We’re probably still six months away from the final voyages of the starship Discovery, but today at San Diego Comic Con — where neither actors nor writers attended, focused on their striking efforts for fair wages — Paramount+ released a lengthy preview clip from Star Trek: Discovery’s fifth and final season.
In this new clip from Discovery Season 5 — set to arrive in “early 2024” — Captain Michael Burnham (Sonequa Martin-Green) takes on a pair of intergalactic outlaws on the run with a prize Burnham is seeking to keep from their hands.
The streamer also released a behind-the-scenes teaser for the upcoming season.
After failing to stop Moll (Eve Harlow) and accomplice L’ak (Elias Toufexis) from stealing their bounty, Burnham is blown out into space as they escape… only to land on the outer hull of their ship just as it blasts into warp speed.
Elias Toufexis as L’ak, and Eve Harlow as Moll. (Paramount+)
While Captain Saru (Doug Jones), Lt. Commander Detmer (Emily Coutts), and the crew of the USS Discovery chase the renegade ship, Burnham works to stop the criminals’ engines — which is when Captain Rayner (Callum Keith Rennie) and his starship USS Antares arrive on the scene, struggling to keep up with the fleeing vessel while trying desperately to maintain a tractor beam lock.
Callum Keith Rennie as new regular character, Captain Rayner. (Paramount+)
The first tease for Discovery’s final season was released last October at New York Comic Con, and the series was surprisingly cancelled earlier this year. Additional writing and filming were completed ahead of the WGA and SAG-AFTRA strikes to craft the Season 5 finale into a wrap-up for the entire series.
Star Trek: Discovery will return sometime in early 2024 on Paramount+ in the United States and several other geographic reasons; in Canada, the show airs on CTV Sci Fi Channel and Crave
Today marks the start of Star Trek’s panel events at San Diego Comic Con, and to kick off the weekend, the spotlight’s been pointed towards all things animated!
If you missed it, today we got the official news that the second half of Star Trek: Prodigy Season 1 is headed to Blu-ray in September; additionally, Paramount+ shared that there will be some kind of theatrical Star Trek: Lower Decks “fan screenings, domestically and internationally” for September’s Star Trek Day — but they have not yet provided more specific details on those plans.
The original Star Trek: The Animated Series got today’s focus, with multiple announcements set to honor the show’s 50th anniversary.
First, a new TAS-themed comic tale from IDW Publishing is coming this September — Star Trek: The Animated Celebration Presents the Scheimer Barrier, named after Lou Scheimer (founder of TAS animation studio Filmation).
Written by Casper Kelly, the comic will first arrive digitally in September, with physical printed copies available at the IDW Publishing booth at New York Comic Con in October.
Here are two images previewing the forthcoming comic, including early cover art:
In addition, CBS Studios will also be producing a series of five animated promotional spots to celebrate the show’s golden anniversary — featuring characters from later Trek series in the Animated Series art style — coming later in 2023.
Jonathan Frakes (Will Riker from The Next Generation), Armin Shimerman (Quark from Deep Space Nine), and Doug Jones (Saru from Discovery) will be reprising their roles for these animated sequences, and stills of their cartoon designs were revealed at the panel.
Neelix from Star Trek: Voyager will also make an appearance, however participation from original actor Ethan Phillips has not yet been confirmed.
Like the Animated Series comic book, these TAS-inspired spots come from Adult Swim and Star Trek: Short Treks contributor Casper Kelly. More information about this new animated Trek video content is said to be coming on Star Trek Day in September.
Keep coming back to TrekCore for the latest in Star Trek franchise news as it breaks!
While preorder links at some retailers have been online for a few weeks, today Paramount Home Entertainment officially announced that Star Trek: Prodigy – Season 1 (Volume 2) will hit retailers on September 26 and include the second ten episode of the animated series’ season on two Blu-ray discs.
The set includes episodes “Asylum,” “Let Sleeping Borg Lie,” “All the World’s a Stage,” “Crossroads,” “Masquerade,” “Preludes,” “Ghost in the Machine,” “Mindwalk,” and the two-part “Supernova” season finale.
The set will also include three new “in-depth bonus features with more than 45 minutes of content, revealing how Star Trek heritage shapes Prodigy’s characters, story, and setting.”
The Odyssey of Prodigy
A review of the second half of the season with the director, producers and cast
Producing Prodigy: The Planets
Creating the different worlds of Prodigy and how the design, music, writing and show elements come together to create environments essential to the story.
Producing Prodigy: The Ships
Evolution of ship design in Star Trek and how its rich heritage influences the design of the U.S.S. Protostar and the Borg ship
As with the first Prodigy Blu-ray release earlier this year, the set’s initial run will also include four limited-edition art carts, this time featuring the Diviner, Jankom Pog, Murf, and Zero.
For those of you outside the United States, a complete first-season Blu-ray set will be coming to the UK on September 25, and to Germany on October 5!
While there’s still no word about if or when Star Trek: Prodigy will return to a streaming platform — if the series has found a new home for its first and yet-unaired second season — but at least it’s a relief to know the stories already shared with fans won’t be out of reach forever.
“Lost in Translation” is a well-put-together mystery story, complete with extra-dimensional beings, freaky hallucinations, brilliant character moments — and a healthy dose of Kirk family drama.
Celia Rose Gooding and Paul Wesley’s immaculate chemistry ties together an interesting plot that ensures that our first in-person meeting with the “real” Jim Kirk is not to be forgotten. (Also, the whole plot is based on interstellar logistics and starship refueling — a massive plus for me!)
Bruce Horak as Hemmer and Celia Rose Gooding as Uhura. (Paramount+)
Enterprise is route to Bannon’s Nebula on the edge of Federation territory, where a deuterium refinery is being established — the first step to opening up the frontier for exploration, and for shoring up Starfleet’s defenses against the Gorn. It’s an exciting moment for everybody, especially the temporarily-promoted Fleet Captain Pike (Anson Mount), even if Enterprise and Farragut are just there to help get the last bugs out of the new station’s systems.
As Enterprise takes a moment to refuel itself using the nacelle-mounted Bussard collectors, a sleep-deprived and overworked Ensign Uhura (Celia Rose Gooding) is surprised by a jarring signal that seems to have no source whatsoever. Chasing down the system fault takes her up into the ship’s starboard warp nacelle, where she encounters Pelia (Carol Kane), who in her own way comments on Uhura’s standoffishness towards the engineer.
I like the idea that the crew are a little distant from Pelia, this aloof stranger who stepped into the void left by the departed Hemmer (Bruce Horak) — seen this week in recorded training videos — and how difficult it is to step into someone’s shoes like that. For Uhura, the void from Hemmer’s loss is still a huge one, and I appreciate that the writers haven’t left that pain behind.
Their connection was too strong to be ignore, and Uhura seems to understand this — enough so that when she hears the jarring noise again, she’s frightened by a hallucination of the Aenar’s dead body!
There is nothing particularly new about this setup from a Star Trek perspective; because the plot beats are a bit predictable, centering this episode our still-green Ensign Uhura — as opposed to any of the more experienced Starfleet characters — was definitely the right choice. Is she suffering from deuterium poisoning, or is she just fatigued? Doctor M’Benga (Babs Olusanmokun) suspects both, and takes off the active duty roster… though Uhura doesn’t seem convinced.
Dan Jeannotte as Sam Kirk and Paul Wesley as James T. Kirk. (Paramount+)
Over on the refinery, Pelia and Una Chin-Riley (Rebecca Romijn) lead the away team sent to tackle the station’s technical problems, and immediately clash over repair prioritization plans. Kane and Romjin are not a pairing I would have predicted, and yet they work surprisingly well as Pelia’s idiosyncrasies get under Una’s skin in no time at all — even as evidence of sabotage is found aboard the station.
(We eventually learn that Una doesn’t like Pelia because she’s missing Hemmer, too; it’s a fitting ending to a less-than-interesting subplot. Truthfully, I found the Pelia and Una squabble intriguing at first, but it became an increasing distraction from Uhura’s story as the hour passed.)
Both mysteries get pushed to the side for a bit, however, as the Enterprise welcomes Lieutenant James T. Kirk (Paul Wesley), coming aboard from the Farragut to visit his brother Sam (Dan Jeannotte). Their tense conversation is a fascinating introduction to the brothers’ complicated relationship, as Jim’s promotion to first officer of the Farragut puts up another wall between the siblings. Jim is the success story in their father’s eyes, and his drive to break every Starfleet record is testing their relationship.
I’ve wondering how they’d present the pre-Enterprise version of Jim Kirk, and the idea that he is so blinded by ambition to be the best of the best is such an interesting prelude to the Kirk of the Original Series — who suffers loss after loss and is constantly caught in this question of whether he is the right man for the job. This is the Jim Kirk that drives Carol Marcus (and her son) away, the Kirk who Areel Shaw can’t stay around, the Kirk that drives Janice Lester to megalomania. (Though the less said about that last example, the better.)
He’s brash, and a little self-obsessed; the lessons about life that will ground him and mellow him out are years (if not decades) away — but there is still that Kirk charm and care, even if Ensign Uhura only reads it as an attempt to flirt. Leaving the poor Kirk brother alone, Uhura leaves the port galley, only be confronted by a vision of a hallway of dead crewmates before being attacked by a reflection of herself.
She fights back, finally landing a blow straight into Jim Kirk’s nose. Whoops!
Celia Rose Gooding as Uhura and Michael Reventar as Ramon. (Paramount+)
Despite injuries that might suggest otherwise, Kirk believes Uhura’s claims: something beyond fatigue and poisoning must be going on. While he heads back to the Farragut to see if that ship’s medical team has any records, Pelia and Una find the saboteur deep in the bowels of the refinery — Lieutenant Ramon (Michael Reventar), an officer who appears to have lost his mind.
As Uhura suffers another frightening vision — this time, the bridge and crew getting sucked out into space — Pike does his best to understand what’s going on, just as Kirk brings evidence that Ramon has been suffering from similar visions. Catatonic in sickbay, Ramon seems completely beyond help of any kind… and then another round of jarring noises sends him in the violent panic, attacking M’Benga before escaping into the ship.
With crew under attack and power offline, Pike, Kirk, Uhura, and La’an (Christina Chong) begin a slowly-paced chase through the underlit decks. Uhura eventually catches up to Ramon in the port nacelle room, where she tries to reason with him right up until the moment he violently ejects the nacelle’s deuterium pods into space — with Ramon along for the ride. Kirk beams Uhura out before she too can be killed by the decompression; at least now they know she’s not alone, and that she’s not imagining things.
Kirk and Uhura’s talk about death sealed the deal for me on whether the Strange New Worlds writers know what they’re doing with this iconic character. It felt like a Jim Kirk moment, though one less self-reflective than those we see in the Original Series. This Kirk is fresh from the Farragutdikronium cloud incident, and lives with the memory of Tarsus IV in his mind — the deaths of people he knows and love is not academic to him, and neither is the need to past that type of loss.
This Kirk has the confidence to talk about pushing past death, and having him tell Uhura that you must push past the barriers that loss builds is a brilliant and ominous nod to the life of love and loss we know Kirk is about to live. Wesley sells this Kirk not as a man who has the burden of 430 souls on his back, but one who still has the wisdom that will allow him to carry that weight in the future — while still being effortlessly charming.
Carol Kane as Pelia. (Paramount+)
With Kirk off in search of the healing power of cookies, Uhura makes a breakthrough: she finds that the audio and voice recognition centers in Ramon’s brain was caused by a “signal overload” from an alien source. With Sam Kirk’s help, they deduce that extra-dimensional aliens living in the Bannon Nebula have been using Uhura and Ramon as a kind of universal translator… and worse, the new station’s deuterium-extraction process is a form of horrifying torture!
With the station now fully online (and unable to be shut down) Uhura and Kirk race to the bridge to report the situation. Pike listens to their story, and after contemplating the situation for a moment, orders the station personnel to evacuate… and then orders the station destroyed to protect the nebula beings from more pain.
In the episode’s final moments, the pair relax in the ship’s lounge and toast to “not letting death win” as the smooth sounds of outer-space jazz — and more Kirk brother bickering — wash over the room. Before things fade to black, though, Uhura introduces Jim Kirk to another member of the Enterprise bridge crew: science offer Spock.
Celia Rose Gooding as Uhura, Ethan Peck as Spock, and Paul Wesley as James T. Kirk. (Paramount+)
CAMP NONSENSE OF THE WEEK
This week’s highlight goes to the Enterprise’s Port Galley jazz band — exactly the right kind of live music a starship should feature in the space ’60s.
OBSERVATION LOUNGE
Captain Pike’s temporary promotion to Fleet Captain is a direct response to “The Menagerie,” where James T. Kirk shared that he met Pike “when he was promoted to Fleet Captain.” (Kirk described nothing else about his pre-“Menagerie” encounter with Pike, so the Strange New Worlds writers have cleanly taken taken care of the only mandatory canon requirement.)
While we’ve seen other ships use their Bussard collectors for unique purposes before — the Enterprise-D had their ‘crimson force field’ in “Samaritan Snare,” and the Enterprise-E collected metreon gas in Star Trek: Insurrection, among others — but it’s not too often that we see them used for their intended purpose: collecting stellar gasses for fuel.
Bannon’s nebula is named for Strange New Worlds actor Melissa Navia’s late partner, Brian Bannon, who passed away in December 2021.
When the refinery is destroyed, we can see three Farragut-type cruisers, and at least two Archer-type scouts (seen in the series premiere), and a myriad of shuttlecraft and automated transports (seen in “A Quality of Mercy”). Seems like it’s a busy day at the gas station!
The mentions of George Kirk’s “traditionalism” are perhaps a nod to the preface to Gene Roddenberry’s Star Trek: The Motion Picture novelization, which further elaborates on the Kirk family’s more traditional bend. (Is Strange New Worlds bold enough to elaborate on their mother’s “love instructor,” referenced in that book? Maybe in Season 3!)
Celia Rose Gooding as Uhura. (Paramount+)
“Lost in Translation” is, in many senses, a run-of-the-mill supernatural mystery with a decent message. It’s moral on facing death and moving forward after loss might be a little strong, but I can live with that. Having Uhura and Kirk carry that message — each of whom has a history strongly tied to death (Kirk since we’ve known him, Uhura in this modern series) — was a good choice too.
I felt like the thread through the events aboard the refinery itself were a little weak, though, as was the tease for more story between La’an and Kirk. Same with the brief “defining the relationship” moment between Chapel (Jess Bush) and Spock (Ethan Peck), which felt like a distraction from the main plot. Even if the conversation was necessary, we just had a full episode focused on those two — let Uhura keep the spotlight this week.
Paul Wesley’s take on the “real” Lieutenant Kirk, now that we’re spending time with him, portrays the future captain as a little brash and overconfident, but I think that’s to be expected — he’s headed up the promotional ladder at breakneck speed, and brushing away Sam’s sentiments is a clear prelude to their distant relationship at the time of “Operation — Annihilate!” I do wonder if the Kirk family drama is overwrought, but it didn’t take me out of the moment.
On the other hand, the fact that (as La’an puts it) he “can’t walk past a stranger in need” is a perfect piece of Kirk characterization, always unspoken in the Original Series. Whether or not it should have stayed that way is a topic for another time — having characters explain why they are the way they are can always come across as wooden — but the fact remains it is good characterization.
The fact that he — a stranger — is the person who can see that something is actually wrong with Uhura is a contrivance in itself, but it’s the sort of plot-based contrivance I can live with to keep the story moving along, especially when Wesley is convincing as that empathetic Kirk.
To the surprise of no one, however, Celia Rose Gooding is the standout star of the episode. Last year’s “Children of the Comet” was my favorite episode of Season 1, and again they prove that when on take center stage, they excel to incredible levels.
I’m going to conclude by reminding everyone that quality television, especially the quality of acting and writing we’ve come to expect from Star Trek, is dependent on good pay and good conditions for writers and actors at all levels. The stories actors and writers have been sharing over the last few weeks about studio-level bullying tactics and wage theft — and the threat of AI replacing human creatives — is antithetical to both Star Trek, and to the creative arts overall.
If the WGA and SAG-AFTRA unions are defeated in this round of strike action, the sort of media environment we know and love — and I use “love” as a relative term here — could cease to exist, replaced by a grim wall of corporate exploitation and computer-generated swill. For fandom, that means that while things might take a hit now (a hiatus to actor and writer interviews, reduced celebrity attendance at conventions, changes to television and movie release schedules, etc.), it’s worth it if it means that the creative-arts community will have a better working environment.
Next week: things get a bit animated as the long-awaited Star Trek: Lower Decks crossover episode arrives!
Star Trek: Strange New Worlds returns with “These Old Scientists” on Thursday, July 27 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 — and this week, the company is doing double duty with scheduled drops on both Wednesday and Friday!
The Vulcan T’Plana-Hath Lander from STAR TREK: FIRST CONTACT.
First, here’s everything set to arrive for sale this Wednesday, July 19, at 4PM ET (and at 9PM in the UK) in a “Flash Drop” of both regular and special-sized Star Trek starships — like the Vulcan T’Plana-Hath lander from Star Trek: First Contact — some of which will have less than 100 pieces in stock.
From the Star Trek Universe:
B’Omar Patrol Ship
Bajoran Raider
Klingon Augments’ Ship
Malon Export Vessel
Norway Class (U.S.S. Budapest)
Tholian Ship (22nd Century)
Vaadwuar Assault Fighter
Voth City Ship
Enterprise NX-01
E.C.S. Fortunate
Cardassian Keldon Class
Enterprise-E Captain’s Yacht
Nebula Class (U.S.S. Honshu)
Species 8472 Bioship
Vulcan Survey Ship
Shuttle Set 1: Galileo, Type-6, Type-9, Type-10
Star Trek Special Releases:
U.S.S. Kelvin (KELVIN TIMELINE)
Klingon Battlecruiser (KELVIN TIMELINE)
Klingon D4 Bird-of-prey (KELVIN TIMELINE)
T’Plana-Hath Vulcan Lander
V’Ger
Vulcan Long-Range Shuttle
Son’a Flagship
The golden USS Enterprise-D model.
Following Wednesday’s releases, Master Replicas will have another more-broadly-focused release this Friday, July 21 at 4PM ET (and at 9PM in the UK).
Here’s what you can expect!
From the Star Trek Universe:
U.S.S. Enterprise NCC-1701-D — Gold Edition
Vidiian Warship
Archer’s Toy Ship
S.S. Raven
United Earth Starfleet Intrepid
Ferengi Ship (22nd century)
Borg Probe
U.S.S Enterprise NCC-1701 (Constitution Class Refit)
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.
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 on July 19 and July 21.
Keep checking back to TrekCore for all the latest in Star Trek merchandise news!
This year’s San Diego Comic Con event (set to kick off on Thursday, July 20) will be much different from years past, as members of the Writers Guild of America (WGA) and the Screen Actor’s Guild (SAG) are both on strike — virtually ensuring that none of the big names you might expect to see will be attending.
While the cast and writers of their shows are rightfully striking for fair compensation, Paramount+ is still bringing their annual Star Trek Universe panel to the West Coast’s biggest forum this weekend, with a look back to Trek franchise history, and a look ahead to what’s next for the streamer’s outer-space adventures.
Since none of the Star Trek actors will be present for this year’s event, Paramount+ has chosen to fill their 75-minute panel time with a look ahead to the upcoming fourth season of Star Trek: Lower Decks, the fifth and final season of Star Trek: Discovery… and as an exclusive event for in-person fans, an early screening of the highly-anticipated Lower Decks / Strange New Worlds crossover episode.
Tawny Newsome as Beckett Mariner and Jack Quaid as Brad Boimler. (Paramount+)
Star Trek Universe Panel — Saturday, July 22 at 1:30PM (Hall H)
The fan-favorite STAR TREK universe returns to San Diego Comic-Con, featuring exclusive reveals and surprises from upcoming and current seasons of STAR TREK: DISCOVERY, STAR TREK: LOWER DECKS, and STAR TREK: STRANGE NEW WORLDS. Fans in attendance will also be the first to see the highly anticipated STAR TREK: STRANGE NEW WORLDS and STAR TREK: LOWER DECKS crossover episode with a special Hall H premiere screening!
The Official Star Trek: The Animated Series 50th Anniversary Celebration — Friday, June 21 at 10 AM PT (Room 25ABC)
This event marks the launch of a campaign celebrating 50 years of STAR TREK: THE ANIMATED SERIES with John Van Citters (VP, Star Trek Brand Development); explore the latest in publishing with an IDW representative and talk gaming with Scopely’s Brian Lelas (Lead Narrative Designer, Star Trek Fleet Command) and Rebekah Plants (Community Manager, Star Trek Fleet Command). In addition, the panel will feature limited edition pin giveaways and special guest Casper Kelly (Star Trek: Short Treks, Too Many Cooks)!
Interactive Star Trek: Strange New Worlds Exhibit (Booth #3529)
Experience the Paramount+ original series STAR TREK: STRANGE NEW WORLDS on the convention floor through an interactive booth inspired by the U.S.S. Enterprise. The booth features two immersive photo opportunities, where fans can take the helm of the renowned captain’s chair and then place themselves in the footsteps of Starfleet by selecting one of four “strange new worlds” to explore.
Within the booth, fans will also get an intimate look at official costumes and props from the series on display and have a chance to receive exclusive giveaways.
Star Trek Universe Activation
The Star Trek brand team, in partnership with Paramount+, will also be distributing limited-edition pins daily during San Diego Comic-Con in the downtown Gaslamp District at “The Lodge: A Paramount+ Experience,” located at the transformed Happy Does Bar.
Happy Does Bar, 340 Fifth Ave, San Diego, CA 92101. Operating hours: Wednesday, July 19, 6-10PM; Thursday, July 20-Saturday, July 22, 12 – 10PM; Sunday, July 23, 10AM – 7PM. Admission is free, but is on a reservation system. No SDCC badge is required.
For those of you visiting San Diego Comic Con and lucky enough to attend the Hall H screening, please keep those Lower Decks / Strange New Worlds crossover spoilers to yourself until the rest of your fellow fans get to watch on Paramount+ next Thursday!
Last week, we spoke to Star Trek: Strange New Worlds actors Jess Bush and Gia Sandhu about Christine Chapel and T’Pring’s experiences in last week’s “Charades” — and today, we’ve got another conversation to share about the season’s midway-point episode.
We had the opportunity to chat with “Charades” director Jordan Canning — whose other work includes episodes of Schitt’s Creek and the HBO revival of Fraggle Rock — about navigating humor during Vulcan family drama, filming on the revolutionary AR wall stage, and more.
https://www.instagram.com/p/CupBJFlAeCo/?hl=en
TREKCORE: You’ve directed a wide range of film and television, but this is your first visit to Star Trek. Did you have much familiarity with Trek before coming into Strange New Worlds?
JORDAN CANNING: I was a big Next Generation fan when I was a kid — I watched that nightly with my parents — and I was a big fan of Star Trek IV; I watched The Voyage Home so many times. And, I mean, it’s the comedy film, you know? So I’m not surprised that fate led me to this episode of Star Trek thirty years later.
I’m not the world’s deepest Star Trek expert by any means. My dad was a big Star Trek fan — the original show — he watched tons of that, and then we all watched Next Gen together, but then I kind of didn’t keep following it. I didn’t get into Deep Space Nine and everything, but now I’m like, “Oh, I should go back and watch all of them.”I rewatched all the movies leading up to doing the job and was like, “Oh, these are great.”
I mean, there’s a couple that are better than others, but, I mean, lots of them are so good. And man, Voyage Home holds up.
TREKCORE: We know that Star Trek can do comedy, and this wonderful episode keeps that alive. As the person in charge on the set, how do you set the tone in the workplace? How do you set the mood for comedy?
CANNING: I don’t know if I have any tricks of the trade; I just love being on set. I have so much fun when I’m shooting, and I think I’m kind of just a natural sort of goofy, silly, funny person. And so I try to just impart that on my sets and just, you know, it’s the best job ever!
We’re having so much fun. We’re doing such silly, amazing stuff, so let’s just enjoy it. Obviously, things get stressful and there are days where you’re like, “How are we ever gonna make it through this?” But at the end of the day, we’re making fun TV.
I’ve worked on sets where those dark clouds come over, and it just sort of ruins everything. There’s hundreds of people there working. So many different personalities, and you do just have to kind of find a way to make it fun and rally everyone and be like, “Okay, yes, we’re three hours behind, but guys, it’s gonna be great. Watch this.”
Jordan Canning (right) directs Ethan Peck as Spock. (Paramount+)
TREKCORE: When you’re working with the actors, is it a collaboration of that tone? How does that back and forth work to get it to be the funniest it could be?
CANNING: Well, I think what’s so awesome about this episode is everybody gets to show how funny they are. Obviously, it’s a big Spock and Chapel episode, but everybody kind of gets at least a little moment or a little fun reaction. I love the montage where everybody’s kicking in to help. Like when you have the four women standing up trying to teach Spock how to talk like a Vulcan? I love that, they were so funny. They had all of these great ideas.
To me, that’s always the best way to approach comedies. Like, you’ve got a great script. You’ve got the jokes in there, but then let’s see what the actors wanna do. And, you know, maybe they have a little instinct to do something, and you pick up on it and you go, “Oh my God, you had this great little moment or you threw this little line in. Let’s keep that. That was funny.” Or to keep that line and then add this little move to it.
And you build upon it because I’ve got to see it to know exactly if it’s funny or if it’s working. With the scenes with Spock, Ethan [Peck] and I were both very determined to make sure that he never went too erratic — it always had to feel like it was coming from Spock, you know?Not turned into something too broad, and then suddenly you’re like, “Who is this? This is not Spock.” So sometimes you’d see it, and I’d be like, “Okay, Ethan, that was too big. Let’s dial it back,” or “Actually, you know what? I think you can go even bigger. Try, you know, try going like really wild with this.”And then he would go for it and I’d be like, “There, that’s it. That’s great.”
Having the time to play on set and actors who are willing to play around? I mean, everybody. There’s so many great little improvised moments in this episode that I don’t think anyone would realize were improvised. Pike had a ton of great, even just great looks.Pike had so many funny reactions.
Canning directs Anson Mount as Captain Christopher Pike. (Paramount+)
TREKCORE: Every time you cut to a Pike reaction was just guaranteed laugh out loud.
CANNING: It’s always gold.And he would throw little lines in there, like the little line about the hat. When Spock is like, “No, these are regulation.” And Pike goes, “…Yeah, I have one just like it.” That was improvised.
La’an had a great line, when they’re doing the Spock thing, you know, “Do I really sound like that?” “Yep, yeah. Oh, absolutely.” Just that little button, you know, it just elevates things, in comedy to have that little sparkle on it. Everybody just crushed it.
We even had this scene — it didn’t make it in the cut — but we were having so much fun on set. We were in the bar set and we had a little extra time, remarkably, and Ethan and Rebecca had, like, worked out this thing. They were like, “Okay, can we just try this where, like, I’ve got gum, and Spock wants to try the gum and doesn’t understand what gum is for? And I was like, “Okay, great. Set up the camera.”
The two of them, tthey did this whole routine where he tries gum and he’s like, “Oh, maybe I should try nuts with it.” And they’re like, “No, no.”And then he is like, “How about a pickle?” [laughs] It’s just, I mean, it was so silly and funny. Just finding ways for us to see Spock experiencing the world through human eyes and the foibles around that.
TREKCORE: And finding the moments of funny that aren’t in the script. It sounds like you had leeway for things like that?
CANNING: Yeah. Kathryn Lyn who wrote the script with Henry [Alonso Meyers] was always on the set. I love Kathryn, we had so much fun. And so there was always someone there, you know, so it would be like, “This isn’t quite working. Can we try this?” And she’d be like, “Great. How bout this?”Or “Do you like this improv? Great. I’m gonna get them to keep doing that.” So it was great to have her there to bounce ideas off of.
Canning directs Peck during one of Spock’s moments of emotionless frustration. (Paramount+)
TREKCORE: There were also some really heartfelt moments in there and there were subtle changes in the way that you filmed those scenes. I specifically think it’s so lovely the way you filmed the scenes with Spock and his mother, much softer and slower paced. How do you balance those things in an episode like this? How do you switch tones and have it blend so nicely?
CANNING: I think what’s so great about comedy and especially a script like this, which has a lot of pace to it, you know, the engine sort of starts, and then you’re going, going, going, and there’s fun. There’s montages. There’s comedy. And so when the audience is sort of on board with that, you can really take advantage of those moments where you do slow it down and you do sit in an emotional moment or a moment of silence or a little tension…
TREKCORE: A moment to breathe.
CANNING: Yeah, a moment to breathe — because that’s how you recognize that there’s a little change and those are satisfying because comedy clips along, and then it allows you to sort of frame up a beautiful moment of emotion and connection amidst that sort of fun paced-up episode.
I love the scene — in the bathroom with Chapel and Spock — it’s one of my favorite scenes. It gets me every time. It’s so beautiful. And, you know, they did such a gorgeous job of just those little subtle moments and her decision to zap. It breaks my heart every time. These two, this missed opportunity, this letting go of this potential way to connect with Spock, because she knows that the greater good is getting him back to the way he was and knowing that that means probably losing him. It’s a beautiful moment.
TREKCORE: It really is. And also her heartfelt declaration of her feelings.
CANNING: Oh, I know. To the aliens.
Canning (center) directs Peck and Rebecca Romijn as Number One. (Paramount+)
TREKCORE: How challenging was that scene to film on the AR wall stage?
CANNING: She was just talking to a dot on the wall, essentially. What’s so cool about the AR wall is we were in that amazing sort of like interdimensional space. So that was happening, but there was nothing, there was maybe an eyeline for her, in terms of the alien. So she was just giving her all to a tennis ball on a stick essentially, but, I love her in that scene.
That was an interesting thing. That scene with Chapel — because it is more of an emotional scene — she’s finally sort of admitting her feelings and doing the impassioned speech to the aliens to hopefully get what she needs. Finding little moments of comedy in that was also really fun.
Like something that Celia [Rose Gooding] did. That little moment, the little side eye that Celia gives. I saw her do that in a looser shot and I was like, “Oh, that’s good”. I’m gonna get thatspecial little shot of that moment because it’s seeing those things that the actors do and then giving them the right shot for it. So in the edit, you get exactly what you need out of it because it doesn’t play as well in the front-on shot.
You want that little side eye and then the two of them over in the side being like, “Come on, Christine, just say what you mean.”
TREKCORE: Just say it. [laughs]
CANNING: Yeah. “Are you that dumb?” I love it.
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TREKCORE: You’re incredibly successful in a male-dominated profession, and I was wondering what advice you have for young women who are starting out – to those who might be interested in the type of career that you’ve built for yourself?
CANNING: It’s a hard industry in general, but I think trusting in your taste and your confidence and trusting your gut and knowing that you’re going to come up against a lot of personalities, male and female.But I’ve come up against men in my career who push back in a way that tries to make you doubt yourself.
They try to shake your confidence like, “Oh, I don’t understand what you’re saying.” “What is it you want?” “You’re not being clear.” And knowing that I am being clear. I know how to communicate. You are the one who’s not listening to me.
I thought Ted Lasso Season 3 was a bit up and down, but there was a great episode near the end where Rebecca is at this table with a bunch of men who are all talking over her and then she pictures them all as little boys. And I was like“Man, that’s a good trick.” Because we’re all just bigger versions of the kids we were. And so to think about that, sometimes be like, “Okay, you’re a little boy throwing a tantrum.”
Okay, yeah, I’ll speak slower for you so that you understand. And then I’m gonna keep going about doing my job because I know I’m prepared, and I know I’ve done ten times as much work to get here. So I think you’ve just got to trust that if this is really what you want to do, you can do it. Any of us can do it.
You just don’t let them tear you down!
Star Trek: Strange New Worlds returns with “Lost in Translation” on Thursday, July 20 on Paramount+ in the U.S, the U.K., Australia, Latin America, Brazil, France, Italy, Germany, Switzerland and Austria.
In addition, stick around to hear Marina’s wish for clarity about the impact the Screen Actor’s Guild strike will have on the 57 Year Mission in Las Vegas scheduled for early August, and a listener theory about Strange New Worlds impacts the Star Trek timeline thanks to “Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow.”
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!
Star Trek: Strange New Worlds returns with the next episode this Thursday, and today we’ve got new photos from “Lost in Translation” for you to review!
This week: Uhura (Celia Rose Gooding) begins to hear strange noises aboard the Enterprise, but no one else seems to notice — leading her to partner with the realJames T. Kirk (Paul Wesley), who comes aboard the Enterprise for the first time.
Here are seven new photos from this week’s episode:
STAR TREK: STRANGE NEW WORLDS — Episode 206: 'Lost in Translation'
1 of 8
Uhura (Celia Rose Gooding) points a phaser. (Paramount+)
Pelia (Carol Kane) speaks to Uhura. (Paramount+)
Uhura stands in an open field. (Paramount+)
Uhura and Jim Kirk (Paul Wesley) work together. (Paramount+)
Kirk in the Enterprise lounge. (Paramount+)
Brothers Sam (Dan Jeannotte) and Jim Kirk. (Paramount+)
Chapel (Jess Bush) plays chess. (Paramount+)
In case you missed it, here’s a preview clip released from Paramount+ as part of last week’s episode of The Ready Room with Wil Wheaton.
LOST IN TRANSLATION — Uhura seems to be the only one who can hear a strange sound. When the noise triggers terrifying hallucinations, she enlists an unlikely assistant to help her track down the source.
Written by Onitra Johnson & David Reed. Directed by Dan Li.
Star Trek: Strange New Worlds returns with “Lost in Translation” on Thursday, July 20 on Paramount+ in the U.S, the U.K., Australia, Latin America, Brazil, France, Italy, Germany, Switzerland and Austria.
Spock had one heck of an ordeal in this week’s new Star Trek: Strange New Worlds episode, and his “Charades” storyline concluded with his fiancé T’Pring declaring their relationship on hold after she was left out of his subterfuge.
We sat down with T’Pring herself, actor Gia Sandhu, to talk about playing the elegant Vulcan, her relationship with Spock, and those amazingly intricate costumes.
Note: This interview occurred before the SAG-AFTRA contract expired on July 12, 2023.
T’Pring (Gia Sandhu) and Spock (Ethan Peck). (Paramount+)
TREKCORE: I love when T’Pring shows up, because you know it’s going to be a fun episode — but this time, we also get to learn more about her as a person. How do you think her upbringing influences the decisions that she makes now, both with her career and with her relationship with Spock?
GIA SANDHU: I think we get a good insight into why she is who she is.I think when we meet the parents, we kind of see the blend of the two that she is — but also her rebellion against wanting to be that, which is so universal, isn’t it?
TREKCORE: Yes, it’s very relatable!
SANDHU: Hermom is obviously so overbearing, and so controlling, that I think that it’s natural for her to sometimes want to push Vulcan culture — and Vulcan principles — away at times. So there’s that side to her. And then I think there’s also the side to her that is really conditioned by this upbringing as well, and that she at the same time can’t help who she is and can’t help the Vulcan within her.
I think that all of this comes into play with her relationship with Spock. We see her wanting to support him, and support his journey, and support his discovery of self, but she also at the same time, wants him to adhere to certain ideas that she has about what a relationship should be and should mean and what a Vulcan relationship is like. So the two things seem maybe a little bit like they push against each other, but I think that’s what creates the complexity of this character.
TREKCORE: She can relate to Spock in that way too, because they’re both struggling with two sides.
SANDHU: Exactly.
TREKCORE: That makes her choice of career even more interesting: rehabilitating criminals.
SANDHU: Her career is high stakes; she is in a position of power. She’s a high-achieving Vulcan!
Gia Sandhu in “Spock Amok,” and Arlene Martel in “Amok Time.” (Paramount+)
TREKCORE: Since I was young, I’ve considered T’Pring in “Amok Time,” played by Arlene Martel, a feminist role model.She couldn’t change the antiquated system that she was in, but she pushed that system to its limits to get the life for herself that she wanted to have.
How do you think about the character, independent of her relationship with Spock?
SANDHU: I think the way that she presents herself is always with so much grace, with so much dignity and integrity. And I think that comes across when we see her at her workplace. I think it also comes across in her relationship with her parents, when her mom really pushes to the point where it’s now insulting to Spock. It’s now hurtful to Spock. And she does stand up and say something to her mother.
I think that just has to do with her own moral compass. And of course, with Spock as well, when she speaks to him at the end, and she says to him, “How was I meant to feel when I was the only one being kept in the dark?” I think she’s so eloquent in the way that she delivers this. It’s very similar to, I think, when she expresses herself in the first season when Spock shows up late for their dinner in the body swap episode.
And she articulates to him then as well, like, “I’m here, I’m present, even though I have so much work to do as well, but I am prioritizing this.” I love the way that she carries herself and how she expresses herself. I think that that feminism is beautiful. It’s such an attractive quality of hers.
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TREKCORE: She stands up for herself in what she wants in that relationship — and when she stands up to her mother, she does it in such a Vulcan way too: “Your assessment is not required,” which is a line I’m gonna keep in mind for my own life!
And then at the end, when she does choose to end her relationship with Spock — or at least, to go on a break…
SANDHU: Like Ross and Rachel. Yeah.
TREKCORE: Oh, no!What is T’Pring hoping for, from her point of view, with this time apart?
SANDHU: Because we know what happens in “Amok Time,” I imagine that him falling for somebody else [Chapel] is not what she meant by, “Let’s take a break.” (laughs)
TREKCORE: That’s true! Though we also saw Stonn — T’Pring’s new man from “Amok Time” — last season. Was that just an Easter egg, or is that something that might come into play during your time on Strange New Worlds
SANDHU: I thought it was a nice thing for them to drop in for the Original Series fans — but whether that develops into something or not during the season, I don’t know actually.
T’Pring and Stonn (Roderick McNeil), future romantic partners. (Paramount+)
TREKCORE: You’re a very talented comedic performer. What are some of the challenges with that when you have to work within the confounds of playing it straight as a Vulcan?
SANDHU: When I read the scripts, I’m usually laughing out loud, and the humor and the delivery is all in the writing. With some comedic scripts, there’s a lot on the actor, in terms of having to kind of mold it and sculpt it to make the thing be funny. With these episodes with T’Pring and Spock and their relationship, all the work is kinda done for us.
The circumstances are just so funny. You know the characters, it’s so clear to see what archetypes we’re hitting. So because it’s all so clear, I think it makes for an easier time for us as the actors. And I really enjoy being able to kind of push the limits on how emotional a Vulcan can be, and how much they can display.
TREKCORE: Because they have emotions, but just try to suppress them.
SANDHU: Exactly. And Spock, I think he puts it so beautifully in this episode when he explains that actually Vulcan emotions are more powerful than human emotions, and that’s why we have to suppress them.
TREKCORE: Who are some of your comedy influences?
SANDHU: In terms of comedic actors, I’ve had the benefit of working with some great standup comics as acting partners. Kristen Schaal is one of them, in The Mysterious BenedictSociety.And with Russell Peters a few years back, and he’s so funny. I love performers who do multiple things. It’s always a joy to see how they work.
T’Pring (Gia Sandhu) and Spock (Ethan Peck). (Paramount+)
TREKCORE: We’ve got to talk about that Vulcan fashion, because T’Pring is just always rocking these outfits! How much fun is it when you get into character? Beyond the ears — her makeup, the beautiful gowns, the jewelry. How does that affect your performance?
SANDHU: With each layer that comes on in the morning when I’m getting dressed, the more I start to feel like this other person. It starts with the ears usually, then it’s a bit of hair, then makeup, then more hair.And then it’s finally the wardrobe. But there’s something about the hair, because I have these crazy long extensions.
TREKCORE: They’re fabulous!
SANDHU: They’re heavy, my neck doesn’t really move properly, it’s like I’m wrestling this to just, like, be able to balance the weight on my head! (laughs)
But it works really well. And as soon as it all comes together and I look in the mirror, I go: “Oh, yeah, there she is.” And it’s a feeling. It’s a feeling. It’s the weight of the hair. It’s the feeling of the corset-like costumes and the shoulder pads. And also, like, the length of the sleeve — there’s something regal about that that is informative.
So it’s all of those things… it all kind of comes together.
Star Trek: Strange New Worlds returns with “Lost in Translation” on Thursday, July 20 on Paramount+ in the U.S, the U.K., Australia, Latin America, Brazil, France, Italy, Germany, Switzerland and Austria.