Star Trek: Strange New Worlds returns with the next episode in its second season — and we’ve got new photos from “Among the Lotus Eaters” for you to review today!
This week, Captain Pike (Anson Mount), La’an Noonien-Singh (Christina Chong), and Dr. M’Benga (Babs Olasunmokun) lose their memories while on a mission to a dangerous world, while Spock (Ethan Peck), Ortegas (Melissa Navia), and Chapel (Jess Bush) remain aboard the Enterprise.
Here are seven new photos from this week’s episode:
STAR TREK: STRANGE NEW WORLDS — Episode 204: 'Among the Lotus Eaters'
1 of 7
La'an (Christina Chong), Ortegas (Melissa Navia), and Dr. M'Benga (Babs Olasunmokun). (Paramount+)
Spock (Ethan Peck) and Ortegas. (Paramount+)
Erica Ortegas. (Paramount+)
Nurse Chapel (Jess Bush) aboard the Enterprise. (Paramount+)
Captain Christopher Pike (Anson Mount). (Paramount+)
Luq (Reed Burney). (Paramount+)
Captain Pike. (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, and a clip from the episode released during last year’s Star Trek Day.
AMONG THE LOTUS EATERS — Returning to a planet that dredges up tragic memories, Captain Pike and his landing party find themselves forgetting everything, including their own identities as he confronts a ghost from his past.
Written by Kirsten Beyer & Davy Perez. Directed by Eduardo Sanchez.
Star Trek: Strange New Worlds returns with “Among the Lotus Eaters” on Thursday, July 6 on Paramount+ in the U.S, the U.K., Australia, Latin America, Brazil, France, Italy, Germany, Switzerland and Austria.
We’ve got a couple of new Star Trek merchandise announcements to share with you as we head into the weekend, from a long-awaited book to new huggable bears for the young folks in your life.
Factory Entertainment has revealed a pair of new products tied to the annual San Diego Comic Con convention in July. First up is a Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan themed keychain set, with Ceti Eel, broken Starfleet badge, and film logo charms; the keychain also comes paired with a USS Reliant pin. The Wrath of Khan set is priced at $22 USD and is available for preorder with an anticipated mid-July ship date.
The company is also issuing packets of Klingon-themed “Fandages,” a set of 25 bandages designed with five different patters reminiscent of the warrior race — from the Klingon language to the weapons carried by members of the Klingon Defense Force. The Klingon “Fandages” are available for $8 per pack, also expect to ship in mid-July.
Fansets has taken a trip into the Kelvin Timeline, expanding their line of Star Trek uniform badges to include the gold and silver-colored Starfleet deltas seen in the trio of Chris Pine-led films.
Titan Books has announced Star Trek: Lower Decks — USS Cerritos Crew Handbook by author Chris Farnell for release this fall; the book is described as “a funny and illuminating guide to life on the U.S.S. Cerritos through the eyes of the beloved lower deckers themselves.”
The official synopsis:
Join the crew of the U.S.S. Cerritos as they seek out new life and travel where people may, or may not, have been before!
Based on the hit Paramount+ animated series Star Trek: Lower Decks, Mariner, Boimler and all their friends offer advice and insider knowledge to new crewmembers. This hilarious and informative handbook will help you come to grips with the ship, your duties, and your fellow lower deckers, especially as they’ve generously left comments throughout.
First announced in September 2021, Star Trek: Deep Space Nine star Nana Visitor’s book A Woman’s Trek was originally set to be published through Eaglemoss/Hero Collector before that company collapsed in 2022.
Now, Star Trek: Open a Channel — A Woman’s Trek has been scheduled for release next spring through publisher Insight Editions.
Here’s the official synopsis:
Nana Visitor, Star Trek’s Kira Nerys, explores how the series has portrayed and influenced women. Interviews with the stars, writers, producers, and celebrity fans reveal the struggles and triumphs of women both behind and in front of the camera throughout the sixty-year history of Star Trek, and how they have mirrored the experiences of women everywhere. The groundbreaking casting of Nichelle Nichols as Lt. Uhura in 1966 took women and people of color into a newly-imagined future. But it was the 1960s and she had to do it in a miniskirt.
Since then, each Star Trek show has both reflected the values of its time and imagined a more future in which all genders were equal. In her first book, Star Trek: Deep Space Nine star Nana Visitor sets out to discover both how Star Trek led the way for women, and how it was trapped in its own era. For Visitor, this is more than a book about Star Trek. It’s about how society and the stories we tell have evolved in the last 60 years, and how the role of women has changed in that time.
EXCLUSIVE INTERVIEWS: Features interviews with almost every woman who has starred in Star Trek, including Kate Mulgrew, Terry Farrell, Denise Crosby, Mary Wiseman, and Rebecca Romijn.
INSPIRING STORIES: Explore how Star Trek has influenced women in the real world, including soldiers, scientists, and even astronauts. In one remarkable episode, author Nana Visitor interviewed astronaut Samantha Cristoforetti while she was in orbit around Earth on the International Space Station.
PIONEERING SERIES: Star Trek has often taken a leading role in promoting women on both sides of the camera. It had women writers when they were rare, and it introduced female captain Kathryn Janeway in Star Trek: Voyager in 1995.
The next Star Trek: Picard novel will focus on Seven of Nine’s journey from Voyager crewmate to Fenris Ranger outlaw, as author David Mack pens Star Trek: Picard — Firewall for release next year.
Here’s the official synopsis:
Two years after the USS Voyager’s return from the Delta Quadrant, Seven of Nine finds herself rejected for a position in Starfleet…and instead finds a new home with the interstellar rogue law enforcement corps known as the Fenris Rangers.
The Rangers seem like an ideal fit for Seven—but to embrace this new destiny, she must leave behind all she’s ever known, and risk losing the most important thing in her life: her friendship with Admiral Kathryn Janeway.
Firewall is the first Star Trek novel on 2024’s publishing schedule. It will be released on February 27 and can be preordered now.
Finally, Build-a-Bear Workshop has unveiled a new bear themed for the Star Trek Universe. The red, gold, and blue ‘Nebula Bear’ is available for purchase alone, or enthusiasts can pair the stuffed animal with either Original Series or Next Generation command uniforms (complete of course with period-appropriate plush phaser).
“Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow” is time travel episode that lasts for 61 minutes. It’s a reasonably interesting plot with a decent payoff… that lasts for 61 minutes. It’s got some great character work from Christina Chong and Paul Wesley that indulges in their excellent chemistry… but it lasts for 61 minutes. (I think you’re getting the point now).
The time travel shenaniganry, while fun, relies to heavily on a mystery box that lasts for 45 minutes or more; and a twist that really should have come a lot earlier in the plot.
We open with La’an Noonien-Singh’s (Christina Chong) routine as security officer seeming to drag. Interpersonal disputes, noise complaints and Pelia’s (Carol Kane) light-fingered kleptomania are all beginning to grate on the security chief, who — despite the best suggestions of Dr. M’Benga (Babs Olusonmokun) seems determined to do it all alone. The (self-induced) beatings will continue until morale improves, it seems… until a stranger materializes on the Enterprise. Foisting a futuristic device into La’ans hand, the grey-suited man (Christopher Wyllie) tells her of an attack in the past, and that she must “get to bridge!” before dying a gunshot wound.
La’an makes her way to the ship’s command center quickly, only to find a crew that doesn’t recognize her, and Captain James T. Kirk (Paul Wesley) in command.
A version of Captain James T. Kirk (Paul Wesley) commands the UEF Enterprise. (Paramount+)
Captain Kirk of the United Earth vessel Enterprise grapples with this new interloper has he turns down a request for aid from Captain Spock (Ethan Peck) of the Vulcan ship Sh’Rel — but it’s La’an, with her strange badge and stories of an alternate reality that command his focus and disbelief. La’an is convinced that she –- and Kirk — must go back in time to fix history. Kirk isn’t convinced, however, and wants to inspect the grey-suited man’s device, which is the last thing La’an wants.
A brief “struggle” results in them both being tossed back into the past without any preparation: no phasers, no communicators and no tricorders. Despite Kirk’s frustration with this predicament, he agrees to help, and together they explore 21st century earth; no, not New York City, but Toronto (home, of course, to Star Trek: Strange New Worlds and Star Trek: Discovery production).
Through theft from a Roots store, chess hustling and the purchase of some hot dogs at the Toronto Harbourfront, we learn more about Kirk and his reality — where Earth is a battle-scarred wasteland and humanity lives scattered amongst the solar system; no Iowa, no sunsets and no Canada. Tragic, really. La’an begins to warm to him a little, and why wouldn’t you? Wesley’s Kirk oozes quiet, affable charm in half smiles and shrugs, while also still having that flair of bravado and intelligence that we have learned to expect from the inventor of fizzbin— or a premier 2D chess hustler.
Kirk beats the locals at “idiot’s chess.” (Paramount+)
The sequences are nice, but as they drag onto into evening and morning — via a rather tortured “I can’t sleep, so I’ll watch the other person sleep” moment — the whole thing gets a little tired. We do, eventually, get to the crux point of their differences on “what is the correct timeline,” the classic time travel debate: one that makes clear how Alt-Kirk’s United Earth is merely surviving on the edges of the solar system, paling in comparison to the prime timeline’s paradise: where La’an’s version of Earth still has sunsets, and Kirk’s brother Sam is still alive.
This crucial point is interrupted by the dramatic (and far less interesting) explosion of the Lake Ontario bridge, which has collapsed in a massive explosion.
The duo race to scene, where they discover that the bridge was blown up with photonic weaponry (certainly not available in this time period) ; the evidence is carted off by a mysterious black van, which leads to a reasonably entertaining car chase through Toronto. Listen, I know we all love the whole “Jim Kirk can’t drive” thing, but the car chase just actually lasted too long, with two acts and a bad musical cover. The most interesting bit was the argument over Kirk’s middle name, which leads to the discovery that this Kirk does not recognize the name Noonien-Singh at all.
It’s a mysterious portent and a little titbit of something interesting within a few minutes of Dodge Challenger product placement.
A Romulan warbird spotted above 21 century Earth. (Paramount+)
Eventually, the police catch up with Kirk and start to arrest them; only for the photographer from earlier, Sarah (Adelaide Kane) to ward them off with a phone livestream and accusations of police harassment. This, erm, rather light touch nod to the current state of attitudes to the police (especially when compared with Picard Season 2) is only really here as a segue to introduce the woman, who has also been tracing the mysterious debris to its black-site home.
Then again, as we learn in a diner, Sarah isn’t a complete conspiracy nutjob, because she’s got photos of a Romulan warbird, and knows of a cold fusion reactor in Toronto that is probably at the same secret location. Only now does Kirk remember that this reactor is about to explode and destroy Toronto as part of a Romulan first strike: a detail that he (and the writers, honestly) should have informed of us earlier instead of making us do all that stuff with the bridge that is immediately forgotten.
Instead, we now get treated to the third side-quest of the episode, as La’an and Kirk go in search of someone who could discretely make them a device to find the reactor: none other than Pelia, who has holed herself up in a warehouse in Vermont during this point in history.
Pelia (Carol Kane) at her hideaway in Vermont. (Paramount+)
This is a cool connection, and reasonably well foreshadowed; but they could have done this a) earlier in the episode and b) with a bit of linkage into the general plot than yet another stage on the mystery box circle of doom. I like Carol Kane! I do! She’s great here, especially as she bumbles about trying to work out why they’ve come to her for engineering help when she isn’t an engineer (whoops).
But it’s really contrived; and we’re nearly 45 minutes into the episode and we’re still chasing…what? A cold fusion reactor that might explode? And we’ve only now found out it’s probably the Romulans? When we could have found that out about 20 minutes ago?
Even this sequence — where La’an devises a cold fusion reactor finding-device out of an old wristwatch — is really laboured. Everything just goes on about three of four minutes longer than it should, and the character interactions that are enjoyable are just surrounded by fluff. Even when they return to Toronto for a nighttime walk beside the wonderfully identifiable architecture of the Royal Ontario Museum, the semi-flirtatious banter between La’an and Kirk just goes on too long.
Sure, we get this moment of La’an letting her defenses down up, and explaining why she feels the need to be so guarded, but I was watching it and wondering how exactly there was still 20 minutes to go.
A benign name for a dangerous organization. (Paramount+)
They also, of course, find the cold fusion reactor, which is inside of the “Noonien-Singh Institute” — I guess the ROM is renting to eugenicists now? — which is great – until Sarah shows up with a gun, revealing that she is also a time traveler… and a Romulan agent. She’s come back to alter the future and prevent the Federation from existing, which seems to happen a lot to the old UFP, doesn’t it? In typical Kirk fashion, Jim believes that she’s bluffing, and attempts to talk her down.
Until she kills him, which is a nice way to undercut the character trope. Good thing this isn’t our Jim Kirk, eh? La’an gets little time to mourn -– I say little, but the moment drags on long enough to kind of kill the tension –- before Sarah drags her into the black site, killing anyone in their way before reaching her target: the locked quarters of a young Khan Noonien-Singh. Yes, that’s right folks, it’s “kill baby Hitler” time. Hooray.
Sarah begins monologuing, and explains her whole rationale to La’an. The Romulans have a “time altering assessment computer” (presumably it came free with the cloaking device) that they use to assess nudges in history, and getting rid of Khan is a surefire way to stop the Federation forming. Sarah also shares her frustrations with the whole plan, and the increasing complications that the Temporal wars are causing as they shift the timeline, and time “pushes back”. Apparently, this was all meant to happen back in 1992.
Good news for Bill Clinton, I suppose, but bad news for this Romulan agent, who has been stuck on earth waiting for 30 years. But now, she’s going kill pre-pubescent Khan, and she’s doing her best to convince La’an to help. They’re both aware of the horrors Khan will inflict on earth, and that La’an knows she must let it happen.
La’an (Christina Chong) encounters her own ancestry: Khan Noonien-Singh (Desmon Sivan). (Paramount+)
After stopping Sarah, La’an comes face to face with her young ancestor, Khan Noonien-Singh (Desmon Sivan). Making the descendent of a mass murder meet their hated ancestor and then having her tell him “He’s in the right place” is mental. It feels abhorrent to say and accept that La’an just must let him live, but’s that the “kill baby Hitler” philosophical debate all over. The “right” course of history must be protected, which despite everything is kind of the point.
Returning to the Enterprise, La’an finds that all is well and back to normal… only to find to find Department of Temporal Investigations agent Ymalay (Allison Wilson-Forbes) waiting for her.
La’an does confront Ymalay with the correct view on it, which is that they — whether they intended to or not — made her make a horrifying choice to protect the timeline. Ymalay does sympathize, but only a little. This whole incident was a mistake on their part, and one that La’an fixed. Which, of course, means she never gets to talk about it again. Go time travel! With time restored and the 29th century device returned, La’an calls up the correct-timeline Lieutenant Jim Kirk — just to see that he is alive and well, before collapsing with emotion.
Paul Wesley as James T. Kirk. (Paramount+)
KIRK ALERT
So, Paul Wesley’s back for round two as James T. Kirk: how did he do? I think he did very well here. With a lot more screentime than in “A Quality of Mercy” — and some good story beats to bounce off of — Wesley is clearly coming into his own as the inheritor of one of science fiction’s greatest characters. This Kirk increasingly feels like his character, and not a pale imitation of either William Shatner or Chris Pine, but there are still instinctive actions, phrases and expressions that make this indisputably Jim Kirk.
The confusions around the revolving door, the attempted bluff with Sarah, the unique and Shanterian delivery of “My God…” when the bridge explodes — it’s all James T. Kirk. I’m looking forward to more of it, but next time, will the “real” James T. Kirk please stand up?
This episode marks the first appearance of agents of the Department of Temporal Investigations since its origination in 1996’s “Trials and Tribble-ations.” (The agency did, however, have its own series of tie-in novels chronicling the adventures of Agents Dulmer and Lucsly.)
The TCARS operating system, returning 24 years after its VOYAGER appearance. (Paramount+)
La’an calls Toronto “The biggest city in what used to be called Canada,” indicating that the country’s name (or its existence as a regional identity) has changed since the 21st century era.
La’an breaks up a dispute between Transporter Chief Jay (Noah Lamanna) and a Denobulan cadet in the start of the episode; while they’ve been seen in animated form in Lower Decks and Prodigy, this is the first live-action Denobulan seen since Dr. Phlox in Star Trek: Enterprise.
Kirk refers to his grandfather Tiberius as the source of his middle name; this piece of Kirk family history was established in the opening moments of the 2009 Kelvin Timeline Star Trek film.
The UEF Enterprise’s dedication plaque. (Paramount+)
According to its alternate-reality dedication plaque, the United Earth Fleet UEF Enterprise was build at the Luna Shipyards — since there’s no San Francisco left in this dark 23rd century.
Somehow, La’an’s handprint was able to unlock the secure area of the Noonien-Singh Institute. If that was possible due to her Khan-sourced DNA, how likely is it that the Institute would let one their lab-created children have access to the site’s security system?
The Torontonians amongst the viewers will no doubt have enjoyed the various on-location shots at Yonge-Dundas square, the Harbourfront and the Royal Ontario Museum, which were fun moments for those of us familiar with the city. The joke about Kirk thinking they were in New York is also a delightful nod to the Canadian city’s role as a stand-in for the Big Apple in a great deal of television and film.
“Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow” is a good concept for a time travel episode, but the execution was just a bit flat. This is no “Yesterday’s Enterprise.” It’s certainly no “City on the Edge of Forever.” It’s got a lot more in common with Enterprise’s “Carpenter Street” in many ways. Chong and Wesley are really good actors, and I can see why they were paired together; the chemistry is good, but it’s not really romantic chemistry in my view.
There’s a certain veneer of a fan-fiction pairing to them that I think should’ve stayed on the cutting room floor, and the fact that the romantic tension is very limited before they kiss speaks to that. This is a standout episode for Christina Chong, and though she’s excelled for every moment she’s had in Strange New Worlds, and she once again proves that she is one of the best parts of this show.
La’an makes a call. (Paramount+)
Overtly tying the Temporal Cold War of Enterprise back into canon as an explainer for differences in timeline — after learning about the War’s future impact to the Discovery era — was clever, but that was kind of it for plot moments I enjoyed.
Still, it was a good advert for the Ontario Tourist Board, so give them that. I would recommend visiting Toronto in the summertime, however: it’s warmer, and there are significantly fewer time travelling Romulans to worry about.
Star Trek: Strange New Worlds returns with “Among the Lotus Eaters” on Thursday, July 6 on Paramount+ in the U.S, the U.K., Australia, Latin America, Brazil, France, Italy, Germany, Switzerland and Austria.
This Friday, Master Replicas will release the next wave of Eaglemoss-manufactured stock — including models from the Star TrekOfficial Starships Collection and more — and we’ve got the next breakdown of what collectors will find up for grabs.
Launching on Friday, June 30, 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.
One of this week’s special releases is the 32nd century Courage-class USS Jubayr from Star Trek: Discovery — this is likely the final ship Eaglemoss ever produced under the Star Trek line before their demise.
The 32nd century Courage-class USS JUBAYR.
Check out everything set to arrive for sale this Friday!
Battlestar Galactica: Battlestar Valkyrie (Blood and Chrome)
Battlestar Galactica: Cylon Heavy Raider
Battlestar Galactica: Cylon Raider (Blood and Chrome)
Batman: Harley Quinn Mega Statue
Batman:Dark Knight Returns Batarang
Doctor Who: Dalek Assault Set 2
Doctor Who: Dalek Classic Deluxe STYLE 1
Doctor Who: Dalek Classic Deluxe STYLE 2
Doctor Who: Dalek New Era Deluxe STYLE 1
Doctor Who: Dalek New Era Deluxe STYLE 2
Doctor Who: Race to the TARDIS Board Game (Expanded Universe)
Gremlins: Stripe
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 June 30 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 June 30.
Keep checking back to TrekCore for all the latest in Star Trek merchandise news!
The second and apparently final Star Trek novel of 2023 is Dayton Ward’s latest, Star Trek Discovery — Somewhere To Belong. Set in the months between the show’s third and fourth seasons, Ward’s newest Star Trek novel is a highly enjoyable trip down memory lane for the Discovery crew that makes good use of both Discovery’s original 23rd century setting, and its adopted 32nd century galaxy of the future.
The remainder of this review contains light spoilers for the plot of “Somewhere To Belong.”
Somewhere To Belong fills in a few of the gaps following Season 3’s story, after the Discovery crew solves the mystery of The Burn and the Federation begins to reestablish contact with many of its former members — but before the emergence of the DMA that kicked off the events of season four. We find the Discovery carrying out the mission it was tasked in the final seconds of Season 3, leading the Federation’s efforts to get reacquainted with the rest of the galaxy.
Tie-in novels to television shows that are largely serialized can be hugely beneficial for establishing character or exploring themes or ideas from the show that the show itself did not have time for in servicing its larger plot lines. And Somewhere To Belong serves that role well, providing for a much deeper examination for the whole crew of the implications of their millennia hopping time travel than we were able to see during the show itself.
Captain Burnham on the bridge. (Paramount+)
The book does an excellent job of revisiting Discovery’s own history and taking maximum advantage of the show’s unique presence in two completely different parts of Star Trek history. As the ship and crew continue to orient themselves to the 32nd century, they encounter a race they have important history with.
That race is the Xaheans — who first appeared in the “Runaway” Short Trek, with their return in “Such Sweet Sorrow” season-ender. In those episodes, Sylvia Tilly formed a close bond with Po, a Xahean destined for the throne of her world, a planet that was rich in dilithium — a mineral that the Xahean people had a special bond with.
Now in the 32nd century, Discovery again encounters the Xahean people, finding that time has not been good to them. Ward tells us the history of the Xaheans after Discovery left the 23rd century, and many of the events of subsequent years that we know about from other Star Trek shows swept in the race and have left them in a dire place.
Somewhere To Belong is a story about grief, loss, and regret. And yet despite those themes, it’s actually not that much of a downer, and serves as a hopeful tale about how even the most challenging circumstances can result in hope and progress. The novel does not shy away from some of the hardships that many in the galaxy have faced in the years that Discovery was a way, but also shows that the sins of the past can be addressed if they are properly acknowledged.
Po enjoys a bowl of ice cream. (Paramount+)
Using the Xaheans allows for Ward’s story to draw from the show’s history both before and after time travel, and serves as a good accompanying narrative for sections of the book that give characters a chance to breathe and reflect upon the big changes to their lives brought on by the time jump to the future and the rollercoaster of events that followed. The book uses Hugh Culber as a through line character for that examination, in a way that mirrors the show’s own use of Culber in Seasons 3 and 4.
Somewhere To Belong also allows some space for a few leftover story threads from season three to be addressed that were not really examined in Season 4; namely the animosity that was created between Paul Stamets and Captain Michael Burnham in the wake of “That Hope Is You, Part 2.” Ward provides some story space to address this, and why it all seems to be water under the bridge by the beginning of Season 4.
Ward also does a really nice job of world building — not just for the Xaheans, who get a deeper examination than they did in season of Discovery, but also in terms of continuing to build out the 32nd century. The book is careful not to stray too far outside the lines of what Discovery has already established, given the possibility the show might contradict later details with its upcoming fifth and final season, but Ward does a nice job of connecting the 32nd century with earlier eras of Star Trek.
It helps make this era feel more connected to the wider Star Trek universe than the show has managed to date, and is a credit to Ward’s writing.
The refit USS Discovery-A. (Paramount+)
Overall, Somewhere To Belong is an enjoyable read, that lives nicely within the Discovery style and explores more of some of the show’s themes and stories in a way that feels additive to your enjoyment of the show as a whole.
* * *
While there’s another Star Trek: Prodigy young-reader tale coming in August — Cassandra Rose Clarke’s Escape Route — it’s just a shame that we’ll have to wait another nine months for the next mainline Star Trek novel: David Mack’s Star Trek: Picard — Firewall, telling the story of Seven of Nine’s journey from the USS Voyager to the Fenris Rangers.
Hopefully there will be more than just two or three entries into the literary Star Trek library in 2024.
In addition, stick around to hear Thad’s theory about the exact release date for Star Trek: Lower Decks Season 4 (timed to a certain tie in to another show that will be running through August), and Alex’s openness to new corporate owners for the Star Trek franchise in light of this week’s bad news.
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 in its second season — and we’ve got new photos from “Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow” for you to review today!
This week: through circumstances yet to be seen, Enterprise security chief La’an Noonien-Singh (Christina Chong) travels back to modern-day Earth — joined by James T. Kirk (Paul Wesley) — to prevent an attack which if successful, will alter their future.
Here are ten new photos from this week’s episode:
STAR TREK: STRANGE NEW WORLDS — Episode 203: 'Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow'
1 of 10
La'an (Christina Chong) and Kirk (Paul Wesley) find themselves on modern-day Earth. (Paramount+)
La'an and Kirk on modern-day Earth. (Paramount+)
La'an and Kirk on modern-day Earth. (Paramount+)
La'an and Kirk on modern-day Earth. (Paramount+)
La'an and Kirk on modern-day Earth. (Paramount+)
La'an and Kirk on modern-day Earth. (Paramount+)
La'an and Kirk on modern-day Earth. (Paramount+)
Pelia (Carol Kane) and La'an on modern-day Earth. (Paramount+)
Kirk, La'an, and Pelia on modern-day Earth. (Paramount+)
Pelia on modern-day Earth. (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.
TOMORROW AND TOMORROW AND TOMORROW — La’An travels back in time to twenty-first-century Earth to prevent an attack which will alter humanity’s future history — and bring her face to face with her own contentious legacy.
Written by David Reed. Directed by Amanda Row.
Star Trek: Strange New Worlds returns with “Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow” on Thursday, June 29 on Paramount+ in the U.S, the U.K., Australia, Latin America, Brazil, France, Italy, Germany, Switzerland and Austria.
Beginning on June 28, Prop Storewill begin their latest three-day summer auction of over 1,400 lots of props, costumes, and entertainment memorabilia, including a large number of notable Star Trek items.
Though this is not a dedicated Star Trek auction like the recent Star Trek: Picard auction last fall, Prop Store has a nice selection of Star Trek items going under the hammer, including some truly iconic pieces. There are 101 Star Trek items being auctioned, including at least one lot from most of the Star Trek TV shows and many of the movies.
Star Trek prop and costume auction prices are not cheap, so come ready to spend if you want to win something. But the hammer will fall at many different price points, so be sure to check out the whole catalogue to see all of the Star Trek items on sale.
Here are a few of the most iconic lots up for auction this week!
Complete Spock costumes are very rare, and so this piece from Star Trek: The Motion Picture is a special one. From the scene in sickbay after Spock returns from his space suit encounter with V’Ger, this is a cool costume from the first Star Trek movie. Given that hoodies are canon in the 23rd century, maybe the Human Adventure really is just beginning.
Beware Romulans bearing gifts, or in this case auction houses offering iconic props from Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan. This bottle’s distinctive design first appeared in The Wrath of Khan but versions of it would recur throughout the Star Trek franchise. And it’s tied to a wonderful scene between Kirk and McCoy at Kirk’s apartment in San Francisco. If the price tag looks a little eye-watering to you, and I expect this one will sell at the high end or event exceed the estimate, you can get a high quality replica (complete with your choice of whiskey or vodka) fromStar Trek Spirits.
An almost complete monster maroon is very rare, and the fact that this one can be screen matched to James Doohan’s portrayal of Scotty in Star Trek: Generations is very special. It is likely the actor also wore it in earlier movies, given his bigger size it is unlikely there were too many other characters who the pieces could be reused for this. This one is just missing the undershirt, but that’s pretty good for a maroon uniform – they were separated and reused so many times for the different Star Trek productions over the years, most are incomplete in some ways. And to have all the pins and insignia too will make this is highly sought after piece… I don’t remember the last monster maroon that was sold at auction.
Wow, I think this might be my favorite piece in the whole auction? An incredibly rare piece of production history, this sign from the original Star Trek soundstage transports me in spirit back to 1967 and the Desilu stages. Make sure to take your cigarettes outside. Given the sets have been gone over 50 years, and only a few pieces survived, this is a magnificent piece of Star Trek production history.
If you are in an Enterprise D kind of mood after the shockingly wonderful reappearance of the Enterprise D bridge in the third season of Star Trek: Picard, this LCARS from the Engineering station in Star Trek: Generations may be what you’re looking for. With proper backlighting, these pieces display so well, and the color scheme and LCARS design just screams Star Trek like nothing else can.
There are a lot of models produced by the collectibles company Qmx in this summer’s auction, many of which are studio quality but never saw screen time. That is not the case for this trio of models from Star Trek: Into Darkness, which appeared on the desk of Admiral Marcus in the movie. There are other lots with the remainder of the history of spaceflight display from his desk, but this marks one end of the display with the USS Kelvin and the USS Vengeance from the movie. Qmx made wonderful models, and so these will display really nicely.
A complete set of all the different kinds of latinum that appeared in Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, this lot includes the very rare latinum brick that only appeared in the season 6 episode “Who Mourns for Mourn?” You might think given Quark was in that big storage container full of them that there are lots, but only the top layer had the proper details of the full latinum bricks – the rest were blocks of wood with gold tape applied to the top. There are not many of the latinum bricks circulating, and the smallest slip is also quite rare too. You can complete your latinum collection in one fell swoop.
To see the complete list of Star Trek lots, for more information, and to register to become a bidder, you can visit Prop Store’s auction page.
A new report from Variety today has rocked the Star Trek fandom community, as the trade reports today that the animated Star Trek: Prodigy series has not only been cancelled ahead of its previously-announced second season, but the show will in fact be removed from Paramount+ and Nickelodeon entirely.
JUNE 26 UPDATE: The series is no longer available on Paramount+ in the United States.
“The Game,” “Grease: Rise of the Pink Ladies,” “Star Trek: Prodigy,” and “Queen of the Universe” have all been canceled at Paramount+. In addition, all four shows are set to be removed from the streaming service in the coming days.
“The Paramount+ series ‘Grease: Rise of the Pink Ladies,’ ‘Star Trek: Prodigy,’ ‘Queen of the Universe’ and ‘The Game’ have completed their runs on Paramount+ and will not be returning to the service,” a Paramount+ spokesperson said. “We want to extend our thanks to our tremendously talented cast and crew and our producing partners for their passionate work and dedication on these programs, and we wish them all the best on their future endeavors.”
The cancellation of “Star Trek: Prodigy,” the first animated kids show in the “Star Trek” universe, comes despite the fact that the show was renewed for a second season back in 2021. According to an individual with knowledge of the situation, although the show had aired on Nickelodeon in addition to Paramount+, it will not be returning to Nickelodeon either.
Those on the show will complete post-production on Season 2 and then CBS Studios will be free to shop it to other outlets.
Prodigy and the other Paramount+ shows being pulled in the coming days — that’s right, it will be gone in DAYS — are just the latest in a line of nearly-unprecedented memory-holing of entertainment media, following a number of high-profile streaming library extractions at Max (formerly HBO Max).
We reached out to Paramount+ today, and received this statement regarding Prodigy’s fate:
Star Trek: Prodigy will not be returning for the previously announced second season. On behalf of everyone at Paramount+, Nickelodeon and CBS Studios, we want to thank Kevin and Dan Hageman, Ben Hibon, Alex Kurtzman and the Secret Hideout team, along with the fantastic cast and crew for all their hard work and dedication bringing the series to life.
Prodigy aired its first season over two years, with 10 episodes starting in fall 2021 and a second ten late in 2022. The second 20-episode season of Prodigy was expected to debut on Paramount+ late in 2023, with ten episodes followed by a second set of ten episodes in late 2024.
Thankfully for the future of the show, post-production on the twenty Season 2 episodes will be completed, likely a sign that Paramount+ believes Prodigy may find a new home without much difficulty.
From creators and executive producers Kevin and Dan Hageman, series co-head writer Aaron Waltke, Rok-Tahk voice actor Rylee Alazraqui, and Star Trek: Picard Season 3 showrunner Terry Matalas this afternoon:
#StarTrek has taught my brother and me to strive for a better future. While news of #StarTrekProdigy not returning to Paramount+ is disappointing…
— Dan & Kevin Hageman (@brothershageman) June 23, 2023
And we are staying positive and hopeful that our amazing fans will get to see it soon! Janeway would never give up, so why would we? Let’s follow her orders and ‘Go Boldly.’
— Dan & Kevin Hageman (@brothershageman) June 23, 2023
Obviously, there is not much I can say. Everyone on the cast and crew loves #StarTrekProdigy deeply.
I have noticed some misleading headlines, so all I can do is point to this particular part of the press release.
Some of the BEST days were recording for #StarTrekProdigy and being with the family of all involved! We are holding our heads up high with hopes of finding it a new home! 🖖🏻 pic.twitter.com/bjKsyp6P2X
As this news has just broken, there’s no word yet on where the animated show will land — if it will end up at any other streamer, that is. In the meantime, the first ten episodes of Star Trek: Prodigycan be purchased on region-free Blu-ray right here.
Keep checking back to TrekCore for the latest Star Trek: Prodigy news as it breaks.
“Ad Astra per Aspera” is more than just a classic courtroom episode: it is arguably the strongest attack Star Trek has made on the social questions and reactionary politics of our time, in a tradition that goes right back to the days when Gene Roddenberry fought with NBC executives over interracial kisses and women in authority positions. It is enjoyable, it is direct, and it is bold. It falls short in some ways with the use of allegory, but it’s message of defiance and hope is unavoidable.
We open with a flashback to Una’s fearful childhood; a slightly dissonant beginning that does highlight the dangers of being an augment in Federation society. In the present, Lt. Commander Una Chin-Riley (Rebecca Romijn) is offered a plea deal by Captain Batel (Melanie Scrofano), who has for reasons best left to the writers been enlisted as the prosecution in Starfleet v. Chin-Riley.
The offer, which would result in a dishonorable discharge for Una, reeks of a grim coverup, and of Starfleet not willing to confront the fact that it let an augment this far into it’s ranks. With only a half-hearted defense lawyer from the JAG office to defend Una, Captain Pike (Anson Mount) has gone to the Voltara Nebula in search of Neera (Yetide Badaki) — an Illyrian lawyer and former friend of Number One — to take the case.
Yetide Badaki as Neera, Anson Mount as Christopher Pike. (Paramount+)
After getting into her office on pain of asphyxiation in the toxic atmosphere of the planet, Pike pleads Una’s case to the deeply disinterested Neera. Her hostility to the UFP and it’s anti-augmentation laws is clear, and even Pike’s admittance of his own faults and disapproval of Federation policy does little to sway her; the draconian race laws of Starfleet would seem to give Una little chance of success. Pike does point out that Neera’s own civil rights struggles against the Federation are hitting dead ends, however: defending Una and winning would give her the platform and profile to make serious inroads against anti-Augment laws.
It’s an opportunity she can’t seem to refuse as she turns up to defend Una, giving her old friend the coldest of cold lawyerly shoulders as she prepares to take up her defense. These sequences, even as the barest table settings, make clear that this is going to be a lot more than a rehash of Next Gen‘s “A Measure of a Man,” and miles away from the (frankly) half-assed civil rights discussions of Voyager‘s “Author, Author.”
There isn’t going to be any view from both sides of the coin: the episode knows what’s right and what’s wrong, and the narrative makes sure you do too.
Neera is defiant and eloquent even here as she attempts to turn down Pike’s plea, and even when she arrives on Earth; her conversation with Una immediately dives into the nuances of marginalization and bitterness between those who can pass and those who cannot. Una doesn’t want to hide anymore; but Neera correctly points out that many others can’t hide, and others — like her — won’t.
Nevertheless, the plea deal is turned down, much to Batel’s fury; her offer cost her a lot to get and now JAG prosecutor Admiral Pasik (Graeme Somerville) is pushing for a harsher sentence: discharge, a sedition charge and 20 years in prison!
Graeme Somerville as Admiral Pasik, Melanie Scrofano as Captain Batel. (Paramount+)
With the stakes set high, both Una and Pike to their best to fight the case from the stand; both are argued down by Neera and Batel respectively on the point that the could jeopardize the careers of the whole Enterprise crew, who arguably have been covering up for Una the whole time. With the senior staff forced to watch from the sidelines, La’an Noonien-Singh (Christina Chong) does her best to find out who turned Number One in, encountering resistance from Uhura (Celia Rose Gooding), who refuses to break regulations and give the security chief the private logs she wants. It’s a small moment, but once again Rose-Gooding and Chong excel in the spotlight, with Uhura’s consummate professionalism never wavering for moment; even if it hurts her to do so.
The trial sequences are dripping in the aesthetic retro-60s charm that we’ve grown to love from Strange New Worlds. The visuals of the golden bell, the ornate and masterful dress uniforms with clustered medals, and verifier scanner on the witness chair are all brilliant homages to the Original Series episode “Court Martial,” the genesis of the Star Trek courtroom episode. The case of immovable law against passionate counter-case also rings tonally of Kirk vs. the computer, but here the similarities end.
Neera goes directly for the intention of the law, reminding the judges (and viewers at home) that laws do not make justice on their own, and that civil rights history is a long struggle of moral right against legal might. The questioning and cross-examination of Admiral April (Adrian Holmes) is a masterful attack by Neera on Starfleet’s own well-discussed double standards on legal enforcements, with April’s repeated violations of General Order One contrasted with his reassessment of sponsoring Una’s Starfleet application.
It’s a heated scene, well-acted by Holmes and Badaki as April’s career is put in the spotlight, much to his irritation. Una is angry at Neera’s stunt too, even as her lawyer points out the privileged position, they both must make a stand for all Illyrians here. Is it just a soapbox to Neera? Possibly. It’s an interesting and difficult question, made even more pointed by the question of whether or not Una is leaving the rest of her people behind by making the case just about herself.
Yetide Badaki as Neera, Rebecca Romijn as Una Chin-Riley. (Paramount+)
The character witness sequences with La’an, Spock (Ethan Peck) and M’Benga (Babs Olosanmokun) are a further delight, and not just because of their dress uniforms. All three offer unique defenses of Number One, with La’an’s mentor relationship a special highlight. Una — who saved her from the Gorn and encouraged her to join Starfleet and do good — is family. We even get a classic “Spock counters your logic with better logic” moment, when he argues that convicting Una would be a net loss to Starfleet: a naturally illogical action.
Once again, Strange New Worlds takes advantage of and uses it’s long-term serialisation for good here: we’ve seen how exactly La’an felt about the revelation in the first moment, but that the full-throated defence and belief in Una now feels like a graceful and well-earned full circle moment. The subsequent scene where Neera confronts Noonien-Singh about her own suspicion — that her own heated private log condemned Una — does mix the metaphors a little, allegory wise, but it still delivers the crucial message around not being ashamed of who you are, and who you are is defined only by who you are.
Una’s deposition is the cornerstone of the episode, and a stellar performance by Romjin and Badaki. It pulls no punches in its descriptions of Una’s childhood as part of a Federation colony in the Voltara Nebula, where the Illyrian community she was a part of was marginalized and oppressed by Federation law and society; their customs eroded, the families arrested and harassed and community divided. The description of her own brush with death, caused by the fear of exposure by an unsympathetic doctor, was tied with flashbacks throughout the episode, The breakup of her community and the pain that caused is clear; the ghettoization of the Illyrian community splitting families and friendships apart.
Melanie Scrofano as Captain Batel, Christina Chong as La’an Noonien-Singh. (Paramount+)
The fact that Una’s family escaped the tyranny of “separate but equal” is not lost on us or the characters, and her open admission that her family had the privilege to “pass” as unmodified — alongside her apology to Neera — speaks to a distinct understanding from the writer’s room of how difficult a choice passing has been for marginalized communities, where it is racial, religious, sexual or gender based persecution that they are trying to escape.
The killer blow of the sequence is the revelation that Una turned herself in. She was tired of living a lie and pretending to be someone else; of hiding her heritage. It was more important to her that her friends knew who she really was. She believed the Starfleet would accept her, despite the obvious ramifications; and that the organizations constant striving to be better than itself would see her through. “Ad Astra per Aspera,” indeed. It is a mission statement about what Starfleet (and the franchise itself) is all about: delivering ourselves from hardship to the stars, and the belief in a better world to come, and of the possibility of our salvation.
Admiral Pasik is, unimpressed, however. The law is the law, and the facts imply that Pike has been involved in a grand conspiracy to cover up a crime, as he knew about Una’s heritage for a long time beforehand. However, Neera uses this fact to present a new and unique counter-case. Citing Starfleet Code 8514, she argues that the three principles of asylum-seeking law in the Federation — clear persecution, seeking safety within Starfleet care and revealing themselves to an authority — have been met. Furthermore, that Pike’s acceptance and the current tribunal both vindicate the legal grounds necessary to vindicate and legalize Una’s position within Starfleet.
Starfleet’s JAG tribunal board. (Paramount+)
The judgement call of a Starfleet captain — the loophole that Neera used to attack April — comes back to save the day, as she appeals to the judges to “be their better selves” and understand the idealism of the law. Which of course they do, but not without the acknowledgement that despite the questioning nature of the law, there are clear individual cases to be considered. Therefore, Una will be granted asylum alongside a not guilty charge. Like almost all real work legal cases, it is an unhappy compromise.
But Una returns to the Enterprise to the joy of everyone involved, as Neera acknowledges that the case — and the proud crew — might not be the game changer for Illyrian rights… but at least it’s a step in the right direction.
CAMP NONSENSE OF THE WEEK
This week’s camp nonsense goes to the heated (by Vulcan standards) conversation between Spock and Vice Admiral Pasik, as M’Benga and Ortegas (Melissa Navia) observe from afar. It’s always about the subtlety with Vulcans, isn’t it?
OBSERVATION LOUNGE
The updated dress uniforms include rank tabs on the shoulders and a redesign of the triangular medal clusters introduced in the Original Series dress uniforms, but they retain the fabulous golden piping. It also confirms that the grey-black uniform April wears is a staff officer’s uniform, used by Admiralty personnel.
Starfleet dress uniforms, then and now. (Paramount+)
We see the return of a “Space Command Representative”, even if we still have no idea what that means. As Memory Alpha describes the early days of TOS jargon,“the terms “Star Service” and “Spacefleet Command” were later used in “The Conscience of the King” and “The Squire of Gothos” respectively, prior to the initial airing of “Court Martial.” Another early variant of the organization’s name was “Space Central” in “Miri.”
Neera is presented with, and then uses as a prop in the courtroom, a physical copy of the Starfleet Uniform Code: something the great Samuel T. Cogley would be proud of!
The courtroom itself is a redress of the Federation Headquarters set from Star Trek: Discovery.
This episode gives us the first showing of San Francisco, home of Starfleet Command, in Strange New Worlds; one establishing shot even shares similarities with the establishing shot from Star Trek: The Motion Picture. (We last saw the city during this era in the Season 2 finale of Discovery, “Such Sweet Sorrow, Part 2.”)
Captain Batel’s service as the prosecution lawyer mirrors the assignments of Picard, Sisko and others as advocates — hough why the captain of an active Starship is needed to perform this duty at Starfleet Headquarters, home to presumably several dozen other Starfleet lawyers is beyond me.
Una joined Starfleet 25 years ago, which would date her entry into the academy to 2235. The fact that Pike addressed her Academy class would meet they met in the late 2230s/early 2240s — which fits with Discovery’s presentation of Pike joining Starfleet in the mid-2220s. (This doesn’t quite cover explain how he’d still be a lieutenant in the late 2240s, but we’ll save the question of Pike’s career stagnation for another time).
Rebecca Romijn as Una Chin-Riley. (Paramount+)
“Ad Astra per Aspera” is a well written, well-acted and deeply enjoyable episode that unavoidably speaks to the critical issues of our time. I’m sure plenty of people on social media, and perhaps in the comment section below, are going to blithely pretend this episode was about something other than LGBT rights. (Sure, and maybe “Let That Be Your Last Battlefield” was about the plight of French Huguenots.)
The llyrian allegory may be an allegory, but all know what this is about. This is about the frightening pace of social conservatism, and the increasingly dangerous world in which queer people — and especially trans people — live in.
The descriptions of Una’s childhood persecution — slurs daubed on doors, restaurants turning people away, playground insults, exclusion from medical care and the dissolution of communities as people seek safety from oppression are not distant possibilities — these are the real and lived lives of trans people of all ages across the world. The questions of hiding your identity in your workplace, of hiding your true self from your friends and loved ones: these aren’t arbitrary concepts: it is the terrifying reality for millions across the globe.
The flashback of young Una’s parents worrying about whether the wrong doctor will turn them and their child over to the state isn’t fiction for many families across the United States; it is now a terrifying reality we cannot afford to ignore.
Making a point about wrong that is, and how we should be better than that is exactly what Star Trek should be doing every single time it comes on screen, and I challenge anyone to tell me how confronting bigotry would go against the original mission statement of this franchise. Strange New Worlds releasing this episode in the middle of a pride month that — on both sides of the Atlantic — has been scarred by an increase in social and political bigotry aimed at LGBT communities is not an accident. It is not intended to make you consider what your position is, or to show you “both sides” of the coin. It is a call to arms, and reminder that Trek is about that struggle through adversity to the stars.
Una returns to her loyal crewmates aboard the Enterprise. (Paramount+)
It is not a perfect story. There was an opportunity to put overtly queer relationships or characters on screen, and that choice wasn’t taken. Adding that element into the dynamics would have sealed this episode for me, and that omission does begin to tell the more I think about it. The confused nature of the Augment allegory — portrayed as villainous despots in “Space Seed” and the three-episode Star Trek: Enterprise Augment arc, while analogous for marginalised communities in Strange New Worlds (and, arguably, with Julian Bashir in Deep Space Nine) — doesn’t help either.
I can see how re-interpreting them as an allegory for queerness works, but at the end of the day, it’s not really a substitute for proper representation — which still remains lacking in the Trek franchise outside of Star Trek: Discovery. With that show coming to a close early next year, the franchise will be carried by Strange New Worlds, as will the mantle of full-throated representation the show is noticeably avoiding.
This doesn’t mean I think this is a bad episode, of course; I just think that these decisions kept a great episode from becoming a stand-out one. I am sure in a year, or five years, or maybe in fifty, we will view this episode with the side-eye which which we view the Original Series’ ham-fisted allegories. But when we look back with derision, it will be because we have become our better selves, despite all that is in our way — but for now, at least it’s a start.
* * *
In case you missed it, Paramount+ has also released a new trailer showcasing some of the additional upcoming adventures this season — including a seemingly human Spock, the return of Lieutenant James T. Kirk (Paul Wesley), and Star Trek: Lower Decks’ Brad Boimler (Jack Quaid) aboard the Enterprise.
Star Trek: Strange New Worlds returns with “Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow” on Thursday, June 29 on Paramount+ in the U.S, the U.K., Australia, Latin America, Brazil, France, Italy, Germany, Switzerland and Austria.