In addition, stick around to hear Steph’s wish to see a Star Trek: Deep Space Nine character show up in the last few episodes of Star Trek: Picard, and Alex’s prediction for First Contact Day announcements: is the long awaited Section 31 announcement coming?
Listen to find out more!
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 continues this week, and we’ve got a new collection of photos from “Surrender” to share with you today!
Though they tried to set a trap for Vadic (Amanda Plummer) and stop her pursuit of Jack Crusher (Ed Speleers), the Titan crew must now find a way to free their ship from the Changeling’s control before it’s too late to save the Federation — while Will Riker (Jonathan Frakes) and Deanna Troi (Marina Sirtis) remain captured on Vadic’s ship.
Here are eleven photos from this week’s episode:
STAR TREK: PICARD — Episode 308: 'Surrender'
1 of 12
STAR TREK: PICARD — "Surrender" (Paramount+)
STAR TREK: PICARD — "Surrender" (Paramount+)
STAR TREK: PICARD — "Surrender" (Paramount+)
STAR TREK: PICARD — "Surrender" (Paramount+)
STAR TREK: PICARD — "Surrender" (Paramount+)
STAR TREK: PICARD — "Surrender" (Paramount+)
STAR TREK: PICARD — "Surrender" (Paramount+)
STAR TREK: PICARD — "Surrender" (Paramount+)
STAR TREK: PICARD — "Surrender" (Paramount+)
STAR TREK: PICARD — "Surrender" (Paramount+)
STAR TREK: PICARD — "Surrender" (Paramount+)
STAR TREK: PICARD — "Surrender" (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, as well as the official trailer for “Surrender.”
SURRENDER — Vadic forces Picard to make an impossible choice: deliver what he can never give… or watch his crew perish. Their only salvation lies in the mind of an old friend and old foe.
Written by Matt Okumura. Directed by Deborah Kampmeier.
Star Trek: Picard Season 3 will continue April 6 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.
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 first breakdown of what collectors will find up for grabs.
Launching on Friday, April 7, 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:
From the Official Starships Collection subscription lineup:
USS Enterprise NCC-1701 (Constitution Class)
USS Enterprise NCC-1701-J (Universe Class)
Hierarchy Ship — Star Trek: Voyager
USS Newton (NCC-1727) — Star Trek (2009)
USS Armstrong (NCC-1769) — Star Trek (2009)
USS Mayflower (NCC-1621) — Star Trek (2009)
USS Franklin (NX-326) — Star Trek Beyond
From the XL Starships line:
XL: USS Enterprise NCC-1701-D (Galaxy Class)
XL: USS Reliant NCC-1864 (Miranda Class)
XL: Delta Flyer
XL: USS Pegasus NCC-53847 (Oberth Class)
XL: USS Shenzhou NCC-1227 (Walker Class)
XL: USS Discovery NCC-1031 (Crossfield Class)
XL: USS Equinox NCC-72381 (Nova Class)
XL: Romulan Warbird
XL: La Sirena
From Star Trek: Discovery:
Book’s Ship
ISS Shenzhou NCC-1227
Special Releases:
USS Enterprise NCC-1701-D (Galaxy Class) — Gold Edition
Klingon Bird of Prey 3-Pack: Flight, Wings Down, Landed
If you want one of the ships 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 7 at Friday at 9pm in the UK and 4pm ET and will be available through Friday, April 21, 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 7.
Keep checking back to TrekCore for all the latest in Star Trek merchandise news!
It’s a good time to be a Philadelphia-area fan of all things science fiction and space! A brand new convention, hosted by an organization with a solid history of Trek events under their belt, is beaming into that area this May.
The Galactic Diversity & Inclusion Convention (or D&I Con for short), is the brainchild of the LGBTQIA+ non-profit Gaaays in Spaaace (GIS). If that organization sounds familiar, it’s because GIS has hosted 200+ events, attended by well over 20,000 fans, since its inception in 2016. If you’ve been to the Star Trek convention in Las Vegas or voyaged on a Star Trek cruise, you’ve no doubt heard of their events. Now GIS is ready for their biggest mission yet: a full blown convention of their own.
GIS founder Dan Deevy told us that there was “no question that we’d do [D&I Con] in Philly.” He said that the City of Brotherly Love hasn’t gotten enough love lately in the sci-fi convention department. He rightly pointed out that Philly is easily accessible from several other major cities by train, bus, and by car, eliminating the need to fly for many East Coast attendees.
D&I Con will feature guests from across a variety of science fiction series, including Robert Picardo (The Doctor, Star Trek: Voyager), Connor Trinneer (Trip Tucker, Star Trek: Enterprise), Denise Crosby (Tasha Yar, Star Trek: The Next Generation), Mark Jackson (Isaac, The Orville), and Thom Allison (Pree, Killjoys).
Although I have to say, I’m most excited to see Alexander Siddig (Dr. Bashir, Star Trek: Deep Space Nine) on the guest list. Although Sid has made himself quite accessible to fans via his Sid City Social Club Zoom calls, he doesn’t attend many conventions. And this is just a fraction of the guest list — check out their website for the full list.
On the space and science side of things, D&I Con is welcoming Michelle Hanlon (For All Moonkind, Center for Air & Space Law), Dr. Chance Glenn (Space for Everyone, The Morningbird Foundation), and Greg Hodgin (ZC Institute, Inc.), with more guests to be announced.
What I’m probably most excited about with this con are the various “Away Missions” (additional ticket required). The D&I Con Away Missions are providing more intimate encounters with their celebrity guests, including bat’leth lessons with J.G. Hertzler and Robert O’Reilly, voice lessons with Robert Picardo, learning to play craps with Garrett Wang, a darts tournament with Alexander Siddig, and a fireside chat with Nana Visitor — with more to be announced (including an exciting mission for fans of The Orville).
While other conventions have done VIP cocktail hours with guests and the like, I’ve not seen a line up of special programming quite like this before.
When I asked Deevy what he was most excited for this convention, he said that while Trekkie Feud was “a close second,” he can’t wait for attendees to experience the final event on Saturday night (“The Union of SciFi and Science” hosted by Denise Crosby). This isn’t a panel, but rather a “full on production that has never ever been done at a convention before,” which he hopes will “inspire a lot of joy” in people.
If you’re a seasoned convention goer, you know that seating for main events is typically a Hunger Games style free for all because ballrooms aren’t cleared between panels — or it’s “pay to play” with the best seats tied up in pricey packages that only a Ferengi could love. D&I Con is taking a different approach, offering the best seats to those who purchased tickets earliest. Known as the “First Contact Club,” these folks are also getting t-shirts as a reward for backing the convention early.
Ticket prices are the same for all seats. A 3-day pass for adults is $160, and includes access to all panels, the Walk of Fame Autograph Room, the Dealers Room and Artists Alley. There are single day general admission tickets, and discounted rates for youth ages 13-17 and children ages 6-12. Kids under 6 are free. There are also add-on tickets available for an exclusive VIP reception on Thursday, the Saturday Night Gala, and the aforementioned Away Missions.
Profits from the convention are primarily being put toward an Inclusive Space Academy Scholarship, which aims to send LGBTQIA+ youth to Space Academy. Additional monies raised will continue to fund GIS’ goal of raising their Traveling Trans Flag in as many cities as possible. This 8’ x 12’ trans flag has traveled the country, been signed by dozens of actors, astronauts, and scientists, and serves as a symbol of support and demand for change from public officials.
D&I Con is being held May 5-7, 2023, at the Pennsylvania Convention Center (1101 Arch Street Philadelphia, PA 19107), in the heart of Philadelphia. It is easily accessible by car and public transit. Visit https://dnicon.org/ to see the full guest list and to purchase tickets.
You can win a pair of weekend passes to the Galactic Diversity & Inclusion Convention, courtesy of Gaaays in Spaaace! All you need to do is follow us on Twitter and tweet to us that you want tickets using the hashtag #DIConTickets by 11:59 PM ET on Friday, April 7.
We’ll contact the winning entrant via Twitter DM to obtain fulfilment information.
After years of rumors and hints, the next Star Trek television series is officially on the way — and it’s at last set at the educational centerpoint of Federation life: Starfleet Academy.
Announced today by Paramount+, Star Trek: Starfleet Academy will become the fourth live-action (and sixth overall) Star Trek series produced for the streamer by Alex Kurtzman’s Secret Hideout production company, and is planned to go before cameras next year.
The official release:
PARAMOUNT+ ANNOUNCES SERIES ORDER
FOR “STAR TREK: STARFLEET ACADEMY”
The All-New Original Series from CBS Studios
Will Follow the Adventures of a New Class of Starfleet Cadets
March 30, 2023 – Paramount+ today announced the series order for the all-new original series STAR TREK: STARFLEET ACADEMY. The series will follow the adventures of a new class of Starfleet cadets as they come of age in one of the most legendary places in the galaxy. Produced by CBS Studios, the series will begin production in 2024.
STAR TREK: STARFLEET ACADEMY will introduce us to a young group of cadets who come together to pursue a common dream of hope and optimism. Under the watchful and demanding eyes of their instructors, they will discover what it takes to become Starfleet officers as they navigate blossoming friendships, explosive rivalries, first loves and a new enemy that threatens both the Academy and the Federation itself.
In celebration of this news, a joint announcement has been made by co-showrunners and executive producers Alex Kurtzman and Noga Landau:
Alex Kurtzman and Noga Landau will serve as co-showrunners and will executive produce the series alongside executive producers Gaia Violo, Aaron Baiers, Jenny Lumet, Rod Roddenberry, Trevor Roth, Frank Siracusa and John Weber. The series premiere episode is written by Gaia Violo. STAR TREK: STARFLEET ACADEMY will be produced by CBS Studios in association with Secret Hideout and Roddenberry Entertainment.
“We are excited to introduce ‘Star Trek’ fans to a whole new generation of Starfleet officers in training as they navigate the rigors of the Academy and the brink of adulthood in STAR TREK: STARFLEET ACADEMY,” said Domenic DiMeglio, Chief Marketing Officer and Head of Data, Paramount Streaming. “Introducing new characters and compelling storylines, this all-new original series will serve as a fantastic addition to the franchise and Paramount+, bringing new generations of viewers and long-term ‘Star Trek’ fans alike together to enjoy the next chapter in the iconic ‘Star Trek’ universe.”
“As we continue to explore more of the ‘Star Trek’ universe, we’re thrilled to bring STAR TREK: STARFLEET ACADEMY to fans around the world as the next chapter in this expanding franchise,” said David Stapf, president of CBS Studios. “Alex Kurtzman and Noga Landau’s vision is a smart and thrilling take that celebrates the core principles of what ‘Star Trek’ has always stood for, but through the eyes of the next generation of Starfleet’s leaders.”
STAR TREK: STARFLEET ACADEMY is the latest addition to the expanding “Star Trek” franchise on Paramount+, which includes the current hit original series STAR TREK: DISCOVERY, STAR TREK: PICARD, the animated series STAR TREK: LOWER DECKS and STAR TREK: PRODIGY, and STAR TREK: STRANGE NEW WORLDS.
Additionally, Star Trek: Lower Decks actor Tawny Newsome revealed today that she’s joined the Starfleet Academy writing team:
— Tawny “My Name is Tawny” Newsome (@TrondyNewman) March 30, 2023
No casting information or other more-specific details about the upcoming series was included with today’s announcement, however there is one hint that may be pointing at where the series is likely to be set within the Star Trek timeline — and here’s our speculation:
Michael Burnham (Sonequa Martin-Green) addresses a group of Starfleet cadets in “Kobayashi Maru.” (Paramount+)
“For the first time in over a century, our campus will be re-opened…” says the announcement, which heavily implies that the show will be centered in the far future setting of Star Trek: Discovery’s era — where Season 4 of that series reopened Starfleet Academy following a long closure, after the crew of the USS Discovery solved the mystery of The Burn.
In addition, Discovery’s Lieutenant Sylvia Tilly (Mary Wiseman) transferred off of her starship to pursue a role at the new Starfleet Academy after accompanying a group of cadets through a hazardous mission-gone-wrong in Season 4’s “All Is Possible.”
Lieutenant Tilly (Mary Wiseman) leads Adira (Blu del Barrio) and the cadets across an icy tundra. (Paramount+)
Interestingly, longtime Star Trek franchise boss Alex Kurtzman will serve as co-showrunner on Starfleet Academy, joining franchise newcomer Noga Landau (best known for her work running Tom Swift and Nancy Drew for The CW and The Magicians for SyFy); it seems to be a similar arrangement to his partnership with Michelle Paradise when she came in to take over Star Trek: Discovery in mid-2019.
That said, there’s still plenty we don’t know about the Starfleet Academy series, so all of this speculation may turn out to be wrong — hopefully the streamer will share some more information about the new show soon, possibly next week for “First Contact Day” on April 5.
Well, there you have it: while Star Trek: Picard and Star Trek: Discovery are both on the way towards their final adventures, the next one is about to begin for the Star Trek Universe.
What are your thoughts on today’s Star Trek: Starfleet Academy announcement? Let us know in the comments below!
It was bound to happen. They can’t all be better than the one before it, and after an amazing run of six episodes, “Dominion” is arguably the least-successful entry in Star Trek: Picard this season.
Although the episode contains some amazing surprises and incredible character reveals — as well as some uniquely staged action sequences — in the end, it doesn’t quite equal the sum of its parts and, ultimately, just isn’t as fun as what we’ve seen up to this point. Whether that is a valid criticism or not is up to the viewer, as “Dominion” is likely a victim of its own success… namely, the high standard of the episodes that have preceded it.
More than anything, “Dominion” is a showcase for the compelling, boundary-pushing choices of Amanda Plummer as Vadic, the scenery-chewing villain leading the Changeling cabal trying to get their hands on Jack Crusher (Ed Speleers). We’ve already seen the unique way in which Plummer brings Vadic to life, alternating between a chilling, melodic cadence, giddy laughter and unhinged, repetitive speech patterns (and everything in between), but for the first time we are also getting a taste of her disturbing backstory in a face-off with both Jean-Luc Picard (Patrick Stewart) and Beverly Crusher (Gates McFadden).
Before that showdown arrives, though, the episode opens with the Titan on the run from, well, everyone, trying to figure out their next move, which includes Seven of Nine (Jeri Ryan) reaching out to a familiar face. In a genuine surprise that no one saw coming, Tim Russ reprises his role as Tuvok, now a captain, 23 years after the USS Voyager’s return from the Delta quadrant.
Tim Russ returns as Tuvok… well, almost. (Paramount+)
Russ slips right back into his old character and gets to feature nicely in a lively game of kal-toh-and-mouse with Seven, who is trying to determine if her old friend is a Changeling or not. The scene is staged quite cleverly by writer Jane Maggs, who sets up a double-bluff for the viewer. When you think Tuvok has passed Seven’s test, as she brings up their many games of kal-toh on Voyager and he commends her on having “beaten (him) countless times,” a composer Stephen Barton’s score once again pumps in the fanfare from Jerry Goldsmith’s fabulous Voyager theme music.
But the trick is on us, not Seven, who gets the Vulcan-imposter to reveal himself a moment later by suggesting a meeting on Aklion VII, where she says she once underwent a procedure to stabilize her neural patterns. Game, set, kal-toh to Seven. (Of course, it was Tuvok himself who helped stabilize Seven with a mindmeld back in “Infinite Regress,” and with just a hint of an evil smile, Russ gives up the game.)
He is in fact a Changeling posing as Voyager’s former security chief — and yes, thankfully, he acknowledges that the REAL Tuvok is still alive so the Changelings can use him as a source of information. (He better make it out of this alive!) The scene is a fun one, helping the crew of the Titan finally realize: they are on their own.
Which leads them to turn to another old friend for answers, this one in the form of Data (Brent Spiner), who they are hoping will be able to provide some guidance on exactly why the Changelings have absconded with the original, organic remains of Jean-Luc Picard.
Brent Spiner as Lore. (Paramount+)
As he was in his brief appearance last week, Spiner is back to his old, scene-stealing self in bringing the many faces of Data back to the screen. There is a lot of fun, background exposition in these scenes setting up the internal battle between Data and Lore in this new Soong android, but none of that really matters once the engrossing Spiner begins snapping back-and-forth between the two characters.
When he first awakens, he’s Data, quickly realizing he is no longer on the Scimitar (where he died for the first time in back in Star Trek: Nemesis), and then he’s quickly Lore, hammering home to Picard that “time has been very cruel to you.” Combined with Spiner’s impressive performance, the production team has fashioned a killer sound design to accompany the actor’s movements and inflection changes. The results are an effective and visually disturbing representation of the struggle taking place inside the android.
Data eventually reveals that Altan Soong’s research on Picard’s remains — which he had in his possession following everything that went down at the end of the show’s first season — would seem to indicate that he may not have had Irumodic Syndrome after all. The answers to what that might mean, and how it might be affecting what Jack is going through this season, will wait for another episode, but it is a potentially fascinating development… especially with Jack’s foreshadowing statement of “I’ve always felt different. Like there is something wrong with me. Deep, deep down inside.”
In terms of their immediate predicament, the Titan crew put a plan in place to lure the Shrike to them after receiving a compromised captain’s code communication request from Riker, confirming once and for all he is being held by the Changelings.
Vadic (Amanda Plummer) and her forces board the Titan. (Paramount+)
The set-up with Vadic and her minions boarding the Titan is where the episode goes slighty awry — not so much in execution, which is fine — but the choice to end the episode with a starship takeover we’ve seen executed many, many other times in Trek. It all feels a little rote, in the way none of the season has in the first six episodes.
As the Changelings board the ship, the crew of the Titan play some forcefield games to try and gain an advantage, but the real joy here is watching Plummer sink her teeth into Vadic with erratic and melodic line reads like: “He’s right there. Right there. I can almost touch him. Don’t you hear that. Don’t you? Tick-tock, tick-toc, goes the ancient clock. We are out of time. We. Are. Going.”
It isn’t long before she has been cornered behind a forcefield in sickbay and adds to the mystery around Jack by answering a query about her own “evolved physiology” by challenging both Picard and Dr Crusher with, “What about your son? Do you know about his physiology?” She later reveals that getting her hands on Jack has nothing to do with her, “He’s not for me. We could bond over that since he was never really for you either.”
When Beverly responds with, “What the hell does that mean?” she is clearly a stand-in for the audience, because that is exactly what I said in that revealing moment.
Vadic kills the Section 31 scientist who tortured her Changeling form. (Paramount+)
With the mystery of Jack ratcheted all the way up Warp 10, we finally get to learn the backstory of Vadic, which is steeped in Star Trek: Deep Space Nine lore surrounding the Dominion War — a war in which the Changeling was tortured by Section 31 as a prisoner of the Federation.
In telling her story, we get a great rehashing of DS9’s seventh season, in which Vadic pointedly reminds Picard that the Federation may have created a cure for the biological warfare unleashed on them, but they also voted not to give it to them.
Vadic’s story time is accompanied by scenes of a masochistic, misguided Federation scientist (also played by Amanda Plummer), whose face she now wears to “remind herself of her hate,” and it is effective in creating some sympathy for the character. Her descriptive narration of the ordeal faced by her and nine of her brothers and sisters is quite visceral, with squealing wheels on a cart in a hallway, squeaking boots on concrete, creaking cage doors, and “screams of all temperance, pitches and whistling.”
Her torture included “more pain than any being should be expected to endure” and was designed to weaponize the Changeling subjects by turning them into the “perfect, undetectable spies, able to drop into any species, and spread chaos. Happy ending, though. Through those experiments you created the perfect monster. Us.”
It’s all quite disturbing. But even in the face of that horror, Picard and Crusher quite rightly point out to Vadic that, “There never would have been a war if the Changelings had not initiated it.” Her response is an afront to reason when she says, “Do not compare the atrocities committed by your side to the warfare executed by mine,” as if the “execution of warfare” has some level of nobility to it.
Vadic shares her story. (Paramount+)
Regardless of the atrocities both sides might be capable of committing (and Star Trek has shown us for more than 50 years that the Federation is capable of their own malfeasance in many different shapes and sizes), Vadic’s attempts to minimize the argument that the Dominion began the conflict with indiscriminate destruction and killing is offensive, especially when she tries to argue it was all done out of “necessity,” because “solids like you were coming and you ruin every world you touch.” So, the Changeling atrocities were preventative? Got it. This is the same kind of logic you get when you waste time arguing with Nazis — there is no “both sides” in that argument.
Fortunately, Picard and Crusher see right through it, and despite briefly weighing the moral implications involved, the fact that she is the “executioner for her cause” leads them to quickly and satisfyingly decide that it is time for Vadic to cease to exist. (Yep, they are going to kill her. They both acknowledge they have fundamentally changed and will compromise everything they believed in to do it. And I love it.)
In the end, if Vadic’s backstory was designed to illicit emotions and debate, mission accomplished. And the added touch of it all being wrapped up in something called “Project Proteus” makes it all the more interesting. In Greek mythology, Proteus was a shapeshifter,but proteus is also bacterium found in both the soil and in the intestines of animals, which helps guide Crusher to discover that each of Vadic’s Changeling friends were exposed to a formula that contained Thalonium 847, a substance still found in each of them which makes them trackable on sensors.
Geordi La Forge (LeVar Burton) begs for Data’s help. (Paramount+)
While Vadic is regaling us with her backstory, Geordi La Forge (LeVar Burton) and his daughter Alandra (Micah Burton) are working on trying to restore Data’s cognitive functions to normal parameters. The scenes with Geordi and this new version of Data are the most emotionally resonant of the episode and are integrated nicely with the action taking place across the Titan, especially when Lore takes control of some of the ship’s key system at the precise moment that his other daughter, Sidney (Ashlei Sharpe Chestnut), and Jack are pinned behind two forcefields while engaging the Changelings.
In an emotional appeal to his friend, Geordi pleads with Data to find a way to circumvent the control Lore has exerted in their battle. The plea is both for his daughter, who is at risk if the forcefields come down, and also personal: he can’t lose Data again. LeVar Burton has been a force to behold in his return to La Forge, and the emotion he showcases in this scene is impossible to contain.
“Life rarely gives you second chances to say what you should,” he says with tears rolling down his face. “Data, you made me better. You did. You made me a better man. A better father. A better friend. And when you died, it broke me. But see, you put me back together, you repaired me. The memory of you.”
It’s a special moment, and it does eventually work as he continues his emotional appeals, but not right away, as Lore drops the forcefields, allowing Vadic to escape Picard and Beverly — while forcing Sidney and Jack into hand-to-hand combat with the Changelings who have been waiting for them. But as we saw earlier when the two were sharing a quiet moment in the turbolift, Jack is exhibiting a strange telekinetic ability to enter someone else’s mind, jumping into Sidney’s head to assist her in defeating her combatant.
Something is very wrong with Jack Crusher (Ed Speleers). (Paramount+)
When it’s all said and done, Sidney (understandably) is none too pleased and holds her phaser on Jack before they both scramble away from Vadic, who appears in the corridor before moving onto the bridge. In finally taking control of the ship, Vadic declares to the crew on board: “I am Vadic, captain of the USS Titan. And Jack, my dear, if you can hear me, it’s time you learnt who you truly are.”
And as a wise woman already said once in this episode, we say again… what the hell does that mean?
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.
After six episodes of being in the thick of the action, Captain Shaw doesn’t have as much to do this week, but he does take a beating from the Changelings while trying to stop them from reaching the bridge in the episode’s final act, which leads us to this week’s choice.
Captain Shaw (Todd Stashwick) is having a bad few weeks. (Paramount+)
Knowing the ship is about to be compromised as Vadic and her shapeshifters head to the bridge in a turbolift, an injured Shaw — from inside that turbolift — quickly gets off a command to Seven to “blow the turbolift,” which, of course, Seven does not do, unwilling to sacrifice her captain.
Instead, she and the crew put up a fight… but it is to no avail as Vadic takes the ship, setting up a cliffhanger for next week’s episode.
Born in 2264 — and thankfully still alive, despite Changeling infiltration — Tuvok is now 137 years old as of “Dominion.”
We get yet another Admiral Janeway reference during Seven’s interrogation of Changeling Tuvok. It’s the fourth time this season Janeway has been namedropped.
The Titan is seen hiding in the Chin’toka scrapyard, likely filled with wreckage from the Dominion War still floating about. The Chin’toka system first appeared in a major battle in Deep Space Nine’s “Tears of the Prophets,” and is where Captain Sisko’s first USS Defiant starship was destroyed in “The Changing Face of Evil.”
As the Titan hides from the Changelings amid space debris, we get a shot of what appears to be the remains of a D’kyr-class Vulcan starship.
A Changeling impersonates Will Riker (Jonathan Frakes). (Paramount+)
Jonathan Frakes’ only appearance in the episode comes when Changeling Tuvok morphs into a corpse-like image of Captain Riker, saying: “I’m as good as dead.” (Creepy.)
Last week we had Riker whistling “Pop Goes the Weasel” to unlock the mysteries of Daystrom Station, and this week we get to hear Vadic’s rendition of “Three Blind Mice.”
A key piece of background detail on these new Changelings is that Vadic evolved from the biological experiments conducted on her. As part of that, she was able to pass her enhanced (but limited) abilities to any Changeling that wanted to join her cause. When they link, “they inherit a shorter life, eternal pain, for the ability to fool those who took everything from us.”
In three different scenes, an evolving Dr. Crusher first acknowledges her openness to exploring a biological solution in their fight with the Changelings, and then in her first confrontation with Vadic says she is rethinking her oath “to do no harm.” Later, as she contemplates killing Vadic with Picard, she admits, “Yes, I think I’m losing my compass.” Of course, we’ve already seen Crusher kill without hesitation in the season premiere (“The Next Generation”), when Changelings boarded her ship.
Data and Lore fight to control their singular body. (Paramount+)
When Picard and Crusher open fire on the escaping Vadic, the Changeling escapes into a conduit in a shot not unlike the VFX seen in Deep Space Nine’s“The Adversary” of Changelings twice escaping into ceiling conduits.
There seems to be a notable difference in how modern ‘pulse’ phasers affect Changelings — hardly injuring them in goo form — compared to the older-style ‘beam’ phasers Worf and Jack Crusher carry, which appear to vaporize Changelings relatively easily.
Michael Dorn (Worf), Michelle Hurd (Raffi), and Marina Sirtis (Troi) do not appear in this episode.
The episode was written by Jane Maggs, who now has four writing credits on the series (including “Seventeen Seconds” earlier this season).
“Dominion” is the first episode of Picard from director Deborah Kampmeier, who previously directed Star Trek: Discovery’s“The Galactic Barrier.”
To be continued. (Paramount+)
Although many of the elements in “Dominion” shine — including those involving Vadic’s backstory, Data’s emergence, Geordi’s emotion and that great cameo from Tim Russ — the episode as a whole doesn’t quite gel in comparison to the rest of the season, and that includes the decision the Titan crew made to allow the Changelings on board to try and bring the fight to them.
It’s an interesting, but not entirely successful, leap in the series’ narrative structure that will play out next week in “Surrender,” with Vadic in control of the Titan.
Star Trek: Picard Season 3 will continue with “Surrender” on April 6 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.
We’re more than halfway through the final season of Star Trek: Picard — and it’ll be until 2024 that Star Trek: Discovery returns for its final season of adventures — so today it’s time to finally learn more about all the other parts of the Star Trek Universe!
(Image: Paramount+)
First up, the big question on everyone’s mind has been answered: Star Trek: Strange New Worlds will be warping back for Season 2 on June 15 on Paramount+ in the U.S, the U.K., Australia, Latin America, Brazil, France, Italy, Germany, Switzerland and Austria. The show finished filming Season 2 all the way back in July 2022, and the continuing adventures of Captain Pike and his Enterprise crew will be back about two months after the Picard series finale.
This will be the season in which the much-touted Lower Decks / Strange New Worlds crossover will occur, as actors Tawny Newsome and Jack Quaid will bring their Lower Decks characters Ensign Beckett Mariner and Ensign Brad Boimler to live action for the first time.
Additionally, as has been previously shared by showrunner Akiva Goldsman in an unofficial fashion, Strange New Worlds has been officially renewed for Season 3; filming is expected to begin relatively soon in Toronto.
(Image: Paramount+)
Following Strange New Worlds Season 2 will be the returning Star Trek: Lower Decks, which will return to Paramount+ for Season 3 in “late summer” (no specific date has been set as of today’s announcement) — but the Cerritos crew will be back at for at least one additional year, as the streamer confirmed that Season 5 of the animated series has been officially ordered, expected to air on Paramount+ in 2024.
Lastly, Star Trek: Prodigy is set for a “winter 2023” return, as Season 2 of the kid-focused animated series is expected to debut on Paramount+ towards the end of this year. While not officially stated in today’s news release, we believe the 20-episode second season will be split in half once more, with 10 episodes in 2023 and the next 10 episodes to follow in late 2024. (There’s still no word from Paramount+ whether Prodigy will continue beyond the next 20 episodes.)
After the final four episodes of Star Trek: Picard, we’ll all have about two months to recharge before launching back into the final frontier — what are your thoughts on the planned release schedule for the next runs of each series? Let us know in the comments below!
We’re getting closer to the return of Star Trek: Strange New Worlds, and as these things traditionally go, Season 1 of the Captain Pike-centric series has just beamed down on Blu-ray and on DVD for fans to add to their home collections.
The three-disc set — also available in special Steelbook packaging — includes all ten episodes of the show’s inaugural adventures, as well as a host of bonus material that dives into the making of Strange New Worlds, a good chunk of additional footage which didn’t make Season 1’s final cut, and an audio commentary track on the series premiere (“Strange New Worlds”).
STRANGE NEW WORLDS Season 1 Blu-ray and Steelbook packaging. (CBS Home Entertainment)
The relatively episodic first season follows the adventures of Captain Christopher Pike (Anson Mount) and his pre-Kirk crew of the USS Enterprise: second in command Lt. Commander Una Chin-Riley (Rebecca Romijn), science officer Lieutenant Spock (Ethan Peck), tactical officer Lieutenant La’an Noonien-Singh (Christina Chong), pilot Lieutenant Erica Ortegas (Melissa Navia), chief medical officer Dr. Joseph M’Benga (Babs Olusanmokun), nurse Christine Chapel (Jess Bush), and communications trainee Cadet Nyota Uhura (Celia Rose Gooding).
The series also includes recurring characters like Aenar chief engineer Hemmer (Bruce Horak), Pike’s superior officer, Commodore Robert April (Adrian Holmes), Jim Kirk’s older brother Sam Kirk (Dan Jeannotte), and Spock’s fiancee T’Pring (Gia Sandhu).
Anson Mount interviewed about his experience filming Season 1. (CBS Home Entertainment)
Along with the audio commentary on “Strange New Worlds” featuring lead actor Anson Mount and co-showrunner Akiva Goldsman, the Season 1 collection contains over 100 minutes of features.
Exploring New Worlds (53:58) is an interesting, if textbook, run-through of the making of Strange New Worlds Season 1. It has a lot of interesting factoids and titbits, from the show’s inception as a misunderstanding on Akiva Goldsman’s part (he originally believed Discovery was going to be a Pike-centered prequel) through to the stylistic camera choices of “A Quality of Mercy” — but very little of it is very ground-breaking. It is, however, very charming, and a nice insight into the devotion of the actors and production staff to their craft.
A lot of it is stuff we’ve heard before in interviews and press interviews: the discussion about episodic stories and serialised characters was almost verbatim what Myers and Goldsman have said in almost every interview they’ve given, but there are still a few bits of new material peppered throughout the nearly one-hour package.
Mount jokes with Melissa Navia and Rebecca Romijn during production of “The Serene Squall.” (CBS Home Entertainment)
Pike’s Peek (17:26), a cheeky name for Anson Mount’s video diary of his time on set, is fun… mainly because Mount himself is irresistibly charming at all levels. It’s not particularly insightful, though, beyond reminding you that everyone on that set is having an incredibly good time. There’s a nice bit where Mount reads out a letter from a NASA official wishing them all good luck; apart from that, the content isn’t particularly special.
Filming on the AR wall stage for “All Those Who Wander.” (CBS Home Entertainment)
I did, however, enjoy the behind-the-scenes look in World Building (11:56), which focuses on how the augmented reality wall works. From an up-close look at the wall itself to interviews with production designer Jonathan Lee and the directors, this segment was worth the watch to learn about the integration of the still-new technology. Learning how the AR wall is used and its significant complications and limitations will be intriguing to those who enjoy the peek behind the “holodeck” walls.
Pike as a younger lieutenant from a “Lift Us Where Suffering Cannot Reach” cut scene. (CBS Home Entertainment)
The Deleted Scenes (18:50) were a mixed bag. The cuts from “Children of the Comet” and “The Elysian Kingdom” (less than 45 seconds total between each episode), as they added very little to the plot and pacing of the episodes. The two cuts from “Ghosts of Illyria” (about two minutes in total) were hit and miss; the first includes a conversation between Ensign Lance and Una, where Lance’s own general mistrust of augments appears as a foil to Pike and Una’s more tolerant tone. The second — a sequence involving Uhura’s bunkmates — was a worthwhile cut.
The five minutes of cut material from “Lift Us Where Suffering Cannot Reach,” though, really stood out to me. The brief flashback to 2249 shows Alura being assisted by a younger — and redshirted — Lieutenant Pike aboard her shuttlecraft, with some brief banter and romantic tension before he disappears back to his ship.
I can easily see why it got cut — it throws the pacing of the episode off completely — but it was a nice little scene, even if just for showing us the nuts and bolts of shooting a scene involving the shuttlecraft set. We also got a new uniform for the 2240s, so thank god this was a deleted scene: we could’ve gotten three weeks of Twitter discourse out of that ribbed collar!
La’an finds peace with her past in this trimmed moment from “All Those Who Wander.” (CBS Home Entertainment)
Filling out the rest of the trimmed material is nearly eleven minutes from “All Those Who Wander,” and it’s a very mixed bag. Some of it — especially the slower, more combative sequence of arguments before the away team comes up with a plan to fight the Gorn — was cut for obvious reasons: it’s not very good, and feels a bit disjointed.
An earlier sequence where La’an, Chapel, Hemmer and Uhura “play dead” to dissuade the Gorn from attacking them also has no real plot purpose, except to show Hemmer putting himself in the way of the Gorn’s attack venom. The two scenes removed from the end of the episode were clearly cut for time but would have provided a little bit of plot closure, especially in the case of Uhura’s request to stay on the Enterprise after her academy graduation.
Mount laughs and Romijn’s phaser goes flying in two moments from the gag reel. (CBS Home Entertainment)
The Gag Reel (2:47) is pretty fun! Gag reels are certainly hit-and-miss, but honestly, this one was a bit of a hit. It certainly solidifies the well-known fact that this is a very fun cast; they are absolutely enjoying every part of this. Even Mount seems a little pleased with himself for continuing the Trek tradition of walking right into a sliding door. Celia Rose Gooding’s gaffes are a complete delight as well, as are a few moments of full cast silliness and pranks.
A moment from “Balance of Terror,” and a similar one in “A Quality of Mercy.” (CBS Home Entertainment)
Finally, to compare with the season-ending “A Quality of Mercy,” CBS Home Entertainment has included an extra bonus feature not previously announced: a full copy of “Balance of Terror,” the classic Star Trek episode which inspired the episode.
(This is the same ‘remastered and enhanced’ version of the Original Series episode which many of you likely already have on disc from the various TOS Blu-ray sets released over the last 14 years, complete with updated visual effects.)
The upcoming 4K UHD Steelbook release, arriving May 16. (CBS Home Entertainment)
Compared to a regular high-definition presentation on Paramount+, the Blu-ray release of Strange New Worlds is going to be your best way to get the best visual experience watching the series, from the exploratory opening title sequence to the many space adventures Captain Pike’s crew experienced over the ten-episode season.
For those of you aiming a bit higher, however, the season will make its debut on 4K UHD Blu-ray this May, with a limited-edition Steelbook release featuring the show in its best overall presentation format yet. The 4K edition will include all the same bonus features found on the Blu-ray release, along with high-quality include Dolby Vision dynamic HDR coloring.
(Keep in mind the 4K UHD release will not include standard Blu-ray discs, so if you want both formats, you’ll need to pick up two copies of the show.)
Looking out into the unknown — literally. (CBS Home Entertainment)
In addition, stick around to hear Sam and Alex discuss their wish for Star Trek to adopt a feature of the Doctor Who media universe with Christmas specials — or an upcoming 60th anniversary special — and a warning about the best way to get the collectibles you’re looking for in the Master Replica sales of Eaglemoss collectibles!
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 continues this week, and we’ve got a new collection of photos from “Dominion” to share with you today!
After finding a new version of Data (Brent Spiner) from deep within the secretive Daystrom Station repository, Jean-Luc Picard (Patrick Stewart) and the Titan crew must continue to hide from compromised Starfleet forces — while making a risky move to find out just what Vadic (Amanda Plummer) wants with Jack Crusher (Ed Speleers).
Here are eleven photos from this week’s episode:
STAR TREK: PICARD — Episode 307: 'Dominion'
1 of 11
STAR TREK: PICARD — "Dominion" (Paramount+)
STAR TREK: PICARD — "Dominion" (Paramount+)
STAR TREK: PICARD — "Dominion" (Paramount+)
STAR TREK: PICARD — "Dominion" (Paramount+)
STAR TREK: PICARD — "Dominion" (Paramount+)
STAR TREK: PICARD — "Dominion" (Paramount+)
STAR TREK: PICARD — "Dominion" (Paramount+)
STAR TREK: PICARD — "Dominion" (Paramount+)
STAR TREK: PICARD — "Dominion" (Paramount+)
STAR TREK: PICARD — "Dominion" (Paramount+)
STAR TREK: PICARD — "Dominion" (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 — and the official trailer for “Dominion.”
DOMINION — Crippled, cornered, and out of options, Picard stages a gambit to trap Vadic and reveal her true motive – a gamble that puts the Titan in the crosshairs and forces Picard and Beverly to question every moral code they’ve ever held.
Written by Jane Maggs. Directed by Deborah Kampmeier.
Star Trek: Picard Season 3 will continue March 30 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.