Home Blog Page 46

New STAR TREK: PICARD Photos — “The Bounty”

The final season of Star Trek: Picard continues this week, and we’ve got a new collection of photos from “The Bounty” to share with you today!
 
After connecting with Worf (Michael Dorn) and Raffi (Michelle Hurd) after Ro Laren’s death, Jean-Luc Picard (Patrick Stewart) and the USS Titan crew — now on the run from Changeling-infested Starfleet Command — make their way to the secretive Daystrom Station to find out what else Vadic’s forces stole from the classified facility.l
 
Here are eighteen photos from this week’s episode, which highlight the return of Geordi La Forge (LeVar Burton) and the first appearance of his daughter, Alandra La Forge (Mica Burton).
 

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 BOUNTY — Now on the run, Picard and the skeleton crew of the U.S.S. Titan must break into Starfleet’s most top-secret facility to expose a plot that could destroy the Federation. Picard must turn to the only soul in the galaxy who can help – an old friend.

 

Written by Christopher Monfette. Directed by Dan Liu.

Star Trek: Picard Season 3 will continue March 23 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.

Win STAR TREK: STRANGE NEW WORLDS Season 1 on Blu-ray!

The first season of Star Trek: Strange New Worlds beams down on Blu-ray this week, and we’re giving three lucky TrekCore readers a chance to score their own copies in a new giveaway.
 

 
From Paramount Home Entertainment and CBS Home Entertainment, the ten-episode first year of Captain Pike adventures arrives on Blu-ray Tuesday, March 21, including all ten first-year episodes and these special features:
 

  • PIKE’S PEAK — Anson Mount takes fans through his journey as Captain Christopher Pike in the first season of Star Trek: Strange New Worlds, providing a glimpse into his portrayal with intimate footage throughout the season.
  • WORLD BUILDING — Led by Production Designer Jonathan Lee and his team, the season’s production design utilized cutting-edge technology to create worlds prior to shoots, allowing the actors to fully immerse themselves into scenes rather than imagine the worlds around them in a green room. Through interviews with producers, cast and crew, fans will learn about the expertise involved in the development process and how the powerful technology was seamlessly integrated into the show.
  • EXPLORING NEW WORLDS — Fans will explore the storylines and characters that bring Star Trek: Strange New Worlds to life with writers, cast and crew.
  • COMMENTARY — Anson Mount and Akiva Goldsman: “Strange New Worlds”
  • DELETED SCENES
  • GAG REEL

Three TrekCore readers will get a copy of Star Trek: Strange New Worlds — Season 1 on Blu-ray, and to have your shot at landing one for yourself, you can enter to win in one of two ways:

Follow us on Twitter and tweet @TrekCore using the hashtag #SNWBlu…

 
…or you can follow us on Facebook and then comment on this post with your desire to receive a copy.

 
You have until 11:59 PM (Eastern time) on Friday, March 24 to get your entry in — we’ll reach out to the winners through Twitter DMs and Facebook private messages after the contest closes to arrange for fulfillment.

Good luck to all!

Contest open to TrekCore readers in the United States only due to supplier restrictions — sorry, international readers, that part’s not up to us.

 

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

*   *   *

In addition, for those of you in the Los Angeles area, be sure to head to the Scum and Villainy Cantina in Hollywood this Friday (March 24) for a special Star Trek: Strange New Worlds trivia night — where you can have your own chance to win exclusive prizes and more.

Hosted by Star Trek series advisor Dr. Erin Macdonald, the one-night-only event features special guests, giveaways, a limited-time menu with Star Trek-themed food and drinks and an exclusive Q&A with the host and special guest!

 

Fans will also receive a special sneak peek at behind-the-scenes footage from the first season of Star Trek: Strange New Worlds, taking place at Scum and Villainy Cantina – 6377 Hollywood Blvd, Los Angeles, CA 90028 – doors will open at 6:30 p.m. PST and trivia will begin at 7:00 p.m. PST.

If you head to the event, have a great time!

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

STAR TREK: THE ORIGINAL SERIES Book Review — “Harm’s Way”

Star Trek: The Original Series — Harm’s Way marks a return to one of Star Trek fiction’s most impressive and ambitious ventures, with a sometimes successful — and sometimes not — addition to the overarching Star Trek: Vanguard meta-narrative. David Mack’s Harm’s Way is at once a tense submarine cat and mouse drama between two classic Star Trek characters, and also an overly violent gore fest that has a few interesting ideas that are mostly lost among pages and pages of mass death.
 
Running from 2005 to 2012, the Vanguard series of novels from authors David Mack, Dayton Ward, and Kevin Dilmore told a serialized story over the course of eight novels that saw Starfleet investigating the mysteries of the ancient galaxy after establishing a starbase at the edge of Federation space — all while contending with the Klingons and the Tholians.
 
Vanguard was a triumphant masterpiece, and highly recommended reading for any Star Trek fan looking to explore the novels. The books are packed with big ideas, bold stories, and great characters. The narrative has an epic scale, and really established the idea that Star Trek novels did not need the main characters from any of the television shows in order to be successful. Vanguard also established that Star Trek could be more mature than what was on television, with great drama, violence appropriate to the story, and some sexual themes that were more adult than anything we saw on screen.
 

Selections from the STAR TREK: VANGUARD novel series.

If you’re just interested in Harm’s Way as an Original Series novel, or you’ve read Vanguard and are interested in seeing what Harm’s Way adds to the story, stick around. But if you have never read Vanguard and you’re interested in checking out Harm’s Way stop now. Go get yourself a copy of the first Vanguard novel (Harbinger, also by David Mack), and enjoy going from there.

David Mack is an accomplished Star Trek novelist. He’s written some of my all-time favorite Star Trek novels, and has never been shy about taking his books to dark or adult places, oftentimes to great effect. Unfortunately, while Harm’s Way has a compelling narrative, it’s not one of Mack’s greatest books. It’s a mixed bag that adds almost nothing substantive to the Vanguard narrative and has uneven execution throughout.

The USS Enterprise is asked to team up with the USS Sagittarius, one of the key starships from the Vanguard series, to track down a Federation scientist who crash landed on Kolasi III and is potentially experimenting with the dangerous Shedai metagenome — the DNA of an ancient and powerful extinct race that enslaved portions of the galaxy millions of years prior. Meanwhile, Captain Kang of the Klingon Defense Force has also been dispatched to the same planet, with similar motives in mind.

The standout part of the novel for me is everything that happens in space. There aren’t enough straight Kirk-versus-Kang stories, and reading the two square off against each other as Kirk works hard to evade Kang and Kang works hard to try and find Kirk, is great reading. Mack successfully gets inside the heads of Kirk and Kang, showing us more about their thinking process, and the fears and insecurities that they conceal from their crew as commanding officers of their respective ships.

Captain Kirk and Captain Kang in “Day of the Dove.” (Paramount)

Harm’s Way is set shortly after the events of “The Doomsday Machine,” and the impact of those events plays an effective role in shaping Kirk’s thinking. It’s a nice little narrative arc that allows him to deal with what happened in the Doomsday Machine incident, and considering what he might have done in the same position as Commodore Decker. And on Kang’s side, we get to see more about how the fabled Klingon commander became the man that we saw in “Day of the Dove,” and later in “Blood Oath,” to great effect. Kang is a great character, and was a good choice of foil for Kirk in this novel.

The cat and mouse game between Kirk and Kang in orbit is by far the best part of the book, but it’s definitely the B-plot to the storyline that takes place on the surface of Kolasi III, where Starfleet and Klingon away teams must work together to destroy a threat to bother galactic powers. The away teams are led by Spock and Mara, and while there is some great stuff in this story about Starfleet and the Klingons being forced to work together, and what that might mean for the future of Federation/Klingon relations, I just can’t get over what an extremely violent slog the last act of the novel was as Mack continuously ups the body count.

Harm’s Way leans hard into darkness without, in my opinion, successfully pulling me back to the light again at the end. There are a couple of scenes, as Starfleet officers are murdering whole ranks of the native sentients on the planet’s surface, where the characters begin to grapple with what they are doing, but these thoughtful moments are quickly swept aside in favor of more grimdark violence in service of the relentless narrative.

Mara and Spock in “Day of the Dove.” (Paramount)

It’s definitely exciting –- David Mack has always known how to skillfully and capably capture the reader and serve you an engrossing tale –- but I didn’t feel good by the time I reached the end. I suppose that’s how Mack wants you to feel, the same as the Starfleet officers put in an impossible situation and forced to compromise their morals for a mission of utmost importance.

But this is the second book in a row of Mack’s, following last year’s Oblivion’s Gate (the concluding chapter of the Coda trilogy), that I have finished feeling… empty. And even though Vanguard –- and lots of other amazing books that Mack has written –- have a lot of violence, the violence always felt important, measured, and important to the story. This just felt violent for the sake of it, and I don’t like that to be my Star Trek.

Overall, David Mack is a great storyteller, and you’ll find yourself swept along in the narrative of Harm’s Way. If that’s all you’re looking for from your Star Trek books, then I recommend it. If you are looking for something a little deeper, or that makes a substantive contribution to the excellent Star Trek: Vanguard, I don’t think that you will find it here.

Star Trek: The Original Series — Harm’s Way is in stores now.

Master Replicas Launches First Eaglemoss STAR TREK STARSHIPS Stock Sale on Sunday, March 19

It has been nine months since longtime Star Trek collectibles vendor Eaglemoss went out of business, leaving fans of their Official Starship Collection have waiting to hear if any of their produced models will ever return to the open market.
 
Now, those of you who missed out on the Official Starship Collection releases have cause for celebration, as the remaining stock of starships produced by Eaglemoss has been bought and is being prepared for sale by Master Replicas… starting this Sunday, March 19!
 
We caught up with with Ben Robinson, the architect of Eaglemoss’ extensive line of Star Trek collectibles, and who is now helping Master Replicas with the sale of Eaglemoss’ remaining stock.
 
He walked us through how the Master Replicas sales will work:
 

They will list 25 products at a time, every two weeks. I think the good thing about that is that people don’t have to find hundreds and hundreds of dollars in one go to try and get anything that they’re missing.

 

It’s not all going to be swept up by the scalpers and sold at these vastly inflated prices, just because you couldn’t afford to get the one you wanted.

 

I think logistically, the idea of dumping all 400 of them in one go was just a complete nightmare and would have been really difficult for everybody. The idea of doing it 25 at a time is to keep it reasonable and to give people a chance.

Every two weeks for as long as they have new products to sell, Master Replicas will be listing 25 new collectibles for sale. This includes all the Star Trek starship model categories — the regular collection, specials, XLs, ships from Star Trek Online, Discovery, Picard, and Lower Decks collections — as well as a limited selection of busts, plaques, and other Star Trek collectibles produced by the company during the 10 years they were in the Trek business.

On top of all the Star Trek products, these sales will also include select other items from various licensed product lines, including The Orville, Stargate, The Expanse and Doctor Who. What Master Replicas will have to sell through their new storefront is dependent on what stock was available at the time Eaglemoss went out of business last year.

Some of the many ships in the Master Replicas inventory. (Photo: Master Replicas)

“There is some of pretty much everything,” Robinson told us, but that doesn’t mean that every model will come with the printed magazines which originally accompanied the Eaglemoss releases. Listings on Master Replicas’ site will indicate whether the ship is accompanied by a magazine or not.

It also means that some of the listings may be very limited quantities, so you will want to move quickly to purchase any “must have” ships on your wish list when they go live every two weeks.

Robinson also stressed that, while there might be efforts underway to identify a new licensee who wants to make new Star Trek starship models in the same vein as the Ealgemoss lines, for the more obscure ships that Eaglemoss produced, the Master Replicas sale is likely your best (and maybe only) opportunity to purchase these again at retail prices.

Said Robinson:

“If you want [a certain ship in the Master Replicas sale], this is probably your best chance to buy it. I think it’s pretty clear that there are lots of ships where we did that were really obscure, that nobody’s going to make again.”

Prices will vary depending on the size of the model, but will mostly align fairly closely to the original Eaglemoss retail prices. That will make Master Replicas the most affordable place for purchasing many of the rarer ship models, which can be listed today on eBay for hundreds of dollars. Additionally, Master Replicas will ship almost anywhere in the world, though expect some shipping charges (and potentially import) duty depending on where you are purchasing.

In addition to the collectibles that had already been released by Eaglemoss that are now getting a re-release, the sales are expected to include some ships that only received very limited releases — or were announced but never offered for sale — including the USS Nog and the USS Liu Cixin, but also items like the Caretaker’s Array, the XL-sized Stargazer, the USS Vancouver from Lower Decks, and the gold-plated XL-sized Enterprise-E.

*   *   *

TrekCore can today reveal the first releases that will be part of the initial round of Master Replicas’ sales, beginning this Sunday:

From the Official Starships Collection subscription lineup:

    • U.S.S. Enterprise NCC-1701 (Constitution Class Refit)
    • U.S.S Enterprise (Star Trek: Phase 2 Matt Jefferies Concept)
    • U.S.S. Enterprise NCC-1701-C (Ambassador Class)
    • U.S.S. Defiant NX-74205 (Defiant Class)
    • I.S.S. Enterprise NCC-1701-D (Mirror Universe)
    • U.S.S. Bozeman NCC-1941 (Soyuz Class)
    • USS Appalachia (Steamrunner Class)
    • U.S.S. Voyager (Rick Sternbach Concept)
    • U.S.S. Valiant (Jim Martin U.S.S. Defiant concept)
    • Valdore (Romulan Warbird)
    • The Baxial (Neelix’s Ship)
    • Steth’s Coaxial Drive Ship

From the XL Starships line:

    • XL: Enterprise NX-01
    • XL: Deep Space 9
    • XL: U.S.S. Prometheus NX-59650
    • XL: U.S.S. Enterprise NCC-1701-E

From Star Trek: Lower Decks:

    • U.S.S. Titan NCC-80102 (Luna Class)
    • XL: U.S.S. Cerritos NCC-75567 (California Class)

From Star Trek: Discovery:

    • U.S.S. Enterprise NCC-1701 (2257)
    • U.S.S. Liu Cixin (Mars Class)
    • U.S.S. Nog NCC-325070 (Eisenberg Class)
    • U.S.S. Kerala NCC-1255 (Shepard Class)

From Star Trek: Picard:

    • U.S.S. Toussaint NCC-87111

From Star Trek Online:

    • U.S.S. Concorde NCC-94500 (Command Battlecruiser)
    • U.S.S. Edison NCC-95160 (Temporal Warship)

These first releases will be available from Sunday, March 19 through Sunday, April 2, when they’ll be replaced by the second round of model ships — that means, if you want one of the ships included in the current wave of sales, you’ll need to move quickly… because once they sell out or leave the Master Replicas site, they may never be available for direct sale again.

For more, head over to the Master Replicas website to sign up for their mailing list, and to bring home any of the first wave of surplus Official Starships models when they go on sale March 19.

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

STAR TREK: PICARD Review — “Imposters”

It’s been almost 30 years since Jean-Luc Picard suffered possibly the most significant betrayal of his career, memorialized brilliantly in the final shot Next Gen’s “Preemptive Strike” — a stone-faced Captain Picard stares silently, with Commander Riker’s final words echoing in his mind, “Her only real regret was that she let you down.”
 
“Imposters” reaches yet another high point with the reintroduction of a fan-favorite character, combined with a return to that infamous moment in the Enterprise-D ready room. It’s a satisfying and heart-breaking conclusion to one of the series’ most memorable, untapped story threads.
 
Showrunner Terry Matalas has mastered the art of showcasing meaningful individual arcs in the first half of this season, by introducing both old and new characters and walking us through their lived-in experiences. (From Picard to Riker to Beverly and her son Jack, to Seven of Nine and Captain Liam Shaw, they’ve all had profound narrative reveals about their characters across four episodes — mostly related to themes of friends, family and finding yourself.)
 
And now, suddenly, the production team has upped the ante again by surprisingly bringing back Ro Laren (Michelle Forbes), who has worked her way back into the good graces of Starfleet as a commander, despite her betrayal of both the Federation and her mentor in joining the Maquis so long ago.
 

Michelle Forbes as Ro Laren. (Paramount+)

It’s a wonderful twist, backed by a brilliant, compelling script that takes the art of exposing your true self to a level I’m not sure we’ve ever seen in Star Trek. You can have all the blood screenings you want — and Dr. Crusher (Gates McFadden) has figured out that those are pretty much useless with these new-look Changelings — but nothing quite reveals who you really are like the deep, biting truth of humanoid pain, loss and regret.

And, boy, do we ever get that truth in the beautiful, one-on-one confrontation between Jean-Luc Picard (Patrick Stewart) and Ro in this episode. No Changeling can replicate that, and as writers Cindy Appel and Chris Derrick showcase here, the only way to truly be real is to expose yourself and admit, understand, and embrace your pain.

In the key set-up for this episode, the Titan has escaped the Shrike and is heading back to Federation space for Picard and Riker (Jonathan Frakes) to face the music. Of course, Captain Shaw (Todd Stashwick) has already notified Starfleet, and the USS Intrepid is on its way to intercept them.

Before long, Ro is on the Titan and face-to-face with Picard and Riker, who — despite having a phaser pointed at him the last time he saw her — is more understanding about her return to Starfleet than Picard, who can’t get past the irony that she of all people is now investigating them for treason.

The set-up with Ro checks a lot of satisfying boxes. First, her untrusting and direct formality is enjoyably framed so the viewer suspects she could be a Changeling, while at the same time, she is slyly setting up the Titan for as much success as possible in avoiding what is later revealed to be a Changeling infestation of Starfleet. (There have apparently been fleetwide issues for months, and Ro suspects it is all pointed to Frontier Day, when Starfleet will have their entire fleet on display.)

Ro has specifically set it up so the Titan will be left with a skeleton crew, even as the officers she has arrived with conduct an exhaustive search for Jack Crusher (Ed Speleers). The son of Jean-Luc and Beverly is being hidden in plain sight in a Starfleet uniform, while also experiencing a myriad of waking dreams and actual heightened experiences.

Tiffany Shepis as Dr. Ohk; Gates McFadden as Dr. Beverly Crusher; Ashlei Sharpe Chestnut as Sidney La Forge. (Paramount+)

In one disturbing vision, he takes out the bridge crew as Ensign Esmar (Jin Maley) says, “I know what you really are.” Uh, that’s cryptic! Elsewhere, he hears a women’s voice saying, “Find me” and “Come home” as part of different dream sequences. And in yet another waking vision, when he is actually discovered by four Changelings, he is triggered by them and easily kills all four, before snapping back to himself.

Beverly compares the incidents to childhood nightmares he previously suffered through, but when he tells her that he had no idea the four people he killed were Changelings, he also must cop to the fact that, “I think there is something very wrong with me.”

The Jack Crusher conundrum layered throughout the season has a little bit of a mystery box feel to it, and certainly is narratively familiar, but it is also undeniably interesting. The mystery of exactly why the Changelings need this one particular human alive is fantastic and being teed up exquisitely.

Elsewhere in the episode, Worf (Michael Dorn) and Raffi (Michelle Hurd) are back and they are having a blast, and passing their fun straight to the viewer. A number of fantastic scenes featuring the crime-fighting friends (Worffi?) begin with Raffi and her former incognito handler sparring in an old school, Worf fight scene straight out of “Sons of Mogh,” among other episodes. In their workout, Worf is basically schooling Raffi and after dropping into a meditative pose, leaves her with the valuable lesson that her “enemies’ aggression will always reveal their weakness.”

It’s a fun moment, accompanied by composer Stephen Barton’s wry version of the familiar Klingon fanfare music, and it leads to a discussion of their plans to try and get to Daystrom Station to further investigate what the Changelings stole from the facility (a disclosure from the previous episode, “No Win Scenario”). However, Worf’s handler denies them — sort of — sending them a message to “Find another way.”

Michael Dorn as Worf; Michelle Hurd as Raffi Musiker. (Paramount+)

The pair don’t exactly listen and instead take the first steps to organize a Daystrom break-in by tracking down Krinn an old associate of the Ferengi Sneed (beheaded by Worf in “Seventeen Seconds”), who specializes in high-security infiltration. When the pair find Krinn, who by design gets the jump on them, we are the recipients of the glorious, surprise reveal of the great Kirk Acevedo playing a scenery-chewing Vulcan who is the kingpin of a local crime-syndicate.

Acevedo is incredible. A genre actor of some renown with standout roles in “12 Monkeys” and “Fringe,” he dives into his role as a kickass, warlord Vulcan with face tattoos and a gnarled ear, who pontificates logically about the world of crime: “There could be no utopia without crime, ergo an organized criminal enterprise is logical.” It’s a special performance and a special moment in the world-building of Vulcans.

I could go on about Krinn (who summarizes the entire season thus far when he says, “In my world, loyalty is what passes for family”), but suffice it to say, despite his belief he has the upper hand on Worffi (yes, we are really doing this; these plutonic friends are henceforth known as Worffi), the pair stage the Klingon’s death via Raffi’s blade to get the jump on the Vulcan warlord, who is now more than happy to provide them with the necessary tech they will need to break into Daystrom Station (“That… would be logical.”).

In the end, the episode comes back to the emotionally charged confrontation between Picard and Ro, as they not so delicately try to work out if the other is a Changeling or not. It’s just an absolutely brilliant set-up for this conversation that Picard angrily admits he has been rehearsing for 30 years.

Ro acquits herself quite well in telling her former mentor that his respect for her was always “conditional” and that his dishonor was in confusing “morality with duty.” For her it was about “standing up to injustice even if it meant betraying” Starfleet.

Michelle Forbes as Ro Laren; Patrick Stewart as Jean-Luc Picard. (Paramount+)

Picard, of course, thinks she’s dishonored herself and tells her as much in calling out the fact she isn’t wearing her beloved earring that at one time he believed was a symbol of her heritage and the family she lost. He practically screams at her in Bajoran that it was her “ego that would lead you to betray me!”

With tension between the two reaching a boiling point as they both begin to acknowledge that their betrayal was mutual, Picard tells her that he believed in her, to which Ro responds, “Only when it was easy for you. If I’d meant so much, you would have understood.”

Picard: “You broke my heart.”
Ro: “And you broke mine.”

And with that, the two former shipmates lower their phasers, as that level of pain can only be achieved by being a good ol’ fashioned solid. It’s a fantastic moment. A miraculous near-conclusion to a story arc that began in 1991 when the character was introduced in a similarly conflicted fashion in The Next Generation episode, “Ensign Ro.”

We say “near-conclusion,” because sadly it doesn’t end there. After informing Picard that Starfleet is compromised at the highest level, she asks him if he trusts her, and, of course, he still does. She then tells him that she’s been working to buy him some time so that the Titan can go on the run and try and fight this thing from the edges. She then slips her previously unseen earring into his hands, a symbol of both the bond between the two, and, of course, a hidden message.

“All these years, I wish you’d known me. And that I had known you. Goodbye, admiral.” It’s now Ro’s time to make the ultimate sacrifice, as her shuttle is commandeered by the aforementioned Changelings that Jack Crusher ends up taking out, planting an explosive on her ship that leaves her with only one option: to destroy the Intrepid’s nacelle so it can’t pursue the Titan.

In a moving exchange just before her death, she tells Picard she is giving back to him what he had given her so many years ago, “a fighting chance.” To which Picard responds, “I do see you, everything. Forgive me it’s only now.” Connection lost. Cue the waterworks.

Patrick Stewart as Jean-Luc Picard; Jonathan Frakes as Will Riker. (Paramount+)

Despite trying to follow his instincts and fall back into his world of structure and meter, Captain Shaw realizes (with the help of Picard, Riker and Seven in his ear) he now has no choice, putting the ship on red alert and getting the Titan the hell out of Dodge.

If all that wasn’t enough, Matalas and his production team have one more storytelling trick in store for us when we find out that Ro had been Worf’s intelligence handler all along, as the Klingon happily reconnects with Picard and Riker when they discover Ro’s earring is actually a data device detailing her investigation.

The reunion of the three Trek stalwarts is a sad one, as they relay the news of Ro’s demise, but it is also the perfect launch into the second half of this outstanding season.

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.

As always, we have a lot to choose from — a chipper turbolift ride, his “reinstatement” of Seven, his reference to the “fastest court martial I’ve ever seen” — but this week we are going with another subtle choice, which serves as a great character revealing moment.

Our pick for “Imposters” is when Shaw leaves the observation lounge early in the episode by saying to Picard, Riker and Seven that as a courtesy: “I’m going to step outside so the three of you can get your bullshit story straight!”

On the surface, yes, this is him being a bit of a dick to our heroes (again), but also if you take a step back, it’s another example of him truly being cool and legitimately giving them an off-the-books chance to try and help themselves. He is a by-the-book Captain that understands there are some necessary grey areas that need to be operated in. He just wants to be left out of them.

Todd Stashwick as Liam Shaw. (Paramount+)

Our second choice this week was Shaw once again showcasing just how good an officer and leader he actually is. Once he moves past his first instinct to have the Titan fall in line with the Intrepid, and as the gravity of their situation becomes clear, he snaps into awesome captain mode by instantly barking out the commands that showcase just how informed and buttoned up he is.

“Red Alert! Battle stations. Starfleet has been compromised. Emergency order 762-Alpha now in effect.”

So cool. The man is ready for all circumstances, he just needs to fight through his own instincts and trauma sometimes to get there. A legendary Star Trek character.

Ok, one more!

During Captain Shaw’s chipper turbolift ride with Picard and Riker, he relays some great moments from TNG lore, referencing: “hot-dropping” the saucer section of the Enterprise-D on a planet (Star Trek: Generations), Picard throwing the Prime Directive out the window to “snog” a villager on Ba’ku (Star Trek: Insurrection), and the averted Devron System time paradox from “All Good Things.”

Shaw: “Basically when it comes to rescues from danger, you two have a real chicken and egg thing happening.”

 

Picard: “Those were the days….”

OBSERVATION LOUNGE

  • Ro Laren’s moment of betrayal in “Preemptive Strike” is, incredibly, the final scene of a regular one-hour episode of The Next Generation’s seven-year run, and the last event prior to the show’s series finale. It’s a big moment, and it’s incredible to see that story continued here.
  • This is now Michael Dorn’s 277th episode as Worf, extending his record appearance tally in Star Trek. As for Worf’s body count in Picard Season 3, we have completely lost track after only five episodes… there’s just too many to count.
  • In staging his death, Worf references having mastered the Kahless technique of regulating his heartrate to nearly imperceptible levels. Prior to his collapse, he utters his most famous quote, telling Raffi, “Today was a good day to die! You are a warrior, and this is a worthy death.”
  • In the moment where Krinn hands over the tech necessary to break into the Daystrom Station, we see a great visual effects shot of the station model and a few shots inside the station for the first time — the station appears to be a blending of design principles found in Jupiter Station and the MIDAS Array.
Jin Maley as Ensign Kova Rin Esmar. (Paramount+)
  • Commander Ro’s ship is the USS Intrepid, the first Duderstadt-class vessel in Trek to date. It’s likely named for Dorothy Duder, the Star Trek: Enterprise food stylist who was also the late wife of Star Trek ship designer and visual-effects artist Doug Drexler.
  • We get yet another reference to Admiral Janeway in this episode, as Ro explains the difficulty reaching Starfleet leadership about the Changeling threat.
  • Following the Dominion War, new Starfleet protocols include having every person on a ship pass through an “internal imaging chamber” before reporting for duty — to verify they are not a Changeling.
  • Crusher verifies that these new-look Changelings are not a new or different species, but an evolution of what we’ve seen before… which means they could be anywhere or anyone and know one would ever know.
  • Krinn wears a large, rather ostentatious, version of the IDIC around his neck. That is only logical for a Vulcan crime lord.
  • It seems there is always an extra phaser or two under the bar at Guinan’s, which Picard puts to good use in his showdown with Ro.
  • Ro’s journey back to Starfleet was just like her first path back to Starfleet service, after the incident on Garon II referenced in “Ensign Ro.” After her defection to the Maquis in “Preemptive Strike,” she eventually turned herself in to Starfleet, was court-martialed and imprisoned, and then was recruited again by Starfleet intelligence. After an arduous rehabilitation program, she proved herself and worked her way up again.
  • The episode is directed by Dan Liu, who has one previous Star Trek directorial credit under his belt, the widely-hailed Strange New Worlds episode “Memento Mori.”
  • Writer Cindy Appel now has five Picard writing credits to her name, while this is the second script for co-writer Chris Derrick.
Michelle Forbes as Ro Laren. (Paramount+)

You may find more variety in specific five-episode runs of Star Trek through the past 50-plus years, but recency bias be damned: there is really no doubt that this first half of Picard Season 3 is right up there with the best in the history of the franchise…. and incredibly, it quite literally has gotten better with each episode.

Next week? The streak continues — but we’ll have lots more to say about that next Thursday!

Jim Moorhouse is the creator of TrekRanks.com and the TrekRanks Podcast.
He can be found living and breathing Trek every day on Twitter as @EnterpriseExtra.

Star Trek: Picard Season 3 will continue with “The Bounty” on March 23 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.

WeeklyTrek Podcast #211 — Beltran Passed on Bringing Chakotay Back for STAR TREK: PICARD, Plus a Khan Musical?!

0

On this week’s episode of WeeklyTrek, brought to you in partnership between The Tricorder Transmissions Podcast Network and TrekCore, host Alex Perry is joined by Filibuster co-host Lee Hutchison to discuss all the latest Star Trek news.
 

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

In addition, stick around to hear Lee’s theory on a major legacy character who may still appear before the end of Star Trek Picard, and Alex’s wish to know the premiere date for season two of Strange New Worlds – maybe we’ll find out in three weeks on First Contact Day?

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!

New STAR TREK: PICARD Photos — “Imposters”

The final season of Star Trek: Picard continues this week, and we’ve got a new collection of photos from “Imposters” to share with you today!
 
Making their way back to Federation space, the Titan crew must now find out more about the surprising threat posed by the return of Changelings — while Raffi (Michelle Hurd) and Worf (Michael Dorn) seek more information about the true nature of the raid on Daystrom Station.
 
Here are thirteen photos from this week’s episode:
 

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.

IMPOSTERS — Caught by Starfleet and facing court martial, paranoia grows as Picard struggles to uncover whether a prodigal crewman from his past has returned as an ally – or an enemy hellbent on destroying them all.

 

Written by Dan Liu. Directed by Cindy Appel & Chris Derrick.

Star Trek: Picard Season 3 will continue March 2 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.

STAR TREK: PICARD Review — “No Win Scenario”

If one single episode of Star Trek ever felt like a fully realized, full-length motion picture, it’s “No Win Scenario,” the fourth installment in Star Trek: Picard’s third season. It’s a beautifully confined, epic adventure about the need for connection to navigate life, and it is rooted in the lore of Star Trek, with the crew each facing death in their own way — some together and some apart.
 
With a run-time of 58 minutes, this episode runs the gamut of extreme emotions – from steely personal contemplation (Riker!) to explosive confrontation (Shaw!) –- with it all culminating in a joyous release worthy of Trek’s most fulfilling, effervescent reveals… space babies!
 
And in the same way that it feels like a grand Star Trek movie of the highest order, it is also presented in its simplest form as a classic TNG episode, with the hero ship stuck in a nebula trying to figure a way out and the crew coming together in the final moments to use their expertise (and a hearty dose of technobabble) to escape to safety.
 

Jean-Luc Picard (Patrick Stewart) and Jack Crusher (Ed Speleers) share a drink. (Paramount+)

Except, of course, this is the souped-up, modern era of television in the 2020s, so the episode is heightened at every corner of production. The blistering pace and visual effects burst off the screen, while the performances perfectly counterbalance the peaks and values of each piece of the story, including the nicely mirrored conversations with Jean-Luc Picard (Patrick Stewart) revealing moments from his past that shaped his life.

In the most prominent of these narrative threads, Picard is on the holodeck as the ship faces certain death trying to connect with his son, Jack Crusher (Ed Speleers), for the first time. Jack is resistant to opening up to him and is instead talking about his seedy adventures rather than anything deeper, insisting he is not a person that needs “to be a part of something.” When Picard admits to him that he does need that connection, he tells him a story about one of the “worst jams” he’d ever been in, featuring his namesake and father escaping a near-death situation in a shuttle years before.

That powerful story is interrupted by the Titan’s captain, Liam Shaw (Todd Stashwick), who has also come to the holodeck in these final moments to contemplate the ship’s impending doom. The intrusion from Shaw is compelling and epic Star Trek, with Shaw revealing for the first time he faced off with Picard at Wolf 359 — and was in a situation on his own ship, the USS Constance, where he and his friends (“They were all my Jack Crusher…”) were randomly selected to live or die based on who made it on to the ship’s final remaining life pod.

Even with his reputation as a scene-stealing character actor before making his Trek debut, Stashwick continues to be a revelation in Star Trek: Picard. In this scene in particular, his seething resentment and deep hurt are boiling underneath the skin with illustrative lines like, “I was just an engineer, just a grease monkey” and “It was like space itself was burning.” (Underneath it all, the sound design includes the subtlest hints of voices and phaser fire in a battle; that’s an extremely nice extra bit of detail.)

It all leads to a fiery emotional release reminiscent of that timeless Picard/Sisko showdown from Deep Space Nine’s “Emissary” when Shaw exclaims:

“You know where your old man was on that day? He was on that Borg cube, setting the world on fire! They have a name for you: Locutus of Borg. The only Borg so deadly they gave him a goddamn name!”

The line sits in the room like a layer of thick smoke from one of Vadic’s cigarettes.

Todd Stashwick as Liam Shaw. (Paramount+)

Jack interjects to try and restrain Shaw’s attack, but as he did 30 years prior with Captain Benjamin Sisko, Picard simply says, “I understand.” But in that devastating moment Jean-Luc is saying it to both men. To Shaw, for the obvious trauma he suffered at the hands of Locutus, but also to Jack, for what he suffered in not being there for him and in his reluctance to open up to his newfound father.

As Jean-Luc leaves the room sad and affected, Jack chases him down, calling him “Admiral” (again, failing to connect more personally), and now Picard has completely disconnected from the situation, doing that thing we’ve seen him do as far back as “Encounter at Farpoint,” stoically saying, “Thank you for your time, Jack. It meant a lot to me.” Ouch.

The scene is a perfect mirror for Picard’s flashback being interspersed throughout the episode where he tells a room full of young Starfleet officers about the many lessons he has learned throughout his life. One of the most important is that “you are only really ever as good as those around you. Your crew becomes part of you. Complete you. They lift you up to accomplish the things you never could do alone.”

This message finally hits home for Jack in the final moments of the episode, but not before the gut-punch reveal at the conclusion of the flashback when we see that Jack was there in Guinan’s Los Angeles-based 10 Forward bar on Earth all along. He is listening in the background and contemplating connecting with his father five years prior, eventually asking him incognito about a life outside of his crew — only to pull back at the last second when Picard disingenuously says, “Starfleet has been the only family I ever needed.”

The venerable captain, mired in more than a decade of inactivity at the time of the statement, knows he doesn’t really mean it.

Will Riker (Jonathan Frakes) in a private moment aboard the Titan. (Paramount+)

As with Jack, Will Riker (Jonathan Frakes) is going through a personal introspective journey in this episode, trying to come to grips with the loss of his own son after so many years. In his confrontation with Picard, Riker has given up all hope of the ship surviving, and has also given up on himself, knowing that Deanna, who feels everything, “couldn’t live with (him) feeling nothing.” It’s an incredibly emotional, heartfelt performance from Frakes, who delivers the same goods here as he did in “Seventeen Seconds,” as both actor and director.

In the end, Riker — who had tried and failed to record a personal message to Deanna Troi numerous times throughout the episode — is finally able to face his wife directly, where we see another brief, but powerhouse performance from Marina Sirtis, echoing her strong turn in “Nepenthe” in the series’ first season. Riker knows their issues are on him, and vows to fix it, describing the “beautiful and amazing” birth they were all there to witness in surviving the nebula and saving the Titan. (That birth features hundreds of ridiculously cool space jellyfish with four eyes and a fluid bounce in their propulsion, another standout creature design from the great Neville Page.)

To get to that finale, though, we must first navigate a round of “choose the Changeling” with Seven of Nine (Jeri Ryan), who has remained off duty (another Riker ruse!) to conduct her search on the downlow in an unofficial capacity. She enlists the help of the incapacitated Captain Shaw, since no one knows the ship better than him.

Their search, which includes some fantastic Changeling 101 pontificating from Shaw, is eventually a success, and coincides with the “dipshit from Chicago” also being recruited by Picard to assist in the Titan’s escape from the nebula because of their need for an old grease monkey to hot wire the nacelles.

The set design and functionality of the nacelle control room in which Seven and Shaw set-up their final trap for the Changeling, now in the form of Lt. Sidney LaForge (Ashlei Sharpe Chestnut), is just spectacular. The tinkering. The use of a 25th century mechanic’s creeper for Shaw to slide in and out of the relays and conduits. The direction from Frakes looking down into the machinery as the Titan captain works. It’s all immaculate.

Seven of Nine (Jeri Ryan) goes on a Changeling hunt. (Paramount+)

Of course, it doesn’t hurt when the writing to accompany the visuals is just as smart as Dave Blass’ production design, with Seven cleverly calling back to a scene in “Seventeen Seconds” to determine La Forge’s true identity when she refers to the former Borg drone as “Commander Hansen” instead of “Commander Seven.” At that precise moment, Seven instantaneously kills the Changeling, showcasing once again that showrunner Terry Matalas and his team don’t have time to waste with storytelling tropes. Seven then uses that opportunity to finally get through to Shaw that it’s respectful to use a person’s chosen name, in any context. “Good call,” says Shaw. (More connection!)

Back on the bridge, the crew is about to use those open nacelles to catch a wave of the energy contractions that Beverly Crusher (Gates McFadden) has determined are coming from a space-faring creature giving birth at the center of the nebula (which is actually the amniotic fluid of its womb).

With Picard now in the captain’s chair courtesy of Riker, the pair assume their familiar positions in command while undertones of Jerry Goldsmith’s Next Generation title score swell in the background from composer Stephen Barton. The swells of music are accompanied by the swell of goosebumps as Picard tells the real Ensign LaForge, “Let’s go home.”

In a moment straight out of the classic TNG episode “Booby Trap,” the Titan must position itself to clear a path out of the nebula, so Picard has his son shouting out coordinates, while he dictates the course corrections to La Forge piloting the ship. It’s a special moment seeing Picard at the helm of Starfleet vessel again, guiding it out of danger.

With the path clear and life support completely exhausted, the Titan catches the wave to the edge of the nebula where the Shrike is waiting to pounce. Without missing a beat, the best first officer in the fleet returns to his familiar role and engages the ship’s tractor beam to grab an asteroid from their stern and hurl it forward to knock the Shrike out of commission. It’s a gratifying comeuppance for Captain Vadic (Amanda Plummer), who used a similar trick back in “Disengage” to throw a ship at the Titan.

Move over Riker Maneuver from Star Trek: Insurrection; the Riker Maneuver from Picard has arrived!

Will Riker, Jean-Luc Picard, Beverly Crusher (Gates McFadden), and Jack Crusher. (Paramount+)

With the ship clear of the nebula and no longer engaged with the Shrike, the series finally takes a breath and closes out the episode with a reset voiceover from Picard wondering exactly what Vadic wants with his son (who at the same time is seeing the same visions he saw in “Seventeen Seconds” of red veins and smoke, with a soft voice in the distant mysteriously saying, “Find me”).

On its own, “No Win Scenario” is basically a perfect episode of Star Trek, but at this point in time it is fair to highlight an emerging trend from the first half of the season after four overall episodes. In an interesting contrast to what we saw in Picard Season 2, where the show was criticized by many for being repetitively Earth-bound for about 80 percent of the season, this season of Picard has gone in the opposite direction.

In many respects, when positioned in context across nearly four hours of the new season, the show actually feels a bit claustrophobic and monotone, with virtually every scene this season taking place on a myriad of look-a-like Starfleet sets or at 10 Forward or on Vadic’s ship (give or take a few seedy markets on M’Talas Prime).

As the kids say these days, it wouldn’t hurt to get outside and “touch some grass,” but that doesn’t seem to be in the cards anytime soon.

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.

Even though this episode saw Captain Shaw become the first character in Star Trek history to be called either a “dick” or a “dipshit” — and they both happened in the same episode! — our choice this week is a little more subtle and occurs when Seven shows up at his quarters to ask for help.

As she rings the doorbell, he repeatedly answers with “Don’t come” (ring) “Don’t come!” before finally relenting and allowing her in with, “Fine. Open.” It’s a brilliant and hilarious send-up of a great Star Trek trope, even before he follows up with, “Hey, Hansen. Bang up job your heroes are doing with my ship. Love the view.”

We also considered his self-aware and character revealing pronouncement to his crew following his outburst at Picard, “Forgive me… at some point asshole became a substitute for charm.”

(And, yes, Picard is referred to as a ‘private dick’ in both “The Big Goodbye” and “Manhunt,” but that doesn’t count! And Gillian Taylor never actually calls Kirk and Spock “dipshits.”)

Jack and Beverly Crusher in the USS Titan’s sickbay. (Paramount+)

OBSERVATION LOUNGE

  • This episode takes place on and around Stardate 78183.10.
  • We don’t check in with Worf or Raffi this week, making “No Win Scenario” the first episode of the series since her introduction in “Maps and Legends” in which Michelle Hurd does not appear.
  • According to Jack Crusher, M’Talas IV is “a vile place; a real dump.” (Sorry, Terry.)
  • Lest you think last season’s Jurati-Borg situation from the end of Picard Season 2 is being completely ignored this year, Captain Shaw makes a brief mention of that whole mess: “Forget about all that weird shit on the Stargazer — the real Borg are still out there!”
  • Apparently Picard and Worf had a Hirogen encounter where the pair beat the Alpha at his own hunt!
  • We get yet another Janeway reference this week, when the young officers being regaled by Picard asked if she helped him when he went face-to-face with the Hirogen.
  • The admiral also references events from “Darmok” and the planet Argelius from “Wolf in the Fold” in his stories.
  • It’s a bit challenging to reconcile Picard’s public storytelling session — set at the 10 Forward bar “five years ago” — with the admiral’s status as “the hermit of La Barre” when we first returned to this era in Season 1.
  • It is worth noting right now that it is unclear if the new meaty-looking Changeling effects are an updated, modernized visual effect — or if it’s something to do with this group of Changeling dissidents who have removed themselves from the Great Link.
  • And speaking of meaty Changeling visual effects… what the hell was that hand-slicing, subspace, resi-goo phone call made by Vadic? (We do not accept the charges!)
  • On duty in sickbay, Beverly Crusher once again dons a blue lab coat.
  • A golden Ambassador-class model can be seen in the foreground in Picard’s 10 Forward flashback, along with a publicity still of the former Enterprise-D captain and Guinan from Star Trek: Generations.
  • The Vulcan game Kal-toh, popularized on Voyager, can be seen in Ensign Foster’s quarters.
Ashlei Sharpe Chestnut as Ensign Sidney La Forge. (Paramount+)
  • Similar to the “double red alert” moment in “The Conscience of the King” when the profile of a phaser is seen hidden behind a light panel in Kirk’s quarters, Seven finds the Changeling’s bucket behind a lit-up light panel in Foster’s quarters.
  • It’s nice to see that Odo’s choice of a Cardassian-style, art-deco bucket for regenerating has caught on across the Great Link — and it’s nice to see Starfleet still has a photo of Odo (the late Rene Auberjonois) on file.
  • As the Shrike jettisons the portal device in order to go deeper into the nebula, we briefly see a Daystrom Institute placard rush by camera as it tumbles through space.
  • The needle drop which opens the episode is Slam Alan’s 2015 song “Can’t Break Away from That Girl.”
  • This is the 29th franchise directorial credit for Jonathan Frakes, including his two Trek films, and the sixth writing credit for Star Trek: Picard showrunner Terry Matalas. Sean Tretta, who co-wrote the episode with Matalas, now has two writing credits on the series, both from this season. He was a prolific writer on the Matalas-helmed series 12 Monkeys, with more than a dozen writing credits on the show.
  • Voyager’s “Parallax” established that Starfleet holodeck power systems aren’t compatible with the rest of a starship’s systems — and Picard expands on that idea this episode, explaining that the simulators rely on independent power cells to provide a ship’s crew a safe place during crisis situations. (In a cheeky Voyager reference, Jack quips, “Everyone crams in here pretending it’s some sort of tropical paradise while the ship implodes around them.”
Any holodeck in a storm… (Paramount+)

Through four episodes, there’s little doubt that each episode of Picard Season 3 has literally been better than the previous one. Will that trend continue next week? All signs point to yes.

Jim Moorhouse is the creator of TrekRanks.com and the TrekRanks Podcast.
He can be found living and breathing Trek every day on Twitter as @EnterpriseExtra.

Star Trek: Picard Season 3 will continue with “Imposters” on March 16 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.

WeeklyTrek Podcast #210 — STAR TREK: DISCOVERY Sets Course for Its Final Season

0

On this week’s episode of WeeklyTrek, brought to you in partnership between The Tricorder Transmissions Podcast Network and TrekCore, host Alex Perry is joined by On This Stardate co-host Bryan Cain to discuss all the latest Star Trek news.
 

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

In addition, stick around to hear Bryan’s theory about what significance that nebula in Star Trek: Picard’s third season might have on the story, and Alex’s reflections on the direction of the Star Trek franchise after Discovery’s cancellation — are we headed for a better or worse place than we are at right now?
 

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!

New STAR TREK: PICARD Photos — “No Win Scenario”

The final season of Star Trek: Picard continues this week, and we’ve got a new collection of photos from “No Win Scenario” to share with you today!
 
After Jack Crusher (Ed Speleers) and Seven of Nine (Jeri Ryan) uncovered a Changeling aboard the USS Titan just as Vadic (Amanda Plummer) attacked the ship, Jean-Luc Picard (Patrick Stewart) and Will Riker (Jonathan Frakes) find themselves at odds during a dark moment.
 
Here are fourteen photos from this week’s episode:
 

NO WIN SCENARIO — With time running out, Picard, Riker and crew must confront the sins of their past and heal fresh wounds, while the Titan, dead in the water, drifts helplessly toward certain destruction within a mysterious space anomaly.

 

 

Written by Terry Matalas & Sean Tretta. Directed by Jonathan Frakes.

Star Trek: Picard Season 3 will continue March 2 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.