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STAR TREK: LOWER DECKS Review — “I Have No Bones Yet I Must Flee”

This week’s two-episode Star Trek: Lower Decks premiere week continues with “I Have No Bones Yet I Must Flee,” a touching and hilarious episode of Star Trek: Lower Decks that feels tonally similar to last season’s underrated “The Least Dangerous Game.”
 
Following on from last episode’s promotion ceremony that saw Boimler, Mariner, Tendi, and T’Lyn receive promotions to Lieutenant (junior grade), this week it’s Rutherford’s turn — while Mariner and Ransom continue to tussle and end up in a very good place. All three storylines in this week’s episode fire on all cylinders, and in some ways I think it’s a bit of a shame that this episode premiered alongside “Twovix,” because that episode is likely going to melt down the internet — and as a result, “I Have No Bones…” is not going to get the appreciative look that I think it deserves.
 
This episode really picks up and runs with the big changes from last week’s season opener to the Lower Decks dynamic, and solidifies them moving forward by proving it wasn’t just a one episode thing.
 

Mariner and Ransom find common ground. (Paramount+)

“I Have No Bones Yet I Must Flee” is the first episode this season — and because Paramount+ released the first eight episodes to review in advance, I can say this continues beyond this episode — to absolutely nail the character of Jack Ransom (Jerry O’Connell).

Ransom is still his usual self in this episode; overly sure of himself and exercise-obsessed. But in this episode he becomes a first officer that you would want to serve under; a man who sees the best in his crew and supports them in the way that they need. Ransom is my MVP of Season 4 so far, and the reason why is absolutely encapsulated in this episode.

The Ransom/Mariner dynamic here also turns what could have been a frustrating snooze-fest — oh great, another episode where Mariner (Tawny Newsome) and Ransom are going to be butting heads for a whole episode — into something sweet and funny, and signifies a real evolution in their relationship. It’s so welcome, and I think there’s a great Ransom/Mariner episode curation you could do to see how their relationship has evolved during the course of the series. Jerry O’Connell is also killing it this season, infusing Ransom’s typical characterization with all the right notes of support and leadership.

The menagerie storyline has a little too many shades of similarity to “Kayshon, His Eyes Open” for me, but that’s totally forgiven by the demented and hilarious creation of the Moopsy creature.

Tendi orders Rutherford to continue being her friend. (Paramount+)

I also love the way this episode ties up the hanging thread from last episode’s promotion ceremony, which left Rutherford (Eugene Cordero) as the lone ensign of the group. It absolutely makes sense that he’s already been offered one multiple times before, because of all the Lower Deckers, he has been a critical lynchpin to the resolution of so many big stories.

To discover he is still an ensign solely because he didn’t want a promotion to alter his friendship with Tendi (Noel Wells) is very sweet. There continues to be something of a question mark over the nature of the relationship that Tendi and Rutherford share, but I am enjoying this exploration of a deeply sweet and seemingly non-romantic relationship that clearly goes deeper than friendship… but maybe not so deep as to reach the next stage.

Boimler has problems with his new quarters. (Paramount+)

Lower Decks always excels when it is doing “slice of life aboard a Federation starship” story, and so giving Boimler (Jack Quaid) the C-plot — struggling with his room assignments — is a joy. It is maybe a little too much of a sitcom trope that he has to be dumb enough not to realize he can change the brightness on the window in order for the whole plotline to work, but it gets a pass from me here to see some new parts of the ship and some of the less desirable quarters aboard the Cerritos.

(Plus, it’s a fun homage to the Seinfeld Kenny Rogers Roasters chicken sign.)

CANON CONNECTIONS

  • The Remans get namechecked by Lower Decks for the second time this year after they were also briefly mentioned in Star Trek: Picard… but we still haven’t seen one for a while!
  • Ransom and Shax’s workout outfits, and some of their exercises, are the same worn and performed by Doctor Crusher and Counselor Troi while discussing the unique charms of Devonani Ral in “The Price.”
  • “Humans are always getting stuck in menageries,” is likely a fun little callback to the events of “The Cage.” Even though that wasn’t the episode that broadcast on September 8, 1966, as the true pilot of Star Trek it feels appropriate the joke broadcasts the day before Star Trek Day.
Snakes in a cage. (Paramount+)
A real engineering throwback. (Paramount+)

OBSERVATION LOUNGE

  • This episode’s title is a play on Harlan Ellison’s classic science fiction story I Have No Mouth, and I Must Scream.
  • The variant Romulan Warbird seen in the episode’s teaser — with wings in vertical rather than horizontal position — is based off a concept drawing of the Romulan Warbird from the early days of Star Trek: The Next Generation created by Andy Probert.
  • Tendi hints at events we haven’t seen on screen, like the time cosmic rays caused the crew of the Cerritos to swap bodies.
  • Where exactly is Boimler’s quarters on the Cerritos? The view of the nacelle through the window does not make it clear where his quarters are located because the secondary hull is set back from the bussard collectors. (Star Trek starship nerds, do your thing!)
  • Genuinely, who would want to be in the rooms on either side of the holodeck? Not me, that’s for sure.
  • Boimler has an action figure of mirror Jonathan Archer and Captain Spock, both action figures that I also want to own, thanks very much!
Boimler’s Captain Spock and Mirror Archer figures. (Paramount+)
  • The Moopsy is genuinely terrifying. I want a plushie.
  • I love technobabble. Here are the ways Rutherford tries to earn his promotion in a day: decreasing vibration in the warp manifold by a factor of .05; increasing the power output of the Tucker Tubes by seven picocochranes; trying to defuse heat conduction by a few nanojoules; and speeding up the replicator by nine whole femtoseconds.
  • The device that has never had a name but shows up in most Star Trek series — those two tubes with light running through them — finally has an official name: Tucker Tubes! What a fitting tribute to the Enterprise NX-01’s dearly departed engineer (#TripLives.)
  • Boimler blocks out the light from the warp nacelle using the protective eyewear developed to protect Spock from the effect of seeing a Medusan.
  • Rutherford turned down promotions for saving the Cerritos from the Pakleds (“No Small Parts”), and saving the USS Rubidoux from a space jellyfish (“Much Ado About Boimler”). He earns his promotion for the time he removed the Cerritos’s hull (“First First Contact.”)
  • Ransom’s new teeth is the second biggest laugh I’ve had so far this season of Lower Decks.
Big smiles all around. (Paramount+)

This week Lower Decks served up a big — but messy — celebration of Voyager, and a fun character episode cementing the new dynamics for the show. I am really happy Lower Decks is back, and excited for the rest of the season ahead. There are fun new ways that the show can explore these characters’ new positions, and I am excited to see the direction they take it.

Star Trek: Lower Decks returns September 14 with “In the Cradle of Vexilon” on Paramount+.

STAR TREK: LOWER DECKS Season Premiere Review — “Twovix”

Star Trek: Lower Decks returns for for its fourth year with a big season opener filled with loving tributes to Star Trek: Voyager, hilarious jokes, a significant step forward for the show’s character development — and a the start of a big mystery set to last through the season.
 
If that all sounds like a little too much, well… it is. But that’s okay, because Lower Decks is back, and “Twovix” shows that the animated series is as funny as ever. The Cerritos is assigned to escort the USS Voyager — newly restored into a floating museum after its seven-year trip through the Delta Quadrant — to Earth, where it will go on display.
 
While preparing the ship for departure, a rogue orchid leaf makes its way into the transporter room, where it accidentally causes Lt. Commander Billups (Paul Scheer) and Doctor T’Ana (Gillian Vigman) to merge into T’illups, just like Tuvok and Neelix in the original “Tuvix” episode. When T’illups returns to the Cerritos and discovers that Tuvix was murdered by Captain Janeway, he sets about creating more hybrids to preserve his chance of living.
 
Meanwhile, back aboard Voyager, Ensign Brad Boimler (Jack Quaid) accidentally awakens a dormant macrovirus (from “Macrocosm”) which wreaks havoc on the ship by reactivating old systems and interacting with the delicate museum displays.
 

The starships Voyager and Cerritos. (Paramount+)

First, what rules about this episode? Everything Voyager! Like the Deep Space Nine tributes in last season’s “Hear All, Trust Nothing,” this week’s tale is a love letter to all things Star Trek: Voyager — and the Intrepid-class starship looks absolutely gorgeous in animation. Just as Deep Space Nine’s vibe was perfectly captured by the Lower Decks animators in Season 3, they also excelled here, rendering each of the iconic locations on Voyager perfectly. I could have easily watched another 20 minutes of the crew exploring the ship and visiting the exhibits.

The episode also marks the entry of T’Lyn (Gabrielle Ruiz) — the breakout character from Season 2’s “wej Duj” — into the Cerritos crew. After being teased in the final moments last season, this episode is the first real opportunity we have had to see how T’Lyn will complement and evolve the core foursome (now fivesome) of our Lower Decks main characters. Like other Vulcan characters before her, T’Lyn often serves as the foil to the humor of Boimler and the gang, and it totally works.

“Twovix” also begins a big evolution for our Lower Decks main characters, showing its credentials not just as an adult animated comedy, but also a Star Trek show. Long-running animated shows like The Simpsons thrive off of sameness — Bart Simpson has been 10 years old for nearly 35 years. But by the end of “Twovix,” four of the five ensigns have been promoted to the rank of Lieutenant (junior grade), with only Rutherford (Eugene Cordero) left behind.

This move represents a big step forward for Lower Decks, and an opportunity to evolve its formula a little. I’ll talk more about how well the show accomplishes that in future reviews, but in Star Trek, characters grow and evolve — and we’re seeing that here with our main cast.

Billups and T’Ana become T’illups. (Paramount+)

This episode is also hilarious. The introduction of the Tuvix’d crew had me in stitches (and that “Swhale Swhaleson” joke is in my top five funniest jokes in all of Lower Decks so far). But while I enjoyed “Twovix” immensely, I felt a little empty by the end of the episode. I think there are two reasons for that: first, because the central ethical dilemma is not explored in any more depth here, it is just played for laughs. And second… I don’t really love that an episode was effectively inspired by Star Trek Twitter.

Go anywhere Star Trek fans hang out on the web, and you’ll find a debate about “Tuvix” — and nowhere more than on Twitter, where the episode has become so debated, that the debate itself has also become its own meme. It is one of the most talked about, most controversial episodes of Star Trek, in part because social media thrives on that.

And I just don’t love the idea of Star Trek episodes that I hope to be watching 40 years from now having such a tie-in to a stupid bit from the fandom at a specific moment in time. I think we’ve just written the last page of the “Tuvix” story, and it’s time to move on.

Tendi and T’Lyn begin to bond. (Paramount+)

But at the same time, if this is the great crescendo of the last few years of Tuvix-mania, what did we learn from it? There was no nuanced exploration of the moral and ethical debate inherent in the original Voyager episode, nor is there a more satisfying conclusion — T’Lyn pulls a Janeway and murders them all, and only with the help of Tendi (Noel Wells) are they able to restore all the original characters to normal. “Twovix” does not add anything to “Tuvix” except some great jokes, and I am not sure that was enough for a Star Trek episode.

“Twovix” ends with a big tease for a mystery that will span a number of episodes (and potentially the whole season): in the epilogue, the IKS Che’Ta’ from “wej Duj” returns, still under the command of Captain Ma’ah (John Curry). They are investigating an unknown starship… one that promptly destroys the Che’Ta’ and kills the crew.

It’s a big shocker to end the season premiere, and I’m excited to learn more!

TREK TROPE TRIBUTES

T’Lyn’s addition to Lower Decks gives the show its first real “straight man” (or straight woman, in this case), which echoes the role that characters like Spock, Data, Odo, Seven of Nine, and T’Pol have played in previous series. Everyone wins:  T’Lyn gets some great character stuff out of her role, not just in this episode, but in several other moments across the first eight Season 4 episodes we’ve seen.

The mystery ship. (Paramount+)

CANON CONNECTIONS

  • Some of the iconic Voyager sets recreated in animation this episode include the bridge, main engineering, Cargo Bay 2, the mess hall, sickbay, the shuttlebay, the transporter room, and Seven of Nine’s Astrometrics lab.
  • Each of the locations visited includes familiar props or costumes, like Seven’s silver outfit from the end of “The Gift” next to her Borg regeneration chambers, or Neelix’s cooking attire in the mess hall.
  • Neelix’s calamitous Brill cheese (which caused so much trouble in “Learning Curve”) returns this episode, used to knock Voyager out of warp before it makes contact with a Borg Cube.
  • The assimilated macrovirus activated several holograms of characters from Voyager’s adventures, including Michael Sullivan (“Fair Haven”), a recreation of Harry Kim’s nightmare Clown (“The Thaw”), and Dr. Chaotica (from “Bride of Chaotica!” and other appearances) — and it also partially assimilated animatronic replicas of Janeway and Paris as “Threshold” salamanders.
  • Michael Sullivan admits to “missing his wife” — fitting, after Janeway deleted her from the “Fair Haven” holoprogram in the episode of the same name.
  • Boimler distracts Chaotica by saying that he is the son of Captain Proton. Is that the opening to Chapter 19?
  • Thanks to Star Trek: Picard, we know that Voyager eventually ends up at the Athan Prime fleet museum under Geordi La Forge’s care, but for now, the ship is headed to San Francisco for Earth-bound visitors. This tracks with Admiral Janeway’s description from “Endgame,” where she refers to the ship as a “museum on the grounds of the Presidio” in her alternate future.
Voyager’s holograms: the Clown, Dr. Chaotica, and Michael Sullivan. (Paramount+)

OBSERVATION LOUNGE

  • Like mother, like daughter: both Mariner and Captain Freeman (Dawnn Lewis) each hoped their classified mission wasn’t some kind of “Romulan thing.”
  • The set up for the Tendi/T’Lyn dynamic in this episode — that Tendi is desperate for T’Lyn’s friendship and approval and T’Lyn’s reticence to offer it — is one of my favorite things about Lower Decks Season 4.
  • According to the curator and historian, Beljo Tweekle, Voyager is “the most beautiful work of art in Starfleet history.” And after seeing her in animation, I’d have to agree!
  • The Season 4 opening credits have added the Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home Whale Probe to the big battle sequence, complete with its iconic sounds.
  • The poles for the rope lines that keep future tourists away from the Voyager exhibits have the combadge at the top.
  • “That’s a mission-worn uniform!” cautions Tweekle, as the Cerritos crew get a little too handsy with Harry Kim’s mannequin — a very a funny parallel to how many screen-used prop and costume collectors behave if you manhandle their collectibles.
  • Forget “Weird is part of the job” — “It’s Voyager, shit got freaky!” should be the show’s official motto.
Boimler fights off a dangerous macrovirus. (Paramount+)
  • Billups had a dragon named Fiddlesticks growing up.
  • Each Tuvix’d crewmember gets a swirly pattern on their uniform shoulder yoke, a throwback to the look Tuvix’s uniform had after merging with Neelix’s clothes. It makes no sense here, but it’s a nice callback!
  • The new names of the Tuvix’d crew include T’illups, Frigleeman, Chaundie, Sh’Barnes, and Swhale Swhaleson.
  • “It’s VOY, man!” is a nice callback to “We’ll Always Have Have Tom Paris” where the debate about the show’s three letter abbreviation was put to bed.
  • “Dude, this is nothing compared to that Pike thing we’re not supposed to talk about!” is, of course, a fun reference to the recent Strange New Worlds crossover episode “Those Old Scientists.”
  • Referring to the Voyager era as “the 70’s” was at the same time both a weird thing to hear and made total sense. It was the (23)70s! A wild time! Just not our 70s…
  • Voyager is headed in the direction of Borg Cube 858779 — might that be the same cube the Star Trek: Prodigy crew encountered in “Let Sleeping Borg Lie” last season? There probably aren’t a ton of Borg Cubes knocking around close to Federation space…
Voyager finally makes it back to Earth — as a museum. (Paramount+).

“Twovix” almost gets a pass for saying nothing interesting — by virtue of being so funny. But I don’t want my Lower Decks to just be funny. I also like it when it has something to say, just like it does about Boimler and Mariner’s promotion. Boimler struggling with the promotion throughout the episode because of his fear about how it would impact his relationship with Mariner (Tawny Newsome) was great stuff, as was Ransom’s (Jerry O’Connell) diagnosis of Mariner’s reluctance to take the promotion at the end.

This show can make insightful character commentary when it wants to. It just chose not to when it came to “Tuvix.” And that’s a big missed opportunity.

Star Trek: Lower Decks Season 4 continues with “I Have No Bones Yet I Must Flee” — check out our review of the year’s second episode, also debuting today on Paramount+.

Watch an Exclusive Clip from STAR TREK: PICARD Season 3 on Blu-ray

The final season of Star Trek: Picard has just beamed down on Blu-ray in North America, and we’ve got an exclusive clip from the new set to share with you today!
 
Courtesy of Paramount Home Entertainment, this clip features series lead Patrick Stewart (Admiral Jean-Luc Picard) celebrating his fellow cast and crewmates during his last day on set, along with comments on the series wrap from showrunner Terry Matalas.
 

 
We’ll have our full review of the Star Trek: Picard Season 3 Blu-ray set in the coming days, and if you’re looking to bring the final adventure of the Star Trek: The Next Generation crew home on disc, you can order the Blu-ray, the Blu-ray Steelbook, or the DVD set now.
 

STAR TREK: PICARD Season 3 on Blu-ray and in special Steelbook packaging (right).

In addition to Season 3, the Star Trek: Picard complete-series collection is also out this week — to be followed by the massive 54-disc Picard Legacy Collection on October 17, which includes all seven seasons of The Next Generation, all four Next Gen feature films, the three seasons of Picard, and several exclusive collectibles.

The PICARD LEGACY COLLECTION, coming in October.

Earlier today, we reported on a visual effects error impacting the series finale episode (“The Last Generation”); we’ll share more on that situation once we have feedback from Paramount Home Entertainment.

Keep checking back to TrekCore for all the latest in Star Trek home media news!

Editing Error Found on STAR TREK: PICARD Season 3 Blu-ray Disc

We’re still finalizing our review of the brand-new Star Trek: Picard Season 3 Blu-ray set, but wanted to quickly make sure that our readers were aware of an error that was identified overnight on the new release, involving the use of an incorrect visual effect shot.
 

September 6 Update: This is an issue involving an incorrect edit of the episode making it onto the Blu-ray disc, not a visual effects production issue. Our article has been amended to more accurately express that.

In the opening moments of the series finale, “The Last Generation,” the Enterprise-D is racing towards Earth to stop the Borg attack on Starfleet — and just before the camera cuts to our heroes on the bridge of the Galaxy-class starship, we see the resurrected Enterprise warping past camera.

On Paramount+, the ship dynamically flies away from a blue nebula, passing close to camera before leaving viewers behind. On the new Season 3 Blu-ray discs, however, that scene features a less-interesting view of the Enterprise at warp speed — this may have been an alternate visual effects shot used during post-production before the “nebula” version was completed.

The ten-second error occurs on Disc 3 at timecode 2:06 on “The Last Generation.”

As Trek visual effects production manager Shawn Ewashko rightly points out, this isn’t a VFX production issue — our speculation that the incorrect version of the episode was provided to the disc production group for the home media release.

The same thing happened when the episode first debuted on Paramount+ back in the spring; certain European regions saw this version of the episode which contained the no-nebula shot in initial “Last Generation” streams — before it was corrected across the service using a final master of the episode.

A fan captured that back in April, and shared a comparison on YouTube at the time:

While this mistake doesn’t impact the story or cause any playback issues when watching “The Last Generation,” it’s an unfortunate matter that will likely require corrective action from Paramount Home Entertainment.

This isn’t the first time that Star Trek Blu-rays have been affected by issues like this one; back in 2012, the first season of Star Trek: The Next Generation required replacement of three Blu-ray discs because of audio errors (and a missing VFX shot in “Heart of Glory”), and the remastered Wrath of Khan Blu-ray needed a replacement in 2016 following an accidental repeated shot of a starship viewscreen.

We’ve notified our contacts behind the Blu-ray release about the situation, and as soon as we have their feedback, we’ll be sure to update you all right here.

Watch for our review of the full Star Trek: Picard Season 3 Blu-ray set in the coming days.

STAR TREK Celebrates Its Animated Legacy with Five Promotional (VERY) SHORT TREKS in the ANIMATED SERIES Style

CBS Studios revealed plans for an homage to Star Trek: The Animated Series to honor its 50th anniversary at San Diego Comic Con in July, and today we’ve learned just what to expect from Star Trek: The Animated Celebration this fall!
 
Starting this Friday, September 8 and continuing for the next four consecutive weeks, the studio is reviving the Short Treks label for a series of VERY Short Treks — all-new animated promotional shorts for the animated side of the franchise, each running just a few minutes in length.
 

 
The animated shorts begin with “Skin a Cat” on Friday, September 8, followed on Wednesdays with “Holiday Party” on September 13, “Worst Contact” on September 20, “Holograms All The Way Down” on September 27, and concluding with “Walk, Don’t Run” on October 4.
 

STAR TREK: very SHORT TREKS comes from creative consultant Casper Kelly, best known for the viral smash hit “Too Many Cooks” and his work on STAR TREK: SHORT TREKS and Adult Swim.

 

The first animated spot will launch on Star Trek Day, Sept. 8, exclusively on StarTrek.com and the official Star Trek YouTube channel, with four additional animated spots rolling out weekly on Wednesdays through Oct. 4 at 10:00 A.M., PT/1:00 P.M., ET.

Don’t worry too much about the impact of these small tales on the wider Star Trek adventure, as the new trailer from CBS Studios flat out tells us that these are considered “anything but canon” — so thankfully there’s no need for that fan debate!

Will Riker plays trombone. (CBS Studios)

The Enterprise crew celebrates with Hemmer. (CBS Studios)
Neelix reads from a padd. (CBS Studios)
Mariner, Tendi, and Boimler on one of DEEP SPACE NINE’s holosuites. (CBS Studios)

Along with returning Trek actors Jonathan Frakes (Will Riker), Doug Jones (Saru), and Armin Shimerman (Quark), other legacy and current-day stars reprising their roles in the new shorts include Ethan Peck (Spock), Gates McFadden (Beverly Crusher), Celia Rose Gooding (Uhura), Connor Trinneer (Trip Tucker), Bruce Horak (Hemmer), Noël Wells (D’Vana Tendi), and George Takei (Hikaru Sulu).

(The trailer above also features Neelix from Star Trek: Voyager, but actor Ethan Phillips isn’t credited in the official press release — so it’s not known yet who will be voicing that character.)

(CBS Studios)

The studio has also released a poster to accompany The Animated Celebration, featuring not only the original TAS Enterprise crew and series-adjacent aliens, but characters from the Discovery animated Short TreksStar Trek: Lower Decks, Star Trek: The Next GenerationStar Trek: Lower Decks, and Star Trek: Prodigy

(The Prodigy gang are included in this artwork because while Paramount+ may have removed the show from its streaming service, CBS Studios is the producer and owner of the property, rightfully keeping it represented with the rest of the Star Trek franchise.)

Preview images from the ANIMATED CELEBRATION comic tale. (CBS Studios)

In addition to the shorts, Casper Kelly will also release a new comic from longtime Star Trek collaborator IDW Publishing called Star Trek: The Animated Celebration Presents ‘The Scheimer Barrier’ — this was previously announced in detail in July.

The first issue will be released on StarTrek.com on September 8 as well, with physical copies coming to the IDW Publishing booth at New York Comic Con in October. Subsequent issues of The Scheimer Barrier will arrive each Wednesday along side the VERY Short Treks on StarTrek.com.

Check back to TrekCore for the latest news on Star Trek’s animated adventures!

WeeklyTrek Podcast #228 — STAR TREK DAY to Celebrate 50 Years of Animation

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On this week’s episode of WeeklyTrek, brought to you in partnership between The Tricorder Transmissions Podcast Network and TrekCore, host Alex Perry is joined by First Flight Podcast co-host Abby Sommer to discuss all the latest Star Trek news.
 

 
This week, Alex and his guest discuss the following stories from around the web:

In addition, stick around to hear Abby’s wish for more Short Treks, and Alex’s theory about how Lower Decks could do a crossover with Star Trek: Enterprise — and make fans of the show and people who loathe how it ended equally happy.

WeeklyTrek is available to subscribe and download each week on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, YouTube, and Spotify — and we’ll be sharing the details of each new episode right here on TrekCore each week if you’re simply just looking to listen in from the web.

Do you have a wish or theory you’d like to share on the show? Tweet to Alex at @WeeklyTrek, or email us with your thoughts about wishes, theories, or anything else about the latest in Star Trek news!

Weekend STAR TREK Merchandise Roundup — New TREK Movie Figures, UK Model Starships, and a 2023 Advent Calendar!

It’s a holiday weekend in the United States, but before we take a break for the long weekend, we’ve got a roundup of the latest Star Trek merchandise news to bring you this Saturday afternoon!
 
First up? New licensee Hiya Toys is adding onto its first Star Trek action figure outing by bringing both versions of the Kelvin Timeline’s Spock to play.
 

After debuting their James T. Kirk and Dr. McCoy figures last month, the company is now expanding their offerings with Spock (based upon Zachary Quinto’s character) and Prime Spock (based upon Leonard Nimoy’s role) — each designed like their appearance in the 2009 Trek film.

Each Spock figure is available for preorder now at the Hiya Toys website for $24.99; Spock is expected to ship in the first quarter of 2024, with Prime Spock to follow next Spring.

*   *   *

Next, EXO-6 continues to explore the 1:6-scale Star Trek universe with the newest villain from the final frontier: Commander Kruge from Star Trek III: The Search for Spock

Based upon actor Christopher Lloyd’s character from the third Trek feature film, EXO-6’s first Klingon release includes the alien warrior’s iconic Klingon Defense Force uniform in all its intricate details, measuring 12.5 inches all and including a removable cloak, rooted hair, a Klingon disruptor and communicator, and multiple hands to support each accessory.

EXO-6’s Kruge figure is available for preorder now for $295 (plus shipping), and is projected to ship in the second quarter of 2024.

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First announced back in April, UK-based model and toy manufacturer Corgi UK is moving forward with their return to the Star Trek licensed product game.

Starting off with the two most predictable starship offerings, Corgi will be selling 20cm models of the Constitution-class USS Enterprise and the Galaxy-class USS Enterprise-D.

Early images of Corgi’s planned USS Enterprise models. (Photo: Corgi UK)

While the ships (and potential future Trek offerings) will be available to ship to fans in the UK and many other international regions, Corgi does not currently have a distribution license to the United States or Canada — so for now, these ships will be out of reach to collectors in North America.

If you’re in one of the regions where Corgi can ship, however, you can preorder each ship now for £54.99 ahead of an expected “Winter 2023/2024” delivery.

*   *   *

Finally, Insight Editions is reviving the Star Trek advent calendar for 2023 — following Eaglemoss in 2021 and Numskull in 2022 (that one still available) — with a new Enterpise-D shuttlecraft-themed box for the upcoming holiday season.

Instead of a full month’s worth of hidden gifts, this calendar pack is scheduled for a 12-day Christmas countdown — and covers most eras of the Trek franchise, including The Next Generation, Deep Space Nine, Discovery, Lower Decks, and more.

The gallery above has a spoiler image of all 13 gifts if you want to see what’s packed inside; along with the small gifts, each shuttle also comes with a signed Trek art print from artist Ryan Dening.

Available for preorder now at $150, the box is said to have items valued at “more than $250.” This advent calendar will ship to collectors after September 12.

Come back to TrekCore for the latest in Star Trek collectible news!

See New STAR TREK: LOWER DECKS Season 4 Images From September 7’s Two-Episode Premiere

Star Trek: Lower Decks returns for its fourth year of animated adventures on September 7, and today Paramount+ has released a batch of new images from the first two episodes of the season!
 

 
First up is “Twovix” (Episode 401), which features what appears to be a visit to the USS Voyager (as seen in the Season 4 trailer released on July 22).
 
The episode title itself is of course a play on the infamous Voyager Season 2 episode “Tuvix,” where Captain Janeway had to forcibly separate a newly-created individual after Tuvok and Neelix became merged in a transporter accident.
 

Episode 401 — “Twovix” (Paramount+)

Episode 401 — “Twovix” (Paramount+)
Episode 401 — “Twovix” (Paramount+)
Episode 401 — “Twovix” (Paramount+)
Episode 401 — “Twovix” (Paramount+)
Episode 401 — “Twovix” (Paramount+)

Next is “I Have No Bones Yet I Must Flee” (Episode 402), where Ensign Mariner (Tawny Newsome) and Commander Ransom (Jerry O’Connell) visit an alien zoo.

Episode 402 — “I Have No Bones Yet I Must Flee” (Paramount+)
Episode 402 — “I Have No Bones Yet I Must Flee” (Paramount+)
Episode 402 — “I Have No Bones Yet I Must Flee” (Paramount+)
Episode 402 — “I Have No Bones Yet I Must Flee” (Paramount+)
Episode 402 — “I Have No Bones Yet I Must Flee” (Paramount+)

We’ll have more coverage of Star Trek: Lower Decks Season 4 next week as the two-episode season premiere approaches – so stay tuned!

Master Replicas Uncovers More Never-Released Starship Models, Including the STAR TREK: LOWER DECKS Shuttlecraft

This Friday, September 1, the team at Master Replicas will be releasing a trio of never-before-available starship models — including the long-awaited Yosemite shuttle from Star Trek: Lower Decks!
 
The company has been rolling out waves of Eaglemoss Star Trek model ship stock all summer, along with leftover inventory from Stargate, Alien, TRON, The Expanse, and more — and in case you missed it, you can find out about how all of this works in our overview discussion with Master Replicas’ Ben Robinson.
 
There have been a few releases of previously-unavailable Eaglemoss ships in the past, but on September 1, they will be bringing collectors two of the last never-released Star Trek models from Eaglemoss now-closed production, along with a big one from The Orville.
 
First up is the fifth and final entry in the Star Trek: Lower Decks series, the Yosemite shuttlecraft seen in the first and second season of the animated series. Larger than the traditional Eaglemoss Star Trek shuttle releases, this “large-scale piece of die-cast” release is both “more detailed and heavier than you’d expect” says Lower Decks creator Mike McMahan.
 

Next is a deep cut from the early seasons of Star Trek: Voyager, the Cravic ship seen in Season 2’s “Prototype.” This brown warship is the counterpart to the grey Pralor ship seen in the same episode, each crewed by the mechanical Automated Personnel Unit beings encountered by the Voyager crew.

(A small quantity of the Pralor ship models will be available in October; Master Replicas has confirmed that the Pralor ship is the final Star Trek model built under the Eaglemoss regime.)

Finally, for fans of the Star Trek-adjacent series The Orville, there’s one more big ship from that line of Eaglemoss models that Master Replicas is adding to its small fleet: the Kaylon Interceptor.

Seen throughout the three-season run of The Orville, this mechanical ship was the companion to the larger Sphere ship; a fast and fierce fighter in the war with the Planetary Union.

If you want one of the ships or products included in this next wave of sales, you’ll need to move quickly… because once they sell out or leave the Master Replicas site, they will likely never be available for direct sale again. This round of product is expected to be available starting on Friday, September 1 at 9pm in the UK and 4pm ET.

For more, head over to the Master Replicas website to sign up for their mailing list, and to bring home these ship models when they beam down on Friday.

Keep checking back to TrekCore for all the latest in Star Trek merchandise news!

September 8’s STAR TREK DAY Events Include LOWER DECKS Theatrical Screenings, a New TREK Special, and More

For the fourth year in a row, Paramount+ is taking over September 8 with another set of Star Trek Day events intended to celebrate (most) of the Star Trek franchise.
 
This year, the streamer plans to give the Star Trek legacy a night in the spotlight with a new retrospective special, a prime-time network airing of Star Trek: Strange New Worlds episodes, and limited theatrical screenings of Star Trek: Lower Decks’ fourth season in the US and Canada.
 

As hinted back during San Diego Comic Con, Star Trek: Lower Decks will be having special theatrical screenings on September 8, in eleven cities in the United States, Canada, and the UK.

Four episodes of the animated series will be shown in Columbus, Dallas, Denver, Philadelphia, Phoenix, San Diego, St. Louis, Washington DC, Vancouver, Calgary, and London, where fans attending the free presentation will get to experience “sneak peeks and surprises, free concessions, giveaways, and more.”

If you’re near one of the host cities, you can register for tickets through GoFobo’s Star Trek Animated Celebration Screenings link after 12PM ET today. Seating is first come, first serve (with tickets), and holding a ticket does not guarantee a seat as the theaters may overbook to ensure full attendance.

At 8PM ET on September 8, the first two episodes of Star Trek: Strange New Worlds will air on the CBS television network in the United States — marking the first time a show from the Kurtzman era has aired on broadcast television since Discovery Season 1 reruns were used to fill CBS’s pandemic-caused programming void back in summer 2020.

The series’ premiere episode (“Strange New Worlds”) will air first, followed at 9PM ET by the Uhura-centric second Season 1 episode “Children of the Comet.”

Finally, the Star Trek Day celebration will continue online with a new special hosted by Star Trek: Lower Decks star Jerry O’Connell (Commander Jack Ransom), with special focus on Star Trek: Discovery ahead of its fifth and final season, a preview of Lower Decks Season 4, and a look back at 50 years of Star Trek animation.

(It’s unknown if any Star Trek: Prodigy content will be included in this special, after the show was removed from the Paramount+ service back in June.)

The “Star Trek Day” special will be available to watch for free globally on StarTrek.com/Day, YouTube (Paramount+ and STAR TREK Official pages), Twitch (ParamountPlus) and Facebook (@StarTrekOnPPlus and @StarTrek).

 

In the U.S., the special will be available to stream on Paramount+, Pluto TV (Paramount+ Picks, STAR TREK, More STAR TREK and Pluto TV Sci-Fi channels) and Mixable and will air on select local CBS affiliates, Comedy Central, Paramount Network, Pop TV, Fave TV and Smithsonian.com.

More information about the planned Star Trek Day activities can be found at StarTrek.com/Day.