As we catch our breath following last week’s epic Star Trek: Picard finale, let’s catch up on some of the recent news from the world of Star Trek merchandise!
The 1:6-scale engineers over at EXO-6 are keeping their production running at warp speed, as this month they teased four new figures this month through StarTrek.com, for products under development.
The first are initial prototypes from a forthcoming Star Trek: Picard product line, including Admiral Picard, Worf, and Vadic from the recently-concluded third season. The company also showcased a prototype of Worf from Star Trek: First Contact,sporting a 2373-era EVA spacesuit complete with internal lighting — and of course, a Borg arm tied around his leg to seal his suit breach.
EXO-6 April 2023 Prototype Announcements
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The Picard figures were created in coordination with “showrunner Terry Matalas, costume designer Michael Crow, and property master Jeff Lombardi” to replicate the Season 3 characters in the 1:6-scale form factor.
All four figures will have release dates and pricing announced at a later time.
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Funko Games has announced a new Star Trek game called Star Trek Cryptic, where players “climb the ranks of Starfleet and explore strange new worlds in this puzzle-filled, action-packed ‘escape room’ game.”
Funko Games — STAR TREK: CRYPTIC
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Here’s the full description of this new game:
For those looking for the experience that will take them to the next frontier, Star Trek Cryptic allows fans to play through missions from the beloved era of Star Trek: The Next Generation.
Using your PADD as your guide, you’ll decipher subspace transmissions, discover alien civilizations, and prevent planetary disaster with logic, deduction, and creative thinking. Prepare to boldly go where no one has gone before!
Gameplay Features
– Innovative new take on the popular escape room game genre. – Includes 3 missions with unique envelopes of components to decipher clues, outwit foes, and resolve otherworldly encounters! – Puzzle through over 70 pages of logbook content! – Hours of smart and suspenseful fun! – Draw your path through 15 thrilling Star Trek inspired challenges!
Star Trek Cryptic, rated for players 10+, is expected to be available for purchase this June at a price of $34.99.
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Announced last year, the first Star Trek: Prodigy figures from Playmates Toys are finally making their way to consumers. Hitting (online) retailers this month and arriving to fans are Dal and Murf,Gwyn,Zero, and Jankom Pog, each arriving with their own character-specific accessories.
Playmates Toys — STAR TREK: PRODIGY Figures
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Additional figures from the line, including Hologram Janeway and Rok-Tahk, are still pending release.
Keep checking back to TrekCore for more Star Trek merchandise news!
In addition, stick around to hear Jamie’s wish that the Enterprise-D bridge set doesn’t stay in a warehouse, his theory that the Starfleet Academy show will be a good vehicle for appearances by characters from Star Trek: Discovery, and Alex’s comments on what it means to have come to the end of another Star Trek show.
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!
In 1994, Star Trek: The Next Generation ended its seven-year run with “All Good Things,” one of the most heralded series finales in television history. Now, almost 30 years later, Star Trek: Picard has pulled off a similar trick — with a phenomenal conclusion to both the series, and its amazing third season.
In “The Last Generation,” the emotion is real and it runs deep. From the original core of TNG’s cast to the new family members introduced this season and ultimately to the journey of Seven of Nine, the level of story being framed in this 63-minute epic is hard to contain.
One final mission. (Paramount+)
Propped up by a towering, defining performance from its lead star, Picard Season 3 did what it had to do: return Jean-Luc Picard (Patrick Stewart) to square off once and for all with his haunting past as Locutus. The story also deftly concludes his three-season arc of first accepting the legacy of his choices, then opening himself up to love through understanding trauma, and now finally to becoming the father to a son in a family that he never knew he needed.
In completing this final piece of the puzzle, we get a beautiful merger of “family” and “found family” that has been there from the start in Star Trek, and is now finally, definitively a part of Picard’s life forevermore. A massive milestone for a character that has been portrayed so solitarily for the better part of 40 years. The theme of family and the inability to control what we pass on to our children is satisfyingly showcased in literally every thread of the show — from Data’s reunion with Lore all the way to Raffi and the House of Musiker, as well as Seven’s surprising story arc in finding her place in Starfleet.
Of course, all of this is seen most prominently in Picard’s poignant rescue of his son Jack (Ed Speleers) from the clutches of the Borg Queen (the voice of Alice Krige), who has hidden her cube inside the gases of Jupiter as it orchestrates a DNA-driven assimilation of Starfleet that kicked off last week in “Võx.”
As the crew arrive at Jupiter to try and stop the Borg, Deanna Troi (Marina Sirits) lets them know she can sense Jack, but that he has been “totally consumed by the collective,” leading to a beautiful scene from the bridge of the Enterprise-D in which Picard assigns one final away team for his beloved colleagues.
Picard salutes his friends. (Paramount+)
With Will Riker (Jonathan Frakes) and Worf (Michael Dorn) joining the “threesome” that will head to the cube, he needs Beverly Crusher (Gates McFadden) to continue to work on isolating Jack’s location, while Geordi La Forge (LeVar Burton) and a frustrated Data (Brent Spiner) to stay on the ship to help provide solutions. It feels like an “Away Team of a Generation” and the first of many great acknowledgments to the DNA of The Next Generation in the episode. (The scene even includes a classic Worf shutdown moment when he wonders aloud if Jack might be too far gone, and Beverly immediately cuts him off with “No!” Great stuff.)
After a powerful exchange of silent thoughts between Riker and Troi, an emotional Picard steps toward the turbolift and says, “It’s been an honor serving with you all.” It’s a heartfelt moment that leaves the audience legitimately left to wonder if it might just be the final goodbye.
Once on board the cube, Picard immediately feels a connection to Jack, indicating again that despite being in a completely new body after his “death” in Season 1, some small part of him “remains compatible with the Hive.” Knowing he needs to go it alone while Riker and Worf try to shut down the beacon transmitting the Borg’s Starfleet takeover, it is time for a second loving goodbye from Picard, who emotionally tells Riker, “I can no longer be your captain. I now have to be a father.… Will, thank you. I, it means so much to me.” To which Riker responds, “You know that I know. Always.”
Again, the emotion is real in this episode and the goodbyes feel definitive, especially when Mr. Worf salutes his captain by saying, “There are two turns of phrase that a Klingon never admits to knowing. Defeat… and farewell.” The level of emotional perfection here is surpassed just a few seconds later when Picard now turns his goodbyes to Beverly by passionately telling her that in thinking “of Jack from the beginning. Shielding him from danger. You did everything right.”
The move concludes a wonderful gambit by the series showrunner Terry Matalas, who both wrote and directed the episode. It’s the release everyone needed for Beverly, to make that decision at the core of the entire season truly work – to hide her son from her friends for more than 20 years. And it does work, especially as we see Beverly’s emotional release in her response.
Beverly Crusher, back at work on the Enterprise bridge. (Paramount+)
Stewart is at the heart of all these emotional goodbyes, hitting all the right notes again after 30 episodes of portraying Picard post-TNG, and somehow now bringing it back to a place where it felt like he never left the bridge of the Enterprise. The achievement is amazing and pairs up exquisitely with Speleers’ performance when he finds himself face-to-face with his son, assimilated in the same style and appearance as Locutus.
The scenes with the “Son of Locutus” are legitimately terrifying as the episode steers directly into the horror genre with a gruesome, emaciated Borg Queen hovering over their reunion in a style and substance straight out of David Cronenberg’s The Fly. The reveal is a jarring, but appropriate change of pace from the emotional moments that have peppered the episode up to this point.
And right on cue with the themes of the series, the Borg Queen announces: “At last, Locutus has returned to his true family, to his collective, to me….” Mired in an “unimaginable loneliness” since the fallout from Voyager’s “Endgame,” the mutilated and disfigured Queen had been isolated and feeding off her collective until hearing the voice of Jack and realizing the future of the Borg lies “not in assimilation, but evolution.”
Turns out that sentiment was highlighted by Beverly earlier in the season in “Imposters” when she was analyzing the Changelings, who at the time we did not know had teamed up with Borg. Together the new faction had worked to weaponize Picard’s biology so that the Borg could propagate with a new goal in mind: “not just to assimilate, but to annihilate all.”
Picard knows it is up to him to try and guide Jack back to himself, but disconnecting him from the Collective will kill him, so with no other option, we get a moment as epic and grand in the scope of Star Trek as anything you could ever expect to see.
Picard tries to reach Jack through the Collective mindspace. (Paramount+)
Despite running from it for more than half of his life, Picard connects himself to the Hive as Locutus to join Jack and help him break free — and he does so by succinctly defining the journey of his life that we have all been on together for so many years:
“I joined Starfleet to find a family I didn’t have. And I found it. I let them in. But there was always a barrier. I too thought there was something wrong with me. And I waited in that vineyard. Waiting to die. Alone. But now Jack I realize that you are the part of me that I never knew was missing.”
The sentiment is a beautiful one, with roots dating all the way back to “Encounter at Farpoint” and the first time Picard chased Wesley off his bridge; here it helps define both Picard the character and Picard the series.
Back on the Titan, Seven of Nine (Jeri Ryan) and Raffi (Michelle Hurd) have cleverly reclaimed the ship and protected their assimilated crewmates (portable beam me ups!), allowing us to get our first real dose of Captain Seven, as she was dubbed by Captain Shaw prior to his death. With only a makeshift crew at her disposal (including a cook at the helm), Seven goes into captain mode by telling her team that she is “not asking you to give your lives for nothing. I’m asking you to fight for what’s below.”
A thrilling moment made even better when we see the Titan buying Picard some valuable time by running interference with a cat-and-mouse, fire-and-cloak maneuver to distract the fleet trying to take down Earth’s planetary defenses. The visual effects in the scene are a smorgasbord of starship artistry.
Not to be outdone, the Enterprise-D is also under attack from the Borg cube when Geordi tells Beverly she will need to return fire manually — as he wasn’t able to complete the weapon installation yet. With nary a second to think, Beverly quickly announces, “Torpedoes away, locking phasers and returning fire.” Much to the surprise of a stunned-to-silence Data, Geordi and Troi, she nullifies the Borg attack and proclaims, “A lot’s happened in the last 20 years.”
The Enterprise-D fights back, with Beverly Crusher at tactical. (Paramount+)
Elsewhere on the cube, Riker and Worf have successfully communicated the location of the beacon, where the Enterprise, based on a gut-feeling and some “enjoyably” deft piloting from Data, has now positioned itself to destroy it, knowing the explosion will also kill everyone on board the cube.
With everything coming to a head, Jack is able to pull himself out of the Collective, courtesy of a hug from Picard (“If you won’t leave, I will stay with you until the end. You have changed my life forever.”) and then a nice montage of Season 3 clips between the father and son. The beautiful, mystical score from Stephen Barton during the scene is oddly reminiscent of the score in the Nexus (Star Trek: Generations) and helps set the tone for Jack’s extraction and his announcement that “the time of the Borg is over.”
In a perfect confluence of stories, Worf and Riker join Picard and Jack as the ship collapses around them, just as the Enterprise-D (fresh off destroying the beacon) swoops in to beam them out. At the helm? Well, it’s none other than Deanna Troi, of course. She jumped into action after connecting with her Imzadi — who fittingly was thinking about the child they lost so many years ago, to quietly close out another season-long story thread — to safely pilot the ship into position. (Hopefully, this will finally put an end to the insufferable “Troi crashed the Enterprise” jokes for good!)
The Borg Queen finally, truly meets her end. (Paramount+)
With the Borg cube destroyed and a predicable reset button taking place above Earth with the assimilated fleet, the episode and series makes time for a therapeutic and satisfying 20-minute epilogue to quietly say goodbye to the series.
The therapy session begins with a reunion of the crew on the bridge and Jack being welcomed onboard the Enterprise by his father and then continues with an actual therapy session for Data with Deanna, who humorously is a little worn out from his excessive need to discuss his very human and ever-shifting emotional state. Knowing that Data will forever be neurotically analyzing his changing moods from joyful to melancholy and everything in between is extremely satisfying. The moment is eloquently encapsulated by Spiner when he responds to Riker’s query on how he is feeling by saying simple, with an air of resigned contentment and a shrug, “I’m… okay.”
In between we get a cathartic moment for Raffi, reconnecting with her family in a healthy way for the first time in probably more than 20 years, courtesy of “an honorable maverick” who made sure they knew what she had accomplished and sacrificed while they were estranged. It’s an intelligent and respectful coda for the show to carve out time for this moment, which could have easily been glossed over.
Of course, the most important resolution in the immediate aftermath of the action belongs to Seven of Nine, who sits down now with the real Tuvok (Tim Russ) to discuss her Starfleet future. Russ is instantaneously Tuvok again — authoritative, direct and, yet, supportive, and it is fitting to have him there for the coronation of this character’s journey from popular Trek icon to the hallowed state of Trek royalty, right alongside Kirk, Spock, Picard and Janeway. It is that big a moment.
The newly-christened Constitution III-class USS Enterprise (NCC-1701-G). (Paramount+)
With the help of a pre-recorded message from Captain Shaw (Todd Stashwick) recommending her for promotion to Captain, we get a gratifying one-year time jump to see her taking her rightful place in the center seat as Captain Seven of Nine, alongside Raffi as her Number One, as well as Lieutenant Sidney LaForge (Ashlei Sharpe Chestnut) at the helm and accelerated Starfleet ensign, Jack Crusher.
And in one final masterstroke, a choice so clear and obvious that, of course, you never see it coming, Matalas and his team make a truly grand, genuinely great, generational, and glorious decision to rechristen the Titan as the Enterprise-G. It’s genius. Names do mean something.
In the proper context of this final hour of the TNG cast in one place, to quickly introduce a new ship and a new design as the next iteration of the beloved Enterprise would never have been satisfying enough. It would not have worked. But now, to suddenly realize that this exceptional season of the adventures of the Titan, a ship we have all come to love and embrace for its starship lineage that looks both forward and back simultaneously, is now the Enterprise-G… well, again, it is a genius decision, and beyond satisfying.
The introduction here is truly a surprise, and it is choreographed in the most familiar of ways, as Picard’s shuttle eases above the horizon inside Spacedock to see the name beautifully engraved on the ship’s hull. Captain Seven of Nine of the USS Enterprise-G, about to write the opening line of her legacy. What a way to close out her journey. Perfection.
And as for that post-credit scene? Well, wow. It certainly is yet another gift in this bonanza of an episode and leaves us with a lot to consider. We get the resurrection of Q (John de Lancie), but as the entity himself says, there is no need to think so linearly regarding his “death” at the end of Season 2, as well as the proclamation that while Picard Senior’s trial might be over, Picard Junior’s “has just begun.”
It seems that for this “young mortal,” there is much ahead of him. I sure hope we get to see it someday.
MOMENTS OF STASHWICK
We think Todd Stashwick and his portrayal of USS Titan captain Liam Shaw is destined for Trek icon status — each week this season, we’ll be highlighting one one of the character’s (and actor’s) best moments.
I could not be happier to report we have one last Moment of Stashwick to highlight in this incredible episode, and it is, of course, his performance evaluation of Seven of Nine. The anti-Shaw brigade will likely again fail to see what is right in front of them, but this log entry brilliantly adds to the layers of internal healing this character has been battling.
Shaw offers some parting words about Seven of Nine. (Paramount+)
Before all the action, before her betrayal of the Titan — a betrayal significant enough to require an actionable pardon in this episode, as mentioned by Tuvok — Shaw had come to a place of recognition for Seven, identifying her by name and acknowledging her abilities, thus recommending her for promotion to captain.
Sadly, in his worldview, that recording was followed hours later by him watching Seven ‘betray’ him and his ship, thus putting him back into his own internal spiral that he would eventually battle his way through before his death.
His entire log entry saluting Seven of Nine is the perfect end for the character.
OBSERVATION LOUNGE
Has anyone heard from Laris?
The Star Trek franchise animation opening gets an update for this episode; the USS Titan is replaced by the Enterprise-D, and the Starfleet delta gets corrupted by Borg assimilation.
The episode’s opening visual is a recreation of the blue nebula which appeared in the beginning of the Star Trek: The Next Generation opening credits for Seasons 3 through 7, right down to the bright star which zooms into camera.
A familiar blue view. (Paramount+)
In a message quite similar to the distress signal sent by the Federation President in Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home, current-day Federation President Anton Chekov warns travelers to “save yourselves… farewell.”
President Anton Chekov, son of Enterprise legend Pavel Chekov, is voiced by Star Trek: The Original Series star Walter Koenig — who of course portrayed the original Chekov character.
President Chekov’s first name is likely an homage to Kelvin Timeline Chekov actor Anton Yelchin, who died in 2016.
The Enterprise-D digital model still sports scorching from its atmospheric descent and impact onto Veridian III (Star Trek: Generations), and interior details of Ten Forward and the behind-bridge Observation Lounge can be seen through the ship’s windows.
The Borg transwarp conduit at Jupiter is tucked within the planet’s Great Red Spot.
Data notes that the Borg cube is only “thirty-six percent operational”; back in “The Best of Both Worlds,” where Shelby shared that a Borg ship… could continue to function effectively even if seventy eight percent of it was inoperable.”
Star Trek: Picard makeup and prosthetics head James MacKinnon plays one of the two gold-shouldered officers who helps Seven and Raffi retake the Titan’s bridge; he first identifies the NCC-1701-D on sensors.
The ship’s chef who Seven assigns to take over the Titan’s helm wears a neutral grey-colored Starfleet uniform; this may be reserved for enlisted crewmen.
The disabled Borg cube has several pyramid-shaped distribution nodes on its ceiling, the target of Shelby’s away team assualt in “The Best of Both Worlds.”
As the Borg Queen commands the captured fleet to destroy Spacedock, she says “Watch your future’s end,” the same threat issued in Star Trek: First Contact when she believes quantum torpedoes are about to destroy Zefram Cochrane’s warp ship Phoenix.
Worf’s kur’leth sword is much heavier than it looks (as Riker is suprised to learn); it also contains a small phaser hidden inside the hilt.
Data learned about humans’ “gut instinct” from Geordi in “The Defector,” concluding that “a person fills in missing pieces of the puzzle with his own personality, resulting in a conclusion based as much on instinct and intuition as on fact” — and later desired the ability to consult a gut instinct of his own during the events of “Data’s Day.” (Glad to see he finally gets his wish!)
Deanna Troi’s Betazoid powers are now able to sense Data’s emotions, thanks to his organic new body.
Like father, like son. (Paramount+)
Once assimilated by the Borg, Jack Crusher’s cybernetic appearance is a near copy of Locutus’s design,right down to the faceplate and red laser.
The visual effects of the Enterprise working its way through the cube to destroy the beacon were gloriously reminiscent of the adventure in the now-closed Star Trek: The Experience Klingon Encounter ride, where a group of shuttles must navigate a similar trajectory to destroy a cloaking generator.
Inside his assimilated mind, Jack Crusher describes the same “intense euphoria” that Jean-Luc Picard described to Jurati in Season 2’s “Assimilation.”
Troi takes the helm for one final time, piloting the Enterprise to just above the Borg Queen’s chamber to rescue Riker, Worf, Jack, and Picard before the Borg cube is destroyed.
Alice Krige’s voice performance is exquisite in her return to Trek — and a special shout-out to her on-screen body double Jane Edwina Seymour for her work in this episode (as well as the incredible makeup team who brought the Borg Queen back to life).
Starfleet cures Borg-infected young officers by running them back through the transporter to repair their DNA; this style of treatment was also used to restore Katherine Pulaski to her correct age at the end of “Unnatural Selection.”
Admiral Beverly Crusher. (Paramount+)
Beverly Crusher returns to Starfleet service; after being promoted to the rank of Admiral, she returns to Starfleet Medical once again for the second — or, if you count the Star Trek: Nemesis deleted scenes — third time.
Tim Russ returns as Tuvok; this time, he portrays the real Vulcan officer who served with Seven aboard the starship Voyager.
Troi and Riker explore a number of vacation options, including Omicron Ceti III (from “This Side of Paradise”), Vulcan, Andoria, Bajor, Trill, Zadar IV (mentioned in “When The Bough Breaks”), and both Kauai, Hawaii and Malibu, California on Earth — ultimately narrowing it down to “the beaches of Kaphar Prime… or Orlando.”
When the Enterprise-D is placed on display in the Fleet Museum, composer Dennis McCarthy’s “To Live Forever” (from the Star Trek: Generations soundtrack) plays — this is the music which accompanies Picard and Riker’s final moments aboard the crashed starship at the end of the film.
Majel Barret’s computer voice returns, with audio segments clipped from two Next Generation episodes: “Electropathic pattern located” is from “Violations,” while “Shutdown sequence initiated” is from “Eye of the Beholder.”
Captain Seven of Nine, commander of the USS Enterprise-G. (Paramount+)
In honor of Jean-Luc Picard and crew’s efforts during the Borg invasion, the USS Titan has been officially rechristened USS Enterprise (NCC-1701-G) — captained by the newly-promoted Seven of Nine, with Commander Raffi Musiker serving as her first officer.
The Starfleet Engineering Corps is a pretty impressive group, rebuilding the massive Spacedock facility in just one year!
The Enterprise-G may be the second Enterprise to begin life as another starship; apocryphally, the Enterprise-A originally served as the USS Yorktown before the events of Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home.
Tyrellians were previously mentioned in “Starship Mine.”
Starfleet introduces a new commbadge design in the year after the Borg defeat; the dark grey bars behind the silver Starfleet delta are now a shiny gold, emulating the “All Good Things” combadge which inspired the original Star Trek: Picard combadge design — and yes, FanSets now has them available for purchase.
The FanSets replica ‘Picard’ finale Starfleet delta. (Photo: TrekCore.com)
It’s fitting that Jean-Luc Picard’s final monologue comes from Shakespeare (his Julius Caesar); Patrick Stewart famously began his career with the Royal Shakespeare Company before joining the cast of The Next Generation.
Worf gives lectures on “Mugatu Meditation,” apparently — and “The Last Generation” extends Michael Dorn’s franchise appearance count to 281, which will stand for the foreseeable future.
Data first attempted his interrupted joke — “There was a young lady from Venus…” — during the events of “The Naked Now.”
Q wears a fanciful new red-and-black outfit, emulating the coloring of his “Judge Q” outfit seen in both “Encounter at Farpoint” and “All Good Things…”
In the post-credit scene, Jack Crusher displays a photo of his parents — in reality, that photograph is this 1988 picture of Gates McFadden and Patrick Stewart taken at and event held during Star Trek: The Next Generation’s first season.
We must have missed that time-travel adventure! (Paramount+)
As Jean-Luc stated in the episode’s teaser, “What began over 30 years ago, ends tonight!” But not with a phaser battle or a ship christening, but with seven friends playing poker and reminiscing about the fact that the past does matter.
It’s a beautiful moment that obviously harkens back to that first game of cards the group played together at end of “All Good Things.” It is and has been a reunion for the ages. A glorious 10-episode run to gift The Next Generation cast, and their legion of fans, yet another poignant signoff.
That first series ended with Picard saying, “I should have done this a long time ago,” and Star Trek: Picard opened with him uttering the words “I don’t want the game to end” — and the story concludes with his much more optimistic outlook: “I’ve come to believe that the stars have always been in my favor.”
Once again… the sky’s the limit. (Paramount+)
It’s a series and a season that literally gave us everything — including a happy ending.
We’re just under two months from the return of Star Trek: Strange New Worlds, and today Paramount+ has released new key art and the first teaser trailer for the second year of Captain Pike adventures!
In the new teaser trailer, Klingons return to the live-action side of the franchise for the first time since Star Trek: Discovery Season 2 — aside from Michael Dorn’s Worf in Star Trek: Picard, of course. Strange New Worlds look to have rebooted the look of the warrior race once more, bringing the species’ look back to a more traditional Star Trek III-and-beyond design.
The warrior race returns. (Paramount+)
Spock (Ethan Peck) shares blood wine with a group of Klingons. (Paramount+)
Joining the Klingon warriors is the return of the iconic Klingon D7 battlecruiser starship; Chancellor L’Rell presented holographic plans for the then-forthcoming ship to the Klingon High Council back in Discovery’s “Point of Light,” and now the ship seems to have made its way into active use.
STAR TREK: DISCOVERY — ‘Point of Light’ (Paramount+)The Klingon D7 back in action. (Paramount+)
In addition, we also see a first glimpse at new Enterprise chief engineer Pelia (Carol Kane) who will be appearing in a recurring role this season, Ensign Uhura (Celia Rose Gooding) approaching a crashed Starfleet shuttlecraft, and the return of special guest star Paul Wesley as Lieutenant James T. Kirk — who appears to end up on modern-day Earth alongside La’an Noonien-Singh (Christina Chong).
Carol Kane as chief engineer Pelia. (Paramount+)Uhura (Celia Rose Gooding) approaches a crashed shuttle. (Paramount+)James T. Kirk (Paul Wesley). (Paramount+)La’an (Christina Chong) and Kirk experience retail shopping. (Paramount+)
Star Trek: Strange New Worlds Season 2 will debut June 15 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, April 21, TrekCore can today reveal 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.
Get your wallets ready for all of these releases, which includes for the first time two new Star Trek starship models which were announced by Eaglemoss before their closure, but never released to collectors: the Parliament-class USS Vancouver from Star Trek: Lower Decks, and the XL-sized Constellation-class USS Stargazer from “The Battle.”
USS Vancouver
Master Replicas has said that for those two new ships they “expect demand to be high, but we have secured all the stock that was created so it should last longer than some of the items we’ve offered recently.”
In addition, the company issued a longer statement through their email newsletter this week:
Quantities are limited, but reasonable. We don’t know how fast they sell but we are confident they will last more than a few minutes. We have put in some maximum quantities that will make it as fair as possible.
While you are here, we just wanted to take some time to clarify how our site works. The site is a drop not a shop. This means the stock shows as available until the payment has been processed. Very much like other drops, this could mean if you have something in a basket, it will not be yours, until the payment confirmation goes through. This can create some frustration, but we are trying to make it as fair as possible. Whenever we can, we’ll make more stock available in a later drop.
We have also upgraded our boxes and void fill within our packages. We also have anti-bot protection on the site. Many of you have asked that we prevent buyers from scooping up some of the newer items that are limited in supply, our bot protection is doing this on every drop.
Here’s everything set to arrive for sale this Friday.
USS Discovery-A Season 3 Refit
Midsize Star Trek starship releases:
USS Vancouver (NCC-70492) — Star Trek: Lower Decks
USS Discovery (NCC-1031-A) — Star Trek: Discovery Season 3 refit
From the Official Starships Collection subscription lineup:
USS Antares (NCC-9844) Miranda-class variant
USS Stargazer (XL)
From the XL Starships line:
XL: USS Stargazer (NCC-2893) — The Next Generation
XL: USS Enterprise (NCC-1701) — The Original Series
XL: USS Enterprise (NCC-1701) — Star Trek: Discovery
Mego Figures: Captain Pike (Discovery), Spock (The Motion Picture)
Battlestar Galactica: Modern Cylon Basestar
From Outside the Star Trek Universe:
Alien: Nostromo XL
Alien: Sulaco XL
Alien: Drop Ship
Alien Covenant: Lander One
Battlestar Galactica: Cylon Basestar (modern)
Battlestar Galactica: Muffit II
Battlestar Galactica: Designing Spaceships book
Batman: Complete Chess Set
Batman Chess Set
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 April 21 at Friday at 9pm in the UK and 4pm ET and will be available through Friday, May 5, when the next grouping of product will be released to collectors.
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 April 21.
Keep checking back to TrekCore for all the latest in Star Trek merchandise news!
First announced as a series concept all the way back in January 2019, the long-gestating return of Michelle Yeoh’s Star Trek: Discovery character — Terran emperor-turned Section 31 operative Philippa Georgiou — is finally coming to fruition.
Georgiou (Michelle Yeoh) bids farewell in “Terra Firma, Part 2.” (Paramount+)
The recent Oscar winner (Best Actress, Everything Everywhere All at Once) departed Star Trek: Discovery in 2020’s “Terra Firma, Part 2” after her character was forced to leave the 32nd century through the Guardian of Forever; Georgiou’s fate has been a mystery since she stepped through the ancient time portal.
Now, more than four years after plans the Yeoh-led Section 31 project was first made public, the high-profile star will be returning to the Star Trek fold in an “original movie event” for Paramount+ which is set to begin production later in 2023.
Here’s the official announcement from Paramount+, which notes that the “movie event” will be directed by Star Trek: Discovery’s longstanding Toronto-based executive producer and director Olatunde Osunsanmi, and written by Craig Sweeny (“Context is for Kings”).
PARAMOUNT+ ANNOUNCES “STAR TREK: SECTION 31”
ORIGINAL MOVIE EVENT STARRING OSCAR® WINNER MICHELLE YEOH
Yeoh to Reprise Her Fan-Favorite Role as Emperor Philippa Georgiou,
First Introduced in “Star Trek: Discovery”
From CBS Studios, “Star Trek: Section 31” Will Begin Production Later This Year
April 18, 2023 – Paramount+ today announced it has officially greenlit STAR TREK: SECTION 31 starring Academy Award winner Michelle Yeoh. In this special original movie event for the service, Yeoh will return to her role as Emperor Philippa Georgiou, a character she first played in STAR TREK: DISCOVERY’s first season.
In STAR TREK: SECTION 31, Emperor Philippa Georgiou, joins a secret division of Starfleet tasked with protecting the United Federation of Planets and faces the sins of her past. Produced by CBS Studios, production will begin later this year.
“I’m beyond thrilled to return to my ‘Star Trek’ family and to the role I’ve loved for so long,” said Michelle Yeoh. “Section 31 has been near and dear to my heart since I began the journey of playing Philippa all the way back when this new golden age of ‘Star Trek’ launched. To see her finally get her moment is a dream come true in a year that’s shown me the incredible power of never giving up on your dreams. We can’t wait to share what’s in store for you, and until then: live long and prosper (unless Emperor Georgiou decrees otherwise)!”
“All the way back in 2017, before the first season of STAR TREK: DISCOVERY had even aired, Michelle had the idea to do a spin-off for her character, Philippa Georgiou,” said executive producer Alex Kurtzman. “She broke new ground as one of the first two women on screen in the pilot to usher in a new age of ‘Trek,’ and now, six years later, STAR TREK: SECTION 31 finally arrives on the heels of her latest groundbreaking win. Everyone on Team ‘Trek’ couldn’t be more thrilled to have our legendary friend return home to us as we expand our storytelling into new and uncharted corners of the Trekverse. Long live Emperor Georgiou; long live Michelle Yeoh!”
— Star Trek on Paramount+ (@StarTrekOnPPlus) April 18, 2023
“We’re thrilled that STAR TREK: SECTION 31 will be the next title in our ‘Star Trek’ universe,” said Domenic DiMeglio, chief marketing officer and head of data at Paramount Streaming. “Michelle Yeoh is an incomparable talent – she brought Emperor Georgiou to life in such an incredibly fun and nuanced way that the character immediately became a fan favorite. We’re so thrilled to welcome Michelle back to the ‘Star Trek’ and Paramount+ family and can’t wait for fans to see what this special movie event has in store.”
“For years, we’ve been looking forward to Michelle Yeoh one day returning to ‘Star Trek,’” said David Stapf, president of CBS Studios. “Her powerful performance as Captain and Emperor Georgiou was a pivotal moment for the return of the franchise, and her portrayal resonated with fans around the world in a multitude of ways. We couldn’t be prouder to join forces with Michelle once again as we continue to explore the ‘Star Trek’ universe, celebrate its legacy and chart a course for the future of the franchise.”
Written by Craig Sweeny and directed by Olatunde Osunsanmi, STAR TREK: SECTION 31 is executive produced by Alex Kurtzman, Craig Sweeny, Aaron Baiers, Olatunde Osunsanmi, Frank Siracusa, John Weber, Rod Roddenberry, Trevor Roth and Michelle Yeoh, and is produced by CBS Studios in association with Secret Hideout and Roddenberry Entertainment.
Georgiou in full emperor mode. (Paramount+)
Unsurprisingly, constraints on the popular actor’s availability (and salary demands, no doubt) have caused the Section 31 concept to contract from the once-announced television series to this special “movie event” — and notably, Discovery writing partners Bo Yeon Kim and Erika Lippoldt (who were announced as showrunners of the Section 31 project when the concept was first announced four years ago) do not appear to be involved with the movie.
And for those of you no doubt asking, “Wait, last week was First Contact Day… where was this announcement then?” — it’s likely that the streamer didn’t have the necessary agreements in place with Yeoh to formally announce the project in time for the April 5 celebration date, otherwise it’s certain that this would have been the big First Contact Day headline.
What are your thoughts about the Section 31 news, now that the project is FINALLY moving forward after all these years? Let us know in the comments below!
In addition, stick around to hear Bill’s theory about how much new Trek we’ll get in 2023 (once Strange New Worlds Season 2 kicks off), and Alex’s prediction about more Star Trek: Picard surprises — ahead of the anticipated series finale.
WeeklyTrek is available to subscribe and download each week on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, YouTube, and Spotify— and we’ll be sharing the details of each new episode right here on TrekCore each week if you’re simply just looking to listen in from the web.
Do you have a wish or theory you’d like to share on the show? Tweet to Alex at @WeeklyTrek, or email us with your thoughts about wishes, theories, or anything else about the latest in Star Trek news!
The final season of Star Trek: Picard comes to a conclusion this week, and we’ve got a new collection of photos from “The Last Generation” to share with you today!
With Starfleet’s Frontier Day armada now firmly under Borg control thanks to Jack Crusher (Ed Speleers) and the Borg Queen (Alice Krige), it’s up to Jean-Luc Picard (Patrick Stewart) and his Enterprise-D crew — Will Riker (Jonathan Frakes), Deanna Troi (Marina Sirtis), Beverly Crusher (Gates McFadden), Worf (Michael Dorn), Geordi La Forge (LeVar Burton) and Data (Brent Spiner) — to save Earth and the Federation.
Meanwhile, after the death of Captain Shaw, Seven of Nine (Jeri Ryan) and Raffi Musiker (Michelle Hurd) remain aboard the Borg-infested USS Titan in the midst of the Collective’s resurgence.
Here are four photos from this week’s series finale:
STAR TREK: PICARD — “The Last Generation” (Trae Patton / Paramount+)
STAR TREK: PICARD — “The Last Generation” (Trae Patton / Paramount+)STAR TREK: PICARD — “The Last Generation” (Trae Patton / Paramount+)STAR TREK: PICARD — “The Last Generation” (Trae Patton / Paramount+)
In case you missed it, here’s a preview clip for the new episode from last week’s edition of The Ready Room with Wil Wheaton.
THE LAST GENERATION — In a desperate last stand, Jean-Luc Picard and generations of crews both old and new fight together to save the galaxy from the greatest threat they’ve ever faced as the saga of ‘Star Trek: The Next Generation’ comes to a thrilling, epic conclusion.
Written and directed by Terry Matalas.
* * *
In addition, Paramount+ has released a number of new photos of the Next Generation cast back on the Galaxy-class bridge — in a collection of images from last week’s “Võx” by unit photographer Trae Patton, and new cast publicity photos from Paramount+’s Sarah Coulter.
STAR TREK: PICARD — 'Võx'
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STAR TREK: PICARD — "Võx" (Trae Patton/Paramount+)
STAR TREK: PICARD — "Võx" (Trae Patton/Paramount+)
STAR TREK: PICARD — "Võx" (Trae Patton/Paramount+)
STAR TREK: PICARD — "Võx" (Trae Patton/Paramount+)
STAR TREK: PICARD — "Võx" (Trae Patton/Paramount+)
STAR TREK: PICARD — "Võx" (Trae Patton/P+)
STAR TREK: PICARD — "Võx" (Trae Patton/Paramount+)
STAR TREK: PICARD — "Võx" (Trae Patton/Paramount+)
STAR TREK: PICARD — "Võx" (Trae Patton/Paramount+)
STAR TREK: PICARD — "Võx" (Trae Patton/P+)
STAR TREK: PICARD — "Võx" (Trae Patton/Paramount+)
STAR TREK: PICARD — "Võx" (Trae Patton/Paramount+)
'Next Generation' Cast — Return to the Enterprise-D
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Return to the Enterprise-D (Sarah Coulter/Paramount+)
Return to the Enterprise-D (Sarah Coulter/Paramount+)
Return to the Enterprise-D (Sarah Coulter/Paramount+)
Return to the Enterprise-D (Sarah Coulter/Paramount+)
Return to the Enterprise-D (Sarah Coulter/Paramount+)
Return to the Enterprise-D (Sarah Coulter/Paramount+)
Return to the Enterprise-D (Sarah Coulter/Paramount+)
Return to the Enterprise-D (Sarah Coulter/Paramount+)
Return to the Enterprise-D (Sarah Coulter/Paramount+)
Return to the Enterprise-D (Sarah Coulter/Paramount+)
Return to the Enterprise-D (Sarah Coulter/Paramount+)
Return to the Enterprise-D (Sarah Coulter/Paramount+)
Return to the Enterprise-D (Sarah Coulter/Paramount+)
Return to the Enterprise-D (Sarah Coulter/Paramount+)
Return to the Enterprise-D (Sarah Coulter/Paramount+)
Return to the Enterprise-D (Sarah Coulter/Paramount+)
Return to the Enterprise-D (Sarah Coulter/Paramount+)
Return to the Enterprise-D (Sarah Coulter/Paramount+)
Star Trek: Picard Season 3 will conclude on April 20 with “The Last Generation” on Paramount+ the United States, and on CTV Sci Fi Channel and Crave in Canada, following the next day in the UK, Australia, Italy, France, Germany, Austria and Switzerland. The series is also available on Amazon’s Prime Video service in most other international locations.
In an episode packed with mysterious revelations, exciting surprises and one cinematic gut punch, Star Trek: Picard’s penultimate episode of season 3, “Võx,” is an absolute homerun of swirling emotions and touching nostalgia — but perhaps most importantly, it’s also just a whole lot of fun.
Co-written by Sean Tretta and Kiley Rossetter, it’s an episode filled with one satisfying payoff after another; payoffs that have been cleverly layered into showrunner Terry Matalas’ heartfelt narrative structure all season long. From sly hints about transporters to “bonk, bonk on the Borg” hints about Picard’s assimilated past, the payoffs in this episode run the gamut between those that are surprising, those that were maybe expected and those that will surely leave you reaching for the nearest box of tissues.
Included in those story beats is the very cool confirmation of an alliance between the Borg and the faction of ‘evolved’ Changelings who have been at the forefront of the conflict throughout this season. Vadic is gone, but the Queen is back.
The door in Jack Crusher’s mind opens. (Paramount+)
With all seven original Next Generation cast members gelling on screen again, each with an important role to play in the action, you might think there isn’t room enough in this episode for the impressive Picard supporting cast to continue to showcase their wares as they have all season long — but this episode is as much about the show’s new cadre of talent as it is about the joyous, in-your-face nostalgia at the center of Frontier Day.
And among the most underrated of those performers this season is where this episode fittingly starts, with Ed Speleers once again crushing it (no pun intended) as Jack Crusher, the son of Jean-Luc Picard (Patrick Stewart) and Beverly Crusher (Gates McFadden)… and perhaps something more.
With the help of Deanna Troi (Marina Sirtis), it is revealed that the vines we’ve been seeing in Jack’s vision are representative of an innate connection to the “many” that has been buried under his “life of disconnection.” In addition to the dynamic presentation of that beautiful, glowing Borg cube, draped inside an orange nebula, keen viewers will also get their first inclination of the return of Alice Krige as the Borg Queen, as we hear her distinctive, raspy whisper saying, “Jack.”
It’s a fantastic moment and genuinely surprising reveal, despite all the clues of the Borg’s return that have been peppered throughout the season.
But the real star of these scenes is Speleers himself. And for all the talk of potential award recognition for this cast, honestly, the person at the forefront of those conversations should be the young Jack Crusher. The English actor has been a revelation in creating this charismatic character on screen. A character designed to not only be hard to like, but who must necessarily win you over with his personal influence and charm, while also hiding and battling his own internal darkness.
Jack accepts his truth. (Paramount+)
When Jack says, “So how much of me is me?” it’s another great connection to the many conversations taking place this season in which the writers’ room dives into the question of nature vs. nurture and what traits we take from our parents. And what makes us who we are. “He inherited the best of you and the worst of me,” says Picard to Crusher, who laments her own perceived failures in how she guided both Jack and Wesley.
Credit also goes to Sirtis in these scenes, as the counselor gets to the heart of the issue with Crusher, helping to piece together the mystery that Picard’s rewritten DNA from his time as Locutus has been passed on to his son. And more importantly, the counselor is in peak Troi mode when she also must convincingly relay to the parents that their son is now a danger, and Starfleet protocols must be adhered to. It’s a strong, tension building flow that kicks off a cavalcade of fun to follow in this episode.
Of course, once Jack gets a whiff of those “protocols” he immediately uses his new powers to “collectively” get the hell off the Titan and takes a shuttle to get close enough to the Borg Queen to get the answers he seeks and to “show her exactly who and what I am!”
Once on board the cube and face-to-face with the Queen, we get to see what has been staring us in the face all season long, a line so powerful from earlier in the season that it has never stopped echoing through this story: “They have a name for you. Locutus of Borg. The only Borg so deadly they gave him a goddamn name!”
And now the Queen has a name for Jack. He is Võx, the voice itself (as opposed to Locutus, the one who speaks). When we last see Jack he is being fully assimilated to the hive mind as Krige speaks for the Borg and the Changelings in seeking “vindication of both our species. To take everything back from those who live like shattered glass.”
Resigned to his fate. (Paramount+)
Krige’s performance is so good in her return as the Borg Queen it honestly makes you forget we never actually see her on screen. This trick is a testament to the strong direction from Matalas and the work of his production team, who create an amazing set design inside the Borg cube with dark, murky lights breaking through the illuminated green atmosphere like the stars in the sky themselves. It’s fantastic work.
Equally impressive is the intricate technobabble at the core of the combined Borg/Changeling plan to destroy the Federation. The two factions have worked together to use Picard’s rewritten DNA code to infect the “common biology” inside all of Starfleet’s transporters. This is why a low-level transporter technician was the person replaced by a Changeling on the Titan — and is also why the late Commander Ro was so mysteriously averse to transporting back in “Imposters.”
All of these details are uncovered in an extremely satisfying “research at a console” scene between Data (Brent Spiner) and La Forge (LaVar Burton) that harkens back to the pair working through problem after problem in their heyday on the Enterprise-D, and it could not be any more fun. Armed with this new information, the Titan does the only thing it can: try to get to Frontier Day and convince anyone that will listen about what is really happening.
As for Frontier Day, it is as advertised! Scores of amazing starships all convening at Spacedock in the Sol Sector and ready to launch the “living construct”… uh, I mean, the “automated Texas-class ships”… no, wait, it’s the “Fleet Formation” mode this time. Yes, it’s the “Fleet Formation” mode that has been hinted at during the course of the season and it is designed to allow every ship in Starfleet to operate as one.
Or as Elizabeth Dennehy says in her long-awaited return to Star Trek as Admiral Elizabeth Shelby, “an impenetrable armada. Unity and defense. The ultimate safeguard.”
(And regardless to the similarities of the previous “controlled, automated, friendly fire” starship story lines seen at the conclusion of the most recent seasons of both Star Trek: Prodigy and Star Trek: Lower Decks, the story here is executed extremely well, with the added bonus of the actual assimilation of Starfleet personnel taking place simultaneously.)
Starfleet’s new “fleet formation” is a bad idea. (Paramount+)
Sadly, the truncated return of Shelby doesn’t really work in this context, especially when she seems to be quickly killed off; however, hearing Riker (Jonathan Frakes) channeling his “Best of Both Worlds” persona and caustically commenting on her decree as “right from the mouth of Admiral Elizabeth Shelby,” and then Picard lamenting the irony of her endorsing “something so Borg-like” does seemingly make it all worthwhile…
…and there’s always a chance she was a Changeling just playing along, and getting caught in the crosshairs of the assimilation, right? Right?!?
In the end, of course, Picard’s plea to the Frontier Day attendees has no affect, and the assimilation of Starfleet begins, but because of some more amazing technobabble about the Borg’s genetic transporter code not propagating in a species beyond a certain point of development, it only affects the younger crew members — in humans, those under the age of 25.
(And while I’m absolutely convinced that this is not a statement from the old school Star Trek voices on this production team subliminally telling viewers that only legacy Trek can truly save the day… I’m also convinced many people will see it as such.)
Regardless of whatever coded message is hidden in that story element by Unimatrix Matalas, it’s a fun one, as the likeable crew of the Titan that we’ve had the good fortune to see in action this season suddenly starts being assimilated. First Lt. Mura (Joseph Lee), then Ensign Esmar (Jin Maley), then Alandra La Forge (Mica Burton), and then — along with the chilling proclamation that “We are the Borg” — Sidney La Forge (Ashlei Sharpe Chestnut). That last one was hard to take.
The La Forge sisters join the new Collective. (Paramount+)
In need of a plan, the veterans on the Titan make a run for it, eventually finding themselves all rerouting to a sub-level maintenance corridor to try and board a repair shuttle, an idea courtesy of the old starship grease monkey himself, Captain Liam Shaw (Todd Stashwick), who recognizes the unaffected “99 Delta” maintenance channel used by the Excelsior in their ill-fated attempt to escape the assimilated fleet.
With no time to even catch their breath on the maintenance level, the crew are quickly pinned down by phaser fire, leading us to the cinematic gut punch we’ve been dreading. With Geordi working to open the hatch to the repair shuttle for everyone to make their escape, it’s down to Shaw to hold off the attack as one by one he calls out his shipmates to get to safety.
The parallel to his own experience as a young engineer on board the USS Constance at Wolf 359, which was so eloquently acted by Stashwick in “No Win Scenario,” is clear. Shaw is not getting out alive as the dipshit from Chicago is mortally wounded getting everyone on board that shuttle. Everyone that is, except Seven (Jeri Ryan) and Raffi (Michelle Hurd), who stay behind to try and save him. The move from Seven to stay for Shaw (and of course, the move from Raffi to stay for Seven) speaks volumes and gives the captain one final chance to tell his Number One that “it’s not my ship anymore. It’s yours. You have the conn, Seven of Nine,” finally acknowledging her true self by using her chosen name.
It’s a satisfying end to both characters’ ongoing arc that has seen them hit various highs and lows with each other throughout this season, all while Shaw struggled with processing his own internal assimilation of how the Borg changed his world view. The moment also serves as a dynamite set-up for the season finale with Seven and Raffi together again, working from inside the Titan to try and stave off the Borg/Changeling attack.
Incredibly, with those integrated payoffs and inspired story beats behind us, it’s time for the moment every Next Gen fan has been waiting for. The return of not only the original TNG seven, but the return of the Galaxy-class USS Enteprise-D, in all its “analog” glory.
Returning home. (Paramount+)
It turns out that since taking over the Fleet Museum, Geordi has been resurrecting the remains of the Enterprise-D: rebuilding the trashed saucer section, reclaimed from its Star Trek: Generations crash on Veridian III, and replacing the drive section with the secondary hull of the USS Syracuse.
The reveal of the ship couldn’t be any more special. From the classic spotlight shots of the hull to the pumping TNG fanfare music, it’s a moment to behold, and it’s made even more special when the crew enters the darkened bridge beautifully lit by only the LCARS screens circling the set. As the overheard lights slowly come up, one bank, then another, the bridge of our youth, of all of our youth, is slowly, patiently revealed. The emotion and tears are real — turns out a whole bunch of us do indeed want “the fat ones.”
Though he may have preferred the Enterprise-E, “She is perfect, Geordi,” says Worf, echoing the thoughts of everyone watching at home. It’s the last functional ship in the fleet not tied into the new automated fleet system.
If you weren’t already completely destroyed by the tactile beauty of this reintroduction of the Enterprise-D, when Picard asks the ship’s computer to “initiate system reactivation procedures,” any semblance of emotional control is completely lost when we hear the ship’s computer voiced by Major Barrett Roddenberry once again: “Authorization acknowledged. USS Enterprise now under command of Captain Jean-Luc Picard.”
It’s history in the making as Riker then declares, “We’re the crew of the USS Enterprise. But more than that, we’re your family. … Jean-Luc, wherever you go, we go.” And with a simple, hearty “Engage!” from Picard, he sinks comfortably into his chair alongside the rest of us, like it was somehow 1990 again.
“Engage!” (Paramount+)
MOMENTS OF STASHWICK
We think Todd Stashwick and his portrayal of USS Titan captain Liam Shaw is destined for Trek icon status — each week this season, we’ll be highlighting one one of the character’s (and actor’s) best moments.
We will be saluting the greatness of Captain Shaw in this episode for seemingly the last time. His heroics on the day have been detailed above (and in all of our prior Picard Season 3 reviews), so there is no need to rehash them here — other than to say, it’s pretty great that it was the grease monkey captain who helped navigate our TNG heroes to safety, while making the ultimate sacrifice and clearing the way for one final, touching acknowledgement of Captain Seven of Nine of the USS Titan.
Captain Shaw, signing off. (Paramount+)
OBSERVATION LOUNGE
Jack Crusher’s memories take him to the arboretum on Raritan IV, the planet on which we last saw Soji Asha in the Picard Season 2 premiere.
The USS Titan has a dedicated ship’s counselor office, as indicated on the door label outside the cabin in which Troi and Jack merge minds.
Beverly says there hasn’t been any sign of the Borg in over a decade. Not counting the dead cube Artifact seen in Picard Season 1, the last time the franchise encountered ‘active’ Borg — chronologically speaking — was in Star Trek: Prodigy’s“Let Sleeping Borg Lie,” set in 2384.
The organic Borg modifications in Picard’s brain explain why the Enterprise captain could still hear ‘Borg radio’ during the events of Star Trek: First Contact.
The Borg Queen brings what seems to be remnants of the Unicomplexthrough a transwarp conduit when arriving to Jack’s location; the interior of the Borg structure is still in ruins thanks to Admiral Janeway’s neurolytic pathogen which disabled the Collective in “Endgame.”
Many ships in the Federation fleet. (Paramount+)
Starships in the current Federation fleet — displayed on several monitors throughout the episode — include the USS Okuda(NCC-74107), the USS Drexler(NCC-97626), the USS Mandel(NCC-72210), the USS Tourangeau(NCC-60113), and the USS Trumbull(NCC-72370) — all named for notable Star Trek contributors.
Other ships listed include the USS John Kelly (NCC-97944), USS Hikaru Sulu (NCC-92420), USS Cochrane (NCC-86516), USS Sutherland (NCC-91800), USS Ganymede (NCC-80107), USS Callisto (NCC-90109), USS Venture (NCC-75306), USS Akira (NCC-62497), USS Huygens (NCC-90104), USS Thunderchild (NCC-63549), USS Resnik (NCC-97945), USS Firesword (NCC-64290), and many others.
The USS Syracuse, the Galaxy-class ship which contributed its secondary hull to the reborn Enterprise-D, was first listed in a screen graphic in “Eye of the Beholder.”
Approaching Frontier Day formations, comm traffic identifies the USS Pulaski, likely named for one-time Enterprise-D chief medical officer Katherine Pulaski (Diana Muldaur).
This isn’t the first time transporters have been used to manipulate a transportee’s genetic structure; Dr. Pulaski was restored from old age in “Unnatural Selection,” Picard and crew were reduced to teenage appearance in “Rascals,” Neelix and Tuvok were merged in “Tuvix,” and more.
Geordi makes a sardonic mention of the Enterprise-E being unavailable for the rescue mission, leaving everyone looking to Worf: “That was not my fault,” says the Klingon. It’s a funny moment, though one that makes clear the story of the Enterprise-E’s end won’t be told this season.
Another great moment from Ed Speleers is this soliloquy, which could portend the role he will play in the upcoming season finale. This is yet another great, unique take on that Borg in new Star Trek: “Funny. I’ve always known the world was imperfect. Broken systems. Wars. Suffering. Violence. Poverty. Bigotry. And I always thought if people could only see each other, hear each other – speaking one voice, act in one mind together – who knew a little cybernetic authoritarianism was the answer? But the Borg they don’t feel, don’t care? But I do. So how does the factor into this?” How indeed?
The USS Enterprise-F in all its glory. (Paramount+)
Despite its ethereal look in this episode, the bridge of the Enterprise-D was a complete set build — from ceiling to floor — led by Star Trek: Picard production designer Dave Blass and art director Liz Kozlowski.
This episode marks the first on-screen appearance of the Odyssey-class USS Enterprise-F,which was designed for the long-running Star Trek Online MMORPG game. (It was briefly shown in a screen graphic in “The Next Generation” during Raffi’s research on “The Red Lady.”)
Picard references a Vulcan research academy called Keslovar as a potential treatment location for Jack. But the young man sees it as “a prison where they can mind meld and lobotomize the Borg from me.” We know Tuvok previously assisted Seven with stabilizing her Borg neural patterns via a mind meld in the episode “Infinite Regress” (referenced this season in “Dominion”), so it will be interesting to see if this comes into play in the season finale.
The Borg Queen’s workshop on producing a Latin name for Jack included “Regenerati” (“rebirth”) and “Puer Dei” (“the child of God”).
When Data asks Picard early in the episode if he would like him to “say something comforting,” it feels like the Data we have known and loved for decades, but a few scenes later we see the Lore-effect coming through in his newfound humor when he tells Geordi, “I hope we die quickly!” These moments are such a great evolution for the character. (An evolution also seen when he beautifully comforts Picard with a simple hand on his shoulder, which is embraced and appreciated by his friend and mentor. An incredible moment.)
I seriously hope Elnor (Evan Evagora) was on leave from the USS Excelsior when it was destroyed in the Borg attack; we last saw the young Romulan assigned to the ship in Season 2 of Picard. (Also… with luck he isn’t off being assimilated right now!)
The secret of Hangar Bay 12 was first referenced by Alandra La Forge as a potential option to her father in the episode “The Bounty.”
Seven of Nine’s words of introduction to Data are “the robot’s right,” which, of course, is accompanied by an off-beat quizzical look from the updated synthetic.
Elizabeth Dennehy returns as Elizabeth Shelby. (Paramount+)
Elizabeth Shelby made her actual return to Trek as a captain in the Lower Decks episode “An Embarrassment of Dooplers,” though that episode did not feature actor Elizabeth Dennehy — here making her first reprisal of the character since 1990’s “The Best of Both Worlds, Part II.”
Shoutout to Troi highlighting that “Jack, Alandra, Sidney… they’re our family, too,” knowing it’s going to take every trick in the book to get all of them through the season finale unscathed.
Picard’s joke about the Enterprise bridge carpet — filmed more than a year ago — is the perfect predicator of the social media faux-outrage regarding the lack of carpets on the Stargazer and Titan sets.
The late Majel Barrett Roddenberry voices a Starfleet computer voice in this episode for the first time since the 2009 Star Trek film.
Alice Krige returns to her role (in voice form only) as the Borg Queen for the first time in a live-action production since the Star Trek: Voyager finale in 2001. She previously voiced a hologram of the Borg Queen in Star Trek: Lower Decks Season 2’s “I, Excretus.”
Michael Dorn makes his 280th appearance in an episode of Star Trek as Worf, extending his record tally for the franchise.
The final two-episode block of Season 3 is directed by Terry Matalas, who previously directed four episodes of his show 12 Monkeys.
This episode was written by Sean Tretta and Kiley Rossetter; Tretta co-wrote both “Disengage” and “No Win Scenario” this season while it’s Rossetter’s first Trek credit.
One last ride. (Paramount+)
Sometimes an episode is all about the execution, and in “Võx,” we get a perfectly executed episode that helps us link and connect many of the season-long mysteries, while also setting the table for one final go-around in this fantastic season.
Star Trek: Picard Season 3 will conclude with “The Last Generation” on April 20 on Paramount+ in the United States and on CTV Sci Fi Channel and Crave in Canada — following the next day in the UK, Australia, Italy, France, Germany, Austria and Switzerland. The series is also available on Amazon’s Prime Video service in most other international locations.
In addition, stick around to hear Jenn’s theory that Star Trek: Prodigy will scratch the same itch that Star Trek Picard season three has been doing, and Alex’s wish for one specific TV movie if the franchise moves in the direction Alex Kurtzman has been hinting and doing shorter-form productions again.
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!