Star Trek: Strange New Worlds returns with for the penultimate episode the season this Thursday, and we’ve got photos from the “Subspace Rhapsody” musical episode for you today!
While investigating a mysterious spatial anomaly, the crew of the USS Enterprise begin to express themselves through musical song-and-dance numbers.
Here are nine new photos from this week’s episode:
STAR TREK: STRANGE NEW WORLDS — Episode 209: 'Subspace Rhapsody'
1 of 9
Uhura (Celia Rose Gooding) at her station. (Paramount+)
Spock, Pike (Anson Mount), and Una. (Paramount+)
Una (Rebecca Romijn) and Kirk (Paul Wesley) at work. (Paramount+)
Pelia (Carol Kane), La'an (Christina Chong), and Spock (Ethan Peck) in engineering. (Paramount+)
James Kirk on the bridge. (Paramount+)
Chapel (Jess Bush) is excited. (Paramount+)
Pike sings on the bridge. (Paramount+)
The Enterprise crew sing and dance. (Paramount+)
The Enterprise crew sing and dance. (Paramount+)
In case you missed it, here’s a preview clip released from Paramount+ during the last episode of The Ready Room with Wil Wheaton, along with the episodic trailer released at San Diego Comic Con last weekend.
SUBSPACE RHAPSODY — An accident with an experimental quantum probability field causes everyone on the U.S.S. Enterprise to break uncontrollably into song, but the real danger is that the field is expanding and beginning to impact other ships — allies and enemies alike.
Written by Dana Horgan & Bill Wolkoff. Directed by Dermott Downs.
Star Trek: Strange New Worlds returns with “Subspace Rhapsody” on Thursday, August 3 on Paramount+ in the U.S, the U.K., Australia, Latin America, Brazil, France, Italy, Germany, Switzerland and Austria.
Never released until Master Replicas’ stock sale on July 28, Eaglemoss’ second version of the Star Trek: Lower Decks hero starship — the California-class USS Cerritos — is now sold out and won’t be released again…. but we’ve got one of these models about to warp home to one lucky TrekCore reader!
This contest has ended and our winner has been notified.
Eaglemoss always planned to release two versions of the USS Cerritos, and a larger XL-sized Cerritos was released just before the company collapsed in 2022. Last week, this smaller, 8.5″ model was finally able to be available to collectors… and the limited inventory sold out in just fifteen minutes, meaning no one else can get one.
Except for one of you loyal TrekCore readers, who can win one of the rare starship models that our friends at Master Replicas are holding in reserve just for you! To have a shot at landing it for yourself, you can enter to win in one of two ways:
You have until 11:59 PM (Eastern time) on Friday, August 4 to get your entry in — we’ll reach out to the winner through either a Twitter or Facebook direct message after the contest closes to arrange for fulfillment.
Good luck to all!
The comments section of this article will not be considered for contest entries.
The thing about “Under the Cloak of War” is that I should like this episode. No, that’s incorrect, I should love this episode.
It’s got everything I want: an exploration of the aftershocks of the Federation-Klingon War; an exploration of what war does to people, how they deal with it — and how they don’t; Klingons, of course; even a space version of M*A*S*H.
And yet… I thoroughly dislike this episode. It drags (despite a noticeably shorter runtime than other episodes this season), the constant flashbacks are disjointed, there’s a reasonably tensionless plot on the Enterprise, and — most frustratingly — they take the worst aspect of M’Benga’s character and make it his whole identity.
Dak’Reh (Robert Wisdom) boards the Enterprise. (Paramount+)
Enterprise is passing through the Prospero system, where she is scheduled to pick up a passenger due for Starbase 12: Ambassador Dak’Rah (Robert Wisdom), a defecting Klingon general who now serves as a representative of the Federation. Dak’Rah is a very interesting character — he’s a soft-spoken, pleasant Klingon atoning for his martial sins, an absolute tack away from traditional portrayals of most Klingons.
Dak’Rah’s persona is refreshing in many ways, but the bristling attitudes of Ortegas (Melissa Navia), M’Benga (Babs Olusanmokun), and Chapel (Jess Bush) are less so. Certainly, for M’Benga and Chapel, their discomfort comes with rounded nuance, but for Ortegas? At this point the character is basically 50% quips and 50% veiled Klingon bigotry, which is barely a foundation for a character at all.
This is okay for the Strange New Worlds writers, however, as they’re willing to use her as a foil when Uhura (Celia Rose Gooding) defends Dak’Rah’s diplomatic record on the bridge — allowing our intrepid helm officer to basically call him a war criminal to his face. She’s lucky the ambassador is more impressed by the size of the viewscreen, even if he then gets let down by Spock’s (Ethan Peck) inability to make a raktajino at the right temperature.
The tour group descends to sickbay, where M’Benga — somehow unaware of the presence of the Klingon ambassador aboard — has to leave before war trauma gets to him. And boy, is that trauma… traumatic! In a series of slightly-disjointed flashbacks, we watch Chapel and M’Benga’s first meeting — during their time at a Starfleet forward operating post on planet J’Gal.
(I might not like this episode; but I love me bit of Starfleet M*A*S*H, especially if we’ve got Clint Howard in the mix as as Space Hawkeye. It’s not a bad concept; hell, I’m irritated it didn’t think of it first!)
M’Benga (Babs Olusanmokun) and Pike (Anson Mount) in sickbay. (Paramount+)
The constant jumping between time periods doesn’t help the flow of the story — soon enough, we’re back in the present where Captain Pike (Anson Mount) informs M’Benga and Chapel that he’s got orders from Starfleet Command that (in an insane bit of logic) veterans of the Klingon War must interact with the ambassador to build a diplomatic bridge to peace.
The pair psych themselves up for the nightmare dinner party of the year, which goes just how you might think: Dak’Rah is endearing and delightful, which eventually drives the trio of veterans to leave (led by Ortegas’ inability to keep her cool). The main problem with her outburst -– as justified as it might seem to be — is that we’ve simply just had so little character exploration from Ortegas that we can’t really tell if this is unrestrained behavior or not. When M’Benga does it, you can feel how much he’s holding back, even as he lets some of his anger slip through; with Ortegas it’s just kind of there.
Back in the past, an Andorian Special Ops officer tries to convince M’Benga to kill General Dak’rah and end the Klingon’s reported war crimes — or, at the very least, hand over the space methamphetamine that M’Benga once formulated. (I have yet to figure out why exactly they decided to make the doctor into some kind of Jason Bourne super-soldier.)
Later, M’Benga confronts the reality of war with a young ensign. It’s some of the typical typical “why we fight” kind of stuff, which Olusanmokun sells well, and is the strongest portion of the flashback story.
Ortegas (Melissa Navia) is not happy. (Paramount+)
Following the dinner party, Spock tries (in his way) to support Chapel during the stressful time. Her dismissal of Spock’s help should work, and it makes a decent point about combat stress and a veteran’s experience — but it just doesn’t have enough tension to drive it home.
I can see how Chapel’s remarks that “those who haven’t been to war can’t understand the experience” tie thematically into the visuals of battlefield casualties arriving on the transporter pad, but at some point, there are just too many cuts. The drama is still good, however; the disastrous attack on Klingon lines has been met with a vicious counterstrike, and the wounded — both Starfleet and civilian — pour in to the aid camp, as M’Benga is forced to make grim choices to protect lives even as those he’d previously saved are put into body bags.
This is, of course, then cut off by a return to the present, so we can watch M’Benga and Dak’Rah verbally and physically spar in a round of ‘full contact mok’bara.’ The Klingon claims that he wants to work with M’Benga — enemies turned allies would be a powerful diplomatic tool! — but the doctor is deeply disinterested, pressing the ambassador on how he supposedly killed his own men to prevent a further massacre.
This would be nice to dwell on, but instead we go back to the war, where M’Benga decides to go full Terminator and kill everyone in the Klingon encampment with his own two hands — and a couple of Klingon blades.
Chapel (Jess Bush) and M’Benga discuss his one-man mission. (Paramount+)
I can’t be the only person who finds this show’s obsession with turning its healer characters into action heroes and drug-fueled killing machines deeply off-putting, right? Watching M’Benga suit up for war and then be told to “take as many with as you can” by Chapel is really macabre. We know the Klingons are bad in this era — evil, perhaps — but the idea that the solution is for our doctor to go full-on killing machine is tonally dissonant with almost everything else Star Trek does.
Back in the present, Pike and Una (Rebecca Romijn) agree to cut short the cruise to Starbase 12 before the deeply-predictable onboard tensions cause even more diplomatic harm. This tension, though, isn’t really there in the story — everyone’s unhappy that Dak’Rah is here, but that’s not plot tension. There’s no active threat to his presence at all, or stakes in getting to the end of this mission beyond “crew morale is not good,” something that, once again, we’re only told about. The dinner party scene has made it clear that (within the senior staff at least) exceptions to Dak’Rah’s presence are the exception, not the rule.
Instead, we get Dak’Rah going to M’Benga with one last offer to join his diplomatic efforts, in which the ambassador undiplomatically refuses M’Benga’s insistent efforts to be left alone… before the doctor exposes the truth: Dak’Rah did give the orders to kill civilians and prisoners, but it was really M’Benga who killed all the Klingon soldiers, and Dak’Rah just took the credit.
M’Benga is furious that Dak’Rah used his trauma and suffering to build his reputation. I really liked this confrontation — the idea of co-opting the horror of war to give people “the saints they need” and the redemption arcs they want to enjoy is an interesting one, and the soft-spoken Klingon ambassador is practically pleading with M’Benga to listening to his argument.
I found it very compelling, at least, until M’Benga stabbed him.
M’Benga and Dak’Rah spar. (Paramount+)
Chapel covering up for M’Benga was a lot less compelling, even if Pike was going to try and paper over the event if the doctor came clean about what happened. Apparently, Pike’s moral code allows him to ignore his own suspicions and let the inquiry conclude that M’Benga killed Dak’Rah in self-defense, even when the doctor strongly hints that it was nothing like that?
I think the conversation between M’Benga and Pike — where the doctor points out that Dak’Rah might not have deserved a second chance — is interesting enough in itself, but it’s a point difficult to hear sincerely from a man who violates his Hippocratic Oath so easily.
What a wonderful message.
OBSERVATION LOUNGE
Archival footage from Star Trek: Discovery’s premiere two-parter — “The Vulcan Hello” and “Battle of the Binary Stars” — is used in the opening recap; this includes the now-dropped early-Discovery Klingon makeup design noticeably absent from the rest of the episode.
New starship alert! The USS Kelcie Mae is a new class of Starfleet vessel we’ve never seen before, with a single nacelle and a graceful forward hull that gives serious ‘luxury cruiseliner’ vibes.
In the flashbacks, Chapel arrives to J’Gal aboard a new design of shuttlecraft; this ‘heavy-duty’ shuttle is also a new design introduced in this episode.
The Klingon makeup used on Robert Wisdom has never looked more like a helmet than in this episode; perhaps it’s the actor’s head shape but it just looks so artificial on him.
It’s never stated in the episode, but could Andorian lieutenant’s black special operations uniform mean that’s connected to Section 31?
In the flashbacks, M’Benga instructs Chapel on storing Lieutenant Alvarado’s pattern inside the base’s transporter buffer to keep him in stasis until help can arrive — the same trick he uses to keep his daughter’s disease from progressing in Season 1.
The serum used to give M’Benga temporary “super soldier” strength and endurance is called “Protocol 12.”
M’Benga and the ambassador spar in “full impact mok’bara,” the martial art often practiced by Worf in The Next Generation and Deep Space Nine.
Clint Howard returns for his fifth Star Trek appearance (seen this week as Lieutenant Martinez), following his role as an Orion in Discovery’s “Will You Take My Hand?,” a Ferengi in Enterprise’s “Acquisition,” a human in Deep Space Nine‘s “Past Tense,” and of course Balok in “The Corbomite Maneuver.”
Chapel arrives to the Starfleet base managed by Lieutenant Martinez (Clint Howard). (Paramount+)
I really, really should have liked this episode. Using the Klingon War to explore how veterans of combat live with their trauma and manage it is a very good concept — and Robert Wisdom and Bab Olusanmokun give it their all — but the plot, pacing, resolution and all just left me disappointed and frustrated.
Certainly, the flashback sequences where Chapel and M’Benga perform surgery in an aid station under fire were well done, especially liked the sequence where Chapel is forced to pump a man’s heart physically — though mainly because Hawkeye also does that. (Whoever in the SNW writers’ room is watching M*A*S*H? Good on you!) But having M’Benga set off to find new and exciting ways to violate the Geneva Convention and then kill Dak’Rah — even in self-defense? Having the murder happen behind a veil is even more annoying.
There was an even chance of setting his episode up to be the next “Conscience of the King” or “Duet,” where our characters get to come face to face with evil — but instead we end up with something that just felt tonally dissonant and flat. The stakes are basically non-existent in the A-plot, and distracting in the B-plot; where tension exists, it’s forced in ways that don’t make that much sense.
On top of that, Dak’Rah’s true intentions and beliefs are never really explored. Was he genuinely reformed? Did truly he want to atone? We don’t know, and never will, because of M’Benga’s actions. The doctor’s anger and horror at what the war did to him is a good idea, but this whole super-commando bit just feels wrong. He should be angry, and he should want Dak’rah dead, but wouldn’t the Star Trek thing be to have him rise above that (even if he needs a little help from his crewmates to do so)?
The entire thing just undermines the hopefulness upon on which Trek is built.
Joseph M’Benga: the Butcher of J’Gal. (Paramount+)
Strange New Worlds was right try a ‘horrors of war’ episode — it made the right choice to try and tackle issues around PTSD and military experience, and what it means to come face to face with a former enemy off the battlefield — but it could have happened that didn’t make our healer into a vigilante… and one that didn’t make 42 minutes feel like an hour.
Next week: it’s time to sing and dance as Strange New Worlds’ musical episode arrives.
Star Trek: Strange New Worlds returns with “Subspace Rhapsody” on Thursday, August 3 on Paramount+ in the U.S, the U.K., Australia, Latin America, Brazil, France, Italy, Germany, Switzerland and Austria.
Master Replicas will release the next wave of Eaglemoss-manufactured stock — including models from the Star TrekOfficial Starships Collection and more!
Launching on Friday, July 28, TrekCore can today share the next set of Eaglemoss releases coming to Master Replicas web shop — 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.
This week, the company will have a ton of different Star Trek vessels, including a never-released midsized USS Cerritos from Star Trek: Lower Decks (approx. 1300 units available) — plus the much-desired (and never-released) F-302 fighter from Stargate: SG-1, with 1500 units in stock!
Please to confirm that the U.S.S Cerritos is the midsized unreleased model, which is in line as same size as previously released Vancouver/Titan.
Probably fair to say that this is one of those that a fair few people have been asking about pic.twitter.com/O7Bep69obN
— Master Replicas Official (@MasterReplicas_) July 18, 2023
Check out everything set to arrive for sale this Friday!
Regular-sized starships from the Star Trek Universe:
Armored U.S.S. Voyager
Borg Cube
Borg Queen’s Ship
Borg Sphere
Cardassian Hideki Class
I.S.S. Enterprise NCC-1701 (MIRROR UNIVERSE)
Klingon D-5-class Battle Cruiser
NX-Alpha
Orion Scout Ship
Romulan Science Vessel
The Fesarius
U.S.S. Enterprise NCC-1701-C (Ambassador Class)
U.S.S. Enterprise NCC-1701-D
U.S.S. Excelsior NCC-2000
U.S.S. Excelsior Nilo Rodis Concept I
U.S.S. Prometheus NX-59650
Star Trek Shuttles:
Type-6 Shuttlecraft Goddard (from “Relics”)
Special Star Trek Releases:
Regula I Station (Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan)
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 may never be available for direct sale again. This round of product is expected to be available starting on Friday, July 28 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 any of the next wave of surplus Official Starships models when they go on sale July 28.
Keep checking back to TrekCore for all the latest in Star Trek merchandise news!
In addition, stick around to hear Thad’s wish for a positive resolution to the SAG and WGA strikes before next year’s Star Trek Cruise, Caleb’s wishes for Star Trek: Discovery Season 5, and Alex’s theory about what’s going on with these animated promotional shorts teased at San Diego Comic Con.
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!
The annual Las Vegas Star Trek convention kicks off next week, and as they’ve done for the last few years, pin and badge company FanSetswill be bringing a number of new Trek products to debut at the event.
Fans of Star Trek: Picard will be happy to see that both the wide “Admiral Picard” pin seen in both Season 2 and Season 3 of the series will join the FanSets Star Trek delta collection, as will the dark-timeline “Confederation” version of that badge (seen on ‘dark’ Picard’s portrait).
In addition, the company will have revised editions of their black-bar and gold-bar Starfleet duty badge from the series; these new versions now feature the ridged border on the silver delta, a detail missing from the original releases.
From Star Trek: Lower Decks, the animated Section 31 delta from Season 3’s “Crisis Point II: Paradoxus” will be joining the original Lower Decks delta.
For the first time, FanSets is also adding rank pips to their lineup! They will be offering a five-pin Next Generation-era pip set, which includes four solid pips and a black-centered half-rank pip pin (used in Lieutenant j.g. and Lieutenant Commander ranks).
They will also be adding the last rank from “Future Imperfect” to their collection, with the single-gold-bar Ensign rank badge rounding out the six-badge series. (Lieutenant, Lieutenant Commander, Commander, Captain, and Admiral ranks are already available.)
Other new additions to their Star Trek badge collection are magnetic editions of the classic Vulcan IDIC symbol, as well as the Star Trek: Discovery mirror universe badges; each were previously available as pin-back products only.
Fansets will also continue their character-focused “glitter” series of pins, this time adding Spock, Will Riker, Garak two their offerings, along with a Paul Stamets + Hugh Culber dual-character pin.
For those of you who pick up the company’s “poker chip” pin each year, typically an exclusive to the Las Vegas convention, the 2023 release will focus on Quark from Star Trek: Deep Space Nine — surrounded of course by dabo chips from his gaming tables.
Finally, FanSets is expanding their line of “MasterShips” display pieces — large magnet-back starship pieces which convert into a stand-up piece — with the classic USS Enterprise, and the USS Titan from Star Trek: Picard.
While all of these new products (and more, most likely!) will debut at Creation Entertainment’s 57-Year Mission Tour convention on August 3, expect them to go up for purchase at FanSets’ website after the show concludes on first- and fifteenth-of-the-month scheduling.
Keep checking back to TrekCore for all the latest in Star Trek product news!
Star Trek: Strange New Worlds returns with the next episode this Thursday, and today we’ve got new photos from “Under the Cloak of War” for you to review!
This week takes on a Klingon theme, as a former officer of the Empire arrives aboard the Enterprise — much to the dismay of Ortegas (Melissa Navia) and M’Benga (Babs Olusanmokun), who served in the Federation/Klingon war.
Here are seven new photos from this week’s episode:
STAR TREK: STRANGE NEW WORLDS — Episode 208: 'Under the Cloak of War'
Ortegas (Melissa Navia) is not happy. (Paramount+)
Dak'Reh (Robert Wisdom) boards the Enterprise. (Paramount+)
Chapel (Jess Bush) and M'Benga on a mission. (Paramount+)
Chapel and M'Benga on a mission. (Paramount+)
M'Benga and Pike (Anson Mount) in sickbay. (Paramount+)
In case you missed it, here’s a preview clip released from Paramount+ during the last episode of The Ready Room with Wil Wheaton.
UNDER THE CLOAK OF WAR — Captain Pike and his crew welcome a Klingon defector aboard the U.S.S. Enterprise, but his presence triggers the revelation of some shocking secrets.
Written by Davy Perez. Directed by Jeff Byrd.
Star Trek: Strange New Worlds returns with “Under the Cloak of War” on Thursday, July 27 on Paramount+ in the U.S, the U.K., Australia, Latin America, Brazil, France, Italy, Germany, Switzerland and Austria.
Surprise! Following its preview screening today at San Diego Comic Con, Paramount+ has released the highly-anticipated Star Trek: Lower Decks / Star Trek: Strange New Worlds crossover episode — titled “Those Old Scientists” — almost an entire week early!
Filling in for this event episode is WeeklyTrek host and Star Trek: Lower Decks reviewer Alex Perry.
Go watch the new Star Trek: Strange New Worlds episode now, then come back here to read our spoiler-filled review!
Boimler and the time portal. (Paramount+)
Let’s not bury the lead: “These Old Scientists” is excellent. It totally capitalizes on the promise of a crossover between Star Trek: Strange New Worlds and Star Trek: Lower Decks. It is this show’s — and the franchise’s — experimental episode to date (we haven’t even gotten to the Strange New Worlds musical yet!), and this just proves that experimental Trek can also be wildly successful.
During an away mission to investigate a time portal — discovered by the starship Enterprise on a mission to Krulmuth-Bsome 120 years earlier — Ensign Brad Boimler (Jack Quaid) accidentally travels back in time to the day the Enterprise crew first visited the planet. Fearing for Boimler’s safety, Ensign Beckett Mariner (Tawny Newsome) also time travels, and together they must find a way back to the 24th century without significantly altering their history. Hijinks ensue, and they are wonderful!
Written by Lower Decks alum Kathryn Lyn (with Bill Wolkoff), and expertly directed by Jonathan Frakes, “Those Old Scientists” represents the exciting and authentic integration between the look, the vibes, and the personalities of both shows. At no point does it feel like a Strange New Worlds episode with Lower Decks shoe-horned in, and nor does it feel like a Lower Decks episode just translated to live action. It is authentically both shows at the same time, respecting the core attitudes and ambience of each without negatively impacting the other.
Boimler (Jack Quaid) and Spock (Ethan Peck). (Paramount+)
The real triumph is that it’s clear while watching that — in less talented hands (ranging from performers, to writers, costume designer, and the director) — this crossover had the potential to be an absolute disaster. If the performances from either cast didn’t hit just right, this episode would not have landed. If the episode had not included some wonderful character moments and just relied on the crossover gimmick, it would have gotten old fast. And honestly, if the Lower Decks costumes had not translated so well into live action (even the boots!), the whole scenario would not have been believable.
When you actually start to think about how much had to go right in order for this episode to be as good as it is, the more you realize what a stunning achievement it is.
At the core of that achievement, without doubt, is the performance of Jack Quaid as Brad Boimler. He infuses nearly every moment of this episode, both animated and live action, with the ineffable charm of Boimler’s character. He’s a mess; one of the smartest people in the room but still lacking the experience to see past his own foibles. On Lower Decks, he is one of the show’s most expressive characters — who doesn’t love the Boimler scream? — and while that unquestionably works in Lower Decks’s animation, in live action he had to walk a fine line between honoring the character’s zaniness without being completely cartoony.
Mariner (Tawny Newsome) and Boimler. (Paramount+)
And while Jack Quaid is far and away the MVP of “Those Old Scientists” — as his near constant presence throughout this episode holds it together magnificently — Tawny Newsome’s performance as Mariner is just as laudable in every way. Newsome totally embodies the Mariner vibe, and it feels completely authentic in live action. Newsome’s magnetic on screen charisma is undeniable, her command of comedy and the Lower Decks style dialogue unparalleled, and I just want more live action Mariner. So much more.
And while Boimler and Mariner’s hijinks on the Enterprise are so much fun, the episode would likely have felt empty if that had been all the focus. Instead, Boimler and Mariner have important roles to play in where the Enterprise crew find themselves, and where they are headed.
The tragedy of Boimler accidentally revealing to Chapel (Jess Bush), who is so uplifted by Spock’s (Ethan Peck) efforts to show emotion, that this is a phase history doesn’t remember is crushing. The moment of joy that Captain Pike (Anson Mount) is afforded knowing how history thinks about him, despite his fate, and Boimler and Mariner encouraging him to seize the moment is profound. Una (Rebecca Romijn) getting the opportunity — in the funniest way possible — to see what impact her actions have had on Starfleet is touching.
This episode has laugh out loud hilarious moments (it might be some of the best comedy Star Trek has ever done), it has sweet moments that uplift you, it has sad moments that are full of pathos. And all the way through it is authentically a true integration of Strange New Worlds and Lower Decks. The episode states its intention to be that way up front, giving us the wonderful moment of integrating the Strange New Worlds credits with Lower Decks’ animation style, and giving the fun scene at the end where the Enterprise crew are animated in Lower Deck fashion.
And even though a lot of the humor of the episode derives from the different styles of the Cerritos and Enterprise crews clashing, the episode’s resolution relies on the Cerritos ensigns becoming a little more Enterprise, and the Enterprise crew becoming a little more Cerritos. The learning and the sharing is what helps save the timeline and get our Cerritos crew back to the 24th century.
Watching the Enterprise crew nerd out about Captain Archer’s Enterprise NX-01, and realize they were fanboying just as hard as Boimler and Mariner about Pike’s ship and crew? A truly wonderful moment.
The Enterprise crew feel a little bit…. animated. (Paramount+)
OBSERVATION LOUNGE
In a lovely touch, the Strange New Worlds/Lower Decks mashup opening credits (above) includes the slug monster from the Lower Decks opening credit sequence.
The mystical Koala of the universe appears in the final seconds of the animated opening credits sequence.
Jack Quaid and Ethan Peck have excellent chemistry together. Spoimler forever!
There are a ton of rapid fire Lower Decks style references to Star Trek episodes and characters including Worf, Trelane, “Past Tense,” and the NX-01’s grapplers. It’s very Lower Decks, and translates to live action more successfully than I anticipated.
The Orion ship design is based off the design of the ship in remastered effects for Star Trek.
— Star Trek on Paramount+ (@StarTrekOnPPlus) July 22, 2023
If I have one tiny criticism about the costuming, it’s that the black shoulders of the Lower Decks uniforms descend a little lower on the arms than felt correct to me — but translating costumes designed for animated not-quite-lifelike proportions to the real world aren’t easy, I’m sure!
If you squint a bit and look at it sideways, the final scene of the episode gives you all the tenuous canonical reason you need for the existence of shows that “feel” animated and those that “feel” live action in Star Trek. But honestly, if that’s something you need to have a good time — and lighten up!
Boimler’s poster of Number One features the phrase “Join Starfleet,” and the Paramount+ social media team released a similar poster on June 27 following “Ad Aspera per Aspera.”
Even though they don’t make it to the live-action portion of the episode, it was wonderful that Tendi (Noel Wells) and Rutherford (Eugene Cordero) made appearances — and Commander Ransom (Jerry O’Connell) too, even if that’s just an excuse for Rebecca Romijn’s real-life husband to complement Number One’s looks.
The episode’s title comes right from the mouth of Jack Ransom (Jerry O’Connell), back in the Lower Decks first-season finale, “No Small Parts” — “The TOS era… it’s what I call the 2260s. It stands for ‘Those Old Scientists.'”
Live-action Boimler’s uniform boots feature the Starfleet delta on their soles, a detail which has been part of the Lower Decks uniform design since the series debut.
“Those Old Scientists” is a triumph for Strange New Worlds and for the Star Trek franchise. It’s an episode that we should revel in, and enjoy every department being at the absolute top of its game. Jack Quaid and Tawny Newsome are treasures, the Strange New Worlds cast are treasures, and Jonathan Frakes is a treasure who expertly weaved the style of the two shows together. I am going to watch it a hundred times more.
Star Trek: Strange New Worlds returns with “Under the Cloak of War” on Thursday, July 27 on Paramount+ in the U.S, the U.K., Australia, Latin America, Brazil, France, Italy, Germany, Switzerland and Austria.
Star Trek: Lower Decks will return for its fourth season on Thursday, September 7 on Paramount+.
Confirming long-gestating rumors about a wild and crazy episode, Star Trek: Strange New Worlds is setting course for the musical event of the season — and that’s not all in today’s next Star Trek news drop out of San Diego Comic Con!
The Strange New Worlds cast has been hinting that the year’s penultimate episode was going to be a big one; Number One actor Rebecca Romijn even said that work for the show required everyone to work extra weekends during filming.
The cast isn’t at SDCC today while they’re out on the picket lines striking for fair wages, but their hard work will arrive for all to see in “Subspace Rhapsody,” airing August 3 on Paramount+.
The huge musical — a first for the Star Trek franchise after nearly 900 weekly installments — will feature ten new original songs with music and lyrics by Kay Hanley (Letters to Cleo) and Tom Polce (Letters to Cleo, Crazy Ex-Girlfriend). With musical experts like Celia Rose Gooding, Christina Chong, and more part of this already-talented cast, the performances are likely to be something fans will be discussing for quite a long time.
There will also be a special variant of the Strange New Worlds main title theme as part of the episode — and guess what? You can pre-save the “Subspace Rhapsody” soundtrack already, where the songs will be available on Apple Music, Spotify, and other digital streamers once the show airs on August 3.
And if that wasn’t enough, the long-awaited Star Trek: Strange New Worlds / Star Trek: Lower Decks crossover episode is hitting Paramount+ almost an entire week early!
Lower Decks ensigns Brad Boimler (Jack Quaid) and Beckett Mariner (Tawny Newsome) make their way to the USS Enterprise in the highly-anticipated tale, “Those Old Scientists” — named for the title Commander Ransom (Jerry O’Connell) gave to the Original Series era in that animated series.
Paramount+ is dropping “Those Old Scientists” tonight at 7PM ET (4PM PT) for all to see, and by doing so they’ve pulled up the release schedule on the following three episodes of the year.
Following today’s surprise release, Strange New Worlds continues Thursday, July 27 with “Under the Cloak of War,” followed by “Subspace Rhapsody” on August 3, and ending with the Season 2 finale “Hegemony” on August 10.
We’ll have our review for “Those Old Scientists” online later tonight, to check back later after you’ve watched the early airing!
It’s been nine months since we last saw the crew of the USS Cerritos, and Paramount+ today announced that Star Trek: Lower Decks will be back in California-class style this September!
One of several announcements made during today’s Star Trek Universe panel at San Diego Comic Con, the fourth season of Lower Decks is set to kick off on Paramount+ — in both the United States and on the streamer in other global regions where Paramount+ is available — with a two-episode premiere landing Thursday, September 7.
The logline for Lower Decks Season 4 confirms that we’ll be seeing more of Vulcan exchange officer Ensign T’Lyn (Gabrielle Ruiz) this year, after she transferred to the Cerritos in the closing moments of the Season 3 finale.
In season four of STAR TREK: LOWER DECKS, an unknown force is destroying starships and threatening galactic peace. Luckily, the crew of the U.S.S. Cerritos isn’t important enough for stuff like that! Instead, Ensigns Mariner, Boimler, Tendi, Rutherford and Provisional Ensign T’Lyn are keeping up with their Starfleet duties, avoiding malevolent computers and getting stuck in a couple caves – all while encountering new and classic aliens along the way.
T’Lyn and Boimler aboard the Cerritos. (Paramount+)
Like the last three seasons, the Star Trek: Lower Decks promotional team has turned to the classic Trek films for inspiration; the key art for Season 4 mirrors the Bob Peak-designed poster artwork for 1986’s Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home.
Here are just some of the things we spotted in the fast-paced trailer:
The gang visits Ferenginar… (Paramount+)…where they meet Leeta and Grand Nagus Rom. (Paramount+)Rutherford and Tendi at a Ferengi romantic getaway? (Paramount+)T’Lyn, Tendi, and Mariner visit the Orion homeworld… (Paramount+)…and a nightclub on the greenskin planet. (Paramount+)Rutherford winds up in a Wadi game (“Move Along Home”). (Paramount+)Mariner and Boimler find a leftover “Macrocosm” virus when visiting the USS Voyager. (Paramount+)Ransom and Shaxs work out in those ridiculous STAR TREK: TNG leotards. (Paramount+)Boimler wears a Medusan vison-protection visor. (Paramount+)Rutherford and Mariner fight Badgey. (Paramount+)
In addition to the Season 4 news, fans in the UK will be able to watch the first three seasons of Star Trek: Lower Decks starting August 29 on Paramount+ UK, with Season 4 to continue on that service on the September 7 global rollout date.
Star Trek: Lower Decks returns September 7 on Paramount+.