The final season of Star Trek: Picard continues this week, and we’ve got a new collection of photos from “Disengage” to share with you today!
After Admiral Picard (Patrick Stewart) and Captain Riker (Jonathan Frakes) make it to the ship carrying an injured Beverly Crusher (Gates McFadden) and a man claiming to be her son (named Jack in press materials) (Ed Speleers), they must find a way to get to safety before a deadly alien vessel destroys them all.
Back on the Titan, Seven of Nine (Jeri Ryan) is in hot water with Captain Shaw (Todd Stashwick) for helping Picard and Riker get to the Eleos, while Raffi Musiker (Michelle Hurd) tries to find the truth behind the shocking attack on Starfleet’s recruitment center.
Here are thirteen photos from this week’s episode, including a few previously-released images from earlier this year.
STAR TREK: PICARD — Episode 302: 'Disengage'
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Picard and Riker aboard the Eleos. (Paramount+)
Riker aboard the Eleos. (Paramount+)
Jack aboard the Eleos. (Paramount+)
Captain Shaw aboard the Titan. (Paramount+)
Seven and Shaw aboard the Titan. (Paramount+)
Seven and Shaw aboard the Titan. (Paramount+)
Seven of Nine aboard the Titan. (Paramount+)
Shaw and Riker. (Paramount+)
Admiral Jean-Luc Picard. (Paramount+)
Riker and Picard aboard the Titan. (Paramount+)
Jack aboard the Titan. (Paramount+)
Jack points a phaser. (Paramount+)
Seven and Jack aboard the Titan. (Paramount+)
And in case you missed it, here’s a preview trailer for the upcoming season which debuted on Paramount+ after the release of “The Next Generation” last week.
DISENGAGE — Aided by Seven of Nine and the crew of the U.S.S. Titan, Picard makes a shocking discovery that will alter his life forever – and puts him on a collision course with the most cunning enemy he’s ever encountered. Meanwhile, Raffi races to track a catastrophic weapon – and collides with a familiar ally.
Written by Christopher Monfette & Sean Tretta. Directed by Doug Aarniokoski.
Star Trek: Picard Season 3 will continue February 23 on Paramount+ the United States, and on CTV Sci Fi Channel and Crave in Canada. It will debut internally 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.
Measuring in at 3 feet tall and weighing about 13 pounds, this enormous ‘heavyweight polyurethane resin’ and chrome replica of the Borg Queen’s remains are recreated from the final moments of Star Trek: First Contact, just after the cybernetic leader is defeated by Captain Picard and Data — after her organic components melted away from exposure to warp plasma coolant.
The Borg Queen skull arrived in an extremely well-protected state within a massive, padded box. Along with the large skull-and-vertebrae reproduction comes a heavy-duty display stand signed by First Contact’s Borg Queen herself — Alice Krige — and a user guide for setup and the integrated lighting.
Before we say more, there’s the cost, of course: the Borg Queen skull’s $1,500 price tag clearly puts this prop replica far out of reach to many collectors. (As a disclosure, we want to make clear that Factory Entertainment sent us one of the replica displays to examine for this review — without any conditions or input into this review.)
Clearly it has been produced for a limited audience, and with only about 250 units produced, the pricing isn’t able to be spread across a larger production run. For such an intricately-designed and built display piece — and for its weight, size, and likely exorbitant cost to build and ship from overseas and out to collectors homes — it’s honestly probably right in the range it should be.
Now on with the review! The lighting elements inside the replica are powered by three AAA batteries, which are nicely hidden in the rear of the skull behind a magnetic clip-on panel to blend seamlessly into the overall look of the prop replica — and the on/off buttons are neatly tucked into the lower half of the skull.
When activated, bright red LEDs flare in the Borg Queen’s right eye and spinal column, while a set of green and yellow flashing LEDs are set into the right side of the skull, blinking in a few variant patterns while powered on. The lighting is certainly visible during daylight or in a lighted room, these lighting elements are very bright in a darkened room — making the Queen skull quite the spooky display if turned on at night.
The lighting isn’t quite perfect, though; when lit, the bright red LED in the right eye lights up the entire interior of the skull, which gives the entire head a red glow when lit up in a darkened room. Adding a bit of a barrier behind the LED to block the light from flaring through the entire headpiece would be a big help, as that certainly wasn’t present in the on-screen prop seen in First Contact.
In addition, there’s a large copyright label on the side of the chrome skull which is difficult to remove without damaging the chrome finish on the replica; while the label itself is mostly transparent, the text is very large and if it had to be placed on the prop in this format, it really should have been placed on the back of the skull to avoid detracting from the look of the replica. (Also, putting stickers on chrome? Not great — put it on the matte plastic surface under the battery cover or something.)
Beyond that lighting issue, however, there’s really very view things to complain about in this recreation. The skull is extremely solid, the spinal column looks fantastic, it sits very securely on the tall metal stand, and including an autograph from the actor behind the character is just icing on the cake.
Factory Entertainment — STAR TREK: FIRST CONTACT Borg Queen Skull Prop Replica
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Powered on vs. powered off
Powered on vs. powered off
The eye LED during daylight
The on/off buttons
LED lights on the side of the skull
A view into the skull's open section
The unfortunate copyright label
The Borg Queen's spinal column
The hidden battery compartment
The upper spinal tubing
The lower spinal tubing
The lower spinal tubing
Packaged for delivery
The setup guide
More documentation
Alice Kriege's autograph
It’s a wildly expensive piece that certainly isn’t something we ever expected to be produced in a 1:1 replica, but for those of you who love Star Trek: First Contact and an afford it — and have the space for it in your home! — this is one of Factory Entertainment’s best Star Trek releases yet.
Did any of you buy the Factory Entertainment Borg Queen prop replica for your own collections? If not, you can still get it through the company’s web shop — and if you have, let us know your thoughts in the comments below!
Keep checking back to TrekCore for the latest news and reviews from the Star Trek universe!
As the starting point for the re-launch of what may be the most anticipated new Star Trek content since the hype ahead of 2009’s first Kelvin Timeline film, the first episode of Star Trek: Picard’s third season drops us straight into the action and kicks off with a classic — and surprisingly rare — pairing of two Trek legends.
You can count on one hand the number of times Jean-Luc Picard (Patrick Stewart) and Will Riker (Jonathan Frakes) went out together by themselves on a rollicking adventure, but as showrunner Terry Matalas exerts his influence on this final season of Picard, that’s exactly what we get in this season opener. And it’s a blast, to say the least — the appropriately-titled “The Next Generation” is a perfect starting point for the final season of a series that everyone knows by now is scratching that TNG Season 8 itch.
This first episode is a “good old fashioned road trip” for the two TNG leads, and does a nice job of setting up one of the central themes of this season: how do the connections and decisions we make define our family, both chosen and by blood? That theme runs throughout the first half of this season and begins quickly here with a number of set-ups in just a few minutes.
Beverly Crusher calls for help. (Paramount+)
We open with a tense action sequence centered around Beverly Crusher (Gates McFadden), who has uncharacteristically been isolated and out-of-touch with her former Enterprise crewmates for more than 20 years. She is on a mercenary medical ship, the SS Eleos, on the outskirts of Federation space and being chased by mysterious alien raiders, who she manages to stop — but not before being seriously wounded in a firefight.
Returning to Earth, we find Picard getting ready to move away from the chateau to a new planet and settle down with Laris (Orla Brady) — but before the family manor can be packed up, he receives a mysterious message from estranged friend and former lover(!). The cryptic distress call from Crusher includes a direct warning for Jean-Luc: “No Starfleet. Trust no one!”
The plea for helpt leads him to reach out to Riker, his greatest ally, who immediately alludes to trouble at home with his wife and daughter (Deanna Troi and Kestra, last seen in Season 1’s “Nepenthe”). That’s a lot of familial upheaval to pack into the opening moments of the season.
Her ominous message is seemingly validated when their clandestine meeting at Guinan’s LA-based Ten Forward bar is being monitored by a human figure up to no good — and who insultingly dunks a model of the Enterprise-D, “one of the fat ones,” into a shot glass as the pair leave the bar to begin their adventure.
To the Ryton system. (Paramount+)
Riker’s big plan (actually, it’s more of a “ruse” than a plan) is to help Picard stage a routine surprise inspection of his previous command, the refit USS Titan, and to somehow convince the ship’s prickly captain Liam Shaw (Todd Stashwick) to reroute to the Ryton system — and lend them a shuttle to get to Crusher’s location just outside Federation territory. The ruse is bolstered by the reveal that Seven of Nine (Jeri Ryan) is Shaw’s first officer, where he requires her to uncomfortably bear her human name — Annika Hansen — while on duty.
With the reveal of the new Titan design, the production team on Picard has once again outdone themselves in every possible way. The new “neo-Constitution” design (formally the Constitution III-class on the ship’s dedication plaque) is glorious, with a a look that is both familiar and unique, with views from every angle that illustrate the magic originally captured in Matt Jefferies initial Enterprise design almost 60 years ago.
The visual effects of the ship in and around Spacedock, accompanied by motion picture-esque swells in the score, celebrates a very specific era of big-screen Star Trek through a wondrous sensory overload of historical Trek sounds, images and ambiance. In particular, the score from Stephen Barton wonderfully captures that era with a mix of bombastic swells and subtle melodies that sometimes borrow from the source material in such a way that it is hard to tell what is new and what is being repurposed. It’s a special piece of work.
The newly-refit USS Titan. (Paramount+)
Impressively, even in the face of all those great production choices, the single best thing about the Titan-A is the introduction of its captain, played by Matalas’ former 12 Monkeys baddie Todd Stashwick. Captain Shaw is a revelation in that you might initially think he is a stuffed shirt that has somehow ‘failed up’ in regard to how he treats Picard and Riker — and Seven for that matter — but it’s no spoiler to say that he gets more impressive in every appearance he makes through the first half of this season… while also not changing in any way.
In fact, one of the most surprising elements of these early installments of Picard Season 3 are the new characters as a whole. Just before we meet Captain Shaw, Seven introduces Riker and Picard to another new face, Sidney La Forge (Ashlie Sharpe Chestnut), who is instantaneously magnetic as the ship’s young pilot — who we will see more of as the season progresses.
La Forge’s introduction is one of the many scenes and moments in the series similarly modeled after something we’ve seen in the films. This one, of course, echoes Kirk’s introduction to a young Demora Sulu in Star Trek: Generations. Offspring of a beloved crewmate at the helm? Check. Stealing a starship out of Spacedock? Check. Majestic shuttle approach to said starship? Check. A veteran starship commander handing the reins to a less experienced officer to “clear all moorings” and pilot a ship out of Spacedock? Check.
Leaving Spacedock. (Paramount+)
Matalas and Trek boss Alex Kurtzman have compared this season to a 10-hour Next Generation movie to give the TNG crew a much-deserved swansong, and that is what we are getting in both subtlety and substance.
After a fantastic dinner scene in which Shaw dismissively shuts down Picard and Riker’s “plan” by revealing his love of structure, his disdain for “bee-bop” jazz, and his aversion to the Borg, he also reveals something important to the viewer. “I love you. I do. I love reading about your wildly-exciting and equally irresponsible adventures,” says Shaw, who means every word of that, despite his unwavering focus in making sure his ship is run as a reflection of himself. It’s an exciting introduction that pays off repeatedly in the season ahead.
With Shaw not budging, it’s down to Seven, who is fighting her own internal battle to “ignore [her] gut, to ignore [her] instincts and just to follow orders,” which, of course, she doesn’t do — defying Shaw and rerouting the ship to the Ryton system, then arranging for Picard and Riker to steal a shuttle to go find Beverly.
Raffi operates undercover. (Paramount+)
Meanwhile, Raffi Musiker (Michelle Hurd) is fighting a similar internal battle in the episode’s other main story thread, serving Starfleet as an undercover intelligence officer on M’Talas Prime (which was first name-dropped all the way back in Star Trek: Enterprise’s “Dawn”). Raffi is responsible for some excellent technobabble and exposition in trying to track down some “experimental quantum tunneling tech” that was stolen from the Daystom Institute’s off-site station, which in the wrong hands could be used as a weapon (give or take a few technos and babbles).
It’s not easy seeing Raffi so isolated again and spiraling into a role that requires her personal demons to be so close to the surface. Her only contact with Starfleet is via a disembodied handler who communicates solely by text. The short, stilted language of her confidant is supportive, but direct, especially when cryptically encouraging her as a “warrior.” (Hmm!)
Raffi’s intelligence work is successful in uncovering a plan to use that “quantum tunneling tech” to destroy a Starfleet recruitment center gearing up for upcoming Frontier Day celebrations — marking the 250th anniversary of the United Federation of Planets’ founding — and the dedication of a beautiful statue of Enterprise-C captain Rachel Garrett, covertly referred to as “the red lady.” However, she is too late, arriving at the facility just in time to see it destroyed, despite her pleas for help.
Raffi witnesses a devastating attack. (Paramount+)
As always, Hurd is up for the challenge of going deep into Raffi’s psyche, conveying her strife with a performance that bleeds off the screen and continues to feel fresh. For Raffi, the sentiment shared by Picard and Riker as they admire the view of the nebula in which they are searching for Beverly, could not be more fitting. It’s the kind of thing you “spend half-a-life chasing, and the other half missing the chase.”
It’s a poignant way to say none of them will ever truly complete whatever mission lays in front of them.
Once on board the Eleos, it’s nice to see Picard and Riker jump into action again as they quickly dissect the scene and piece everything about the alien raid together, including a notable reference to a “kill shot, straight down, cool, efficient.” Picard insists that their friend would only do something like that defensively, as Riker notes it “doesn’t sound like the Beverly I know.”
But we know the truth from the episode’s opening moments, where we saw Dr. Crusher systematically kill an intruder to protect her ship and its cargo. That cargo includes a young man who dramatically reveals himself after first getting the jump on Riker before letting down his guard once Picard convinces him they are there to help — and who is he, viewers may ask? None other than Beverly Crusher’s unexpected son.
Ed Speleers as Beverly Crusher’s son. (Paramount+)
Ed Speleers is another strong addition to the cast, and when he announces to Riker and Picard that he is Beverly’s son, everyone in the room seemingly knows what that means. The truth of those reveals will come in later episodes as we get more of Speleers’ excellent performance. For now, we are left to a single scene with the actor where he dynamically breaks down the struggles that he and his mother have faced in being hunted by a foe who has tracked them to multiple destinations — where each time “they had different faces.”
And with that, we are left with a 40-second long, grandiose, villain ship reveal of the deadly Shrike vessel to close out the episode; another moment reminiscent of more than a few Star Trek films. It’s an additional triumph for the visual effects team and portends just how effective the previously-announced Amanda Plummer is in her role as Vadic — but more on her next week.
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.
This week, Captain Shaw says that he “likes structure, likes meter, likes keeping tempo and time” — and that is absolutely on display as he learns what Riker and Picard are up to. He immediately takes control of the situation, issuing a confident command to his crew to “lock down” the Titan before turning to Seven and proclaiming that she just “loyalty’d [her] way to the end of a career.”
Like it or not, that’s one bad-ass captain acting decisively.
Captain Shaw hosts an unusual dinner. (Paramount+)
OBSERVATION LOUNGE
Star Trek observation master and friend of the site Jörg Hillebrand is credited as a ‘research consultant’ on this episode, indicating his love of the franchise’s finest details has made a direct impact on production. (Good for him!)
The Titan-A flies through the Star Trek franchise logo which opens each episode this season.
“In the 25th Century…,” the opening card seen this episode, is a direct callback to the “In the 23rd Century…” card which opens Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan.
One of many nods to Beverly Crusher’s time aboard the Enterprise-D. (Paramount+)
For some reason, Crusher is listening to Captain Picard’s official logs recorded during “The Best of Both Worlds” on a 2360s-era Starfleet monitor — likely, as Riker explains later, because of the ‘Hellbird’ virus which affected the Enterprise-D during that time.
Actress Amy Earhart voices the Eleos computer; Earhart just happens to be married to Star Trek: Picard Season 3 showrunner Terry Matalas.
Eleosis the god of mercy, clemency, compassion, and pity in Greek mythology.
As Picard is packing up the chateau, we see several personal artifacts seen in the previous two seasons, including his Ressikan flute (from “The Inner Light”), his Kurlan Naiskos (from “The Chase”), a Bajoran award, a gold-plated Enterprise-D, and of course, his Enterprise-D painting which once hung in his ready room aboard that ship.
Geordi La Forge is said to be “running the [Starfleet] museum.”
When decoding Beverly’s message, Picard uses Starfleet authorization code Picard-4-7-Alpha-Tango, first recited in Star Trek: First Contact.
Guinan’s bar is selling Starfleet merchandise — starship models produced in the 21st century by the now-defunct Eaglemoss — with loads of Enterprise-D surplus stock. (“No one wants the fat ones!”)
Nobody wants the fat ones. (Paramount+)
Riker reveals that while Picard was serving the Borg as Locutus during “The Best of Both Worlds,” a computer virus nicknamed ‘Hellbird’ spread through the Enterprise-D navigational system, adding a 3 to every digit in the spatial coordinate database.
The upcoming Frontier Day event joins a pantheon of Star Trek holidays like First Contact Day, Captain Picard Day, the Bajoran Gratitude Festival, the Talaxian celebration Prixin, and the Vulcan Kal Rekk day of atonement. An “Empire Union Day” is also seen on screen during Raffi’s research, the first reference to a founding day in Klingon history.
According to the Instagram Star Trek Logs, Frontier Day will feature the final flight of the soon-to-be-decommissioned USS Enterprise-F, previously seen only in the Star Trek Online game.
The Titan-A was designed by modelmaker Bill Krause.
Like the Stargazer last season, the brief view of the Titan‘s shuttlebay is a reused digital background originally built to represent the USS Discovery cargo bay set.
The Titan bridge started as the Stargazer bridge in Season 2; production designer Dave Blass credits the Starfleet ‘bridge module’ implementation as a way to accommodate the same bridge design in multiple starships.
According to the Instagram Star Trek Logs, the Titan-A did originally begin life as Will Riker’s Luna-class Titan, though it was heavily overhauled and deconstructed down to its spaceframe before being resurrected as the new Neo-Constitution-class design.
Fancy new plates aboard the USS Titan. (Paramount+)
Picard makes a reference to station Deep Space 4, first mentioned in “The Chase” — but the station is now closed down.
The “utterly humiliating” scene featuring Picard and Riker sharing a bunkbed on the Titan-A (courtesy of Captain Shaw) was reminiscent of the spartan quarters given to the captain and Data on board a Klingon Bird-of-Prey in “Unification.”
Captain Janeway gets a shoutout from Seven, who credits both her and Picard in convincing her to join Starfleet following the events of Picard Season 2.
M’Talas Prime is, of course, a reference to show runner Terry Matalas, but the planet was first referenced in dialogue in the Star Trek: Enterprise episode “Dawn,” where Trip mentioned seeing the planet’s ringed moons.
Raffi sends her message to Starfleet Intelligence (and asks for more money) using an old-style flip-open communicator.
Raffi’s official Starfleet service record. (Paramount+)
Raffi Musiker’s birthdate is April 9, 2353. This is the same year in which Jack Crusher dies, Will Riker and Geordi La Forge enter Starfleet Academy, and Nog is born on Ferenginar.
According to her Starfleet service record, Raffi was awarded the Starfleet Medal of Honor in 2399, after her once-discredited ‘consipiracy theories’ about a Romulan involvement in the destruction of Mars were proven correct at the end of Season 1.
Raffi’s investigation into stolen Daystrom Institute technology is codenamed “Operation Daybreak” on her monitors.
The reference to captain Rachel Garrett of the Enterprise-C marks the first time she has been mentioned in Star Trek in any capacity since being featured in “Yesterday’s Enterprise.”
The new graphic-intensive end credits sequence features two familiar musical cues from Star Trek: First Contact: the emotional main title theme, and the rousing movie-era Next Generation theme, both by composer Jerry Goldsmith.
The “For Annie” dedication at the end of this episode refers to the recently-passed Annie Wersching, who played the Borg Queen in Picard Season 2.
More questions. (Paramount+)
The much-anticipated return of Star Trek: Picard absolutely does the trick in setting up a season of adventures and reunions — action, heart, humor and reflection flood this script by Terry Matalas, which feels like the beginning of classic Trek romp made for the big screen… and it only gets better from here.
Star Trek: Picard Season 3 will continue with “Disengage” on February 23 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.
Last week, the third and final season of Star Trek: Picard debuted at a blue-carpet premiere event in Los Angeles, and the TrekCore team was there to chat up the cast and crew behind Season 3 — including returning Star Trek: The Next Generation star Jonathan Frakes, who brings Captain Will Riker back for one more adventure with his former captain.
TREKCORE: You obviously were in Picard in the first season; you’ve done directing and so forth for all the modern Star Trek shows, plus your other extended career. This year, you really take on a lot more Riker than you have in a very long time.
JONATHAN FRAKES: That’s Terry’s fault. Terry Matalas said to me while we were shooting Season 2, ‘Are you ready to bring Riker back?’ I said, ‘Well, Riker was back in Season 1. Picard had a nice visit with Riker and Troi.’
He said, ‘But I’m talking about REALLY bringing him back.’ So he pitched this kind of Butch and Sundance story to Patrick and me at lunch. Not that I was ever going to resist coming back to Star Trek, it’s only changed my life for the better 35 years ago
So it has been a dream. And Terry’s a great showrunner and a great friend, and he really loves and knows Star Trek.
TREKCORE: You also directed this year. When’s the last time you directed yourself — is that something you still do often?
FRAKES: I direct myself occasionally. I’ll give myself a small part in the show, but I hadn’t done it at this level for a long time. [Laughs]
But I did have a lot of help. The guy who directed the first two episodes of the season, Doug Aarniokoski, is a friend, and we worked together a lot on the other Star Trek shows. So he was really co-directing with me. He stayed on the Video Village and he let me know what he thought and I trust him and we have similar tastes.
And Terry was in, so I didn’t go too far off the rails — but I like doing both jobs.
Jonathan Frakes as Captain Will Riker in STAR TREK: PICARD. (Paramount+)
TREKCORE: Riker’s certainly got a different tone to him this season. He’s fighting through a lot of emotional issues — or, trying to avoid emotional issues. How is that, knowing the character as well as you do, bringing that sort of different vibe to him this year?
FRAKES: I appreciated it. Again, to mention Terry Matalas, he was not afraid to bring the conflict. There’s conflict between Picard and Riker, and conflict between Geordi and Picard, and Riker and Troi are at loggerheads.
So it was something that Gene Roddenberry didn’t believe — that there would be any conflict in the family — but Terry does, and it makes for better drama.
This interview has been edited for clarity.
We’ll have more from the Star Trek: Picard premiere as the days ahead — and of course watch for our review of the season premiere, titled “The Next Generation,” tomorrow morning.
Star Trek: Picard Season 3 will debut February 16 on Paramount+ the United States, and on CTV Sci Fi Channel and Crave in Canada. It will debut internally 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.
Last week, the third and final season of Star Trek: Picard debuted at a blue-carpet premiere event in Los Angeles, and the TrekCore team was there to chat up the cast and crew behind Season 3 — starting with this year’s creative lead, showrunner and executive producer Terry Matalas.
TREKCORE: What did it take to get the entire Next Generation cast back together, and get the season filmed before the news went out? How hard was it to keep that secret?
TERRY MATALAS: It is crazy that it didn’t get out. We shot almost four months before we announced it. I don’t know…. it’s not like we had tents or anything like that. We just did our best, but we didn’t go as hard as Star Wars or Marvel would. I also don’t know necessarily if there was that kind of speculation or eyes on it in that way.
But, yeah, I was surprised it hadn’t leaked.
TREKCORE: Now that you have all these TNG characters back, knowing you have this extended, though still finite length of time, how do you work to balance it so that everybody — along with Jeri Ryan and Michelle Hurd, and the newcomers –all get their time in the spotlight?
MATALAS: Well, it’s tremendously difficult. That’s 14 hour days in our writers room with the dry erase board, asking ourselves, “Is every character getting their due?” Pairing them up, making sure everybody has the right story arc, that’s just the work we have to do.
I hope we got it right.
Scarlett Pomers as Naomi Wildman in STAR TREK: VOYAGER. (Paramount)
TREKCORE: There were things, story points you were trying to do, but you just couldn’t pull it off in the length of time. You mentioned at one point that you had a Naomi Wildman story that you were working on.
Can you tell me anything about that, if it’s not a spoiler?
MATALAS: We broke an episode where Naomi Wildman was a Fenris Ranger, following in the footsteps of Seven of Nine — and maybe was a bit more aggressive in her style than Seven. The crew his season certainly gets into some trouble, and Seven might have needed to go to somebody for help, and that person would have been Naomi Wildman.
Ultimately, there just wasn’t the real estate for it this season. I love the story. I’d love seeing that. However, I’d love to do more and stay in this time period — and that’s a character you absolutely would want to see again.
This interview has been edited for clarity.
We’ll have more from the Star Trek: Picard premiere as the days ahead — and of course watch for our review of the season premiere, titled “The Next Generation,” tomorrow morning.
Star Trek: Picard Season 3 will debut February 16 on Paramount+ the United States, and on CTV Sci Fi Channel and Crave in Canada. It will debut internally 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.
The final Star Trek: Picard journey begins this week, and we’ve got a new collection of photos from the Season 3 premiere to share with you today!
In “The Next Generation,” Admiral Jean-Luc Picard (Patrick Stewart) receives a desperate call for help from a long-absent Dr. Beverly Crusher (Gates McFadden), leading him to reunite with former first officer Will Riker (Jonathan Frakes) and now-Starfleet officer Seven of Nine (Jeri Ryan) to lead a rescue mission aboard the USS Titan.
Here are 16 photos from this week’s episode, including a few previously-released images from earlier this year.
STAR TREK: PICARD — Episode 301: 'The Next Generation'
1 of 16
Beverly Crusher. (Paramount+)
Beverly Crusher. (Paramount+)
Beverly Crusher. (Paramount+)
Will Riker. (Paramount+)
Riker and Picard at Ten Forward. (Paramount+)
Jean-Luc Picard. (Paramount+)
Picard on the Titan. (Paramount+)
Picard on the Titan. (Paramount+)
Seven of Nine. (Paramount+)
Picard, Seven, and Riker on the Titan. (Paramount+)
Ensign Sidney La Forge. (Paramount+)
Seven, Picard, and Riker. (Paramount+)
Riker and Picard. (Paramount+)
Seven of Nine. (Paramount+)
Seven and Riker. (Paramount+)
Picard, Riker, and Seven. (Paramount+)
In addition, Paramount+ has also released a few new variants of the Picard Season 3 cast photos through various social media accounts today, along with another version of the Season 3 artwork poster.
STAR TREK: PICARD Season 3 Cast Photos
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Patrick Stewart as Jean-Luc Picard. (Paramount+)
Jeri Ryan as Seven of Nine. (Paramount+)
Michael Dorn as Worf. (Paramount+)
Gates McFadden as Beverly Crusher. (Paramount+)
LeVar Burton as Geordi La Forge. (Paramount+)
Marina Sirtis as Deanna Troi. (Paramount+)
Brent Spiner as Lore. (Paramount+)
Todd Stashwick as Liam Shaw. (Paramount+)
Ed Spellers. (Paramount+)
(Paramount+)
And in case you haven’t seen it, here’s a special preview episode of The Ready Room with Wil Wheaton focusing on the upcoming season — including interviews with Patrick Stewart, Gates McFadden, showrunner Terry Matalas, and more.
THE NEXT GENERATION — After receiving a cryptic, urgent distress call from Dr. Beverly Crusher, Admiral Jean-Luc Picard enlists help from generations old and new to embark on one final adventure: a daring mission that will change Starfleet, and his old crew forever.
Written by Terry Matalas. Directed by Doug Aarniokoski.
Star Trek: Picard Season 3 will debut February 16 on Paramount+ the United States, and on CTV Sci Fi Channel and Crave in Canada. It will debut internally 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.
The first collection of Star Trek: Lower Decks episodic score, covering the music of Season 1 and Season 2, was released digitally in October 2021 — and this March, Lakeshore Records is bringing the Cerritos score to vinyl with a new two-LP collection.
Composer Chris Westlake’s Star Trek: Lower Decks — Original Series Soundtrack (Volume 1) is beaming down on vinyl March 24 for soundtrack collectors to bring home, with the two records crafted out of “swirling galaxy” blue and yellow-colored vinyl, along with themed packaging including a diagram of the Cerritos internal structure.
Here are the contents of the soundtrack collection, which leaves about a dozen tracks from the digital release out due to capacity limitations:
Side A — 19:55
01. Main Titles (1:10)
02. Romulan Prison (0:44)
03. Leg Day (2:17)
04. Strange Energies (1:08)
05. The Time Of His Life (0:39)
06. Riker’s Plan (3:15)
07. Stay Alert, Stay Alive (2:42)
08. Mistress Of The Winter Constellation (4:55)
09. The Black Mountain (0:48)
10. Mariner’s Secret (2:17)
Side B — 19:52
11. A Compromise! (1:44)
12. Ejecting the Warp Core (2:48)
13. Stumbling on History (0:42)
14. City Escape (2:15)
15. Agimus Reigns (3:55)
16. Temporal Black Hole (2:20)
17. I Am Available For Chess (1:05)
18. A New Officer (2:14)
19. Red Alarm (2:49)
Side C — 19:40
20. Death Battle (2:04)
21. What Are Your Orders, Captain? (1:38)
22. Departing Space Dock (0:30)
23. Getting Desperate (4:37)
24. Standing Down (1:26)
25. Don’t Date Barnes (1:14)
26. Welcome To The Cerritos (1:21)
27. Finding The Cure (2:45)
28. Ransom vs. Vindor (1:21)
29. Saving Lives (2:44)
Side D — 19:55
30. Failed Ascension (1:01)
31. Saying Goodbye (1:57)
32. The Cerritos (1:27)
33. Today You Die! (4:48)
34. The Real Mariner (1:58)
35. Self Destruct Timer (1:30)
36. Pakled Attack (1:19)
37. Badgey Gets Loose (2:37)
38. Memory Loss (1:35)
39. End Titles (0:53)
40. Bonus Track: batlh vIpoQ! (0:50)
The two-album Star Trek: Lower Decks vinyl set will be available through Lakeshore Records’ web shop now ahead of its release on March 24.
Keep checking back to TrekCore for the latest in Star Trek soundtrack news!
One of the best, most rewarding things to ever happen to Star Trek is putting Season 3 of Star Trek: Picard into showrunner Terry Matalas’ hands.
There is life before and life after watching what the lifelong Star Trek fan and co-creator of the 12 Monkeys television series and his collaborators have done with the iconic heroes from Star Trek: The Next Generation. Here, these heroes reunite for what’s billed as one last voyage, and it’s simultaneously their most epic and intimate adventure yet.
By investing the entire ensemble with the kind of drama and big emotional stakes that are usually reserved for just the heads on a movie poster, Star Trek: Picard’s much-anticipated third season finally delivers on all the promise that the first two fell frustratingly short of — and by reaching back into the franchise’s past and mining the emotional depths of these characters in ways fans have never seen before, Matalas proves that the future of both this series and Trek at large would do well with more compelling and heartfelt trips like this to the Final Frontier.
The below contains minor spoilers for PICARD Season 3.
Patrick Stewart as Jean-Luc Picard. (Paramount+)
The first six episodes of this latest voyage have been screened for critics, kicking off with the appropriately-titled “The Next Generation,” which announces its 25th Century setting (in a nod to Nick Meyer’s Wrath of Khan) before dropping in on Dr. Beverly Crusher (a never-better Gates McFadden) as she struggles to defend her medical ship — and its mysterious human cargo — from masked intruders (as previewed in the Season 3 trailers).
After a fierce exchange of phaser rifle fire, Crusher scrambles to send a message to the only person that can help her, someone she hasn’t seen in over 20 years: Jean-Luc Picard (Sir Patrick Stewart). The retired Admiral and former Enterprise captain is unable to ignore the encoded call for help, and he must get the band back together and help their old friend. His first stop? Former first officer, Will Riker (Jonathan Frakes, in a career-best performance).
But this Riker is unlike the guy fans are used to seeing; he’s broken (not sprained) after the recent loss of his child — a story told in Season 1’s “Nepenthe” — that’s created a rift between him and his wife, Deanna Troi (Marina Sirtis). With Will more than happy to put off his grieving a little longer, he helps Picard get a starship to search for Beverly — who is in a part of space that Starfleet isn’t exactly keen on boldly going to.
Jonathan Frakes as Will Riker. (Paramount+)
As seen in the Season 3 trailers, once aboard the refitted USS Titan-A, lots of sparks (and cutting banter) ensues when Picard meets Captain Shaw (Todd Stashwick), who subverts our expectations by showing that he has little patience and zero tolerance for the retiree’s unique (and exhausting) brand of heroics. With Shaw seemingly being more foe than ally, and with Shaw’s first officer — Seven of Nine (Jeri Ryan) — caught between her friend and her pain-in-the-ass commanding officer, Picard and Riker find themselves unaccustomedly on their back foot and desperately behind on their rescue plans.
“The Next Generation” should be regarded as a standardbearer when it comes to revisiting IP and making it more than just a nostalgic cash grab. Like Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country did for the Original Series crew, this episode drops the Next Gen-ers into a riveting mystery with a ticking clock, one that’s full of surprising character flourishes and a grounded exploration of the toll saving the galaxy takes.
Everyone involved seems to have mixed the best parts of the Rick Berman era of Trek with that of producer Harve Bennett’s run on the first five Trek feature films, to give Picard Season 3 the exact amount of whatever these characters need to complete their story.
Gates McFadden as Beverly Crusher. (Paramount+)
Musical and visual callbacks to past Treks are subtle and earned, and should help get rid of the negative stigma associated with “fan service.” And the performances from the TNG regulars, especially McFadden and Frakes, are more nuanced and compelling than anything these actors have done across seven seasons and four movies. As for newcomer Ed Speleers, his movie-star charisma could power a starship. While his character’s appearance is brief in “Next Generation,” the episode does a brilliant job setting him up as a key piece of the high-stakes puzzle Picard must solve as his role in Season 3 grows as the episodes continue.
Early in the premiere episode, an introspective Picard states that he is a man who doesn’t need that which he already has: A legacy. If Star Trek: Picard Season 3 is indeed the last time we will see this sci-fi icon in action, it’s hard to imagine a more satisfying note for that legacy to end on.
Star Trek: Picard Season 3 will debut February 16 on Paramount+ the United States, and on CTV Sci Fi Channel and Crave in Canada. It will debut internally 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: Picard Season 3 is everything that you want it to be. Reunited together on screen for the first time since Star Trek: Nemesis, it is an absolute treat to be back with the main cast of Star Trek: The Next Generation as they join final season, led by executive producer Terry Matalas.
Across the six episodes that TrekCore had the opportunity to view, a rich story is being developed that draws heavily on the characters you know and love from The Next Generation. There are fun new characters who are likely to become fan favorites. And the showrunner’s claims about Picard Season 3 being an authentic extension of all three Berman-era Star Trek shows — The Next Generation, Deep Space Nine, and Voyager — is not an exaggeration.
Unlike the previous seasons of Picard (which, full confession, I enjoyed), Season 3 is unashamedly a Star Trek show — and I don’t just mean by that the things fans are already aware of, including the setting, largely aboard the USS Titan and other Starfleet locales. I mean that Terry Matalas’s Picard goes further than any of the current live action shows to embrace the canon and the universe that Star Trek inhabits.
Patrick Stewart as Jean-Luc Picard. (Paramount+)
Remember how frustrated fans were in Season 1 that Picard’s “brain abnormality” — despite being critically important to the season’s story — was never actually called Irumodic Syndrome? How weird a creative choice that seemed? No need to worry about that here. Picard’s third season revels in the history of Star Trek, takes joy in the canon, and does not shy away from the 800+ episodes that came before it to build a compelling narrative. To this obsessive fan of 24th century Star Trek, there’s nothing more joyous than that.
A lot of press surrounding Season 3 emphasizes that it does feel — or should feel — like a totally new show. There are certainly lots of things that are very different; as mentioned, we’re primarily on a Starfleet vessel this year, with all the procedures, aye-sirs, and technobabble you’d expect. In addition, composer Jeff Russo has been replaced by Stephen Barton for Season 3, whose score is more traditionally bombastic — and riffs heavily on all kinds of previous Star Trek themes to great effect. Even the fonts used in the main title are different (and iconic, in their own way).
But, in my opinion, Star Trek: Picard Season 3 is not an entirely new show. It’s a show that got the original premise of Star Trek: Picard right. It turns out, with a few tweaks to the formulas of Seasons 1 and 2, a new and improved version of Picard is born.
Jonathan Frakes as Will Riker. (Paramount+)
Why do I say that it’s new and improved, when there are clearly so many differences? Because Season 3 does not, as you might be led to believe, completely abandon what came before. There are important tie ins to the previous seasons that deepen and enhance your appreciation for Season 3, even as the story heads in an entirely new direction and there has been a lot of turnover in the cast.
But the promise of Star Trek: Picard was always this: thoughtfully integrating legacy characters that felt like realistic advances from their previous appearances coupled with ideas you loved and wanted more of from previous Star Trek, alongside new and interesting characters who had their own journeys that you could fall in love with. There is a lot of dispute about how well Seasons 1 and 2 lived up to that promise. I personally enjoyed them; many fans did not.
I genuinely believe there will not be the same level of dispute about Season 3. The returning characters feel authentic. The new characters are surprising and easy to love (and in some cases easy to hate). The ideas are big and bold, and the overarching story for Season 3 draws heavily from Star Trek canon in surprising ways. Fans of Star Trek: The Next Generation are feasting, obviously, with the return of so many beloved characters.
But fans of Deep Space Nine genuinely have a lot to look forward to as that series ties into Picard in important ways that fans haven’t guessed yet.
Marina Sirtis and Michael Dorn as Deanna Troi and Worf. (Paramount+)
The returning TNG cast members are unbelievably good after all this time. Jonathan Frakes totally steals the show, inhabiting Riker again so authentically, with a nice arc across the first six episodes we’ve seen that fans will enjoy.
Michael Dorn also slips immediately back into character as Worf, surprising and delighting this reviewer, and has a lot of great scenes with a key member of the Picard cast. Gates McFadden too, has a strong emotional arc this season — but to stay more about that would risk getting into spoilers. There are some wonderful moments of emotional catharsis for several of the TNG cast members across the episodes.
And Patrick Stewart is totally comfortable and feels the most “Picard”-y he has been in the whole show. Having Riker by his side almost from the very beginning of the season, and a consequential story for Picard that reinterprets his relationship with other members of his crew in surprising ways, sparks new life — and new joy — into Sir Patrick’s performance. He is magnificent this season, and I attribute that not just to his performance, but the incredible work of his co-stars.
LeVar Burton and Gates McFadden as Geordi La Forge and Beverly Crusher. (Paramount+)
Picard does have surprising legacy characters, as Matalas has publicly teased; though to control expectations I will say that there is only one unannounced legacy character who appears in the first six episodes. Well… maybe two (or is it three or four?)… but to explain more would be to go too far. But my goodness, the one character who does return is magnificent, absolutely capturing a whole episode with incredible scenes with some key TNG cast members.
And the new characters are excellent. It was a shame to have to say goodbye to Santiago Cabrera, Alison Pill, Evan Evagora, and Isa Briones at the end of Season 2. But in their place we have a number of compelling new characters who I was delighted by. Todd Stashwick’s Captain Liam Shaw, commanding officer of the USS Titan, is an utter delight. Stashwick is clearly having the best time playing this character, who has a very nice arc across the first six episodes. There is one speech that he gives in the middle of the season that a lot of fans are going to talk about.
In addition, Ed Speelers is excellent, bringing nuance and emotion to what is, on the face of it, a very difficult part to play — and Ashlei Sharpe Chestnut’s Sidney LaForge is also a standout.
Jeri Ryan as Seven of Nine. (Paramount+)
Star Trek: Picard Season 3’s first six episodes are a supremely enjoyable experience. The show breaks the curse of Seasons 1 and 2, where everyone agrees the first couple of episodes are great and then… opinions diverge. In my opinion, episodes four, five, and six were the strongest of Season 3, which speaks highly for where anticipation should be for the last four episodes when we get there.
However, despite all this praise, it is important to note that Picard’s third season is not perfect. Across the first six episodes, fans are likely to be very disappointed that one key TNG cast member has almost nothing to do. There are also a couple of frustrating character choices that yield excellent scenes that are incredibly well-acted, but speak more towards needing the season to develop in a particular way than because that actually feels like the choice the character would make.
And while the season demonstrates a rich love of the Star Trek movies — I counted explicit references in the first six episodes to eight of the first ten movies — it can sometimes feel a little much, even for this total fanboy for Star Trek canon.
Michelle Hurd as Raffi Musiker. (Paramount+)
But if those are the biggest objections I can muster across the first six episodes, that’s pretty good for a sprawling, epic television production that draws on 57 years of Star Trek history and has a lot of characters to try and do justice to. I really loved the first six episodes of Star Trek: Picard Season 3, and I hope you do too.
Star Trek: Picard Season 3 will debut February 16 on Paramount+ the United States, and on CTV Sci Fi Channel and Crave in Canada. It will debut internally 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.
Today marks the live red-carpet Hollywood premiere of Star Trek: Picard Season 3, and ahead of the festivities Paramount+ has released the cast photography of the series stars — including the returning Next Generation favorites reuniting for Picard’s final outing.
Also included are the Season 3 newcomers, including Todd Stashwick as the USS Titan’s captain, Amanda Plummer as the evil Vadic, and Ed Speleers as Beverly Crusher’s assistant.
Patrick Stewart as Jean-Luc Picard. (Paramount+)
Jonathan Frakes as Will Riker. (Paramount+)Gates McFadden as Dr. Beverly Crusher. (Paramount+)Michael Dorn as Worf. (Paramount+)Marina Sirtis as Deanna Troi. (Paramount+)LeVar Burton as Geordi La Forge. (Paramount+)Brent Spiner as ‘a character called Lore.’ (Paramount+)Jeri Ryan as Seven of Nine. (Paramount+)Michelle Hurd as Raffi Musiker. (Paramount+)Todd Stashwick as Captain Liam Shaw of the USS Titan. (Paramount+)Amanda Plummer as Vadic. (Paramount+)Ed Speleers as Beverly Crusher’s assistant. (Paramount+)
We’ll be on the red carpet for the Picard premiere tonight in Hollywood, so watch for our interviews with the cast and crew of Star Trek: Picard Season 3 in the coming days here at TrekCore and on our social media channels!
Star Trek: Picard Season 3 will debut February 16 on Paramount+ the United States, and on CTV Sci Fi Channel and Crave in Canada. It will debut internally 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.