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!
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:
STAR TREK: PICARD — Episode 305: 'Imposters'
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STAR TREK: PICARD — "Imposters" (Paramount+)
STAR TREK: PICARD — "Imposters" (Paramount+)
STAR TREK: PICARD — "Imposters" (Paramount+)
STAR TREK: PICARD — "Imposters" (Paramount+)
STAR TREK: PICARD — "Imposters" (Paramount+)
STAR TREK: PICARD — "Imposters" (Paramount+)
STAR TREK: PICARD — "Imposters" (Paramount+)
STAR TREK: PICARD — "Imposters" (Paramount+)
STAR TREK: PICARD — "Imposters" (Paramount+)
STAR TREK: PICARD — "Imposters" (Paramount+)
STAR TREK: PICARD — "Imposters" (Paramount+)
STAR TREK: PICARD — "Imposters" (Paramount+)
STAR TREK: PICARD — "Imposters" (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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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!
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:
STAR TREK: PICARD — Episode 304: 'No Win Scenario'
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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.
After traversing the mushroom highway, fleeing the Mirror Universe, and jumping centuries into the far future, Star Trek: Discovery’s story will come to an end next year.
Announced today through StarTrek.com and the official franchise social media channels, the upcoming fifth season of Star Trek: Discovery, currently in post-production, will be the show’s last adventure — and won’t be here until sometime in early 2024, nearly two years after the Season 4 finale in March 2022.
Here’s the official statement on Discovery’s conclusion, attributed to franchise boss Alex Kurtzman and showrunner Michelle Paradise.
“Dearest Disco Family,
You discovered the mycelial network with us. You were there when we greeted Georgiou, Spock, Pike and Una… as we jumped into the future… as our heroes restored the Federation, solved the DMA and left their home galaxy… as Michael Burnham, former mutineer, sat in the Captain’s chair for the very first time.
There is much adventure yet to come in season five – but today we share the bittersweet news that after 65 incredible episodes with Captain Burnham and the crew of the U.S.S. Discovery, the upcoming season premiering in early 2024 will be our last. No series continues forever, of course, so this day was always going to come. We are forever grateful to have been able to share such an amazing journey with you.
Thank you for your love of DISCOVERY. Thank you for inviting us into your homes, and for trusting us with this show. Thank you for appreciating and supporting our incredible cast and crew. Thank you for the passion and excitement you’ve brought to this fandom – online, at conventions, and when we’ve seen you out in the world. We’ve loved meeting you, hearing what DISCOVERY means to you, and getting to share what it means to us, too. And rest assured, we’re not going anywhere just yet! There’s still work to be done to finish season five and we’re excited for you to see our exciting and satisfying conclusion.
We also have some very special fan events planned for the months ahead, so that we can all celebrate DISCOVERY and our incredible cast together. More details to come on that – and on our premiere date – very soon. Until then, as Burnham would say: Let’s fly!”
While Season 5 finished principal photography back in November, The Hollywood Reporter notes that “there will be additional filming to help craft a conclusion for the series,” indicating that the year wasn’t intended to be the show’s last when production began.
The extent of that additional filming — whether it be additional episodes or simply a re-do of the Season 5 finale’s ending to wrap the show — is yet to be known.
Sonequa Martin-Green as DISCOVERY’s Captain Michael Burnham. (Paramount+)
Series lead Sonequa Martin-Green (Captain Michael Burnham) also shared a statement on Discovery’s announced conclusion (through the above-linked Hollywood Reporter article):
“I can hardly believe that this mind-blowing journey with Discovery is ending. I’m astoundingly blessed by God to have played Captain Michael Burnham and to have taken part in a legacy alongside an extraordinary cast, phenomenal crew and remarkable writing team.
To our most supportive partners at CBS Studios and Paramount+, who insisted on making television history, I’m deeply grateful. I’m also deeply grateful for the creative collaboration with our showrunners Michelle Paradise and Alex Kurtzman, as well as Olatunde Osunsanmi and the incomparable team of executive producers. I will never forget how it felt to stand together as a show family, cradling the heirloom of Trek with all those from the franchise at large and with the fans.
The fans welcomed us into their hearts as we launched a new iteration of Trek and an entire entertainment platform, and we’ll never forget it. 65 episodes later, here’s to the entire company of Star Trek: Discovery, to the show and its fifth and final season, to its beloved fans and to all those who envision a better future. Let’s fly…”
We’ve got a long wait until the end of Star Trek: Discovery’s journey, but in the meantime there’s still plenty of Trek to come in 2023, including the final episodes of Star Trek: Picard and additional seasons of Star Trek: Strange New Worlds, Star Trek: Lower Decks, and Star Trek: Prodigy.
Strange New Worlds and Lower Decks are expected to get additional season orders, and Prodigy’s second season is likely to be split into 10-episode runs in 2023 and 2024 (mirroring the show’s first two years on the air). Official news on these shows, however, has not yet been announced by Paramount+.
Star Trek: Discovery is currently in production on its fifth and final season, expected to debut on Paramount+ sometime in early 2024.
In addition, stick around to hear Abby’s theory about the role that Lore and Moriarty might play in Star Trek: Picard’s third season, and Alex’s theory that — since we don’t yet know what the next show to premiere after Star Trek: Picard will be — that there might be a bit of a wait for new Star Trek once Picard concludes.
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!
It would be easy to write 2,000 words on just the final 15 minutes of “Seventeen Seconds,” an episode of Star Trek: Picard absolutely packed with intense scenes and dense plotting. The episode moves from one connective thread to the next and the next with massive reveals of character, heart, and storytelling along the way. It’s 56 minutes of jam-packed Star Trek that absolutely flies by, and it is the high point of the season thus far, culminating in one of the great reveals of a villain ever seen on Star Trek.
Against all odds, showrunner Terry Matalas has connected this season in unforeseen ways to the 90s era of Star Trek, with the ultimate link in this great narrative being the revelation that the season’s big bad are… the Changelings! It’s a surprise that no one saw coming, even with so many breadcrumbs laid out for us along the way. (As early as the season premiere, Jack Crusher described the foe hunting he and his mother as having “different faces” each time they were confronted, though many fans speculated this related to the “Conspiracy” parasites.)
Well that’s not good. (Paramount+)
The reveal of the Changelings was achieved so subtly in its execution that when you see it happen, it takes a minute to process what has occurred. In a fistfight between Jack Crusher (Ed Speleers) and Ensign Foster (Chad Lindberg), the Titan crewman’s face briefly shimmers distortedly in a way that would likely only be familiar to a long-time fan of Star Trek. Foster, of course, has been seen side-glancing his way through the first few episodes of the season, while also apparently sabotaging the Titan so it could be tracked by Captain Vadic (Amanda Plummer) and the Shrike.
The slight revelation of the Titan crewman’s face does not come with a proclamation of “Changelings!” by anyone in the room — we’ll leave that to Worf later — and is so brief and sly, it takes a moment to even understand what is happening. The reveal leaves the viewer alone in their thoughts for a minute with, “Wait, was that?!? I think that was … Holy crap! That was a Changeling?!?” It isn’t until a minute later when Jack meets up with Seven that they are able to warn the ship that there’s a Changeling on board… and the full scope of this twist is finally beginning to be understood.
It’s a fantastic moment, buoyed a few minutes later when we see Worf (Michael Dorn) and Raffi (Michelle Hurd) interrogate a human named Titus Rikka (Thomas Dekker) who turns out to be very much not a human, but a Changeling that was involved in the theft of the “world-ending portal tech” seen throughout this season. It turns out that theft from the Daystrom Station was a distraction from something else that was stolen — told you the plotting was dense!
Rikka resists Worf’s questioning. (Paramount+)
When Worf, who faced off directly against the Founders in his time on Deep Space 9, knowingly announces, “How long have you been away from the Great Link?” and the Changeling spits out that the worlds of humans and solids are on the verge of destruction, we finally realize that this season is actually about to give us Next Gen vs. the Changelings – and who would have ever thought that would be a thing? Amazing.
The set-up for this rogue group of Changelings is pitch perfect: a terrorist faction, apparently being led by Vadic, broke away from the Great Link when they were unwilling to accept defeat in the Dominion War. Worf was contacted by “a close friend…a man of honor” — Odo, of course, in a nice nod to the late René Auberjonois — who informed him about this schism in the Great Link, but Starfleet never acknowledged their existence for fear of reigniting the Dominion War. With the pieces now a little more firmly in place, Worf and Raffi partner up to head off to Daystrom Station to try and figure out what else was stolen.
Despite the exciting news that the Changelings have returned, ultimately this episode should probably be remembered for another ubiquitous thread running throughout the history of Star Trek: the incredible contributions of Jonathan Frakes. It is not an exaggeration to say this might be Frakes’ crowning achievement in the Trek universe, where he not only takes command of the Titan as William Riker, while going head-to-head on-screen with his friend and mentor Jean-Luc Picard (Patrick Stewart) — but he also directs the episode in real life, deftly weaving together a myriad of one-on-one character scenes into a seamless tapestry. It’s a spectacular piece of work.
Picard and Riker in happier times. (Paramount+)
From a flashback scene with Picard and Riker (toasting the birth of Riker’s since-passed son, Thaddeus) the episode jumps to a short, but important, scene between Seven (Jeri Ryan) and Sidney La Forge (Ashlei Sharpe Chestnut), then to Picard and Beverly (Gates McFadden) , then to Riker and Jack, then back to Picard and Riker, and then to Seven and Jack, and then Raffi and Worf… it’s a complicated episode to say the least.
Of course, the biggest of those scenes is the showdown between Picard and Beverly, where the former Starfleet doctor basically has to defend her decision for keeping Jean-Luc out of the life of her son for the past 20 years. Ultimately, for Beverly it came down to Picard’s status — both chosen and bequeathed — as a galaxy-saving hero who embraced the role.
“When the galaxy comes calling for you,” says Beverly, “you are not put upon by it. You love it. Don’t tell me you would have walked away.” And she’s definitely not wrong about that, as we saw Jean-Luc doing exactly that at the start of the season, leaving Laris behind to come to the aid of Beverly, ironically.
Beverly tells him that she lost her parents, her husband and then Wesley “to the same stars that own you. I thought I could protect mine. I didn’t know if I could protect yours.” Quite rightly, Jean-Luc is unaccepting that she never gave him a chance, though, and is particularly upset that she used him confiding in her about his own fears of parenthood and the challenges he faced with his own father to cut him out of the biggest decision of his life.
A conversation two decades in the making. (Paramount+)
In a great reference to the narrative thread of Picard Season 2, he is oddly comforted knowing now that he would have never been the same kind of man as his father — a gift from Q — but is affected by the fact that he could have perhaps learned that 20 years prior.
As for Frakes, his showdown with Picard is an all-timer, and honestly probably something we never thought we’d see in Star Trek. With Riker being given control of the Titan by an incapacitated Captain Shaw (Todd Stashwick), the pair plot a quick escape from the Shrike that results in a nice show of camaraderie with Picard joking to his friend, “I think it might be time for you to call me Number One.”
Those good feelings do not last though, and by the end of the episode, the two are legitimately pissed at each other, with Riker eventually telling his friend, “Remove yourself from the bridge. You just killed us all.”
Throughout the conflict, Picard had been advocating for an aggressive engagement with the Shrike, especially after getting an upper hand strategically after exposing the Changeling infiltrator. But Riker was having none of it and wanted to position the ship for an escape and keep Shaw’s crew safe.
Their conflict comes to a head as part of a visual effects extravaganza with Vadic twice using the experimental portal tech to first relocate the Titan into the Shrike’s line of fire and then to deposit the Titan’s own photon torpedoes onto their stern to knock the ship out of commission. In short, they are thoroughly getting their ass kicked — and Riker blames Picard for convincing him to go on the offensive.
The Titan falls victim to Vadic’s portal technology. (Paramount+)
The work from Jason Zimmerman’s visual effects team is a feast for the eyes in these scenes inside the nebula, especially when the dimensional folding of the portal weapon is being showcased. Of course, during the action on the bridge, the Titan’s impressive Vulcan science officer Lt. T’Veen (Stephanie Czajkowski) relays her theory that they are not actually in a nebula, but an unknown anomaly with both electrical and biological signatures. Going deeper into the “nebula” is not a “logical” option, but ultimately that is the only choice for the Titan, which the Shrike is more than happy to allow, pushing them deeper toward the gravity well in its quest to get their hands on Jack Crusher.
Finally, at the emotional heart of this jam-packed episode, is the title, “Seventeen Seconds,” which is powerfully represented as the time two new fathers (first Riker, and then Picard) have to contemplate their fears and life choices as they traverse a turbolift to hopefully aid their ailing sons.
For Riker, the trip came years before as Thaddeus was being born on the Titan and things weren’t going well. And for Picard it comes near the end of this episode as Riker cajoles him to get to sickbay after Jack is badly injured by the Changeling. Riker has been pushing Picard to connect with Jack at all costs and before it was too late, but Riker’s action are based on the son he lost and the decisions he maybe wishes he could have made then to save him. For Picard, he is now looking at Jack and the life he has missed as a big “What If?” situation and is aggressively trying to save him, to make up for the lost time that Riker knows he can never get back.
Picard watches as Beverly treats Jack’s injuries. (Paramount+)
It was earlier in the episode, prior to the loss of his son, when Riker told Picard, as Thad’s life hung in the balance, that “You’d burn the world to save them.” And now that is pretty much exactly what Picard is trying to do, knowing Vadic is basically not going to stop until she gets to Jack Crusher.
The theme of family and loss and the choices we make bristle with emotion and gravitas throughout almost every scene of the episode (as it has the entire season), and it is represented here quite poignantly in the thoughts of two fathers across 17 seconds.
If all that wasn’t enough, the episode also sets up two exciting threads for future episodes. First that there is now a Changeling loose on the Titan that needs to be identified, and second a new mystery involving those cryptic red flashes seen by Jack after being attacked by the Changeling as he was fighting for his life.
It’s incredible that we are only three episodes into this phenomenal 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.
There are lots to choose from this week, including the fantastic delivery of the line, “Anybody else want to throw some weird shit at me?” And the reverse Stashwick Moment when Picard acknowledges that he owes the “ship’s captain an apology,” definitively justifying Shaw’s actions from the get-go.
But this week’s moment is again highlighting Shaw’s decisiveness in quickly transferring command to Riker when he was hurt and incapacitated. No ego here. No trying to skirt the issue and come-up with a workaround. Shaw knew he was hurt and didn’t hesitate for a second before relinquishing command and telling Riker, “You got us into this. You are going to get us out.”
In one additional Moment, Shaw is once again ahead of the game when he comes face-to-face with Jack, the man most responsible for the condition his ship is in, and forces out a question while receiving major medical attention: “How does she keep finding us?!” The moment spurs an idea in Jack who then uncovers the sabotage on the ship’s warp coils.
Shaw transfers command to Riker. (Paramount+)
OBSERVATION LOUNGE
This is now Michael Dorn’s 276th episode as Worf, extending his record appearance tally in Star Trek.
This is the 28th directorial credit for Jonathan Frakes (which includes his two Trek films), and the third writing credit on Star Trek: Picard for both Jane Maggs and Cindy Appel.
Shoutout to the scenes with Worf and Raffaela (her full name, by which he always refers to her – a nice touch), which bring a welcome twist. Just when you think the two might be butting heads (a trope we’ve seen way too often, not just in Trek, but literally everywhere, in this type of relationship), Worf flips the script and tells her, “You have the heart of a warrior, and the instincts.” He proceeds to tell her that together they will track down the person who paid the Ferengi (Worf still won’t use the name of any Ferengi – another nice touch), find out the next phase of their plan, and stop them. To which Raffi, after a very long beat, can only respond with – “Cool.” You love to see it.
Worf throws a Klingon D’k tagh dagger at Raffi when she approaches him aboard La Sirena.
The traditional Klingon dagger returns. (Paramount+)
The Klingon introduces himself as “Worf, son of Mogh, House of Martok; son of Sergei, House of Rozhenko; bane to the Duras family; slayer of Gowron.” He might as well give Raffi a copy of his resume!
Thomas Dekker appears as Titus Rikka, his third role in the Star Trek universe, having previously appeared as a child actor in Star Trek: Generations and in two episodes of Voyager (“Learning Curve” and “Persistence of Vision”). Dekker is best known for his genre roles in Heroes and Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles.
Seven of Nine keeps a chrome model of the USS Voyager on display in her quarters.
As Beverly recalls Picard’s brushes with death over the years, she references Remanassassins who went after him in the Donatra sector — likely named for the Romulan commander seen in Star Trek: Nemesis.
After the Rikka shapeshifter reverts to its gelatinous form, Worf fires a ‘dolphin’ phaser at it, the same style introduced in Star Trek: Nemesis.
Worf favors a now-old-style phaser. (Paramount+)
For the first time we can remember on a Starfleet ship, a rear window is part of the bridge configuration on the Titan, thanks to the open doors to the briefing room. For much of the action in this episode, the visual effects team impressively showcase the nebula in a corridor at the back of the bridge level where Shaw actually positions crew to “look out the goddamn back window” when their sensors are down to help track the Shrike.
Shoutout to Casperia Prime, where, uh, apparently Jack was conceived. The vacation planet has been mentioned a couple of times on DS9 (“Change of Heart” and “Inquisition”), but has yet to be seen.
The writers figuratively have Beverly “wave a light over” Jack’s English accent, which is explained away as having stuck from his time schooling in London.
Verterium, the source element being used by Vadic to secretly track the Titan in the nebula, was previously referenced in Voyager’s “Investigations” as an element used in the construction of warp coils. The verterium link is discovered by Seven and Jack.
Marina Sirtis appears briefly in reprising her role as Deanna Troi, the first-time we’ve seen the live-action version of the character since the Season 1 episode “Nepenthe.” She has also appeared in one episode of Lower Decks, “No Small Parts.” (Troi will return later in the season.)
Deanna isn’t having as much fun back at home. (Paramount+)
In another universe, three visual cliffhangers in three weeks of a ship in distress inside the same nebula might be a point of criticism, but not here.
“Seventeen Seconds,” a celebration of the work of Jonathan Frakes across 35-plus years with the Star Trek franchise, is easily the best episode of the season to date — with the promise of bigger and better things to come.
Star Trek: Picard Season 3 will continue with “No Win Scenario” on March 9 on Paramount+ the United States and on CTV Sci Fi Channel and Crave in Canada.
It will arrive the next day on Paramount+ on February 17 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: Lower Decks Season 3 is heading to home media in two months, and like the show’s previous releases, you’ll be able to get the animated series’ latest episodes on Blu-ray, DVD, and digital for your personal archives — but this time, there’s a twist.
Let’s get the easy stuff out of the way first: all ten episodes of Star Trek: Lower Decks’ third season will be available on DVD April 25, and the release will include several audio commentary tracks with both the series’ cast, production team, and guest stars — including Jonathan Frakes (Riker), Nana Visitor (Kira), and Armin Shimerman (Quark) on the episodes in which their characters appear.
Audio Commentary by Jonathan Frakes, Tawny Newsome and Mike McMahan (Ep. 301)
Audio Commentary by Nana Visitor, Armin Shimerman, Tawny Newsome, Noël Wells, Jack Quaid, Eugene Cordero and Mike McMahan (Ep. 306)
Audio Commentary by Barry Kelly, Kether Donohue and Mike McMahan (Ep. 307)
Audio Commentary by Tawny Newsome, Noël Wells, Jack Quaid, Jerry O’ Connell and Mike McMahan (Ep. 308)
Audio Commentary by Jack Quaid, Dawnn Lewis and Fred Tatasciore (Ep. 310)
Docking at Deep Space 9 (Ep. 306)
Lower Decktionary Season 3
Unfortunately, things won’t be as simple when it comes to the Blu-ray release of Season 3this time around. Possibly due to low sales numbers on the previous releases — remember, Season 2 dropped the Steelbook treatment given to the show’s inaugural year — this season’s Blu-ray release will be a manufactured-on-demand (MOD) production.
These are not ‘cheap’ Blu-ray discs, like burning CDs or DVDs at home in the mid-2000s; MOD Blu-ray releases are simply smaller production runs manufactured based upon specific sales numbers.
“This isn’t actually that uncommon these days. For example, Paramount released “Jack Ryan” Seasons 1 & 2 Blu-ray first, then released them on manufactured on demand 4K Ultra HD later. They also released “Station Eleven” and “Reacher” on Blu-ray and DVD, as well as MOD 4K the same day.
These are regular manufactured discs (not BD-ROMs), just produced in smaller batch runs as demand requires.”
The final season of Star Trek: Picard continues this week, and we’ve got a new collection of photos from “Seventeen Seconds” to share with you today!
After Admiral Picard (Patrick Stewart) learned from Beverly Crusher (Gates McFadden) that Jack (Ed Speleers) is his son, he and the USS Titan crew must find a way to get away from Vadic (Amanda Plummer) and the deadly Shrike vessel.
Meanwhile, Raffi Musiker (Michelle Hurd) finally meets her secretive Starfleet Intelligence handler — Worf (Michael Dorn) — after he rescued the drugged officer from her disastrous undercover mission.
Here are seven photos from this week’s episode, including one previously-released image from earlier this year.
STAR TREK: PICARD — Episode 303: 'Seventeen Seconds'
1 of 7
Jean-Luc Picard (Patrick Stewart) and Beverly Crusher (Gates McFadden). (Paramount+)
Jean-Luc Picard (Patrick Stewart) and Beverly Crusher (Gates McFadden). (Paramount+)
Beverly Crusher (Gates McFadden). (Paramount+)
Jean-Luc Picard (Patrick Stewart) and Beverly Crusher (Gates McFadden). (Paramount+)
Jack (Ed Speleers) and Beverly Crusher (Gates McFadden). (Paramount+)
Raffi Musiker (Michelle Hurd). (Paramount+)
Raffi Musiker (Michelle Hurd). (Paramount+)
SEVENTEEN SECONDS — Picard grapples with an explosive, life-altering revelation, while the Titan and her crew try to outmaneuver a relentless Vadic in a lethal game of nautical cat and mouse. Meanwhile, Raffi and Worf uncover a nefarious plot from a vengeful enemy Starfleet has long since forgotten.
Written by Jane Maggs & Cindy Appel. 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.