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STAR TREK: STRANGE NEW WORLDS Interview — Jess Bush on Christine Chapel’s “Charades” with Spock

In this week’s Star Trek: Strange New Worlds, the simmering tension between Lieutenant Spock and Nurse Christine Chapel finally hit a boiling point in “Charades” — as the two officers finally faced their feelings head on after Chapel fought to get Spock restored to his half-human, half-Vulcan self.
 
We sat down with Nurse Chapel herself, actor Jess Bush, to talk about growing into the role of Enterprise’s best nurse… and of course, the growing Chapel-Spock romance.
 

Note: This interview occurred before the SAG-AFTRA contract expired on July 12, 2023.

Jess Bush as Christine Chapel. (Paramount+)

TREKCORE: Christine really gets to shine in this episode — and besides all the Spock scenes, we get to see her solve a medical mystery. We get to see her really stick up for herself in her career, assert her independence, and it’s really great to see. How satisfying is it to get to explore the deeper life of this character who previously, in the Original Series, basically existed to pine away for Spock?

JESS BUSH: It’s deeply satisfying, and it’s also a great honor to be trusted with that task. I think the writers have done a friggin’ wonderful job of being really intentional about how they were gonna flesh this character out because Majel [Barrett] was famously unsatisfied with what she got to do.

And as you said, she kind of existed as just this reason for Spock to show his emotionless-ness. So it’s been just such a privilege to be entrusted with that. It’s also just been really fun. Like, the cool stuff that they’ve given me to do this season has been so good.

TREKCORE: Your version of Chapel is really fun. She’s got a lot of spunk, you know, moxie, and a lot of vigor. When you look at Majel’s version, she’s a little more sad; she’s almost defeated. Knowing her journey to when she gets older, how does that affect your choices in how you play her?

BUSH: Well, when I watched her performance, I didn’t really get sad from her. I got kind of, like, salty — like she’s kind of sarcastic and dry. So I kind of looked at that and kind of reverse-engineered what the bright-eyed and bushy-tailed version of that person would be, when she maybe hasn’t been totally knocked down yet.

TREKCORE: How about the medical aspect of it? Where do you draw from for the actual being-a-nurse part?

BUSH: I’ve read a lot about the type of person that is drawn to the nursing profession. Memoirs of nurses, books about combat med stuff —

TREKCORE: Right, because she’s also a veteran of the Starfleet-Klingon war.

BUSH: Yeah. It’s a constant learning process, because the field that Chapel is working in, the things that I have to do are kind of a mix of all the different types of medical professions that I could be in today’s world. So it’s pulling pieces in from everywhere.

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TREKCORE: She’s very open and honest with her patients, which is really fun to watch — “This won’t hurt… much!” — but she’s also very compassionate.

BUSH: I’m really familiar with this character now. Reading into what internally drives someone to be in that profession is also really informative to how she behaves at work, what she cares about when she’s on the floor, and how she approaches people, how she wants people to feel, what she knows of herself and what that can provide to people. I feel like that honesty and candidness can be really helpful in making people feel safe in times when things are uncertain.

TREKCORE: It makes the sickbay feel like a very safe place.

BUSH: Yeah, like, “I’m gonna tell you what’s going on, find a way to laugh about it.”

TREKCORE: “Weird shit is happening, and I’m not gonna sugarcoat it.”

BUSH: Totally!

TREKCORE: It’s probably quite interesting to play a character whose future you know. How does it complicate things, when you must portray your budding relationship with Spock — knowing that this is a person that your character will ostensibly never get over? 

BUSH: Our job is to be present, so I can’t think about that. That’s something that we can’t really entertain, if we’re gonna live the truth of this moment. We don’t know what’s gonna happen in real life, so part of the job is ignoring that.

TREKCORE: When you learned that Spock diverted the shields to save Chapel, and then you gave this beautiful, heartfelt speech about your feelings… it was a beautiful moment, but all against a digital character. Does that make it harder to bring up those emotions, when you’ve got nothing real to play against?

BUSH: Well, I mean, yeah — I was talking to a dot on a screen. But you know, coming clean in that moment and all the vulnerability that was there was more about Spock and me and my internal journey. And so I guess I just focused in on that.

I focused in on the relationship with Spock, what I wanted for him — and also the fear of being real. I think that was the biggest part of it, was like, just really feeling the fear of exposure and pushing through that, struggling with that.

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TREKCORE: Last season in “Spock Amok,” she was emphatic about not wanting anything serious — so what makes things with Spock different? 

BUSH: You know, she behaves like that, that she wants nothing but casual surface-y fun things — but that’s not what she really wants. That’s just a way to protect herself, and the way that she feels about Spock is too special to tarnish with that protective stuff. So she’s forced to be more honest and take the opportunity to get something that she actually really wants with someone that makes her feel safe and seen.

TREKCORE: One of my favorite parts of the episode is the scene with the cure to Spock’s condition. Instead of listening to what he’s about to confess — something that sounds very important and emotional — she hits him with the cure right away and says, “Go back to your life.” That’s such a bold choice. I can’t imagine being that strong… like, I would wanna hear what that person had to say!

BUSH: Well, it’s the right thing to do, I think. I think that she knows that it would be very, very hard to resist leaning into his humanness, if she did hear what he had to say. And she knows that that’s not the right thing to do, so she cuts him off.

She wants to do the right thing, you know, like, it’s not up to her. It would be selfish and almost like indulgent of her to take advantage of his humanness.

Spock (Ethan Peck) and Chapel break new ground in their relationship. (Paramount+)

TREKCORE: That’s a lovely way to put it. But also then, there’s that kiss, which is just a lovely moment between you two — and it’s Christine that decides to kiss him first! How was that moment choreographed between the two of you, and from a character perspective, how did she make that decision?

BUSH: Intimacy scenes are always really scripted. They’re always very choreographed, just for everybody’s safety — but on a character level, I think it just gets to the point where she’s like, “We gotta stop thinking about it. Like, we just gotta follow our guts and experience this because if we think too hard, it’s just gonna mess it up and I can’t wait any longer. We have to act on it to see.”

The journey of the episode and where Chapel is in that moment, she’s just like forced to be fucking honest with herself in that moment and be like, “This is what I want.” Like, “No matter what the conditions are, no matter how complicated it is, I want this and I know that this is how I want to behave right now.”

And I think that the journey towards that honesty has been stretching through the whole episode, and she arrives at this point where she’s like, “You know what? Fuck it — this is what I want!”

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.

STAR TREK: STRANGE NEW WORLDS Review: “Charades”

“Charades” is an enjoyable homage to 1960s screwball sitcom hijinks that is undercut by the rather shaky (and increasingly annoying) science fiction trope about splitting a multiracial person in two. This is not to say that the episode handles that topic itself that badly, but I’ll get into that later.
 
Enterprise is on a slow cruise through the Vulcan system on its way to the moon of Kerkhov, home to an ancient civilization that could be the site of great archaeologic discovery. The downtime is great for the crew, especially Nurse Chapel (Jess Bush), who is preparing to interview for an internship with the great Dr. Roger Korby on Vulcan. She is, however, pointedly avoiding Spock (Ethan Peck), who is also doing his best to avoid her in return.
 
Spock has been busying himself with work and preparing to meet T’Pring (Gia Sandhu) and his future in-laws for a Vulcan engagement ritual. It is, as they say, “a big thing” – though not, apparently, as big a thing as Spock having to take Chapel along as a passenger when they do a shuttle flyby of the Kerkhovian moon. It’s painfully awkward… right up utnil an anomaly above the Kerkhovian ruins snags the shuttle and gives it a good ol’ Star Trek zap.
 

Ethan Peck as Spock. (Paramount+)

Thankfully, Spock wakes up on the Enterprise, seemingly unharmed… until the reveal that he’s now fully human! We learn that the energy-based Kerkhovians tried to repair Spock’s injuries from the shuttle accident, and found his Vulcan DNA to be an anomaly — comparing him to the all-human Chapel — and “helpfully” removed that part of his genome before returning the shuttle back to normal space.

Honestly, I can live with this interdimensional-being nonsense as an explanation for this, even if it is kind of stupid. Thankfully, no one aboard the Enterprise is even trying to argue that this could be a benefit to Spock — but he’s stuck like this for now, since the Kerkhovians seem to be unwilling to “heal” him another time.

And what does it mean for Spock? Seemingly, he’s not only lost his Vulcan genome, but he’s apparently lost his capacity to act like a Vulcan as well, missing all of those inherited cultural suppressants that Vulcans have. Ethan Peck gets to show off his comedy chops in  a reasonably funny montage of Spock managing his new human forms of expression — including laughing, irritation, and alarmingly… bacon.

I like the idea that human emotionality is just too constant for Spock — and like any adolescent Spock must learn to tame them, much to the consternation of the crew.. thought I wonder how exactly La’an (Christina Chong) became the one to give him “the talk.”

Meanwhile, Chapel has her own problems: her interview with the Korby fellowship is a disaster, as the Vulcan Science Institute has little time for her fieldwork and “interpretation.” Spock offers some comfort in a very un-Vulcan way. (He’s learning to cope.)

Anson Mount as Captain Pike and Mia Kirshner as Amanda. (Paramount+)

Their brief reunion is interrupted by the appearance of a new problem: Spock’s mother Amanda Grayson (Mia Kirshner) arrives, only to report that the engagement dinner is going to happen aboard the Enterprise!

Kirshner’s return after a four-year absence is a delight. Her interpretation of Amanda, last seen in Discovery’s “Such Sweet Sorrow, Part 2,” was brilliant and nuanced, and taking the opportunity to bring her back here was perfect. Amanda’s grace and wit, as well as her motherly tendencies towards Spock, are the perfect foil for Peck’s frantic, teenager-esque characterization of the now-human Spock — the sequence in the transporter room when Spock and Pike (Anson Mount) try to hide the predicament from her is brilliant.

With the tenuous relationship between Spock and T’Pring’s families on the line, the natural (and most hijink-heavy) choice is for Spock to finally learn the most important human characteristic of them all: how to lie to your in-laws! With coaching from both Amanda and his cremates, Spock must learn how to present as a typical Vulcan: handling superheated teapots, talking with the monotonous tone of logic, and trying (and failing) to manage his emotional outbursts during a V’Shal “improvement” session and a bogus mind-meld.

Things look dicey, butthe show must go on. After Chapel is unable to find a cure for his condition using Federation technology, she ropes in Uhura (Celia Rose Gooding) and Ortegas (Melissa Navia) into her mission to fly back to the Kerkhovians and demand that they take another look at Spock. In the meantime, T’Pring returns ahead of her difficult parents, as Spock does his best to act Vulcanly-normal. He succeeds in that feat, but fails to do the more important thing: tell her what’s going on.

Ellora Patnaik as T’Pril and Michael Benyaer as Sevet. (Paramount+)

T’Pril (Ellora Patnaik) and Sevet (Michael Benyaer), T’Pring’s terrifying parents, are great! They are not complicated characters in any sense; drawn more from the cookie-cutter in-law stereotypes of The Dick Van Dyke Show, I Love Lucy, and Bewitched era, but with a Vulcan twist. And honestly? It works!

The whole set-up is a perfect storm of 60s sitcom tropes: the disapproving mother-in-law, the contrived rituals that have to be absolutely correct, the awkward doing-his-best host (Captain Pike), the easy to please but doting husband in Sevet. They are not particularly deep characters, but they are interesting; certainly T’Pril’s aloof arrogance towards strangers — and family — explains a lot about T’Pring’s own temperament.

As Spock claws his way through the rituals, Chapel, Ortegas and Uhura make their way to the Kerkhovian moon. Unable to ring through, Uhura suggests “wedging the door open” with a shuttlecraft, which seems to get the Kerkhovian’s attention. Unfortunately, they still don’t understand what they’ve done wrong, even as Chapel insists that they fixed him incorrectly.

Back on the Enterprise, the ritual only gets worse as they enter the “improvement” stage, which seems to mainly consist of T’Pril being mean to everyone in the room — but primarily Spock, who she eviscerates as being wholly inadequate for her daughter. T’Pril’s attitude is characteristic of a lot of Vulcans we’ve met over the years, and if we are to assume that this viewpoint is fairly normal among the Vulcan population (as we’ve seen again and again), it certainly underlines the difficulty and nuances of Spock’s dual identity.

Spock himself struggles a lot here, and I do to. T’Pril sucks; her attituded towards Spock’s complicated identity is infuriatingly realistic and recognizable to many people, and the way in which you just have to put up with it, even when you know it shouldn’t be how things go.

Babs Olasunmokon as M’Benga and Jess Bush as Christine Chapel. (Paramount+)

The tone stays with us as we go back to Chapel, Ortegas and Uhura. Stuck in interdimensional space, Chapel pleads with the Kerkhovians to fix Spock, but they remain unconvinced.. though not as unconvinced as Ortega and Uhura about Chapel’s “just friends” claim when it comes to Spock. As Chapel pleads for their action, the Kerkhovians (and her friends!) force her to confront how she feels about Spock in the open, and how important he — all of him — is to her.

With time running out before the fateful and un-fakeable mind meld, Pike attempts to stall with an ancient Earth ritual: charades! This gives Chapel just enough time to arrive with Spock’s much-needed “vitamins.” In the bathroom. Yeah, I can understand T’Pring’s suspicions, even if Chapel is only there to fix Spock before either of them can act on their impulses.

With his internal Vulcan genetics restored, Spock can mind-meld with his mother, sharing the memory of school day; finally, it appears that T’Pril is content with Spock… until she shares her own bigoted views on Spock’s “faults,” pointedly marking down his human side for its inability to conform to Vulcan ritual.

This gives Spock the opportunity to reveal that he’s been human the entire time, thanks to the timely removal of his fake ears. It’s a nice moment, especially for the support Spock shows to Amanda for putting up with the absolutely nonsense that people like T’Pril throw at her. Since “Journey to Babel,” there has always been this undertone in Amanda’s character that she has to suffer through a lot of Vulcan bigotry to get by as Sarek’s wife, and the overt acknowledgement of that is a good writing moment.

Gia Sandhu as T’Pring and Ethan Peck as Spock. (Paramount+)

The aftermath of the reveal is a little laboured. Spock is back to normal, but his relationship with T’Pring is significantly damaged. Unhappy that everyone on the ship — except for her — seems to have known about his predicament, she decides that now that they’ve appeased their families, they should probably spend some time apart. Which, sure. That will help.

Spock’s own conflict is helped in some way by the final conversation with his mother. The details on the memory they shared in the mind-meld — of the first time Vulcan children let Spock play with them — is bittersweet, especially as they discuss how difficult Amanda’s time was.

Then, of course, Chapel and Spock face up to each other’s feelings. Events have forced each of them to face what the other feels, and what they represent to each other. It goes about as well as you’d expect, with the will-they-won’t they of the last 10  episodes finally reaching some catharsis. I guess someone out here was asking for this — I certainly wasn’t — but it seems that Strange New Worlds has committed to the pairing… at least, until Roger Korby comes into the picture.

“Charades” is just fun! It’s also a well-written comedy that doesn’t treat the allegorical bigotry lightly, even if that part of things could have been handled a bit more seriously. But this wasn’t a serious episode, and it’s quite clear that we really shouldn’t think too hard about the dynamics of Vulcan biology or Kerkhovian medicine; it’s just a show, we should really just relax.

Ethan Peck as Spock, Rebecca Romijn as Una, Celia Rose Gooding as Uhura, Christina Chong as La’an, and Melissa Navia as Ortegas. (Paramount+)

That said, there are definitely some points that I need to talk about, given how this episode treated Spock’s multiracial identity. Since the the first preview clip for “Charades” dropped last week, there’s been a significant level of discourse in some circles around the idea of splitting Spock — or the idea that you can make a mixed-race person into “one or the other” genetically.

Speaking as a mixed-race person myself, someone who has had their identity essentialized to one half or the other by different people through my life, that’s not fun, and it’s not something to encourage or support. “Charades” doesn’t support that essentialism: the whole idea that the Kerkhovians can “remove” his Vulcan genetics is annoyingly supported by Trek canon — the Vidiians did it to B’Elanna Torres in “Faces” — but unlike that nightmare of an episode, we’re not dealing here with a character lamenting their dual heritage.

The entire character of T’Pril exists to remind us how narrow-minded that sort of viewpoint is, and how Spock cannot be boiled down to being “Vulcan enough” for his mother-in-law. We’re not meant to agree with her viewpoint, and we’re not meant to think the Kerkhovian’s “remediation” is acceptable at any level. Despite that text, however, I am so tired of this trope — because even subversion and criticism of splitting a multi-racial person means accepting that in Star Trek, such a thing is possible. You can’t split me into an Irishman and a Trinidadian; that’s not how I work. Even if you could put me in a transporter and beam the “Irish” out of me, you’d still end up with… me.

And I think the episode does that, in a sense — altered Spock still has all of Spock’s own personality quirks, his awkwardness, his curiosity and his temperament — but in other ways, it feels off. This Spock is meant to be wrong. He’s meant to be incomplete and unformed; as La’an says, he’s closer to an adolescent teenager than anything else.

I didn’t find this episode’s set-up particularly offensive, but this trope needs to be put to bed. As much as the conflict between his human and Vulcan “halves” is interesting, I think exploring that internally is much more interesting than exploring them in this external manner.

Ethan Peck as Spock, Mia Kirshner as Amanda, Anson Mount as Pike. (Paramount+)

CAMP NONSENSE OF THE WEEK

There were plenty of contenders this week! Strong consideration went to Pike’s contorted looks of pain throughout the entire V’Shal ceremony — and to the bridge crew coaching Spock on how to ‘speak Vulcan’ — but this week we have to give it to Ethan Peck’s performance.

He managed to bring plenty of hilarity in his de-Spock-ified performance, but never lost science officers key characteristics.

OBSERVATION LOUNGE

  • This episode brings us the first Strange New Worlds-era mention of Dr. Robert Korby, who would eventually become Christine Chapel’s romantic partner and fiancé in the years ahead of “What Are Little Girls Made Of?” Considering other developments in Chapel’s love life, I am intrigued as to how he’ll fit in here.
  • The episode also mentions the ongoing rift between Spock and Sarek, which won’t be  resolved until “Journey to Babel” — an episode set eight years into the future.
  • Spock’s hat ploy with his mother is a clear homage to the multiple occurrences of Vulcan ears being hidden with beanies or other caps, though this time with a twist: it’s to hide his lack of pointed ears.
  • Pike’s wearing the green wrap again, but this time it appears with a more formal look. I hope every season has a “Spock hijinks and green wrap” fifth episode!
  • Pike’s delight at watching Spock taste bacon — while a funny moment — seems a bit cruel, given how much we know about how much Vulcans detest eating animal flesh.
Spock expresses his displeasure in “All Our Yesterdays.” (Paramount+)

Once again, the Strange New Worlds cast proves that they can do comedy just as well as they do drama, all without losing the edge on the more serious elements of the plot. Even as someone who does not enjoy this whole Spock/Chapel thing, it’s well-scripted and well-acted; Bush and Peck sell the romantic tension and awkwardness, and the payoff at the end is earned.

I am interested in long – and how far – the writers intend to go with this, considering that this relationship can’t last too long with with what we know about Chapel’s romantic future. Having T’Pring break things off with Spock because he can’t confide in her also works well; you can see how this will lead to her attitude in “Amok Time” already.

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.

EXCLUSIVE VIDEO: Factory Entertainment Unveils Plans for Studio-Quality STAR TREK Model Starships

Our friends at Factory Entertainment are boldly setting a new course… one where you’ll need deep pockets to follow.
 
The company today announced a new line of planned studio-scale and studio-quality Star Trek starship models — the first of Factory Entertainment’s planned FE MasterWorks line — which aims to bring Hollywood-level recreations of the franchise’s greatest vessels out to those willing to meet the hefty price tag.
 
We’ve got exclusive first-look video showcasing the detail in these large-size constructions here at TrekCore, so be sure to check them out below!
 

 
Launching officially at San Diego Comic Con later this month, the first FE MasterWorks starships will be the refit Constitution-class USS Enterprise from Star Trek: The Motion Picture, Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan, and Star Trek III: The Search for Spock, the USS Excelsior as seen in Star Trek III, and the Galaxy-class USS Enterprise-D as it appeared in Star Trek: The Next Generation.
 
(A fourth starship replica will be announced later this summer.)
 
Here’s what the company’s press release has to say about the new venture:
 

Each fully-licensed FE MasterWorks™ product is hand-built in the U.S. by veteran modelmakers with extensive experience building models for major motion pictures as well as leading theme park companies. Each is constructed using authentic film production techniques and materials to render a final product that is suitable for actual film use.

 

“With modern CGI greatly diminishing the use of filming models in new motion pictures, fans of classic science fiction have come to appreciate even more the artisanship of the craftsmen who built the detailed miniatures used in classic iterations of Star Trek and other iconic science fiction films and TV series,” said Jordan Schwartz, President & CEO of Factory Entertainment.

 

“The FE MasterWorks™ program is dedicated to preserving the art of building filming models, and gives the talented artisans who honed their skills on some of the classic models a chance to again practice their craft, this time for the benefit of the most serious collectors who want to own not just a movie prop replica, but a true work of art.”

As for pricing? A representative from Factory Entertainment revealed through social media that the cost of each approximately-three-foot-long model is expected to start at a $15,000 USD price point — the models will be produced mainly of resin, but will also feature other mixed material in their construction.

This isn’t the first round of large-scale, large-priced Star Trek starship models which have been released for public order over the years. Back in 2011, QMx debuted Motion Picture and Star Trek (2009) Enterprise studio-scale models for $5,000 USD each, followed by an Enterprise-D model priced at $10,000 USD.

In 2018, the now-out-of-business Anovos showcased similarly-sized models of the USS Discovery, USS Shenzhou, and Discovery-era USS Enterprise for pricing up to $9,000 USD each.

Factory Entertainment will be showing off their FE MasterWorks starship prototypes at San Diego Comic Con; their booth (#2743) will open starting July 19 where visitors can begin to make reservations for these model offerings.

We’ll have more details to share about this heavy-duty Star Trek project following the company’s SDCC appearance.

Check back to TrekCore often for the latest in Star Trek product news!

Master Replicas Launches Next Wave of Eaglemoss STAR TREK STARSHIPS Stock Sales on Thursday, July 13

Master Replicas will release the next wave of Eaglemoss-manufactured stock — including models from the Star Trek Official Starships Collection and more — on Thursday this week, instead of the usual Friday schedule!
 
Launching on Thursday, July 13, 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 several individual Star Trek shuttlecraft, previously available only in four-shuttle sets, and the often-desired Enterprise NX-01 Refit.
 

The refit ENTERPRISE NX-01 design.

Check out everything set to arrive for sale this Friday!

From the Star Trek Universe:

    • V’Ger
    • Worker Bee
    • U.S.S. Enterprise NCC-1701-C (Ambassador Class)
    • The Baxial (Neelix’s Ship)
    • Kazon Raider
    • Enterprise NX-01
    • Enterprise NX-01 Refit
    • Klingon D4 battle cruiser (John Eaves concept)
    • U.S.S. Vengeance (Kelvin Timeline)
    • U.S.S. T’Plana-Hath (Engle class)
    • U.S.S. Edison NCC-1683
    • Klingon Cleave Ship
    • The Festoon (Baron Grimes’ ship)

Star Trek Shuttles:

    • NX Shuttlepod 1
    • Type-11 Shuttle
    • Workbee
    • Shuttle Set 4: Kelvin Timeline (Passenger, Medevac, Transport, and Warrant shuttles)

Special Star Trek Releases:

    • Dedication Plaque: U.S.S. Enterprise NCC-1701-A
    • Dedication Plaque: U.S.S. Enterprise NCC-1701-D
    • STAR TREK Designing Starships Deep Space 9 and Beyond

XL-Sized Star Trek Starships:

    • Nebula Class (U.S.S. Bonchune)
    • U.S.S. Prometheus NX-59650

From Star Trek Online:

    • I.K.S. Mat’ha
    • U.S.S. Edison NCC-95160 (Temporal Warship)
    • Tholian Recluse
    • C.U.V. Damar
    • U.S.S. Concorde NCC-94500 (Command Battlecruiser)

From Outside the Star Trek Universe:

    • Battlestar Galactica: Viper Mk VII
    • Battlestar Galactica: The Osiris (Blood and Chrome)
    • Battlestar Galactica: Cylon Raider (Classic)
    • Battlestar Galactica: Raptor
    • Battlestar Galactica: Gold Cylon Centurion (Classic)

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 Thursday, July 13 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 13.

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

STAR TREK: ENTERPRISE Season 4 Showrunner Manny Coto Dead at 62

We have sad news to report today, as we’ve learned that Star Trek: Enterprise showrunner Manny Coto has passed away at the age of 62.
 
Coto, who passed away on July 9 after a long battle with pancreatic cancer (reports Variety), joined the prequel Star Trek series during its third season, would go on to write or co-write 14 episodes in the back half of Enterprise. In 2004, he would go on to take over showrunner duties to manage the show in its fourth, final, and some say most successful season.
 

Manny Coto (center) with ENTERPRISE cast Anthony Montgomery, Jolene Blalock, and Scott Bakula.

After departing Star Trek, Coto would go on to become an integral creative member on several high-profile television series, including Fox’s 24 and 24: Legacy, as well as FX’s American Horror Story. He also created Showtime’s Odyssey 5 and Next for Fox.

Manny Coto’s writing Star Trek: Enterprise writing credits began with the emotional Season 3 episode “Similitude,” when a clone of Trip Tucker (Connor Trinneer) is grown to sentience only to be used as an organ donor to save the NX-01’s engineer during the Xindi crisis.

Enterprise co-creator and executive producer Brannon Braga:

https://www.instagram.com/p/CuiQ0BCvSmj/

His full list of Star Trek: Enterprise credits are as follows:

  • “Similitude”
  • “Chosen Realm”
  • “Harbinger” (teleplay)
  • “Azati Prime”
  • “The Council”
  • “Storm Front” and “Storm Front, Part II”
  • “United” (co-written with Judith and Garfield Reeves-Stevens)
  • “The Aenar” (story credit)
  • “Affliction” (story credit)
  • “Bound”
  • “In a Mirror, Darkly, Part II” (story credit)
  • “Demons”
  • “Terra Prime” (co-written with Judith and Garfield Reeves-Stevens)
Coto cameos as a Starfleet admiral in the ENTERPRISE finale, “These Are the Voyages….”

Our condolences go out to his wife and four children, his other family and friends, and his Star Trek: Enterprise colleagues.

New STAR TREK: STRANGE NEW WORLDS Photos — “Charades”

Star Trek: Strange New Worlds returns with the next episode in its second season — and we’ve got new photos from “Charades” for you to review today!
 
Expect some comedy this week, as Star Trek: Lower Decks alum Kathryn Lyn (wej Duj) co-writes her first Strange New Worlds episode!
 
This week: Spock (Ethan Peck) is inconveniently transformed to a fully-human being after an alien encounter removes his Vulcan DNA… just in time for an important meeting with his fiancée T’Pring’s (Gia Sandhu) strict and disapproving family.
 

Captain Pike (Anson Mount) with Amanda Grayson (Mia Kirshner). (Paramount+)

In addition, actor Mia Kirshner returns as Spock’s mother Amanda Grayson, reprising her role from Star Trek: Discovery; she was last seen in 2019’s “Such Sweet Sorrow, Part 2” as Michael Burnham bid farewell to her life in the 23rd century.

Here are seven more new photos from this week’s episode:

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.

CHARADES — A shuttle accident leads to Spock’s Vulcan DNA being removed by aliens, making him fully human and completely unprepared to face T’Pring’s family during an important ceremonial dinner.

 

Written by Kathryn Lyn & Henry Alonso Myers. Directed by Jordan Canning.

Star Trek: Strange New Worlds returns with “Charades” on Thursday, July 13 on Paramount+ in the U.S, the U.K., Australia, Latin America, Brazil, France, Italy, Germany, Switzerland and Austria.

STAR TREK: STRANGE NEW WORLDS Review — “Among the Lotus Eaters”

“Among the Lotus Eaters” feels like an Original Series episode — not in a “classic Trek, top-ten-memorable moments” sense, but more of a “well, at least they tried something new” sort of way. (Think “For the World is Hollow and I have Touched the Sky,” but with a shorter title.)
 
The Enterprise and Cayuga, Captain Batel’s (Melanie Scrofano) ship, on a joint operation to survey a pair of pulsars, which is a nice opportunity to Captain Pike (Anson Mount) and Batel to catch up on some much needed personal time. Batel gifts him an Opelian mariner’s medal, a pendant she picked up on Galt, when their time together is interrupted by professional calls — including a longwinded conversation with Admiral Eldon.
 
It appears that Batel is being punished for Una’s acquittal in “Ad Astra per Aspera,” as she learns othe, with promotions passing her for other candidates. Pike seems to blame himself, and tries to push her away… something Batel doesn’t take well.
 
Thankfully, Starfleet has given Pike a distraction from post-breakup moping: a mission to Rigel VII, site of a disastrous landing party six years ago. Photoreconnaissance of the pre-warp planet has revealed a dangerous anomaly: a Starfleet delta sculpted into gardens surrounding the royal palace. With a likely Prime Directive violation the cause, Pike and the Enterprise must return to the planet to correct their own mistake.
 

That’s not supposed to be there. (Paramount+)

It’s an interesting pitch for a plot, and certainly a captivating one, as Pike’s existing melancholy mood over the cultural contamination is a nice character reach back to the brooding captain of “The Cage.”

Pike, La’an (Christina Chong), Dr. M’Benga (Babs Olusanmokun) and plucky navigator Lt. Erica Ortegas (Melissa Navia) prep to join the landing party, dressed in culturally-appropriate costuming. Ortegas is excited to finally join an away mission, but her excitement to get out into the field is quickly dashed when her piloting skills are required to keep the Enterprise safe from a nearby asteroid field.

The remaining trio descend to the planet, departing their shuttle on foot towards the palace with only the appropriate technology — only for La’an to inexplicably lose six hours worth of her memories of the journey. It’s very odd, but M’Benga can’t immediately discern a medical cause, and the trio push forward. Arriving at the palace, they find another Starfleet delta on the exterior gates, along with phaser-rifle-carrying guards.

It’s clear sign of technological disruption, but as Pike and the team start to formulate a plan of entry, they’re ambushed by phaser-toting warriors who recognize them as Starfleet personnel.

La’an (Christina Chong) gets confused along the journey. (Paramount+

It’s now M’Benga’s turn to experience memory loss, and when he recovers, the landing party is about to be hauled in front of the “High Lord” of the region, a sovereign who turns out to be Zach (NAME), a member of the Enterprise landing party thought dead during Pike’s last visit to Rigel VII, furious about being left behind.

Zach reveals that Rigel VII “changes people,” as a nearby asteroid — one of which crashed to the planet’s surface nearby — emits a dangerous form of radiation that erases one’s memory completely. While Pike, La’an, and M’Benga forget their identities quickly, the radiation soon begins to affect the Enterprise crew as well as Uhura (Celia Rose Gooding) is one of the first aboard ship to experience memory loss.

Back on the surface, an older man called Luq (Reed Burney) approaches Pike in an effort to help the landing party through their “Forgetting.” Pike and La’an attempt to overpower the guards, which goes well until La’an is stabbed. M’Benga tries to help, but she is dying; Luq takes then to his house, where they will be safe for the time being.

There’s something very TOS-esque about the Forgetting, along with the local color-based caste systems, the totems, the four guards in the hats, and the sets where you can clearly see the back wall. (Was this a purposeful homage? Quite possibly? Did it still feel very shallow? Absolutely.)

The acting is great, especially as Pike remembers his emotional connections to La’an, M’Benga, Batel and the ship in orbit, but the storytelling is still closer to the sophistication of “The Apple” than anything with depth. That’s fine, if you can live with that. I think with 50 years of hindsight, I’m struggling a little.

Pike (Anson Mount) knows his pendant is important. (Paramount+)

On Enterprise, the memory loss is growing; a third of the crew is down, with more to follow. It appears that Rigel VII is the cause, with exotic radiation emitted from its atmosphere as the culprit. Spock (Ethan Peck) and Ortegas — the last crew left on the bridge –- makes the drastic move of taking the ship into the asteroid belt in the hopes that minerals in the field will protect them.

Back on Rigel VII, Pike argues with Luq about whether or not it is better to save La’an — or let the “forgetting” take her memory from them — which is a grim and very TOS idea in a way. Even the language Luquses feels like a TOS homage, as he talks about leaving behind the burdens of past pains every night. Luq knows he had a family, but they are forgotten and he prefers it that way.

Pike isn’t convinced; he knows must save La’an and get back to whoever gave him that medallion — Batel. This seems to convince Luq; apparently love is an emotion so strong the Forgetting can’t erase it. (How convenient!) M’Benga thinks he can save La’an if he gets his memories back, and the totem in Luq’s home says that the palace contains a casket that holds peoples’ memories — this keeps the king and warriors to keep their memories intact, while those outside the palace walls must forget.

Ortegas (Melissa Navia) gets back to her cabin in a panic. (Paramount+)

Things have gotten worse on the Enterprise; Spock and Ortegas have forgotten who they are completely, and Ortegas freaks out enough that she runs from the bridge, through a completely mind-wiped crew and back to her cabin. Cowering on the bed, she argues with the ship’s computer about who can save the Enterprise, only to learn that it’s up to her to rescue everyone.

She’s the pilot: she flies the ship! Apparently that’s so important to Ortegas that she can never really forget it, which is great – especially for the rest of the crew — as she returns to the bridge in triumph to dramatically fly the ship out of danger.

Planetside, M’Benga and Pike attack the palace, breaking past warriors and mind-wiped alike to get into the main chamber. Pike bars the door and overpowers Zach, demanding access to the memory casket. Zach only laughs, explaining that the whole thing is a myth: in reality, it’s the ore used in the palace walls and the guards’ helmets that protect their memories. Just by entering the palace, Pike’s will return… but not in time to save La’an.

Pike doesn’t believe him, as the captain beats and nearly shoots Zack in anger before his memory returns just in time, realizing what lengths his protectiveness for his crew push him to. “Rigel VII doesn’t change you,” says Pike, “it just shows you who you really are.”

(Apparently, for Zach, that’s a slightly mad despot who hasn’t changed his shirt in six years. Ew.)

Pike starts to release his anger. (Paramount+)

Pike, seemingly horrified at what he was about to do, promises that Zach will be punished for what he’s done — but not until they save La’an, an easy task when Pike finds the cache of Starfleet equipment in Zach’s throne room. Luq also gains his memories back in a bittersweet moment of remembrance, as he weeps in memory of his wife and son. Remembering people is better than shoving it down and ignoring it, folks. You heard it here first!

All is restored on the Enterprise too, thanks to Ortegas’ flying and an alteration of shield harmonics. She saved the day, but it would have been nice if she had gotten some more character depth in the process.

Pike also reconciles with Batel; the experience of losing and re-gaining his memory has made it very clear that no matter what, their relationship is too important to be discounted. It’s a nice roundup to the episode: Pike’s arc from Season 1 — overcoming the shadow of his dark future — has been closed, and now his interpersonal relationships have value beyond the temporary. It’s a well-rounded character arc for the episode, and a nice way to push Pike and Batel’s relationship forward.

Pike and Batel (Melanine Scrofano) reconcile. (Paramount+)

CAMP NONSENSE OF THE WEEK

This week’s camp nonsense award (sadly missed, I’m sure, from last week’s review) goes to Ortegas in the native hat she wears in preparation for landing party duty. It’s a good hat, Erica, I promise. No idea what the others are on about.

OBSERVATION LOUNGE

  • The Starfleet delta seen on the surface of Rigel VII is based upon the design introduced in Star Trek: Discovery, apt for a planetary visit from six years prior to the episode.
  • Mentions of Spock’s injuries is consistent with “The Cage,” where the Vulcan sports bandages and a limp from the Enterprise’s first visit to Rigel VII.
  • The mentions of Spock’s injuries are another nod to the script and background of The Cage – Spock, in fact, still has a limp and some dressings on him during the Cage itself!
  • Batel found the Opelian mariner’s medal on the farming colony of Gault, where Worf grew up after his adoptive parents rescued him from the Khitomer attack.
  • Pike and Batel share a bottle of Chateau Picard (vintage 2221); a version of the same bottle was released last year through Star Trek Wines.
Batel and Pike share a bottle of Chateau Picard. (Paramount+)

“Among the Lotus Eaters” has some interesting ideas, and the concept of a caste society built around memory is unique and intriguing. It’s well acted, certainly, and Mount makes the most of his first big episode of the season, but the plot is somewhat lacking. Following up on the Rigel VII incident — the inciting prelude to “The Cage” — is absolutely the perfect thing for Strange New Worlds to do, but it just felt undercooked.

I’d have liked more focus on the people Pike left behind — especially Zach — and what that meant, over the whole “memory loss-regain” thing that, while intriguing, was still very stretched out. I think the focus on what is important to Pike (his love for his crew, and for Batel) is a great piece of closed storytelling, but I think I would have liked a bit more sophistication from a ten-episodes-per-season show.

The visuals were also dampened by prodigious usage of the AR wall soundstage, which certainly gave the whole thing an claustrophobic Original Series-esque “planet of the week soundstage”, something that I thought we’d left behind.

Even Ortegas’ service record only knows she’s the Enterprise pilot. (Paramount+)

I think my biggest criticism, however, is the handling of Erica Ortegas’ character, one for whom fans have been clamoring for focus since the series debuted last summer. Last season, we got virtually zero development for the Enterprise pilot, and nearly halfway through Season 2, we’re up to… “I fly the ship.” Remembering how exciting and important your passions are can be is good, but this is not character depth; this is a job description.

This isn’t like the Star Trek: Discovery bridge crew, where the four or five extra bodies on that set occasionally get some lines or small spotlight moments; Melissa Navia’s part of the credited main cast and she plays Ortegas brilliantly — but there’s almost no depth to work with, something that annoys me greatly.

We learnet more about Sulu in the first aired episode of TOS than we have about Ortegas in the last fourteen episodes, and that is increasingly irritating, especially if this was the expected Season 2 “Ortegas episode” viewers had been hoping for.

Hopefully it won’t take until Season 3 for fans to spend some more personal time with her.

Star Trek: Strange New Worlds returns with “Charades” on Thursday, July 13 on Paramount+ in the U.S, the U.K., Australia, Latin America, Brazil, France, Italy, Germany, Switzerland and Austria.

Master Replicas Launches Next Wave of Eaglemoss STAR TREK STARSHIPS Stock Sales on Friday, July 7

This Friday, Master Replicas will release the next wave of Eaglemoss-manufactured stock — including models from the Star Trek Official Starships Collection and more — and we’ve got the next breakdown of what collectors will find up for grabs.
 
Launching on Friday, July 7, 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 for the first time individual Star Trek shuttlecraft, previously available only in four-shuttle sets — including the NX-class shuttlepod from Star Trek: Enterprise.
 

Check out everything set to arrive for sale this Friday!

From the Star Trek Universe:

    • The Fesarius
    • Cardassian Hideki Class
    • Cheyenne Class (U.S.S. Ahwahnee)
    • U.S.S. Buran
    • Klingon Qoj class
    • U.S.S. Hiawatha
    • Section 31 Stealth Ship
    • U.S.S. Kelvin (Kelvin Timeline)
    • Deep Space 9
    • Kobayashi Maru
    • Klingon Sarcophagus Ship

Star Trek Shuttles:

    • Executive Shuttle NAR-25820
    • NX Shuttlepod 1
    • Type-15 Shuttle

Special Star Trek Releases:

    • U.S.S. Voyager Illustrated Handbook
    • Star Trek Shipyards: Starfleet 2251-2293

XL-Sized Star Trek Starships

    • U.S.S. Enterprise NCC-1701
    • U.S.S. Enterprise NCC-1701-E
    • La Sirena

From Outside the Star Trek Universe:

    • Alien: Dropship
    • Alien: Nostromo
    • Alien: The Betty
    • Alien: Mega Statue: Vent Attack Xenomorph
    • Battlestar Galactica: Cylon Centurion (Modern)
    • Battlestar Galactica: Viper Mk II
    • Battlestar Galactica: Battlestar Pegasus (Modern)
    • Battlestar Galactica: Blackbird
    • Battlestar Galactica: Scar Raider
    • Battlestar Galactica: BATTLESTAR GALACTICA Colonial Plaque

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 July 7 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 7.

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

WeeklyTrek Podcast #223 — Fans Shocked and Outraged at STAR TREK: PRODIGY Removal at Paramount+

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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 Marty Allee to discuss all the latest Star Trek news.
 

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

In addition, stick around to hear Marty’s theory about the ninth episode of Star Trek Strange New World Season 2 (which seems like that long-rumored musical episode?!) — and listen to Alex’s unpack how “Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow” impacts the Star Trek canon in some very interesting ways.

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!

Support the #SaveStarTrekProdigy Effort and Win a STAR TREK: PRODIGY Prize Pack!

Are you as down as we are about the surprising cancelation of Star Trek: Prodigy and its swift removal from Paramount+? Then join the TrekCore team in making your voices heard by Paramount Global that we want to #SaveStarTrekProdigy!

This contest has ended and the winners have been notified.

We believe that Paramount Global should ensure a swift home media release for the second half of Prodigy’s first season — and the yet-unaired Season 2, when it is completed — and to shop the show on favorable terms to a new streamer that will house the entire Prodigy story (and perhaps even continue the series beyond Season 2)!

Star Trek fans have moved mountains before to show our support for the franchise, and we’re asking you to contribute towards doing so again. Let’s #SaveStarTrekProdigy so that fans of all ages can continue watching Dal, Gwyn, and the rest of the Protostar crew keep their animated adventures flying into the final frontier.

GRAND PRIZE: All four PRODIGY figures, plus an NYCC-exclusive Murf plush

Six lucky TrekCore readers will have the chance to win a complete set of Playmates Toys Star Trek: Prodigy action figures, and our grand prize winner will also get one of the rare Murf plush dolls which were given away at last fall’s New York Comic Con pop-up event.

GRAND PRIZE: A complete set of Playmates Toys’ Star Trek: Prodigy action figures (Dal + Murf, Gwyndala, Jankom Pog, and Zero), plus the rare NYCC exclusive Murf plush.

SECOND PRIZE: A complete set of Playmates Toys’ Star Trek: Prodigy action figures (Dal + Murf, Gwyndala, Jankom Pog, and Zero).

FOUR ADDITIONAL WINNERS will also each win one randomly-selected Playmates Toys Star Trek: Prodigy figure (winners will receive either Dal + Murf, Gwyndala, Jankom Pog, or Zero).

All four STAR TREK: PRODIGY action figure sets from Playmates Toys

To be entered for a chance to win one of these incredible Prodigy action figures sets, we need you to make your voice heard! You can enter to win in one of two ways:

Follow us on Twitter and tweet @TrekCore using the hashtags #SaveStarTrekProdigy and #PROfigs and tell us why you want Prodigy’s adventure to continue…

…or you can follow us on Facebook and then comment on this post with your thoughts on why the Star Trek: Prodigy story needs a new home!

https://www.facebook.com/Trekcore/posts/pfbid02xAbcbx4uEPcqGPpoiDJ1hhqWXefCABhDkyezH1NhQAUsnxVCJu2wfprR3ZSgtY3il

You have until 11:59 PM (Eastern time) on Friday, July 7 to get your entry in — we’ll reach out to the winners through Twitter DMs and Facebook private messages after the contest closes to arrange for fulfillment.

Good luck to all!

This contest is open to TrekCore readers worldwide through Twitter and Facebook.

The comments section of this article will not be considered for contest entries.

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