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New Three-Disc STAR TREK: NEXT GENERATION Soundtrack Coming From La-La Land Next Week!

It’s a new year, and as we’ve been expecting for some time, La-La Land has just announced a new Star Trek: The Next Generation soundtrack collection going on sale January 12!

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La-La Land’s news release, announced on their Facebook page, reads as follows:

January 12, 2016 brings us our first release of 2016. (It will be the only title released in January).

La-La Land Records and CBS are kicking off the 50th Anniversary of Star Trek in style with:

STAR TREK: THE NEXT GENERATION VOLUME 2 – 3 DISC SET
Music by Dennis McCarthy, Jay Chattaway and Geoge Romanis
LLLCD 1377
Limited Edtition of 3000 Units
Retail Price: $34.98

The first 200 or so customers who purchase this cd directly from www.lalalandrecords.com will receive a signed copy autographed by composer Dennis McCarthy at no extra charge. Quantities are limited and you are not guranteed a signed edition.

This title goes on sale next Tuesday, January 12, 2016 at 12 pm pst. www.lalalandrecords.com

Following up to their 2011 “Volume 1” TNG release, La-La Land has already provided a list of episodes to be represented in this new set:

DISC ONE: MUSIC BY DENNIS McCARTHY
1. STAR TREK: THE NEXT GENERATION
Main Title (2nd Season)
Music by Alexander Courage and Jerry Goldsmith
Arr. Dennis McCarthy

2 – 6. THE LAST OUTPOST
7 – 10. HOME SOIL
11 – 12. PEN PALS
13 – 14. PEAK PERFORMANCE
15. FAMILY
16. THE WOUNDED
17 – 21. CAUSE AND EFFECT
22. SCHISMS
23. LESSONS

Disc One – Total Time: 77:19

DISC TWO: MUSIC BY JAY CHATTAWAY
1 – 2. IN THEORY
3. THE GAME
4 – 8. POWER PLAY
9. TRUE Q
10 – 11. CHAIN OF COMMAND, PARTS I & II
12. LESSONS
13. FRAME OF MIND
14 – 15. GAMBIT, PARTS I & II
16 – 17. EMERGENCE
18 – 19. PREEMPTIVE STRIKE
20. BONUS TRACK: GAMBIT, PART I

Disc Two – Total Time: 75:34

DISC THREE: UNFINISHED BUSINESS
1 – 6. TOO SHORT A SEASON
Music by George Romanis

7 – 10. HIDE AND Q – Music by Dennis McCarthy
11 – 14. CONSPIRACY – Music by Dennis McCarthy
15 – 17. THE SURVIVORS – Music by Dennis McCarthy
18. THE CHILD – Music by Dennis McCarthy
19. STAR TREK: THE NEXT GENERATION
End Title (3rd Season, Short Version)
Music by Jerry Goldsmith, Arr. Dennis McCarthy

Disc Three – Total Time: 75:48

Total Time – All Discs: 3:48:41

There is no official page for this release at La-La Land’s main website at this time, but we’ll be sure to share a link for direct purchases as soon as it’s available.

William Shatner Won’t Be in STAR TREK BEYOND

Even though there were several different rumor-filled reports around the internet back in 2014 that William Shatner would be showing up in Star Trek 3 — then under the reins of former planned writer/director Roberto Orci — the former captain of the Enterprise firmly shut down any ideas that he’d be appearing in Justin Lin’s STAR TREK BEYOND.

An interview coming in this week’s SFX Magazine (online via GamesRadar), Shatner addresses this year’s upcoming film.

There was never a conversation. It would have been interesting to see what [the writers’] fertile imaginations could have done with somebody who is 20 years older than when [my version of] Captain Kirk died, and how they would have explained the difference in appearance.

But that never came up. I’m sure they must have thought of it one time or another, but I never had a substantial conversation about replaying the role.

While some may mourn the hopes that the original Captain Kirk would make another big-screen appearance after twenty-two years, it certainly seems proper that Chris Pine’s crew finally stand on their own for their third adventure.

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Trek Comics Review #52: “Live, Part 3”

It’s this month’s issue of IDW Publishing’s Star Trek comic series: the third and final installment of “Live,” the next adventure in the new Five Year Mission.

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This month’s release brings a pair of covers for “Live, Part 3”:

Order Star Trek #52

  • The regular edition, created by Tony Shasteen, features an illustration of Khan, as portrayed by Benedict Cumberbatch in the last film, looking down at the reader as the Enterprise zips behind his head, blocking the sun, creating a dazzling halo effect from his head. The character looks terrific, the ship excellent, and the coloring makes this almost holy to gaze upon. Well done in every way.
  • The subscription variant is by Dan Parent, artist of many an Archie comic outing, and this features the Riverdale gang in Star Trek uniforms. Archie Andrews is the largest character, sporting command gold. In front of him is Veronica Lodge as Uhura, and just behind his right shoulder is Betty Cooper as Janice Rand. It appears that Reggie Mantle is Doctor McCoy, while Jughead Jones is obviously Spock.The final cast member looks to be Parent’s version of Chris Pine as Kirk, looking at the others with a semi-smile. Behind the gang is the Enterprise and two planets, all against a starfield. Readers’ love of this cover will depend on their love of Archie characters; I like them, so I like this.

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The closing chapter of Mike Johnson’s saga into the Mirror Universe opens in great style with the meeting of two men named James Kirk. The MU Kirk has a perfect response in seeing his doppelganger, while the Kirk readers are familiar with says something equally perfect. The two are kept from shooting each due to a famous Klingon’s intervention.

Khan, who’s also present, now understands why the Kirk he’s met had a negative reaction in seeing him, but still doesn’t understand how how he and his crew arrived in this reality. Uhura tells him it was an ion storm, which the Klingon reveals he’s been monitoring. Our heroes realize they need to get to that storm, but the Mirror Kirk interrupts, “Hello? Did everyone forget about the phaser I’m pointing at you?” Realizing that he needs the help of his treacherous counterpart, Kirk makes a deal.

This was a good conclusion to the story, though it did come off a bit rushed. It could have gone for another issue quite easily. The story moves to Vulcan where both Spocks share a moment, ending poorly for one of them, before returning to Kirk — well, Kirks and company. The confrontation that occurs on Page 11 was expected, though not with such horrific results. The justification on the following page for such action was completely in character for that individual.

One character had been built up in the previous two installments and is taken out too quickly in the fourth panel on 12; I needed this to be much more difficult. The initial reveal on 15 is also too quick, as is the surprise in the fourth panel. This is some pretty dramatic movement, and was too rapidly introduced and resolved within three panels. However, the new danger on 16 was drawn out well and concluded satisfactorily. A solid, but speedy conclusion.

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Tony Shasteen finishes up this storyline with his typical aplomb. His character work is tops. His likenesses of the familiar characters are terrific and he’s able to have them emote just as well as the actors who play them on the big screen.

The first introduction to “our” Kirk has him staring at his opposite with a splendid condescending look. Later, Kirk gets worried, angry, and thoughtful perfectly. Spock also looks good, whose silence (such as on Page 6) tells as much, if not more, than the dialogue that accompanies it. Also getting some good appearances was Uhura, whose reaction on 11 is superb; one can hear the tone in her dialogue due to the way she’s drawn.

As outstanding as these characters look, it’s the Mirror Universe characters that steal the show because of their differences. Kirk is the most similar looking of all the characters, sporting only a few days without a shave and a much more rugged outfit. The way he stands is enough to demonstrate to readers his cockiness.

Spock, naturally, sports the iconic goatee, but it is much fuller than the one shown in the classic television episode. He’s an imposing figure in every panel. Seen previously, the Uhura of this universe has a shorter hair cut, slicked down, which makes her much more intense looking. Also shown earlier was Chekov, who had a radically different hair style, but suited this deviant character excellently. The character who appears on 15 is startling; though this individual was eluded to earlier, I don’t see how this reveal can’t be anything but shocking.

The strong character work, though, is again undone by the settings. I cannot understand why they are not as crisp and clear as the characters. They’re okay on the first four pages, though on Page 5 they look like a cut and paste job. Leaving this setting, they improve, but once on the Enterprise they return to the fuzzy, out of focus filler.

Shasteen can make the settings tight, such as when he does so with the captain’s chair on 13, but if anything is more than a foot away from a character it’s a blob: look at all of the backgrounds on 13 – 16. If this is hand drawn, I don’t understand why, after putting so much work into them, an artist would want to blur them? The top panel of the final page is horrific; it looks more Cardassian than Federation.

I’m continuing to find myself liking what Shasteen does with the foregrounds, but the backgrounds are hurting his work.

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There is some impressive work by Davide Mastrolonardo. His coloring of characters’ flesh is really well done. The first page shows this quickly with both Kirks, and the slick shading on their faces. He also does a strong job on the Klingon; notice the ridge work done on his nose in the first panel on Page 3.

He also does strong work with light sources, such as the computer casting a blue glow on 3 and the shading on both Spocks and their uniforms on 6. The transporter effect on 16 is a dramatic color, and the interiors of the ship that’s on red alert is perfection.

he second panel on 19 depends on the coloring to show the reader where the escaping ship has gone and Mastronlonardo pulls it off excellently with a sudden shift in hues. Excellent work.

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Chris Mowry creates dialogue and scene settings (the same font), sounds, yells, and the final two words for this issue. I prefer to see dialogue and settings be different fonts, but Mowry does a fine job with the sounds, with the one on Page 11 memorable.

One question: Why was there a sound for the action on 10, but not on 16?

REVIEW: The Original Series — “Child of Two Worlds”

child-coverAn all-new Star Trek novel from New York Times bestselling author Greg Cox, taking place in the blockbuster Original Series era!

The year is 2255, not long after the events of the Original Series episode “The Cage.” A young Spock is science officer on the U.S.S. Enterprise, under the command of Captain Christopher Pike, when an outbreak of deadly Rigelian fever threatens the crew.

Reviewing the Starfleet medical database, Dr. Phillip Boyce comes up with a highly experimental and untested new treatment that might save the crew. Just one problem: it requires a rare mineral substance, ryetalyn, which is not easily obtained…except on a remote alien colony near the Klingon border.

But borders are somewhat blurry in this part of galaxy. Pike will need to tread carefully in order to avoid provoking an armed conflict with the Klingons—or starting an all-out war.

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The Star Trek novels are a fantastic way to explore time periods that we don’t get to see a lot of in the course of “canon” Trek. One such period is set before Kirk’s five-year mission, while Captain Christopher Pike commanded the U.S.S. Enterprise. We’ve been offered glimpses in the past, most notably through the two-part episode “The Menagerie,” which re-used footage from the aborted pilot “The Cage” to present an all-new adventure.

Child of Two Worlds joins just a few past novels featuring this captain and crew, including Once Burned by Margaret Wander Bonnano and The Rift by Peter David. It is always a treat for me when we get more adventures featuring Captain Pike, as I have always wondered what Star Trek would have been like had that first pilot been purchased by NBC.

pike-spockThis tale features Spock’s early days, learning to live with humans aboard the Enterprise.

The story itself is a fascinating tale about a young woman who finds herself torn between two cultures. A Cyprian, who at a young age was captured by the Klingons, has been taken from her adoptive Klingon family by her biological sister and recovered by the Enterprise. Now, the planet of her birth is demanding her return and reunion with her biological family.

Complicating matters is the fact that the Enterprise crew has been infected with Rigellian fever, and the Cyprians control the supply of ryetalyn, a compound that would cure the fatal disease (see: “Requiem for Methuselah”). They, of course, are refusing to turn it over until and unless Captain Pike returns Merata to them.

Greg Cox does a wonderful job in pairing Spock and Merata. Both of them are the titular “child of two worlds,” and Spock is uniquely sympathetic to Merata’s plight. The exploration of their two natures means that the reader learns more about Spock through what Merata is going through. It is an interesting pairing that highlights a great deal about Spock’s character. Additionally, Spock is written very well by Mr. Cox. At this point in his life, Spock is still uncertain of his place in either Vulcan or human society. His younger nature comes across very well in the pages of Child of Two Worlds.

In some ways, this story is reminiscent of the TNG episode “Suddenly Human,” in which a young human boy was captured by the Talarians and raised in their culture. His grandmother, an elderly Starfleet admiral, desperately wants him returned. In the case of Child of Two Worlds, the role of the grandmother is replaced by an entire planet, and their desire to see Merata returned coupled with a tense political situation lends a very interesting angle to the story.

suddenly-humanMerata’s situation is reminiscent of Jono in the TNG episode “Suddenly Human.”

Finally, Greg Cox very effectively places this story firmly in the time period by using terminology that was used in “The Cage.” “Lasers” instead of phasers, for instance, or “hyperdrive” instead of “warp drive.” Number One is used quite effectively as well, and she gets to show off her formidable leadership skills while leading the landing party on the surface of Cypria.

Cox is even able to account for the seeming anachronism of hardcopy printouts on the bridge of the Enterprise, chalking it up to a charming eccentricity on the part of Captain Pike.

New Photos from STAR TREK BEYOND’s Visit to Dubai

Just when we thought we’d hit the weekend without getting more STAR TREK BEYOND info, a new batch of photos from this summer’s production in Dubai have shown up, revealing several new things… including the whereabouts of one cast member we thought was staying home for the summer!

Possible spoilers below!

As we learned from Simon Pegg a few days ago, Dubai’s futuristic locale is standing in for a new starbase far from Earth and the Federation central planets: Starbase Yorktown. Back in the summer, we saw plenty of photos of the local cast in special Yorktown uniforms, along with a confirmed sighting of Chris Pine wearing one himself.

Now, photos from Monday’s “sizzle reel,” screened by the Dubai Film and TV Commission, have made their way online courtesy of @Brand_Dubai, showcasing some of the city’s more prominent landmarks, along with what we now know are reaction shots of an incoming Swarm attack (as seen in this week’s newly-released trailer).

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While our look at Chris Pine (linked above) was captured during an evening shoot, here’s our clearest look yet at his meeting with what appears to be the female commander of Starbase Yorktown — and likely not, as some have speculated, the Federation President.

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Along with these location photos come one surprising appearance: Zoe Saldana, who from all indications was not part of the team filming in Dubai, apparently did make it into town for at least part of the three-week visit to the city.

Here she is, filming a scene with Zachary Quinto at the Meydan Racetrack (as Starbase Yorktown personnel wander the halls nearby):

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Finally, our last new photo today may be the most telling as to where the story takes the Enterprise crew, as this shot features Karl Urban and Anton Yelchin… but also Sofia Boutella’s character Jaylah and Simon Pegg (barely visible, trailing behind her).

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We’ve known since the days of filming that Boutella followed the cast and crew from Vancouver to Dubai, but after seeing the trailer — where the implication seems to be that the Enterprise crew meets Jaylah mid-adventure — it now seems that she’s also part of the visit to Starbase Yorktown.

This scene, which obviously shows the crew off-duty, would then likely take place before the Swarm arrives at Starbase Yorktown, given the somewhat informal and relaxed appearance of the crew — so maybe she’s already along for the ride when the Enterprise is torn to pieces.

We don’t know if John Cho is hiding somewhere off-camera, though we do know that that he was spotted in Dubai back in October. 

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Simon Pegg Shoots Down that “Less ‘Star Trek’-y” Quote, Spills on New STAR TREK BEYOND Story Info

A new interview with Nerdist came out last night – conducted while the production team was still on set – which brings a whole new set of insights into STAR TREK BEYOND from actor and co-writer Simon Pegg, from the role Dubai’s expensive outing plays in the upcoming film, as well as more Memory Alpha connections to which he hinted previously.

First, however, Pegg took the time to make himself clear on that oft-quoted “less Star Trek-y” line that’s being bandied about the Internet, saying that the reporter to whom he spoke was not portraying his comments correctly.

Something I’d like to clear up — I got misquoted recently, saying that I was brought on to make it ‘less Star Trekky,’ which is not what I’d told that journalist.

What I meant was there has to be a degree of universality when you’re dealing with something like that. Which means you can’t alienate the people for whom it’s their very first Star Trek. If they come into it and it’s indecipherable because there’s a lot of stuff that you have to have prior knowledge to understand, then you’re left with something which is a little bit exclusive.

It’s always the trick with these properties. Making it at once something that the fans can enjoy and take a lot from, but also knew people can come in and see it as a one-off and go, “Hey, I’ve got fifty years of this I can go and watch now!” Which is a great thing for kids.

I love the idea when you used to discover a band and then discover they’d had six albums out before. So that was what I meant by that.

The idea of it not being Star Trek is anathema to me. This has to be in every way and every fiber of its being Star Trek.

NOTE: The original quote, published by Radio Times in May, was this, referring to the Orci/Payne/McKay script:

[Paramount] had a script for Star Trek that wasn’t really working for them. I think the studio was worried that it might have been a little bit too Star Trek-y.

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On the other constant rumor, that he and Doug Jung were brought on board to revamp the old Roberto Orci / JD Payne / Patrick McKay script:

I never read Bob [Orci]’s script and neither did Doug [Jung]. We started out in a room at Bad Robot that’s just got white boards around the room, just blank white boards. Which is a terrifying thing to see.

Then we just filled them and kind of went through so many iterations and so many story ideas. […] It’s not easy. So yeah, and then we finally go to begin shooting with a full script.

Earlier this summer, Pegg revealed that he made good use of the Memory Alpha website, and he revealed that two of the site’s founders we more contributive to the script than we previously thought:

We actually went out to the Memory Alpha guys, the two founders of the Memory Alpha Wiki and asked them to name something for us. There’s a specific thing in the screenplay that we wanted to get a name for. So I just wrote an email saying, “Hey guys. There’s this thing. I can’t tell you what it’s for, but there’s this item…”

Three hours later I got a full etymological breakdown of the word and the history of the thing. So they’re gonna be in the credits for that.

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While we’re on the subject of Trek research, his pocket guide to classic Trek redshirt deaths sounds pretty handy:

It’s always good to get names from the Original Series, like dead redshirts. I have a list of dead redshirts on my phone somewhere. Just to know that the same people exist in the universe. But this is our universe. It belongs to us now. J.J. — very cleverly — was able to establish the story again without damaging or affecting what went before. And it’s ours now. Anything can happen. Anyone can die. It’s not the same events.

There will be things in there for every Star Trek fan. It is the same world, and so some of the points of reference will be the same. But they are off in a part of the galaxy that they’ve never been before. They’re far away from the usual suspects I think. As such it’s not like they’re meeting up with an old adversary or someone they’ve met before.

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Lots of stuff may be blowing up in BEYOND, but Pegg assures us that there’s meaning behind the mayhem.

What you have to maintain with Star Trek is that it’s rooted somewhere in our universe. In humanity, [compared to Star Wars, which] is a long time ago in a galaxy far, far away.

The thing that makes that Star Wars more science fantasy is there’s a lot of special effects, a lot of fighting. Star Trek never could afford that, in a way. Which is why it had to concentrate on other aspects of production. We can do both now now. So I think it’s kind of finding a way of having that really fun, spectacular event cinema, but grounding it.

Because explosions don’t mean a damn thing if you don’t care about who’s involved in the explosions. You can see that most incredible fireworks on a cinema screen. But if you don’t fundamentally care about the people that are in jeopardy then they’re so unimpressive. You see that time and time again these days.

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He also covered the new ways in which our characters interact…

I felt like now it was time to move away from the [Kirk-Spock] bromance thing and concentrate on the idea of the crew as a family living in a small space together, and what it means to all of them. I really love the dynamic between Bones and Spock, so that’s something we’ve kind of concentrated on a little bit with this one.

Kirk’s older than his dad was when he died. All that sort of psychological stuff is playing on him. Scotty’s just still Scotty.

…and what it means that the crew is already two years into their Five Year Mission.

[The crew knows] that they’ve still got time to go. It’s more that they’re dealing with what would inevitably be the psychological impact of doing it. It’s not they’re, “Oh, I don’t want to do this anymore.” No one’s over it. It’s just that they’re doing their job. They’re going from adventure to adventure and it’s kind of tiring, and wondering what the end game of it all is.

The idea of the movie, the story in the film, is that what they encounter helps to clarify what their job is.

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Finally, Pegg revealed the first details on Dubai’s role in BEYOND, standing in as Starbase Yorktown:

Part of the story at least begins with [the Enterprise] docking up at a new Starbase which is at the very edge of space. It’s a new kind of diplomatic hub. It’s called Yorktown, and it’s right on the edge of Federation space. It’s where all the most recent Federation inductees can come and mingle with each other and sort of learn about each other.

[It’s] basically a place where they can understand what being part of the Federation means, and it’s an important kind of tactical establishment for the Federation. They’re very, very far out, but it’s been built locally, so it’s very interesting to look at. It’s where the Enterprise docks up. For the first time in ten months [the Starbase has] proper contact with other people — that’s where the story begins.

At least now we know what Paramount spent $32 Million on in Abu Dhabi!

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Simon Pegg Asks Fans to “Hang In There,” There’s More “Star Trek Stuff” Ahead in STAR TREK BEYOND

Catching up with STAR TREK BEYOND actor Simon Pegg at the UK premiere of Star Wars: The Force Awakens — don’t worry, no spoilers here! — British media site Hey U Guys chatted with the film’s co-writer in the wake of Monday’s trailer release.

It was very action-packed — yeah, it was surprising. I find [the trailer] to be the marketing people saying ‘Everybody come and see this film, it’s full of action and fun!’…

There’s a lot more to [the movie] than that. I didn’t love [the trailer] because I know there’s a lot more to the film. There’s a lot more story, and a lot more character stuff, and a lot more of what I call ‘Star Trek stuff.’

But, you know, [Paramount has to] bring a big audience in; they’ve got to bang the drum. To the ‘Star Trek’ fans, I’d say hang in there and be patient.

As with director Justin Lin’s comments yesterday about some hesitance towards some of the marketing decisions to include certain sequences into the BEYOND trailer, Pegg obviously would have made a few different choices had he been part of the editing team to roll out our first look at next year’s film. We’re hoping that “more Star Trek stuff” is as potent as he suggests.

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Sofia Boutella is ‘Jaylah’ in STAR TREK BEYOND

Over at Yahoo! News, they are spilling some new secrets from a visit to the STAR TREK BEYOND set from earlier this summer — starting with our first comments on Sofia Boutella and her role in the upcoming film.

After revealing that her warrior character’s name is ‘Jaylah,’ some insight from her exhausting experience comes from director Justin Lin.

I put Sofia through hell in her intro fight, and we had to go take after take after take. It was four days of really pushing it. She was so pumped up and she just went for it. It looks great. I’m excited for that.

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The BEYOND trailer showcased what seem to be the planned team-ups in the film: pairing Chekov and Kirk; Sulu and Uhura; Scotty with Jaylah; Spock with McCoy. As Zachary Quinto details, they’re going to have to find a way to save the day despite their disparate locations:

Circumstances dictate that we’re not all in this together. We have to divide in order to conquer. We’re off in unconventional pairings; there’s a real sense of scrambling to defeat our common enemy.

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While the cast may seem to get in a lot of trouble in this new adventure, don’t let their headliner status keep you from thinking they will be safe and sound, as co-writer Simon Pegg explains.

This is a different reality, you know. Just because [William Shatner’s] Kirk and those guys lived until they were in their 70s, doesn’t mean it’s going to happen in this universe. All bets are off. We’ve started again. It’s nice to have that element of unpredictability.

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As for that deadly cloud of destruction that hits the Enterprise in the early moments of the film? Let Zoe Saldana tell you about that:

The Swarm is what we’re calling it — it’s all these little ships moving in synchronicity like a school of fish in the ocean.

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Lastly, Chris Pine talks about how this third film brings things full circle:

The first film was about establishing the characters. The second film was about taking it into a darker place, which was the in-vogue thing circa the ‘Batman’/’Dark Knight’ era.

For us ‘Beyond’ is re-establishing — especially in the 50th anniversary of the Enterprise — of the world of ‘Star Trek’, re-establishing why ‘Star Trek’ is uniquely its own beast. It’s funny, it’s got a total sense of humor.

…but when it comes to action and adventure, the captain lays it all out in a way that may not please some of you.

I can definitively say [‘Beyond’] has the most action out of any one we’ve done so far. People who like summer blockbusters and like shit blowing up will like this.

Hang on tight.

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Justin Lin on STAR TREK BEYOND Trailer Reactions

After yesterday’s whirlwind release of the first STAR TREK BEYOND trailer, director Justin Lin took time to speak with several media reports in a roundtable interview covering everything from fan reaction to the new preview,  the lack of Carol Marcus, and the first real insight into Idris Elba‘s ferocious new alien character.

We saw plenty of vocal fans reacting strongly to yesterday’s trailer, from the music to the showcase sequences, and not all were positive (as we’re sure you guessed even before reading comments on social media or around the web!), and Lin tackled that head on.

There were versions that were much more traditional…

But with trailers you’re putting a two-hour movie into a minute and a half, and the one thing I wanted to make sure is that it hopefully represents that we are trying to be bold and take risks, whether we are successful or not, I don’t know. […] I’m not afraid to share it, I feel like we have the goods in a two-hour run and you really do get to know the characters and hopefully the journey is great.

[The Beastie Boys song “Sabotage” is] in the DNA of this canon. It was in the ’09 Trek, and we went through different iterations of the teaser and I wanted to make sure whatever here is using all the elements from the film.

It’s been a part of this Kirk’s journey and so I felt it was very organic, and it will ultimately be in the finished film.

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And even though he’s the director, even Lin can’t always win out when it comes to marketing — and when it came to the now-infamous motorcycle jump, he feels your pain:

When I saw the teaser, I’m like, aw shit. You really have to put the motorcycle in there? So [for ‘Fast and Furious’ comments], I get it, I get it, I get it.

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Be prepared for a more in-depth 3D experience this time around, as well — Lin’s built the 3D presentation into his filmmaking process.

I felt like, especially with space and the depth, I think you get a different experience going 3D, so it’s definitely been kind of designed into it, and I feel like in the nature in how some of these shots are constructed, I would want to see it in 3D, you know?

But it will definitely be a bit of a different experience in watching this movie 2D. So that was definitely taken into account. I don’t think I would have agreed to 3D if it was just, again, to like milk people for more money. I just don’t think that’s right.

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Moving on to the content of BEYOND itself, Lin also addressed questions about some of the lingering criticisms from Star Trek Into Darknesslike the “magic blood” cure-all and Section 31’s intergalactic transport, capable of jumping Khan from Earth to the Klingon homeworld.

I don’t know if we’re leaving it behind. And Simon [Pegg] and Doug [Jung] and I definitely have had some, spent some time on that. But at the same time I feel like this, Star Trek’s been around 50 years. And I’m excited to be a part of it, but I’m also excited to be a participant, but hopefully to see where it’s gonna go. And I think every filmmaker comes on has a different point of view.

[It] definitely now exists. I think the people that really care, you can’t ignore that. But at the same time, do we address that? I don’t discount it. Like, we don’t sit there and say it doesn’t exist. It’s part of this universe now.

Basically, it seems as if the BEYOND team decided that it was safer just to kind of leave those troublesome elements of the previous film alone, concentrating instead on building the best film they could. That’s probably for the best.

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As for Alice Eve’s Carol Marcus, or Benedict Cumberbatch as Khan? Don’t count on seeing them in this sequel.

We pick up about two and a half years after the end of ‘Into Darkness.’ […] What we shot and what’s gonna be in theaters, quantity wise it’s quite a bit. But then to be honest, I actually had even more beyond that. So that’s something that we definitely talked about and worked on, [but in ‘Beyond’ they] didn’t quite fit in.

And the Spock / Uhura romance? That may be on the back burner as well this time around.

What we’re doing is appropriate to the two and a half years. It’s a continuation in a way, and I don’t want to ignore things and act as if they don’t exist, so there’s an acknowledgement and I think their relationship is consistent to the way it was before.

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The visual effects work is far from complete, as is to be expected this far out from the release date. That shot of Kirk’s reflection looks like some kind of wax figure now, but don’t worry too much about it:

Six weeks ago I was in Dubai. So these shots usually take six, seven months just to do it. So, again, there are a lot of people in dark rooms around the clock and I’m in there and we’re talking and were building. Around the world everybody’s trying to get this.

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Action, action, action! From crashing saucers to close-up combat, the BEYOND trailer was packed with one fast-moving sequence after another — but according to Lin’s comments, it’s not just a mindless blur, but a parallel to today’s world.

Star Trek has a very 1960s sensibility – who has the bigger ships wins. But if you look at the [orbital] attack, these ships are 40 feet long but there are 40,000 of them. I think even in the way they’re being encountered…

I feel like when I do think about Star Trek, a lot of times it is about the size, it has a very different sensibility. But at the same time, I think it’s also, that’s also part of moving it and taking risks and saying there’s a lot of different ways people engage in the universe.

What would happen if you go on a five year journey and you’re trying to not only explore but also maybe introduce other people to your way of thinking?

What would that mean? What are the consequences of that? You’re spreading a philosophy that you think is great – are there going to be any philosophies that counter you? That was something I thought about since I was a kid, and we got to explore that.

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Oh, and just because you saw the former writing trio of Roberto Orci, JD Payne, and Patrick McKay credited at the end of the teaser, don’t worry — it’s all about the Writers’ Guild and their rules, as Lin clarified:

The [Writers’ Guild of America] has to figure it out, because I don’t know who [Payne and McKay] are, I never met them. I came on, I had an idea and then Simon and Doug came on. I had one conversation with Orci after I came on, and that was it.

Nothing was refurbished [from that first story] because I don’t know what was done before I came on.

We did attempt to get in touch with Payne and McKay when the director/writer changes were announced earlier this year — after their big, two-part interview with us from last summer — but the declined to comment. Seems they’re still connected to the feature, however tenuously.

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Jim Kirk’s character arc, from the 2009 film through STAR TREK BEYOND, is also a critical element in this new film’s throughline.

It’s a big part — if you think of how in this timeline how Kirk engaged and joined Starfleet, and then you’re going in on a five-year journey, you’re two-and-a-half years into it, I think some existential issues are gonna, it’s gonna very obviously gonna pop up.

I think, if I was in his shoes, I would have those and I think we do try to kind of answer, and I think that was one of the challenges. […] It is about why is Kirk doing what he’s doing. We assume, when we watch it on the TV show, that that’s just something he did, but I wanna know why, and are you going to continue? Are you going to…what’s the reason? Why do you do what you do?

Great, you can go out and talk about how great The Federation is and be a part…whatever. But why are you part of it?

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Finally, we finally learned something concrete about the alien warrior Krall — that’s Idris Elba, pictured in full makeup — after months of silence and speculation.

It’s about building him and having a philosophy and a point of view. I really like [Krall] because he’s challenging the Federation’s philosophy, and it’s something growing up I wanted to see. He’s a character that has a distinct philosophy. Sometimes I watch Trek and I see utopia in San Francisco, and you think “They don’t have money, so how do they live, how do they compete?” Those are things that his character, in a way, has a very distinct and valid point of view about.

When someone is really challenging a way of life, how the Federation should act, I can see – right or wrong – that this is a valid point of view, and that’s a point of entry.

I’ve worked with some really great people and Idris immerses himself and I really enjoyed working with him because he’s all about the character and what’s best about the character’s journey in the film. The only thing that sucked is it took four hours every time we needed to get him on set.

Despite comparisons to Remans (from Star Trek: Nemesis and Enterprise), Jem’Hadar (from Deep Space Nine), or any other Trek staples, Lin specified that Elba’s character is definitely a new alien creation for STAR TREK BEYOND.

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So there’s a lot to digest here: and from what we’re reading, Justin Lin —“the Star Trek kid” — seems to have a firm handle on what Trek is supposed to be, even while it’s being given a bit of an upgrade for today’s audiences.

Do you agree, or are we totally wrong? Sound off in the comments below!

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Breaking Down the STAR TREK BEYOND Trailer!

After months of anticipation, we finally got our first look at director Justin Lin’s STAR TREK BEYOND this morning, after leaked version of the German-language trailer made its way online this weekend.

Now that we’ve got a good look at the trailer, let’s break it down!

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Starting off with the familiar faces of the Enterprise crew — though these shots are pretty clearly culled together from different points in the film — the Beastie Boys’ “Sabotage”, last heard in the opening moments of the 2009 Star Trek film, rocks us into the world of STAR TREK BEYOND.

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Scotty taking inventory of the crew’s tech?
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Note Scotty in the background behind Kirk in this image.
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Sulu at the helm, with seatbelt on.
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Chekov is tucked away in the other room to the left.
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Note Spock’s flight jacket; the shoulder patch reads USS FRANKLIN.
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Uhura watching the team.
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We’re immediately tossed into at overwhelming attack on the Enterprise.
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The port nacelle is blown clean off of the Enterprise.
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Bye bye, warp drive.
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A massive swarm severs the Enterprise saucer section from the drive section below.
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A swarm of alien craft bombard the Enterprise, seemingly designed to penetrate a starship’s outer hull like Cullah’s Kazon shuttlecraft.
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Breaching the hull.
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One alien soldier fights a goldshirt — Kirk, pre-crash — on the Enterprise.

As the crew abandons the Enterprise, we see Kirk launch an escape pod right from the bridge, later watching the detached saucer section fall to the planet below.

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About to give the abandon-ship order. That’s one high collar.
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You can stop asking why there’s only one turbolift: the bridge has its own escape pods.
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Kirk leaves the ship in gold.
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The primary hull descends through the atmosphere.
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And it seems that the saucer mostly survives the descent, as Kirk approaches the wreckage with the help of a mysterious alien…
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…who seems to be part of the Enterprise crew as she arrives in a Starfleet escape pod.
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Could this alien woman be Lydia Wilson?
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Meanwhile Kirk and Chekov explore the interior of the downed vessel.
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Hard to have a rip in the hull like that while still in orbit.
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The wreckage also gives us our first look at these “swarm soldiers”.
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Oh look, it’s G’Kar, back from “Beyond” the rim! (get it?)
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The few escape pods that make it to the surface seem spread out in the wilderness: Chekov lands in the Squamish forest area…
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…while Scotty donned an oxygen mask while strapping himself into a photon torpedo casing, only to end up teetering on the edge of a cliff.
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This torpedo design was last seen holding some frozen dude.

McCoy and an injured Spock, however, end up at the Pitt River Quarries:

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Sofia Boutella’s alien warrior gets to show off her skills:

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Scotty connects some cables — to perhaps blow the stardrive section?
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Chekov and Kirk get blasted through the air at Kent Hangar Field.

Most of the Enterprise crew, however, seem to have gone down with the ship as Sulu and Uhura are among the Starfleet refugees being herded together by the alien soldiers at the quarry.

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The march of the saucer survivors.
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Keenser’s separated from Scotty — hope the little guy can take care of himself.
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Uhura and Sulu watch as the soldiers start something cruel…
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…and they’re powerless to stop it.

Meanwhile, Sofia Boutella shows Simon Pegg something mysterious:

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“…only on CBS All Access?!”

Some of the soldiers make it to a Federation outpost in Dubai, as Kirk takes aim:

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Lastly, as Sofia Boutella fights off one of the soldiers…

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Dom launches himself into the air via car crash, narrowly saving Letty from sudden death.

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Wait. That’s not right.

Just kidding!

Kirk launches himself into the air via motorbike (also last seen in Trek ’09), and the pair beam away together.

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Maybe he bought a new motorbike to replace his one from Iowa?
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Space Motocross: the ultimate evolution of the wheeled arts.

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1992

1997

2017

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While we don’t yet have a fully picture of the STAR TREK BEYOND storyline, this trailer gives us the first ideas of where the film will take us — but one interesting note here is that even though they were jettisoned from the writing team, it seems that Roberto Orci, JD Payne, and Patrick McKay are still receiving some kind of writing credit on the film.

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We want to know what you think: sound off in the comments below!

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