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Justin Lin: “Let the Next Starfleet Mission Begin!”

Star Trek Beyond director Justin Lin has finally weighed in on the now-filming sequel, taking to Twitter to celebrate the launch of production — and he’s appeared to confirm the Beyond title once and for all.

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It’s our first look at any Federation gear from this third entry in the film series, a shoulder patch which appears to be part of a new uniform design.

Could this be part of a revised dress uniform, such as the grey dress jackets worn in Star Trek Into Darkness?

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Of course, until more images are available, the usage for this Starfleet patch is all speculation… but of course, we’ll be watching!

EDIT:  As Paul Sutherlin pointed out in our comments below, the Starfleet flight jackets worn a few times in Star Trek Into Darkness also featured a very similar — if not identical — patch worn on the left shoulders. This appears to be the another reusage on the new blue-colored costume hinted in Justin Lin’s photo.

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Trek Comics Review #46: “The Tholian Webs, Part 1”

Our Trek Comics editor Patrick Hayes is back with a review of this month’s issue of IDW Publishing’s Star Trek comic series: the first chapter of “The Tholian Webs,” the next adventure in the new Five Year Mission.

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Order Star Trek #46

  • The regular cover is another beautiful piece by Joe Corroney and Brian Miller. Kirk looks intently at a threat beyond the boarders of the image, holding a phaser ready. Scotty looks in the same direction, though his gaze is one of concern. On the left a crewman in red raises some protective goggles to speak with someone on his communicator. I’ve never seen this blonde crewman before and he’s wearing red, so I won’t become too attached to him. Three desert worlds swirl about the characters with a warp field coming out from behind Kirk. Computer overlays of Enterprise terminal screens are sprinkled throughout the image. Corroney always knocks it out of the park with his covers, and he does so here. Joining him as colorist is Miller from Hi-Fi who is just as accomplished. The glow around each character, the computer overlays, and the shading on each individual’s face is top notch. Corroney and Miller are a powerhouse team.
  • The photo cover is of Anton Yelchin as Chekov. If Pavel is in this issue (and he is), the picture is appropriate because the lieutenant always seems to have that momentarily stunned look. This picture is so good Yelchin could use it to promote himself. I’m glad this is a full page bleed on this image as opposed to the previous issues’ horizontal cover images.

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The Enterprise is streaking its way home to “re-establish contact with Starfleet, and make repairs after the events of the past few weeks.” All’s going well until the ship powers down out of a warp on her own. Kirk isn’t happy. “I don’t want to spend another second of this mission adrift.” The captain’s anger is tempered when Spock asks to show him something, and he puts his arm through one of the computer screens on the bridge.

The molecular cohesion of the ship appears to have been affected after their shifting out of warp-space. Chekov puts his hand through his console to illustrate it’s still occurring. Though when Kirk tries it on his chair, nothing happens. Spock believes the ship is encountering interphase. A trip to the conference room with Kirk, Spock, Scotty, Uhura, and McCoy explains what the theory is just before one of the individuals has an uncharacteristic outburst.

This is a sacred television episode for me and I was surprised to see that writer Mike Johnson was reimagining this episode. I approached this with a lot of trepidation. This was really good. Once interphase is introduced Johnson shows the physical threat to the crew and things escalate as the integrity of the ship continues to be questionable. I was nicely surprised by the sequence that begins on Page 10. This was a fantastic decision made by this character and a slick way to communicate information to Kirk.

Minor nit: the dialogue in the second and third panel completely dismisses the individual standing on the far left. I expected him to say, “Hey! I’m right here!” The fourth panel on the same page is a nice throw back to a previous page with the realization being too late. I like how trouble is coming from two separate parts of the ship.

The exterior antagonists don’t appear until the final four pages. Fans of Judy Burns and Chet Richards’ script will be pleased with what occurs because Johnson has taken the original problems of the Enterprise and doubled them. The justification for why the unknown ships are doing what they’re doing is nicely reasoned out by Kirk, but I’m hoping to see this alien threat make some reference to Star Trek: Enterprise’s history with this species. I’m looking forward to seeing and hearing this race next month in the conclusion.

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Taking on “The Tholian Webs” is artist Rachel Stott, coming off her very successful run on Star Trek/Planet of the Apes: The Primate Directive. I was interested to see if she could do as well a job in creating the likenesses of the new crew of the Enterprise after doing a sensational job on the original crew. Oh, she does!

Kirk looks great on pages 1 – 3, 11, 13, and 19; Spock sharp on pates 4, 10, 11, 13, and 19; and “that character” on 5, 6, 8, 10, and 11. I’d like to draw attention to Page 11, which illustrates how deftly Stott can render her characters: the first and last panel focuses on the same two characters, but from different angles — one from on high and the other down low. The first panel allows the reader to feel he or she is eavesdropping on the conversation as a plot point is revealed, and the last has the reader join the characters in being startled at what’s occurred. Both views of the characters are superb.

Stott must also be recognized for doing something that no other Star Trek artist has done on this book in over a year — she draws her own backgrounds! Gone are the fuzzy, out of focus photographic inserts. I practically hooted and hollered at seeing this in the third panel on the first page. Engineering is the best it’s looked in a long time at the top of Page 3. This seems like something of little importance, but look at the corridor on Page 7: every recess in the wall can be clearly seen, and it’s shown in even more detail on 8. The location the story moves to on 10 is lavish in its geometry.

I have been waiting forever for an artist to come to this ongoing series who draws the entire panel. Ms. Stott, please stick around for a while.

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Handling the coloring chores is Davide Mastrolonardo. He colors the interiors of the Enterprise with the same clean white and grey colors of previous colorists, but with more of the latter and some pale blues to break up the monotony of the setting’s palette. The shading of individuals’ faces is terrific with Kirk and Scotty being stand outs on Page 2 and Keenser being beautiful on 3. I also like the nontraditional use of orange used for a background color during stressful moments such as on 2, 6, and 11.

The coloring used for the title characters’ trap is the same shade as that from the famous episode, and I was happy to see it be so. This is some solid work from Mastrolonardo.

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The captain’s log and dialogue (same font), computer signage, sounds, yells, the Enterprise’s computer voice, and next issue’s tease are all crafted by Neil Uyetake. I wanted to see the captain’s log and a character’s pre-recorded message in a different font from the dialogue, but what’s done is fine.

TREK 3 Production Heading Overseas to Film in Dubai

Things just got going this week in Vancouver, but we’ve also learned today that the next Star Trek film will be traveling to Dubai soon for additional filming on the sequel, following in the footsteps of Star Trek Into Darkness which included portions filmed in Iceland.

In a Slashfilm interview released today, Skydance Productions heads David Ellison and Dana Goldberg spoke about the then-upcoming production on the Trek sequel, covering the yet-to-be-confirmed Star Trek Beyond title, as well as filming destinations and director Justin Lin’s vision:

SLASHFILM: I want to segue into a certain Star Trek sequel that I believe starts filming soon. Is it called Star Trek Beyond?

GOLDBERG: To be determined.

SLASHFILM: What can you tell people about when it’s filming and where?

ELLISON: We start shooting in ten days and we’re shooting in Vancouver and Dubai.

SLASHFILM: Dubai is an interesting place for an alien planet.

ELLISON and GOLDBERG: Could be [laughs].

GOLDBERG: [Justin Lin  came] in to meet with us and to meet with everybody at Paramount and pitched a version of the film that we just thought ‘wow, that has huge potential.’ We’re not allowed to talk about the specifics of the film to say the least, but what we can tell you is there are some sequences that we have seen in pre-vis that are just incredible.

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The pair also discussed the nature of the CBS / Paramount “divorce” that split Star Trek ownership rights between the two companies, setting up the feature films against the world of Trek television.

SLASHFILM: What is the status of Star Trek on the small screen? Is Skydance involved in that?

ELLISON: It’s something that we would love to be involved in. As I’m sure everybody knows, the rights situation given the CBS and Paramount divorce on the Star Trek rights is very, very complicated. The exact status of it is absolutely something being worked on. We would love to be involved, but all to be determined at this time.

GOLDBERG: You’re preaching to the converted. We would love it, both as fans and as people who would want to be involved in the making of them. We would love it. Everything you just said is right. It goes with what we were talking about before with television is you can just take more time to tell very specific stories and it would be fantastic. It’s not something we control, sadly.

.  .  .

SLASHFILM: Is that the reason why there hasn’t been a TV show in all of these years? Because it’s such a popular property around the world, you would think that they’d get their head out of their ass and do something with it.

GOLDBERG: You said that, we did not [laughs].

ELLISON: It’s wildly, wildly complicated.

Just speaking towards going to something we do control, not trying to get myself into trouble by answering this bluntly, because you said it appropriately, is the Terminator rights were scattered all over the world prior to us getting involved. And it’s when a franchise has been around for thirty or fifty years, different people make different deals at different points in time.

It really took for Terminator the previous owner actually going bankrupt and going through obviously bankruptcy court, and then even after that it took a year to clean up the straggling pieces that that process did not clean up. We’re very thankful that the rights now all revolve under our house so they are now all at Skydance so we can control all assets of the property.

That’s not always the case with franchises, and when they’re fifty years old, there’s a lot of complicated deals that have been made that sometimes prevent things that might seem obvious that need to happen from happening.

With Chris Pine and Zachary Quinto already onboard for Star Trek 4should it come to pass, there will be many questions regarding the state of Trek television — and if fans will need to wait another four years for hopes of a return to the small screen.

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Paramount Signs Pine and Quinto for Potential TREK 4

It’s been a busy day for Trek news, and we’re barely through the morning — and here’s one more breaking story, laying the first bit of foundation for a potential Star Trek Beyond sequel.

The Hollywood Reporter has confirmed today that actors Chris Pine and Zachary Quinto have both completed contract negotiations with Paramount Pictures to extend their runs as Kirk and Spock for a potential fourth Star Trek film.

Each actor was seeking raises from their original three-picture contract established in 2009. Chris Pine earned just $600,000 for the lead role in that first film — bumped to $1.5 Million for Into Darkness — and was hoping to double his $3 Million Star Trek Beyond take. Neogtiations appear to have been fruitful as his paycheck has been increased to $6 Million for the new film, currently filming in Vancouver.

The one condition of the various pay and benefit increases, according to THR, was that Pine and Quinto lock down their participation in another sequel — and that was completed in these new contracts.

While this news isn’t a guarantee of a Star Trek Beyond sequel, it’s the first indication that Paramount is looking to keep the J.J. Abrams film series going past 2016.

TREK 3 Filming Permit for Stawamus Park Revealed!

As we’ve been reporting over the last few days, Star Trek Beyond filming is now underway at the Stawamus Chief Provincial Park in British Columbia — and now we’ve got a copy of Centre Forward Productions permit for filming at the natural location.

Issued on June 4, 2015, this extensive permit details not only the approved filming schedule, but also rules and regulations for operating within the park.

Specifics include insurance requirements, a larger map of the planned filming areas, guidelines for how the park’s credit should appear at the end of the film, as well as costs and fees associated with ‘renting’ the location for filming — including the payment rates for the BC Parks ‘film monitor’ to be on site with the cast and crew.

The full 16-page agreement can be viewed below:

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Photos by Peter Michaux.

Browse through the document and let us know what grabs your attention in the comments below!

First Photos From TREK 3’s Location Shooting at Stawamus Park Show Fake Rocks, Construction

As we reported on Wednesday, filming on Star Trek Beyond was set to begin on June 25 at the Stawamus Chief Provincial Park, a popular site for hikers and rock climbers north of Vancouver.

There has already been an update to the posted filming schedule, as Squamish Climbing Magazine has already started seeing revised notices indicating some changes to the “Washington” film crew’s site needs over the next few days.

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While the United States prepares for next weekend’s Fourth of July holiday, the crew from Centre Forward Productions looks to be taking July 1’s Canada Day holiday off as well — sure to be a popular day for park visitors at the Stawamus forest.

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As we also mentioned on Wednesday, there has been some concern about damaged rocks and trees at the Squamish Boulders filming site within Stawamus, and today we have some photos of the area in question, also courtesy of Squamish Climbing Magazine and their local climbing enthusiasts.

The site, currently set up near the Grand Wall boulders area of the park, is filled with fluorescent pink taped-off areas, artificial rock formations, and a large stage platform among the trees.

Additionally, wire rigging has been reportedly set up to allow cameras to ‘fly’ above the forest floor to film overhead shots.

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A raised platform has been built over several smaller boulders, possibly as a stable support structure for cameras and filming equipment within the rugged, rocky forest.
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A taped-off area with garbage cans and other debris has been set up to limit the crew’s impact.
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It wouldn’t be ‘Star Trek’ without a few fake rocks, right? With all the boulders already in the area, these are likely to be used for scenarios that could damage the existing formations.

In terms of the previously-reported environmental damage claims, there does appear to have been some impact on the natural formations at the park, including the removal of at least two dead trees.

At least a few of the boulders, however, has been treated a bit incorrectly, as the film crew was reportedly spotted cleaning chalk off with wire brushes — a procedure that could damage the rock surface. SCM has been in contact with the site’s coordinating team and has confirmed that any future cleaning needs will be completed with softer, nylon brushes.

Climbing holds on ‘Bulb’ boulder was sprayed what initially appeared to be some kind of resin or foam residue — later determined to be a type of natural, alcohol-soluble shellac — were also spotted, and those spots have since been successfully cleaned with the assistance of some local climbers.

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The ‘Bulb’ rock face, before and after cleaning.

We have reached out to several local Squamish climbing enthusiasts and hope to follow up on this with additional information as filming progresses over the next several days.

TREK 3 Production Starts June 25: “Washington” Filming Notices Up in Canadian Provincial Park

The time has come: Star Trek Beyond launches full-fledged production on June 25, and there have already been public notices posted for local residents.

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Posted by @lelisab on Twitter

Project “Washington,” the now-well-known codename for Star Trek Beyond, is taking over the Stawamus Chief Provincial Park for several days over the next week, as the above public notice advises park visitors.

washingtonClick this image to see the public notice document in high-resolution.

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scheduleThe expected filming areas and schedule, courtesy of Squamish Climbing Magazine

Stawamus Park is located nearly an hour north of Vancouver, and is the first known location to be used in the film’s production.

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This park visit isn’t sitting well with some local residents, however, as CBC News is reporting claims of “cut down trees” and “spray painted boulders” by the “Washington” pre-production team which has been on site for the last two weeks.

While the production company has valid permits for filming in the park, the British Columbia Parks staff is investigating these allegations of environmental damage.

This location certainly harkens back to the opening scenes of Star Trek V: The Final Frontier, showcasing a popular rock-climbing location (the Squamish Boulders, featured in the above video) and surrounding wooded forest. Time to roast a few more marshmelons, perhaps?

Build to TREK 3 Continues: Zachary Quinto Gets a Bit More Vulcan; Sofia Boutella in Vancouver Too

Zachary Quinto is continuing the Instagram sharing trend as well this week, as he revealed another part of his transformation into Spock: his shaven eyebrows, ready to be shaped into a more Vulcan look.

https://instagram.com/p/4SeBU0Li6Z/

He shared the photo in an effort to raise awareness for Adam Nimoy’s For the Love of Spock Kickstarter fundraiser, a project aiming to complete a personal documentary on his father’s Star Trek role.

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Another of the Star Trek Beyond cast has arrived in Vancouver ahead of the June 25 start of production: actress Sofia Boutella, confirmed to have joined the film back in April, began sharing photos on Instagram tagged with the Canadian city’s name this week.

https://www.instagram.com/p/4L3HUuNxG1/

While perhaps not the most, well, on-topic photo, it’s good to see confirmation that Boutella is joining the rest of the Trek 3 crew up north.

Remembering Acclaimed Composer James Horner

By Rob Heyman

It seemed the punches just keep coming this year: Leonard Nimoy, Maurice Hurley, Harve Bennett, and now James Horner. Star Trek certainly felt the blow from the passing of some noted talent. I could spend an entire column writing just about Nimoy.

I could probably spend more than a few paragraphs taking about Hurley, too, as someone who left an indelible mark as a producer on Star Trek: The Next Generation (we owe the Borg to him).

I wanted to donate this column to Horner, because composers are often the unsung heroes of cinema. Horner certainly wasn’t an unknown, however. He’d composed the score for Star Trek: The Wrath of Khan and The Search for Spock, thus leaving an indelible mark on the franchise.

Most people probably know him as the guy who composed Titanic, for which he won a couple of Oscars. He later went on to compose Avatar and was keeping pretty busy with upcoming assignments, including the Avatar sequels.

Like Jerry Goldsmith and John Williams, Horner became a bit of celebrity, and his acclaim was largely justified. Say what you will about his penchant for recycling his own music (listen to the score to Wolfen and you’ll hear some familiar melodies from The Wrath of Khan) — Horner was an unquestionable talent. I can’t imagine Field of Dreams without his score.

He delivered an equally moving contribution to the 1989 film Glory. And then of course there’s Titanic. Many directors partner with a loyal composer. Spielberg has John Williams, Robert Zemeckis has Alan Silvestri, and M. Night Shyalaman has James Newton Howard. Horner was a favorite of James Cameron and Ron Howard.

These partnerships helped inform our fascination, as film geeks, with cinema and provided a kind of compass to what we could expect musically whenever a new project was announced by one of these directors.

Sadly, it seems, we don’t really talk about film composing these days as we once did. The sort of classic, sweeping, epic landscapes that were painted musically in movies like Dances With Wolves or romantic melodramas like Titanic are long gone.

Horner was a part of a Golden Age of film scoring that seemed to end about 15 years ago. There’s been the occasional speck of light poking through the darkness. Michael Giacchino delivers some heavy melodies for the new Star Trek movies, but they certainly lack the bombastic assault of Horner’s Wrath of Khan score.

Horner had a way of nailing the emotional center of any scene he composed – whether it was Spock’s death and eventual “burial” on Genesis in Khan or Kevin Costner playing baseball with his dead dad in Field of Dreams.

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James Horner’s STAR TREK II cameo.

It’s my hope that, perhaps with the upcoming Star Wars movies and John Williams’ work therein, film composing will find its way back on the radar and a return to the glory that Horner helped shape over the past 30 years.

I got the news about the plane crash from my longtime friend on Monday night. At that point, it was still unclear as to whether Horner was the pilot who died (as this evening, of course, that news has been verified).

The first thing I did was go on Twitter in the hopes of finding some real-time update. One thing that became clear to me was that Horner had an incredibly fan base, all of whom poured out their sadness on social media.

For my generation in particular – fans who grew up on the movies Horner composed – the loss of Horner is a powerful one. This is certainly a time to celebrate his music and the contribution he made to cinema. Very few composers find their way into the public consciousness by virtue of the work that they have done.

Horner was one of them.

Uhura Approaches: Zoe Saldana Arrives to TREK 3

Following co-stars Karl Urban, Simon Pegg, John Cho, and Anton YelchinStar Trek actress Zoe Saldana has now made the journey north to Vancouver where she’s getting prepared for Star Trek Beyond, expected to begin filming later this week.

Like Zachary Quinto, she’s starting from the top down:

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Expect to see more of the cast and crew share their progress into the final frontier for the third time over the next several months as the path to Star Trek 3 continues.