floating in the void. (Paramount Pictures)

Of course, the Yorktown station is more than just a shiny, pretty object to look at. The filmmakers have superbly made it feel like home, making it an essential catalyst to much of the film’s plot development, including the much-discussed personal revolutions for Cho’s Sulu – where the station is home to his family.

Care and detail have also been given to the Enterprise makeover, with some sleeker lines in the nacelles and a clever new warp bubble effect we glimpsed in the trailers. The effect is mesmerizing and sets a new standard when compared to the oft-repeated “stretched lights, flashing into the distance” effect – not that there’s anything wrong with that classic effect!

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The new warp effect is an impressive standout among the film’s stunning visuals. (Paramount Pictures)

As he has done in the two previous incarnations of the Kelvin Timeline, master composer Michael Giacchino has infused the film with both the familiar and the foreign, creating a score that opens with a tonal nod to Alexander Courage’s original Star Trek theme, and only gets bigger and more majestic from there.

While his work on the previous films certainly hasn’t been overlooked, this third film score will likely be the one that garners the most attention (and is available for preorder now).

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Technically-adept allies Jaylah and Scotty work together. (Paramount Pictures)

All that being said, Lin’s take on the Trek universe doesn’t breezily move past the dark tones that permeated STAR TREK INTO DARKNESS – as Krall has more than a few dark moments to match anything seen previously in Trek – but there is certainly a different feel to this incarnation.

Replacing the ubiquitous JJ Abrams’ lens flares are a number of new visual flourishes, including several uses of twisty, long-range camera movements layered between fast-paced cuts and quick camera pans that will rocket viewers around at warp speed.

In addition, Lin’s inclusion of some modern story-telling beats may not be to everyone’s liking – including the much-discussed use of a motorcycle in a pivotal action sequence – but the director’s style clearly jumps off the screen in critical ways… in both sound and fury.

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Kirk finds a new set of wheels. (Paramount Pictures)

At its heart, though, STAR TREK BEYOND is about the core relationships that have bound the crew of the Enterprise in tales spanning half a century.

The film integrates and honors the passing of Leonard Nimoy in a number of emotional scenes, while never ignoring the critical backstory laid out in the previous two films surrounding the destruction of Vulcan.

Nimoy’s loss is felt throughout the film. His absence resonates emotionally and powerfully, but is also celebrated in a tear-inducing scene that is more than worthy of this franchise benchmark.

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Uhura stands her ground while the Enterprise falls under attack. (Paramount Pictures)

In the simplest terms, the humor, action and pacing of this film will satisfy both summer movie aficionados and hardcore Trek purists alike. The film is epic and balanced, kinetic and thoughtful, and connects Trek across 50 years of continuity in ways that could never have been expected.

It’s an exceptionally worthy mic drop for Star Trek’s golden anniversary.

Be sure to check out our BEYOND review, from Rob Heyman.

J.J. Abrams: High Hopes for STAR TREK 4, Says “There’s No Replacing” Anton Yelchin’s Chekov in Potential Sequel

After today’s Los Angeles STAR TREK BEYOND press conference, executive producer J.J. Abrams stated that while he and his team are “incredibly excited” about creating another chapter in the Kelvin Timeline, Anton Yelchin’s character of Chekov won’t be recast.

Said Abrams, when asked if he’s expecting a STAR TREK 4:

It’s hopefully something that we are figurative minutes away from talking about. The answer is 100% yes and it’s incredibly exciting.

Our Los Angeles correspondent @EnterpriseExtra was in attendance at the event – look out for more on that soon – and shared his take on Abrams’ comments:

After Yelchin’s untimely passing on June 19, some speculation began to percolate about the fate of the Chekov character – would he be recast? Would a new character be appointed navigator on the Enterprise, such as Arex from the Animated Series?

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Arex, the three-armed navigator who took Chekov’s place for the Animated Series.

Well, in an interview with Postmedia Network (via the Toronto Sun), producer Abrams said that the in-universe fate of Pavel Chekov is still being decided – but he won’t be replaced.

We knew going into this movie it would be a bit of a heartbreak just because of Leonard [Nimoy]. We had no idea just how devastating events would become.

I would say there’s no replacing him. There’s no recasting. I can’t possibly imagine that, and I think Anton deserves better.

When asked if the character of Chekov might be ‘killed off’ between films, Abrams admitted that was one fate that had crossed his mind – as some online have also speculate – but that it’s way too early for any decisions to have been made.

I have thought about it, we’re working on it, and it’s too early to talk about it.

STAR TREK BEYOND includes a tribute to the fallen actor, and hits theaters next week.

EXCLUSIVE! Talking STAR TREK BEYOND Deleted Content with Director Justin Lin

by Ronan O’Flaherty for TrekCore.com

Yesterday’s London premiere of STAR TREK BEYOND continued the international roll-out of the new Star Trek adventure, and our team was there at the white carpet to catch up with BEYOND director Justin Lin – much to his surprise!

If you’ve been coming to our site for the last couple of years, you know we’re addicted to finding as many Star Trek deleted scenes as we can: from our campaign to get Next Generation cut footage to the TNG Blu-ray releases after snagging several old VHS tapes of footage, to reviewing the Star Trek Into Darkness cut sequences months before Paramount announced the Compendium Blu-ray set, to even finding the only known snippet of Star Trek: First Contact footage – and interviewing its star!

So OF COURSE we had to ask Justin Lin about his edits to STAR TREK BEYOND! Check out our exclusive interview with the director above, speaking for the first time about the scripted sequences that didn’t make the cut – and if we’ll get an extended edition of this year’s film!

Another New STAR TREK BEYOND Clip: When Scotty Met Jaylah

Paramount has just released another new clip from STAR TREK BEYOND, featuring the first meeting on planet Altamid of Montgomery Scott and the alien newcomer, Sofia Boutalla’s character Jaylah.

As revealed in Monday’s “Jaylah” featurette, the alien woman knows her way around Federation technology, so it’s no surprise that she recognizes the Starfleet insignia on Scotty’s uniform – and it may be why she’s quick to offer him her support.

Four New TREK BEYOND TV Spots, Full of New Footage

Four new STAR TREK BEYOND TV spots beamed down overnight, featuring several new shots from next week’s film, including our best look at the USS Franklin, more time with Jaylah, and additional sequences from the much-maligned motorbike sequence.

Spoilers below!

This dramatic spot, entitled “We Change,” definitely plays up the emotional aspects of the movie, with a somber Captain Kirk voiceover declaring that no one will be left behind.

“Skills,” today’s second new clip, is focused on BEYOND’s action beats – in the style of the December teaser trailer – with Jaylah’s tongue-in-cheek comment on how she “likes the beat, and shouting!”

This quick Uhura-centric spot features the communications officer holding her own against a pair of Swarm invaders as they attempt to take control of the Enterprise.

This fourth spot, “Come With Me,” is chock full of new footage, from the Enterprise crew rescue mission on the surface of Altamid to the Swarm attack on Starbase Yorktown.

There’s a whole lot of new material here, and you can flip through some selected screencaps below.

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Only one week until the world premiere!

Stars Shine at London’s STAR TREK BEYOND UK Premiere

STAR TREK BEYOND made its UK debut in London today, where the entire cast joined director Justin Lin on a brilliant white carpet under England’s cloudy skies.

Thanks to Facebook Live, Paramount UK was able to live-stream the entire pre-premiere event with interviews with everyone from Chris Pine to Idris Elba, available here to watch at your leisure:

 
The gloomy weather held off just long enough for all the starts to make their way through the throngs of media – including our team, who was on-site for the big event, thanks to Paramount UK!

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(Photo: Paramount Pictures)

We’ll have our own white-carpet photos and interview videos for you in the next day or so – they’re still in subspace! – but in the meantime, you can check out Paramount’s official gallery of photos from today’s event in our media gallery.