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STAR TREK: LOWER DECKS Review — “Hear All, Trust Nothing”

We missed you, Deep Space 9! After years of fans pleading, beginning, and cajoling Paramount for more Star Trek content that directly ties into the station-based spin-off, Star Trek: Lower Decks serves up a whole Star Trek: Deep Space Nine episode in the aptly titled “Hear All, Trust Nothing.” This episode isn’t just some winking nod of a tease to DS9, it’s a full on DS9 episode — and it’s great!

The Cerritos is assigned to travel to starbase Deep Space 9 and open post-war trade negotiations with the Karemma. After negotiations overseen by Captain Freeman (Dawnn Lewis) and Colonel Kira Nerys (Nana Visitor) get off to a rocky start, the Karemma seemingly kidnap Quark (Armin Shimerman).

Meanwhile, Tendi (Noel Wells) and Rutherford (Eugene Cordero) encounter another Orion in Starfleet named Mesk (Adam Pally), while Mariner (Tawny Newsome) is introduced to Jennifer Sh’reyan’s (Lauren Lapkus) friends — and they don’t automatically get along.

There’s a huge amount packed into “Hear All, Trust Nothing,” not least the wonderful and welcome return of Nana Visitor as Kira and Armin Shimerman as Quark. It is so nice to hear both actors play their iconic roles again in animated form, and to revisit Deep Space 9 after all this time.

The animators did an incredible job this week re-creating the unique look and feel of the station, so that all the familiar locations — Ops, Kira’s office, the Promenade, the Wardroom, Quark’s, the holding cells — felt exactly right.

But despite being “the Deep Space Nine episode,” this is still very much a Lower Decks-centric tale: at no point does it feel like the Cerritos crew are being shuffled aside in favor of the DS9 characters, and there is robust and rich character development for both Mariner and Tendi along the way. “Hear All, Trust Nothing” capably services three plotlines, and it has two huge legacy characters.

And that’s no small feat — episode writer Grace Parra Janney does an excellent job balancing the competing priorities of the episode without shortchanging how cool it is to be back on the Cardassian space station.

After all, the DS9 A-plot is a classic Quark misadventure: Quark has a new scheme that is making him a lot of money, and by the end of the episode his scheme has been exposed and he’s lost most of that latinum. It’s a time-honored classic, and it’s so nice to see it back briefly in Lower Decks — plus, it’s so much fun to discover that Shaxs and Kira have a history from their shared time in the Bajoran Resistance. It’s a nice touch.

And while the Tendi B-story has almost no connection to the Deep Space 9 station, it has a lot of thematic connections to Deep Space Nine the show. One of the main themes of that series was that to become your best self, you need to embrace who you are — both the good and the bad.

Tendi learns that lesson here too, ultimately embracing her family history and personal upbringing as an Orion pirate to save the day and rescue Quark from the Karemma — as does Mariner, who learns that Jennifer is only interested in her true personality, not her faux politeness shown when trying to blend in with Jennifer’s friends.

It’s some nice growth for our Orion ensign, who has not gotten as much attention as some of the other characters this season. Seeing her interactions with the showy and ultimately deflated Mesk were a lot of fun, because while he talks a good game about being an Orion pirate — but doesn’t know how to actually BE an Orion pirate — Tendi keeps it to herself and knows all the tricks.

I hope that the integration of this part of her personal history is explored in more detail in the show, and that the one-time Mistress of the Winter Constellation reaches a comfortable place of reconciliation between her Orion nature and her desire to grow and be a better person.

TREK TROPE TRIBUTES

  • As discussed above, the A-plot of this episode is a classic Quark episode, complete with a get-rich scheme… which ends with our favorite Ferengi losing it all.
     
  • My favorite joke in the whole of Lower Decks so far is the way they spoofed the Deep Space Nine opening titles in the episode, with the Cerritos slowly orbiting the station. I love it when they break the fourth wall and comment on a trope like that — that some consider the DS9 main title sequence to be slow and boring. Just so, so well done.

CANON CONNECTIONS

  • It’s been over five in-universe years since our last visit to starbase Deep Space 9, as  “Hear All, Trust Nothing” (set in 2381) takes place half a decade after the events of “What You Leave Behind” (set in 2375).
     
  • Colonel Kira remains in command, and there is no indication of either Captain Sisko’s return — or that Bajor has joined the Federation.
     
  • Quark’s bar now has it’s own hexagon-themed logo design, sported on merchandise and in the form of a large neon sign at the bar’s entrance — this will later be seen at the franchise location on planet Freecloud in 2399.
     
  • Morn, of course, remains at his usual seat in Quark’s bar.

  • The Karemma were mercantile members of the Dominion; members of that species previously appeared in “The Search, Part I” and “Starship Down.”
     
  • The Federation’s gifts to the Karemma include Vulcan port (seen in “The Maquis, Part I”), Aldeberan whiskey (seen in “Relics”), Romulan Ale, and Galardonian spider-cow milk (from “Second Contact”).
     
  • Mariner tries to get out of Jennifer’s friend’s “salon” by claiming that she needs to give the Lower Deckers a tour of DS9 — or else “they’ll get lost and show up in a Mirror Universe with Smiley.” a reference to the alternate-universe counterpart of Miles O’Brien.
  • The dart board belonging to Miles O’Brien and Julian Bashir is still hanging in Quark’s bar, and Colonel Kira still has Captain Sisko’s baseball on her office desk.
     
  • Mesk is drinking a Modela aperitif when he first approaches Tendi, the layered drink Quark prepared for Jadzia Dax in “Dramatis Personae.” Kira and Shaxs each drink one later in the episode as well, as it’s a specialty of the “Quark 2000” replicator.

  • Rutherford sits with his legs dangling off the upper level of the Promenade, just like Jake and Nog used to do. It looks like there’s less of a prohibition against loitering on the Promenade since Odo left.
     
  • We get a couple of references to the Dominion War in this episode, a reminder that in universe it wasn’t all that long ago.
     
  • Tendi’s family are members of the Orion Syndicate, the famous criminal organization that has showed up in a number of episodes of Star Trek: Deep Space Nine.
     
  • Mariner — who served aboard Deep Space 9, we learned in Season 1 — still has the holosuite program of Kira with Quark’s head superimposed from “Meridian.”
     
  • There are so many great little details in the animated Deep Space 9 station sets, that show the animators were paying attention to the DS9 sets — ranging from the big things like the wheel doors and how they rotate, to the very small, like the triangular stickers that were all over the DS9 set, including on the walls between the holding cells.

OTHER OBSERVATIONS

  • A surprisingly great Dabo player, Boimler leaves Quark’s with an armful of gift-shop merchandise thanks to his Quark’s Bucks winnings — including a blue raktajino mug, a Ferengi doll (modeled after the Star Trek Experience “Alien Beans” Ferengi), and more.
     
  • The Cerritos was originally meant to be supporting the USS Vancouver – introduced in “Cupid’s Errant Arrow” — before Starfleet asked the Cerritos to lead negotiations with the Karemma and reassigned the Vancouver.
     
  • Admiral Buenamigo has a model of the Alamo on his office shelves — Miles and Julian would be proud.
     
  • Shaxs describes Deep Space 9 — formerly called Terok Nor — as a “tacky Cardassian fascist eyesore.”

  • Quark’s has become a franchise by 2381, now expanded out to 21 locations (including one at Starbase 25) — some called “Quark’s Express,” a take on compressed versions of restaurants in US airports. Mariner is less than impressed that her friends are excited about a franchise restaurant, calling them “a bunch of tourists.”
     
  • It is unknown whether the Promenade still has the Klingon restaurant, but it does have a “Bat’leths R Us” store.
     
  • When Kira enters her office and pauses in front of the window to watch the wormhole open, you wonder if she’s thinking about her lost friend, the Emissary of the Prophets.
     
  • Fred Tatiscore pulls double duty in this episode, voicing not just Shaxs but also Karemma trade minister Korzak.
     
  • Apparently, there’s no right way to dance the “Kobayashi Maroon.”

If you’re a Deep Space Nine fan, and you enjoyed “Hear All, Trust Nothing,” make sure you say so online. DS9 fans have been feeling a bit neglected by the powers that be — with so much from the OTHER legacy shows popping up in the modern era —  and we just got a whole episode featuring two legacy DS9 characters set on the station itself.

“Hear All, Trust Nothing” is exactly what you want from a legacy character featured episode of Star Trek: a great story for our Lower Decks characters, but a great time with some old friends too. I hope we see the station again soon — it’s been too long!

Star Trek: Lower Decks returns with “A Mathematically Perfect Redemption” on Thursday, October 6 on Paramount+ in the United States, Australia, Latin America, and the Nordics, as well as on CTV Sci Fi Channel in Canada and on Prime Video in many other regions.

After Losing Its Director, the Long-Delayed Kelvin Timeline STAR TREK 4 Beams Away from Paramount Pictures’ Release Schedule

A month after director Matt Shakman moved on from the project, the ill-fated fourth Kelvin Timeline Star Trek film has once again taken a major stumble as Paramount Pictures has removed it from its release schedule.

Most recently scheduled for a December 2023 theatrical release, the latest iteration of the Kelvin Timeline’s fourth outing was announced back in Februaryto the surprise of the cast — and yesterday, it was scrubbed from Paramount’s future release schedules, as reported by Deadline and Variety.

The road back to the Kelvin Timeline has been a rocky one over the last six years, from the premature announcement of a fourth film in July 2016 to a number of fizzled-out projects in the years since, including films from Quentin Tarantino and Noah Hawley.

While Trek continues its small-screen renaissance on Paramount+, it seems that the wait for another theatrical adventure will continue for the foreseeable future.

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

New STAR TREK: LOWER DECKS Images — “Hear All, Trust Nothing”

Star Trek: Lower Decks is back for the sixth episode of the new season this week, and today we’ve got new images from “Hear All, Trust Nothing” for your review!

This week, the Cerritos crew takes a trip to the Bajoran sector and revisits starbase Deep Space 9 for the first time since the June 1999 Star Trek: Deep Space Nine series finale.

Here are four new images from this week’s new episode, which includes a shot previewed in last week’s episode of The Ready Room; the above header image is from the Lower Decks Season 3 trailer.

HEAR ALL, TRUST NOTHING —The Cerritos crew unexpectedly spends a day on Deep Space 9.

Written by Grace Parra JanneyDirected by Fill Marc Sagadraca.

Star Trek: Lower Decks returns with “Hear All, Trust Nothing” on Thursday, September 29 on Paramount+ in the United States, Australia, Latin America, and the Nordics, as well as on CTV Sci Fi Channel in Canada and on Prime Video in many other regions.

WeeklyTrek Podcast #194 — Previewing PRODIGY’s Return, New STAR TREK Comics and More!

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On this week’s episode of WeeklyTrek, brought to you in partnership between The Tricorder Transmissions Podcast Network and TrekCore, host Alex Perry is joined by Starfleet Academy Awards host Caleb Dorsch to discuss all the latest Star Trek news.

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

In addition, stick around to Caleb’s wish for another Original Series-era Trek show (to follow Strange New Worlds’ eventual conclusion), and Alex’s prediction about how this season of Lower Decks will end!

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!

INTERVIEW — Showrunner Terry Matalas Says STAR TREK: PICARD Season 3 is “Kind of a Whole New Show”

In the last of our Star Trek Day interviews, we caught up with Star Trek: Picard showrunner Terry Matalas, who took the captain’s chair on the third and final year of the series.

Along with the returning Star Trek: The Next Generation cast, the show will also see Seven of Nine (Jeri Ryan) formally join the ranks of Starfleet, and a new starship Titan will join the growing Federation fleet.

TREKCORE: What are your thoughts on the Season 3 trailer?

TERRY MATALAS: I think it really signals a call to adventure, going back out into space, and returning Picard to that Starfleet world we love to see him in — and with some friends, like Captain Riker and Commander Seven of Nine.

TREKCORE: And they have a starship!

MATALAS: They do have a starship, the USS Titan. It’s all very much from my heart and soul. It’s the kind of Star Trek I want to see.

The new Titan-A starship seen in PICARD Season 3. (Paramount+)

TREKCORE: So this is a new Titan, right?

MATALAS: It’s the Titan-A, yeah. It’s kind of a refit; in the series we refer to it as a Neo-Constitution-class. It’s a revamped Constitution-class, but we honor the other Titan — Riker’s ship, that we’ve seen on Lower Decks and in the novels.

In the Titan-A observation lounge, there’s a gold model of that ship, so we acknowledge Riker commanded that ship, but this is the newest, latest, state-of-the-art underdog starship of the season.

Raffi (Michelle Hurd) and Seven (Jeri Ryan) work to rescue Rios in PICARD Season 2. (Paramount+)

TREKCORE: What did you bring into Season 3’s story from the first two seasons of Picard?

MATALAS: Picard Season 3 is, in some ways, kind of a whole new show. It’s in the spirit of kind of a final Star Trek: The Next Generation movie — that if they were to hand the keys to me to come up with my Next Gen movie, this was always the story I had in mind.

So in that way, we integrated some of Raffi’s story and Seven’s story the most, to arc and finish those previously-included characters; and we needed some room for some new characters that are coming in — they’re not announced yet — and of course, the Next Gen cast, who all have their own stories.

TREKCORE: Before you go, back in Las Vegas, Denise Crosby said fans will see Tasha Yar — somehow.

MATALAS: I will say… there is a nod to Tasha Yar in the season. You will SEE Tasha.

This interview has been condensed and edited for clarity.

While the series won’t be back on Paramount+ until next February, we’re certain to learn much more about the events of Season 3 when the Star Trek Universe beams down to New York Comic Con on October 8.

Star Trek: Picard is currently in post-production on its third and final season, set to debut in February 2023 on Paramount+ the United States, and on CTV Sci Fi Channel and Crave in Canada. Outside of North America, the series is available on Amazon’s Prime Video service in most international locations.

Review — STAR TREK ASCENDANCY Moves into the Gamma Quadrant with New Dominion War and Breen Expansions

The team at Gale Force Nine is back with their latest addition to the Star Trek: Ascendancy tabletop game: two expansions which let players step into the role of the imposing Dominion or the enigmatic Breen Confederacy.

Debuting originally in 2016, Star Trek: Ascendancy is a 4X strategy game where you steer a galactic power to explore the Star Trek universe, exploit its resources, expand your territory, and exterminate anyone who stands in your way. These two new releases bring the total number of player factions up to nine — plus an appropriately ‘automated’ Borg threat.

Such an extensive roster offers endless combinations of how you can battle for supremacy in the Alpha Quadrant — and with the Dominion expansion, the Gamma Quadrant as well!

The theming is strong for the reclusive Breen, who gain powerful advantages when defending their territory. Between chances to automatically destroy ships, reroll missed To-Hit rolls in combat, and deny opponents the chance to retreat from battle, the prospect of going toe-to-toe with the Breen on their home turf is a daunting one.

Players will still need to keep their weapons technology advancing steadily though, as all the advantages in the universe can still be stymied by powerful shields. And speaking of advantages out in the universe, the Breen’s new system discs offer a bevy of Culture and Open slots that offer a lot of value to savvy players while ships are exploring strange new worlds.

One-time allies of the Breen, the Dominion are not to be discounted either. This faction sports powerful combat abilities, led by their Ketracel-White ability to reroll failed attacks. The Dominion’s fleets are geared for battle as well, generating new ships while in flight and overpowering enemies with heavily-shielded armadas.

Their research opportunities highlight each of the three major components in the Dominion’s social structure: the Jem’Hadar generate Command tokens to trigger more combat rerolls, Vorta commanders help to resist Hegemony takeovers by enemy powers, and a novel mechanic allows for the Founders to infiltrate opponents’ systems and sow discord by moving ships out of position or making homeworlds easier to invade.

With the right advancements in place, the shapeshifting Founders can be very difficult to remove after they’ve infiltrated your territory and inflict costly losses — but it will take quite some time before they can put their full apparatus in place, so wise players will strike them quickly before it’s too late. The Dominion’s putative drawback, their inability to suborn another faction’s systems culturally, only means their fleets will be on the warpath all the sooner.

The arrival of the Dominion wouldn’t be complete without their native Gamma Quadrant. This expansion comes with rules for discovering star systems sequestered on the far side of the galaxy – and braving the wormhole can be added to games even without a Dominion player! The tile linking Bajor to the Idran system does a good job modeling the physical and conceptual distance that the Gamma Quadrant represents in the TV series; at the same time, it takes up a lot of real estate on the game area for relatively little value in play.

It’s perfect from a lore point of view, but if you use the Gamma rules at all you may want to leave it as a random event that might replace a phenomenon rather than forcing the Dominion player to start in their own private region.

The Dominion brings not only a new faction from beyond the wormhole, but a new game scenario: team play with the Dominion War. The rules introduce Alliance cards, which players can use to swing conflicts in their favor: deploying fleets, accelerating research, and rushing to the contested front to provide aid.

Several cards can also be used to directly assist your teammates by bolstering their forces or switching cards in your hand with theirs. This helps to add a level of meta-interaction that the alliance format otherwise reduces compared to a standard game. Conspiring with your allies to drop crucial cards beyond the normal flow of play is a nice injection of strategy and variety in what otherwise may feel like a more rote scenario.

The revised win conditions do require conquering at least one enemy homeworld, so a formidable military presence will be necessary in some aspect of your team’s plans. Turtling up and stalling for Ascendancy won’t save you, and there’s much less incentive to engage in table talk when Initiative is always random and there is no possibility of your current adversary becoming an ally of convenience in future turns: it’s a battle to the death.

This has pluses and minuses for different factions; aggressive ones like Klingons and the Dominion will always have a way to deploy their strengths. Others that focus on heavy peaceful interaction — like the Ferengi (limited to only one trade agreement) or the Vulcans (who peddle their ambassadors as helpful observers across a wide area of the boards) — will find their typical playstyle somewhat hamstrung.

On the other hand, Vulcans won’t have to worry about their ‘No Lying’ edict when it’s clear that they’re going for the throat. The Ferengi ability to add spacelanes without numeric restriction may also be particularly handy in a play area that is quite crowded from the start.

Another great addition that the Alliance rules bring is the Resistance deck. In the Dominion War, there is no player elimination. When a faction has their homeworld taken over by an enemy power, they aren’t erased from the map but rather become a sort of vassal to the faction who conquered them. Sending part of their resources off, allowing free passage — and all the while, plotting a rebellion and aiding their remaining allies!

The Resistance cards take the place of the player’s Alliance cards, and allow them to strike a blow against their conqueror, build ships for themselves or an ally, and even liberate themselves outright and rejoin the game with their full regular abilities again (with or without the assistance of their allies to free their homeworld).

The chance to support the team even when your faction is all but vanquished is a terrific addition that greatly suits this style of play.

The initial setup for the Dominion War does accelerate play right to the midgame, with mature empires turning their gazes outward among the other players, who have all made first contact at the start. Full fleet and Starbase complements are available regardless of Ascendancy, and extra starting resources can quickly enable you to spread your ships far and wide.

Removing some of the randomness in initial system draws prevents any one player from being significantly set back by bad luck in dangerous phenomena or resource-poor planets; this also takes some of the thrill of exploration away — and hobbles the Federation’s perk for generating Culture from new discoveries.

There’s less time on average for Research projects to be initiated and mature without the threat of enemy ships bearing down on you, so fewer signature abilities may be brought to bear in some games.

Playing Star Trek: Ascendancy with several first-timers — but long-time board gamers — I found that it hits the sweet spot with simplicity of mechanics while it also maintains enough strategic depth to be highly replayable, which is a great combination in a game that will occupy the better part of your day.

The components in the new set maintain the excellent quality consumers have come to expect from this product line, and the spot-on theming will please any Trekkie eager to turn their eye toward a tactical take on exploring their favorite fictional universe. Pick up the Breen if you’re eager to try a tenacious and insular faction that has the bite to match their slowly-growing ambition.

You’ll want to grab The Dominion for the alliance rules alone, but there’s great value in the introduction of a new way to build your galactic map with the Gamma Quadrant and a powerful faction armed with relentless assault ships and insidious spies throwing rival empires into chaos.

The Star Trek: Ascendancy Dominion War game expansion set and the Breen Confederacy player expansion set are both available in stores now, along with the base Star Trek: Ascendancy game set.

INTERVIEW — Celia Rose Gooding, Christina Chong, and Henry Alonso Myers Talk Carol Kane and STRANGE NEW WORLDS

September’s Star Trek Day event brought news for all of the currently-in-production Trek shows, but perhaps no announcement was more surprising than the casting of legendary comic actress Carol Kane as the new chief engineer of the starship Enterprise.

Joining the Star Trek: Strange New Worlds cast for show’s upcoming second season, Kane will portray “Pelia,” a new engineer who is described as “highly educated and intelligent, this engineer suffers no fools; Pelia solves problems calmly and brusquely, thanks to her many years of experience.”

During press time at the Star Trek Day festivities, we caught up with Strange New Worlds executive producer Henry Alonso Myers — along with stars Celia Rose Gooding (Uhura) and Christina Chong (La’an Noonien-Singh) — to talk about how Kane became the newest member of the Enterprise crew.

Carol Kane as new Enterprise engineer Pelia, coming aboard in Season 2. (Paramount+)

TREKCORE: Tell us about Carol Kane joining the Enterprise crew in Season 2!

HENRY ALONSO MYERS (Executive Producer): Well, we needed a new engineer character after Hemmer’s death, and and wanted someone who was very different from anyone who’d been on the Enterprise — someone who had a very different presence.

We wanted someone who was surprising — maybe someone who we wouldn’t expect to see in an engineer’s uniform — and someone who was older, because that’s not something you often see on the Enterprise, which has mostly younger crew.

CHRISTINA CHONG (La’an Noonien-Singh): Carol Kane is the most hilarious person I know.

CELIA ROSE GOODING (Uhura): Yeah, she truly brought an energy to set that we really didn’t have in the first season. She’s such a character and such a light; she has this wiseness, but also this silliness about her that’s so intoxicating.

CHONG: I was literally on set like this [covers mouth] during all her close-ups.

GOODING: Just shuddering, trying to contain our laughter. She’s amazing, and she’s going to be a fan-favorite, for sure.

TREKCORE: How did you land on Carol for the ‘Pelia’ role?

MYERS: Our casting people came up with Carol. Akiva Goldsman and I discussed it, we discussed it with the writers, and thought it was an amazing idea! [Laughs] “Is she interested? Does she really want to do this?” we thought — it turns out she was!

We had some conversations with her, and she was like, “Do you really want me?” It turned out to be a delightful match. I can’t wait for people to see her — she’s a recurring character throughout the season.

Chong and Gooding in “Lift Us Where Suffering Cannot Reach.” (Paramount+)

TREKCORE: What can fans look forward to from Uhura and La’an next season?

GOODING: I’m excited for people to see how Uhura is reeling and recovering from the events of Season 1. She went through a lot, and and there’s more she goes through! She’s in an incredibly human, vulnerable state.

CHONG: For La’an, there’s one particular episode…

GOODING: Oh! [Smiles]

CHONG: …one episode in particular that I’m just so excited for. [Sings] We cannot say anythiiiiing! But it’s a very good episooooode!

GOODING: It’s a really good La’an episode. Mmm-hmm!

TREKCORE: You’re not talking about the Lower Decks crossover episode?

CHONG: Oh no!

GOODING: Oh, no no no!

CHONG: I mean, the crossover’s great, too.

GOODING: If you loved Season 1, you’re going to love Season 2 because we up everything to like the umpteenth level. We really give it to you!

Tawny Newsome (left) interviews Rebecca Romijn, Jess Bush, Christina Chong, Celia Rose Gooding, Melissa Navia, and Babs Olosunmokon at Star Trek Day 2022. (Paramount+)

This interview has been condensed and edited for clarity.

Star Trek: Strange New Worlds Season 2 is in post-production now; it is expected to arrive on Paramount+ in the first half of 2023.

Along with regions where Season 1 has already debuted, the first season of the show is expected to arrive on Paramount+ in Italy, France, Germany, Switzerland and Austria “later this year.”

STAR TREK: LOWER DECKS Review — “Reflections”

After a couple of weaker the normal outings, Star Trek: Lower Decks absolutely storms back to form in “Reflections,” a character episode from series creator Mike McMahan which finally provides a look at our engineering ensign’s backstory — one which shines with warmth, humor, and character growth.

It’s so nice to sing Lower Decks’ praises again, and as “Reflections” signals the halfway point for Season 3, here’s hoping the season three upswing mirrors that in Seasons 1 and 2 where the season’s back half begins to absolutely excel.

Ensign Rutherford (Eugene Cordero) is left in a coma when his old personality — which he learns was almost deleted when his implant was forced upon him — attempts to reassert control of his body. We learn that pre-implant, the ‘original’ Samanthan Rutherford was an angry racer who participated in illegal starship races during his first year at Starfleet Academy.

After an accident, Rutherford was given his implant to wipe out both his memory and old personality to cover up a still-unknown scheme — by a high ranking Starfleet officer.

The two Rutherford personalities race each other for control of present-day Rutherford’s mind. ‘Original’ Rutherford loses after his anger and cockiness get the better of him, and he cedes control of his mind to ‘our’ Rutherford. But after that experience, the Cerritos engineer now knows what happened to him — including the fact that someone else chose to give him the high-tech cranial implant.

Meanwhile, the Cerritos spends time back at Tulgana IV (first visited in “Envoys”) after Commander Ransom (Jerry O’Connell) sends Ensigns Mariner (Tawny Newsome) and Boimler (Jack Quaid) down to the planet with the unenviable task of manning a Starfleet recruitment booth at a local job fair — drawing the ire of the other vendors nearby.

“Reflections” is a wonderful and surprising character episode for Rutherford, and one that’s also got a lot of funny moments. The episode only begins to unpack some of the implications for Rutherford of learning about his past — who he used to be, how that differs from who he is now, what was done to him.

The ‘original’ Rutherford is a fascinating character, who is so unlike the Rutherford that we’ve come to get to know, and I really like that as a character choice. Eugene Cordero does a great job expressing both versions of the character with just his voice, and making it sound authentic.

And while I might have liked one more scene with ‘original’ Rutherford — considering the implications of what was done to him and his seeming gone-for-good ‘death’ — it does not feel like this is a story arc that ends with this episode.

This episode is also potentially Lower Decks’ most self-referential episode to date. From revisiting Tulgana IV to the Collectors Guild, “Reflections” includes many references to previous episodes of the series. I love that as the show becomes more established — in addition to all the great callbacks to other Star Trek shows — Lower Decks can also start referring back to itself.

It adds layers of enjoyment not just for fans of the franchise as a whole, but for Lower Decks fans in particular. There’s the Data bubble bath from “An Embarrassment of Dooplers” in one moment, a T88 scanner from “Cupid’s Errant Arrow” in the next, and so on.

In addition to pulling back the veil on Rutherford’s backstory, “Reflections” also feels like it’s setting up future story arcs for Lower Decks. Furthering the Rutherford storyline for sure, but Mariner’s encounter with Petra Aberdeen (Georgia King) from the Independent Archeologists Guild — plus the continuation of “Bold” Boimler’s attempts to be more assertive — seem like they are laying the groundwork for much more to come on all fronts.

TREK TROPE TRIBUTES

  • Visitors to the Starfleet booth on Tulgana IV make jokes about whether Starfleet is a military organization or not — which is completely fair, because even the fans can’t agree on the answer to that one!
     
  • When asked about Starfleet uniform changes, Boimler explicitly acknowledges that the California-class uniforms are not used everywhere across Starfleet — and as fans know, different parts of Starfleet where different uniforms (and update them frequently).
     
  • Petra Aberdeen, clearly a Vash stand-in, taunts Mariner and Boimler by scaring away a potential Starfleet recruit interested in the transporter by saying that they would spend seven years in a windowless room… referring both to the length of Star Trek: The Next Generation, Deep Space Nine, and Voyager (and the fact that all the transporter room sets seen in Star Trek have been windowless rooms).

CANON CONNECTIONS

  • The Cerritos first visited Tulgana IV in “Envoys.”
     
  • When Rutherford tells Tendi that he’s been having bad dreams, Tendi asks if his dream is one where he’s in “a new timeline with Kirk and Spock, and they have cinematic chemistry?!” This is, of course, a wink-and-nod towards the Kelvin Timeline films.
     
  • Ransom threatens to have Boimler and Mariner transferred to Starbase 80 if they aren’t successful in sharing the good word of Starfleet at the recruitment booth — the dreaded “worst” starbase was first used as a reassignment threat in “Terminal Provocations.”
     
  • When Rutherford’s ‘original’ personality first manifests, he worries that might be possessed by an anaphasic alien — like Ronin, the candle-dwelling specter that tried to, uh, ‘merge’ with Beverly Crusher in “Sub Rosa.”
     
  • At least one Antedian, one Vorgon, and one Arcturian can be seen in the job fair crowd.
An Antedian, a Vorgon, and an Arcturian. (Paramount+)

  • Mariner talks through the process of signing up for Starfleet as a non-commissioned officer and attending the Tech Services Academy on Mars. The Starfleet Technical Services Academy was previously mentioned on an Okudagram in “The Eye of the Beholder.”
     
  • One of the booth visitors is from Gelrak V, whose love of crystals the Cerritos crew encountered in “Temporal Edict.”
     
  • Representatives manning the Collector’s Guild booth include a Zabalian, the same race as Kivas Fajo, and an alien of the same race as Palor Toff — also from “The Most Toys.”
     
  • One of Mariner’s catchphrases — to generate interest in the Starfleet recruiting booths — is “Prepare Yourself for Warp 10 Excitement!” which was the log line for the novelization of Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan.

Classic flora returns — safely under glass. (Paramount+)
Pose with a pair of Those Old Scientists. (Paramount+)

OTHER OBSERVATIONS

  • Tendi signed up for Starfleet through a recruitment booth like the one seen in this episode.
     
  • Barnes, Federov, Kayshon, and Chief Lundy all appear in this episode, making “Reflections” a veritable who’s who of Lower Decks secondary characters!
     
  • Rutherford’s ship, the Sampaguita, really does look like a Starfleet hot rod — or as the ‘original’ Rutherford describes it, “a seat strapped to an impulse engine.”
  • Sampaguita (or Arabian jasmine) is the national flower of the Philippines; Rutherford voice actor Eugene Cordero is of Filipino descent.
  • Where our Rutherford hates pears, apparently ‘original’ Rutherford loved them!
     
  • The animation for the race between the two Rutherfords is absolutely gorgeous; this is one good looking animated show.
     
  • Boimler failed the Kobayashi Maru test 17 times, which, well, seems just about right.

Overall, “Reflections” is fun, it’s funny, and it has important character growth for Rutherford. It’s rewarding to find out more about his backstory — and to find out how surprising it is — and the Boimler and Mariner storyline is both fun and funny.

Lower Decks is a great show, and “Reflections proves why.

Star Trek: Lower Decks returns with “Hear All, Trust Nothing” on Thursday, September 29 on Paramount+ in the United States, Australia, Latin America, and the Nordics, as well as on CTV Sci Fi Channel in Canada and on Prime Video in many other regions.

INTERVIEW — Brett Gray and the STAR TREK: PRODIGY Creative Team Previews the Show’s October Return

Above: Kevin Hageman, Ben Hibon, Dan Hageman, and Brett Gray.

(Photo: Jesse Grant / Getty Images for Paramount+)

We’re just over a month away from the long-awaited return of Star Trek: Prodigy, finally blasting back to Paramount+ on October 27!

During September 8th’s Star Trek Day event we had the opportunity to chat with series lead Brett Gray and the show’s creative leads — Kevin and Dan Hageman, and director Ben Hibon — to learn what’s coming next for the Protostar crew.

After ten months away, there’s a lot to look forward to!

The crew of the USS Protostar, returning for more adventures in October. (Paramount+)

TREKCORE: What can fans look forward to when Prodigy returns next month?

KEVIN HAGEMAN (Executive Producer): As people have seen in the first ten episodes, our show starts off sort of outside Federation space; outside of everything you know of Star Trek. With each episode, we get closer and closer, deeper and deeper in.

These next ten episodes are going to become even more Trek, and I think people are going to love that.

BRETT GRAY (“Dal”): The first half of the season was the part of the story where the characters were discovering themselves and becoming a crew. Now we’re going to start to dig into who these characters are — in their past, but also who they are GOING to be and what their roles are going to be in the team.

I think it’s going to be cool to watch the obstacles they will have to face as they are coming into their own as a group — instead of just individuals.

BEN HIBON (Director / Executive Producer): We’re all part of a family, right? And Prodigy is trying to capture all the different aspects: the tensions, the conflicts, embracing each other, believing in each other… all of those good things. It speaks to all ages, and to people with different backgrounds.

TREKCORE: And now the Protostar is on the run from the real Admiral Janeway — and they can’t even explain themselves to her!

GRAY: It’s really smart. What better way to set up conflict then to not allow the people who stole a Starfleet ship to speak to Starfleet!

It’s a lot of show-and-tell, as opposed to talk-and-tell — so it’s going to be great to watch our crew really figure out how to navigate this world without being able to contact people, or even being able to know about what Admiral Janeway wants in general. It’s like playing darts, but blindfolded!

TREKCORE: So how did Billy Campbell become involved in the series, bringing back his Okona character after such a long time?

KEVIN HAGEMAN: Very early on in the writers room, we were talking about the “greatest hits,” the characters we love. As a family show, we like the colorful characters, and he was pretty outrageous, that Okona!

We fell in love with the thought of what Okona would be like some years down the road, living this outrageous life…

The outrageous Thadiun Okona throughout the years.

GRAY: It’s showing where the Prodigy crew fit within the larger Star Trek universe. Dal and Okona have a very good, fun relationship that I think people will enjoy — and they learn a lot from each other. I can’t wait for everyone to experience that. It was fun being shady!

DAN HAGEMAN (Executive Producer): And Billy Campbell actually had a lot to say! He was like, “Man, give me an eyepatch! Give me some heft!”

KEVIN HAGEMAN: “Make my belly a little bigger!”

DAN HAGEMAN: Those were Billy’s words — and we were like, “Hell yeah!”

KEVIN HAGEMAN: Yeah, “Let’s do it!” Okona’s little over the hill.

TREKCORE: Meanwhile, real-life Billy Campbell’s as fit as a fiddle.

KEVIN HAGEMAN: He is. He’s a very handsome man.

Murf is going through a… meta-murf-osis.

TREKCORE: Will there be other surprises people can look forward to?

KEVIN HAGEMAN: Oh, there are a lot of surprises… that we can’t talk about!

DAN HAGEMAN: We chose this clip to preview because something’s happening to Murf…

TREKCORE: Yeah, what’s going on with Murf!? Are we going to learn about his Original Series connection?

KEVIN HAGEMAN: Yes! In Episode 11! It is a deep, DEEP dive. I think we only saw ONE person on Twitter guess it.

TREKCORE: Before you go, is there anything you can tell us about the Star Trek: Prodigy — Supernova game?

DAN HAGEMAN: It’s coming out in October and it’s beautiful, everything we’ve seen.

KEVIN HAGEMAN: I just saw some game footage, and it reminded me that not only do you get our actors’ voices in there — no soundalikes, you’ll be hearing Kate Mulgrew as Janeway, Brett as Dal, Ella Purnell as Gwyen, and all the great characters — but they’re also using music from Nami Malumad, our composer.

They modeled the look of it after what Ben did on the series, so when I’m looking at that game, it feels like you’re playing the show.

DAN HAGEMAN: I know it’s been hard for people — the long wait between episode 10 and episode 11 — so when they have to wait longer after episode 20, they can play the video game!

This interview has been condensed and edited for clarity.

Star Trek: Prodigy will return on Thursday, October 27 to Paramount+ in the United States, Latin America, Australia, South Korea, and the UK; the series is said to air “later in the year” in South Korea, Germany, Italy, France, Austria, and Switzerland.

IDW’s New STAR TREK Comics Include Tales from LOWER DECKS, PICARD, STRANGE NEW WORLDS… and the Return of Ben Sisko!

The Star Trek universe may be exploding with content on television these days, but that isn’t the only place stories from the final frontier are being told — as longtime Star Trek comic publisher IDW has not just one or two, but FOUR new tales coming for readers starting this month!

While Season 3 of the animated series continues on Paramount+, Star Trek: Lower Decks begins its first print story this month with as a three-issue miniseries written by Ryan North and drawn by artist Chris Fenoglio.

Cover A by Chris Fenoglio, Cover B by Jay Fosgitt, Retailer Incentive by Philip Murphy, Convention Exclusive by Troy Little. (IDW Publishing)

Here’s the synopsis to Lower Decks #1, in stores now:

Soon after leading her crew on a planetary expedition aimed at building bridges and advancing Federation technology, Captain Freeman begins to suspect that the planet and its people are not all what they seem… Meanwhile, the crew in the lower decks take to the holodeck, enjoying some much-needed recreational time-until a bloodthirsty visitor decides to join in on their games!

Cover A by Chris Fenoglio, Cover B by Derek Charm, Retailer Incentive by Philip Murphy. (IDW Publishing)

Here’s the synopsis to Lower Decks #2, coming in October:

While the crew in the lower decks deal with the repercussions of bringing Dracula aboard the Cerritos, the away team grapples with its own unfortunate miscalculation on the planet Qvanti.

Cover A by Chris Fenoglio, Cover B by Robby Cook, Retailer Incentive by Philip Murphy. (IDW Publishing)

Here’s the synopsis to Lower Decks #3, coming in November:

With the Cerritos under attack and Captain Freeman’s away team accused of violating Starfleet’s most upheld principle, can the crew prove their innocence? Or will they end up one of Dracula’s infamous Draquiri cocktails?

***

Star Trek: Picard won’t be returning for its third season until next February, but IDW has launched this year’s between-seasons comic tale, as Star Trek: Picard — Stargazer begins its three-issue run here in September.

As with many of the previous tie-in comics connected to the modern Star Trek era, the Stagazer miniseries is written by longtime collaborators Mike Johnson & Picard co-creator Kirsten Beyer, with art by Angel Hernandez.

Cover A by Angel Hernandez, Cover B by Megan Levens, Retailer Incentive by Liana Kangas, Online Exclusive by Carlos Nieto. (IDW Publishing)

Here’s the synopsis to Stargazer #1, released in late August:

When the U.S.S. Stargazer goes missing near a planet from his past, Admiral Jean Luc-Picard enlists Seven’s help to unravel the mystery and save the Stargazer crew!

Cover A by Angel Hernandez, Cover B by Butch Mapa, Retailer Incentive by Aaron Harvey. (IDW Publishing)

Here’s the synopsis to Stargazer #2, coming in October:

While Picard and Seven seek answers to uncover the mysterious disappearance of the Stargazer crew near Jenjor VI, a bold choice from Picard’s past comes back to haunt him.

Cover A by Angel Hernandez, Cover B by Sean von Gorman, Retailer Incentive by Andy Price. (IDW Publishing)

Here’s the synopsis to Stargazer #3, coming in late October:

Caught in a deadly crossfire between the Romulans and Remans, Picard and Seven of Nine must draw on their combined Starfleet and Rangers skills to save not only themselves but an entire planet!

***

Captain Pike’s crew joins the comic adventures this winter in Star Trek: Strange New Worlds — The Illyrian Enigma, a tale set between the show’s first and forthcoming second season.

Like the Stargazer series, this new comic story is also written by Mike Johnson and Kirsten Beyer, with art by Megan Levens.

Cover A by Megan Levens, Cover B by Jake Bartok. (IDW Publishing)

Here’s the synopsis for The Illyrian Enigma #1, coming in December:

With Una accused of unlawful genetic modification by Starfleet, Captain Pike sets out in search of evidence that could prove his first officer’s innocence.

***

Finally, IDW’s next monthly Star Trek series kicks off this October with Star Trek #1, a new ongoing tale centered around Benjamin Sisko — after he’s returned from the Bajoran Wormhole — who must bring together characters from many eras of the Trek saga for his mission.

Written by Jackson Lanzing and Collin Kelly (who helmed the recently-concluded Star Trek: Year Five series) with art by Ramon Rosanas, this new monthly comic — which is the start of a massive new comic-based continuity.

Cover A by Ramon Rosanas, Cover B by Declan Shalvey, Cover C by David Aja. (IDW Publishing)

As IDW Publishing’s marketing director Keith Davidson puts it:

It’s the biggest initiative that IDW has ever undertaken for the brand in its now-14 years of Star Trek publication.

Essentially, our new Star Trek series is creating a new ongoing IDW continuity, from which we will build offshoots, spin-offs, and epic events for years to come. Benjamin Sisko takes the helm of the Enterprise, supported by a crew of characters pulled quite literally from throughout Star Trek canon — even from The Original Series! Part of the fun will be seeing how the diverse personalities mesh or clash.

Honestly, we’re hoping to channel with Star Trek what Marvel did when they launched their Star Wars comics a few years back — respecting the canon that came before while building a new universe for fans that’s wholly unique, unexpected, and accessible.

Writer Jackson Lanzing called the new Star Trek monthly “a Deep Space Nine sequel” on social media this week, and in a lengthy new interview with ComicBook.com, described the tale as one which fits into a neat year-and-a-half of time which no on-screen Star Trek production has yet touched: the era between Voyager’s return home and the events of Star Trek: Nemesis.

Online Exclusive cover by Angel Hernandez. (IDW Publishing)

As writer Collin Kelly described it to ComicBook.com:

They’re giving us a lot of access to all the toys, with the understanding that at the end of it, we will put the toys back in the box. There is about a year and a half here of Star Trek timeline that is untouched, and within this, we can make all sorts of trouble as long as we put the characters that need to be back in the box for Nemesis.

Lanzing also talked about how this new storyline will be canon — until it’s not.

This is as close as we can, on the comic side, to being canon. We will be canon until they un-canonize us. But we are working with the shows. We are in communication with the teams…

We’re taking this as an opportunity to effectively fill [the space formerly occupied by the Trek novel continuity], because a lot of that stuff was created with the understanding there would never be shows again.

[But] now we know that there will be, so we are trying to create new canon that exists inside that space. But these are the characters you know. This is the canonical Benjamin Sisko sequel story. This is the last ride of Data before Nemesis. These are those stories. This is what happened to Tom Paris after he came back from Voyager.

Cover D by Rachael Stott, Retailer Incentive A by Francesco Francavilla, Retailer Incentive B by Ramon Rosanas. (IDW Publishing)

Here’s the official synopsis for Star Trek #1coming in October — where Captain Sisko is joined on his mission by first officer Data, medical officer Dr. Beverly Crusher, pilot Tom Paris, and new characters as well.

It’s stardate 2378, and Benjamin Sisko has finally returned from the Bajoran Wormhole omnipotent. But his godhood is failing with every minute. Sent by the Prophets on a mission to the deepest parts of space aboard the U.S.S. Theseus, he witnesses the unthinkable: Someone is killing the gods. And only Sisko and his motley crew of Starfleet members from every era of Trek can stop them.

Here’s the official synopsis for Star Trek #2, coming in November:

Tasked with a mission from the Prophets, Benjamin Sisko enlists the help of an old friend from Qo’noS to track the ship and persons responsible for slaying the gods.

Here’s the official synopsis for Star Trek #3, coming in December:

When strange malfunctions begin plaguing the U.S.S. Theseus mid-warp, Benjamin Sisko and his crew must band together to unveil the source behind the mysterious phenomena aboard the ship. But what initially appear as mere technological quagmires and strange happenings become a test that will determine the very fate of the universe.

The world of Star Trek comics continues to expand. Keep checking back to TrekCore for more Star Trek comics news as it breaks!