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New STAR TREK: STRANGE NEW WORLDS Photos — “All Those Who Wander”

Star Trek: Strange New Worlds’ first season is nearly at its end if you can believe it — and today we’ve got a new collection of photos from “All Those Who Wander” for your review!

In the penultimate Season 1 episode, the Enterprise crew arrives at an icy planet where the fellow Starfleet vessel USS Peregrine has crashed to the surface — but as the landing party investigates the downed starship, thing turn quickly as the offers find themselves being hunted by a dangerous creature.

Here are 42 new photos from this week’s episode:

And in case you haven’t seen it, here’s a preview clip from “All Those Who Wander” which debuted in last week’s episode of The Ready Room, along with the official Paramount+ trailer for the upcoming episode.

ALL THOSE WHO WANDER — The U.S.S. Enterprise crew comes face-to-face with their demons – and scary monsters too – when their landing party is stranded on a barren planet with a ravenous enemy.

Written by Davy Perez. Directed by Christopher J. Byrne.

Star Trek: Strange New Worlds returns with “All Those Who Wander” on Thursday, June 30 on Paramount+ in the United States, Australia, Latin America, and the Nordics, as well as on CTV Sci Fi Channel in Canada.

The episode will follow on Paramount+ in the UK and Ireland later this summer; additional international distribution has not yet been announced.

STAR TREK: STRANGE NEW WORLDS Review — “The Elysian Kingdom”

“The Elysian Kingdom” is textbook costume campiness from start to finish, and offers a rather neat ending to this season’s M’Benga family story — but beyond a lot of amusing silliness, there’s not much too it.

Our story begins with the Enterprise surveying a nebula, while the good Dr. Joseph M’Benga (Babs Olusanmokun) reads his daughter Rukiya (Sage Arrindell) her favorite book, a fantasy story from which we’ve heard brief excerpts twice this season: “The Kingdom of Elysian.” Kiya loves the tale, but complains actively about the plot in typical kid fashion. The doctor promises her that when she grows up, she can rewrite the ending to be whatever she wants — but that possibility of her reaching adulthood seems to be slipping from his grasp a bit more every day due to her incurable illness.

After a gentle push from Una (Rebecca Romijn) to take a break from his exhausting research, M’Benga heads to his quarters — but this just happens to be when the bridge crew finds that the nebula is giving the ship trouble, and after an attempt to leave the area, Lt. Ortegas (Melissa Navia) is slammed to the deck, badly hurt in the process.

When M’Benga wearily arrives to the bridge after reporting for medical action, though, he finds the command center adorned with regal banners, and everyone present — including Captain Pike (Anson Mount) and Ortegas herself — transformed into medieval characters, complete with period costumes and mannerisms.

It’s camp! Very camp! Especially as we watch M’Benga stumble around, trying to figure out what’s happened to the Enterprise and his shipmates — including his own new role as “King Ridley” — and putting up with the bickering between royal rivals, the prideful yet cowardly “Sir Rauth” (Pike) and the brave but aggressive “Sir Adya” (Ortegas).

He heads to sickbay, where M’Benga finds Nurse Chapel (Jess Bush) as woodland healer “Lady Audrey” — but even a working tricorder doesn’t reveal any clues to what’s going on, besides high dopamine levels among the Enterprise crew… and the hyperactive and bombastic support of La’an (Christina Chong) as “Princess Thalia.”

Thalia (and her little doggy, Runa) shares her excitement over M’Benga’s possession of something called the Mercury Stone, a powerful relic which can free the Kingdom from the control of evil Queen Neve — M’Benga doesn’t know what she’s talking about, but he plays along to keep the “story” moving along until he can figure out more about what’s going on.

Just when it seems like the doctor is all alone in this crazy situation, he finds Hemmer (Bruce Horak) — dropped into the role of “Caster the Wizard,” but as self-aware as M’Benga — being dragged away by Queen Neve’s Crimson Guard, commanded by navigator Lt. Mitchell (Rong Fu).

Mounting a rescue mission to free the Aenar, the team comes across Spock (Ethan Peck) as the second wizard of this tale, “Pollux,” who leads them through the woods to the dark queen’s realm. M’Benga and his group finally make it to “Queen Neve,” and her throne — where Cadet Uhura (Celia Rose Gooding) brilliantly chews the scenery, taking them all captive with the help of Pollux’s sudden yet inevitable betrayal.

M’Benga, Hemmer, and his merry band find themselves locked away in Queen Neve’s dungeon (the ship’s transporter room, with added steel bars!) where the engineer reveals that some kind of alien consciousness has taken over the crew’s minds — something Hemmer was only able to rebuff thanks to the natural telepathic abilities of the Aenar mind.

Thanks to the power of science — and a laser scalpel — the group manages to make their escape, though they’re quickly intercepted by Pollux (Spock) and the Crimson Guard, where Adya (Ortegas) has some swashbuckling fun, only to be nearly defeated… but that’s when Una saves the day, dropping into the fight as the dark archer “Z’ymira the Huntress.”

Finally making it to Main Engineering, Hemmer and M’Benga find that the Jonisian Nebula outside the Enterprise is the source of the storybook fantasy; the gas cloud is in fact sentient, previously-theoretical spontaneous consciousness known as a “Boltzman brain.”  This rather remarkable discovery is passed over very quickly while the pair try to figure out why it has transformed the Enterprise from thoughts out of the doctor’s head, only to realize that it’s not M’Benga who sourced the Elysian fantasy, but Rukiya — the young girl has re-written the ending of her favorite story, just as she had wished in the opening moments of the episode.

The girl isn’t anywhere to be found, though, not even her usual home inside sickbay’s transporter buffer; M’Benga remembers that his daughter always wanted to see his quarters, so they head that way quickly — only to once again be stopped by Queen Neve’s forces, after learning that Rukiya is the actual Mercury Stone she’s been seeking.

All seems lost — including Rukiya — until Hemmer intervenes with his magical “Science!” powers, banishing the evil queen and her guards to the “Event Horizon” — more accurately, Cargo Bay 12, thanks to some clever work with the transporter. M’Benga finds his little princess in his quarters, where he learns Rukiya has been watching the entire adventure thanks to her new “friend,” the sentient nebula.

Thanks to Hemmer’s telepathy, M’Benga manages to speak with the nebula directly, explaining his concern for the Enterprise crew (and for his daughter). He learns in return that the nebula found Rukiya to be similar to itself, a lonely being in search of companionship; the medieval fantasy was a gift to allow the kid to experience childhood in a way her transporter-stasis life wouldn’t allow.

It’s bittersweet, especially because M’Benga knows the entity is right, in a way — but it also a massive waste of an important plot point. M’Benga has deprived his daughter of a childhood, and you would think that making his reasoning clear to an entity that does not know disease or pain should be a challenge, right? But no, it’s just tagged on here briefly. We instead have to deal with the doctor’s impossible choice: save his child from her illness, and leave the crew as fantasy characters, or return everything to normal — including Rukiya’s terminal disease.

There is, however, a third option: Rukiya can join the nebula as a second consciousness, living on in the void of space together. It’s heartbreaking, but both M’Benga and his daughter agree on it, even if he cannot join her. He must let her go, which he does as she disappears in a multicolored ball of light — only to reappear as an adult, to thank him and tell him he did the right thing.

Years have passed for her and “Deborah,” the name she’s given to the nebula (named for M’Benga’s late wife), and they’ve had countless adventures together in the few seconds she was away from the Enterprise. They’re happy! And he should be too. Once again – sweet and simple. Then again, the contrivance of having M’Benga be told to his face that he made the right choice is heart-warming to watch, but obvious and a little cheap. He is left alone, smiling, as the crew return to normal, remembering nothing of the last five hours of high fantasy nonsense.

CAMP NONSENSE OF THE WEEK

This week’s award goes to Anson Mount as the cowardly Lord Rauth, who is utterly absurd and camp for the whole episode. Plus, that hairstyle? Pure nonsense!

OBSERVATION LOUNGE

  • While briefly mentioned in “Children of the Comet,” the usefulness of the Aenar telepathic ability was previously put on display in the Enterprise Season 4 Romulan trilogy.
     
  • Queen Neve’s “Crimson Guard” are a rather obvious allusion to Star Trek redshirts.
     
  • “The Kingdom of Elysian,” the storybook on which this week’s adventure is based, is written by none other than Benny Russell — the alter-ego of one Benjamin Sisko whom the Deep Space Nine captain inhabited in “Far Beyond the Stars.” (It’s rather fitting that this story of fantasy worlds — used to mask painful realities — is written by such a person.)
The dreamer once again becomes the dream. (Paramount+)
  • The Boltzmann brain is a real thought experiment from the late 19th century.
     
  • Once again, despite Melissa Navia’s swashbuckling focus this episode, Strange New Worlds is just not giving us a deep dive into Erica Ortegas. (This is becoming a pattern!)
     
  • In an amusing touch, Lord Rauth’s map of the fantasy realm is shaped like the Enterprise.
     
  • Princess Talia’s furry friend is Christina Chong’s own dog, Runa Ewok… but the real question I’m forced to ask is, did that dog already exist aboard the Enterprise? If it’s not a crewman’s pet, was the dog blinked into existence — and then out again — by that sentient nebula?!
Christina Chong and her dog Runa Ewok. (Photo: Christina Chong on Instagram)

Babs Olusanmokun is absolutely stellar throughout the hour, and I’m very thankful that both he and Bruce Horak got to take the limelight this week as the key players — but the thing about “The Elysian Kingdom” is that it’s, well, safe. That’s not always a bad thing, but many of the first-season episodes (beyond the ending to “Lift Us Up Where Suffering Cannot Reach” a few weeks ago) have been playing things a bit it too safe for my tastes.

And this is a show that knows it can take bigger swings. This episode has allusions to riskier character or plot choices — with its passing hints towards Adya and Z’ymera’s very close relationship — but there’s nothing particularly challenging or uncomfortable here. Even the reveal of Dr. M’Benga’s first name, the particularly-anticlimactic “Joseph” smacks of hesitancy, when “Jabilo” — the aptly-chosen first name used for years in Star Trek novels — was right there for the taking.

I think it’s clear that everyone — and I mean everyone, from costumers to writers to actors in roles both big and small — had an insane amount of fun on this episode. Everyone is hamming it up, especially Gooding, and I have to commend that, but it’s just… that. It seems a lot closer to a Christmas Panto show than anything else; writing from London, though, I admit that’s a reference which may be lost on our American readers.

Episodes like “The Elysian Kingdom” give us much of the aesthetic and ambience of the Original Series, but without the ethical substance. I understand and accept that classic Trek wasn’t always like that, but Strange New Worlds seems incredibly unwilling to engage with it in detail. Some of the Original Series does this, too — “Catspaw” is good example — but other episodes well-known for the high levels of nonsense, such as “Return of the Archons” or “I, Mudd,” usually had some sort of point about social trends, none of which is found here.

There’s a lot more to classic Star Trek than just silly costumes and clunky noises — a desire to tell plots that make you think and ask questions of our society. There is some cursory engagement with questions around terminal illness and engagement here, but it is slim. With Strange New Worlds aiming to recapture that classic Trek vibe, there must also be room to say something more about the world, right?

Star Trek: Strange New Worlds returns with “All Those Who Wander” on Thursday, June 30 on Paramount+ in the United States, Australia, Latin America, and the Nordics, as well as on CTV Sci Fi Channel in Canada.

The episode will follow on Paramount+ in the UK and Ireland later this summer; additional international distribution has not yet been announced.

EXO-6 Assimilates Seven of Nine to Its STAR TREK: VOYAGER Collective

Following quickly behind Captain Janeway, the Doctor, and Lt. Commander Tuvok, everyone’s favorite former Borg drone just beamed into the rapidly-growing EXO-6 Star Trek 1:6-scale character collection.

Announced for preorder on June 21, Seven of Nine is the company’s newest addition to their line of Star Trek: Voyager figures. In development now — all product images below are of the EXO-6 prototype design — the Seven figure is going to have a longer production and fulfillment timeframe compared to earlier releases due to new body engineering.

As EXO-6 describes it in their product announcement:

“She’s been in development longer than any other character and we knew we had to get her right. But after a long wait, a little teasing, and a lot of anticipation, we are very happy to finally have Star Trek: Voyager’s Seven of Nine ready for pre-order.

Seven has a newly developed body that will set the standard for female EXO-6 figures going forward. She has gone through several expensive tests and different sculpts, trying to get the body as close as possible to the ideal form.

Due to the more complex production methods used for this body the time from pre-order to delivery won’t be at the same warp speed as previous EXO-6 releases. She will need about six months to arrive in the Alpha Quadrant – but it will be worth the wait!”

Clad in her later-season magenta costume — complete with color-coordinated tricorder and phaser holsters mounted on a waist-mounted belt — the final Seven of Nine figure will include a Voyager-era compression phaser rifle, Type II hand phaser, a Starfleet science tricorder, data padd, and five pairs of hands featuring the character’s unique Borg specifications… right down to a set of extended assimilation tubules.

This new Seven of Nine figure will measure in at approximately 11″ tall, and will come with its own display bases like all of EXO-6’s other 1:6-scale figure — you can preorder it now at the EXO-6 website, where the figure retails at a $220 price point ($20 immediate deposit required).

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

STAR TREK EXPLORER Issue #3 Arrives This Month; Read an Exclusive Excerpt from a Special Kate Mulgrew Interview

Issue #3 of Star Trek Explorer, the official magazine for the Star Trek Universe, beams down to subscribers next week — and we’ve got an exclusive look at a new feature interview with Star Trek: Voyager and Star Trek: Prodigy star Kate Mulgrew from the new release!

Between her return in Prodigy, adding her voice to the long-running Star Trek Online game, and her legendary leadership of the starship Voyager, franchise favorite Kate Mulgrew gets her own spotlight feature in the latest issue of Star Trek Explorer.

Kate Mulgrew as Captain Janeway then… and Hologram Janeway today.

Here’s an exclusive excerpt from the lengthy interview with Explorer writer Ian Spelling:

Janeway is back… in more ways than one! Not only is Kate Mulgrew reprising her iconic Star Trek: Voyager role in animated sensation Star Trek: Prodigy, but in massively multiplayer online RPG Star Trek Online as well. So how does it feel for the actress to be portraying a holographic Captain Janeway, an animated Admiral Janeway, and a menacing Mirror Janeway all at once…?

“Let me tell you something,” Mulgrew marvels. “From the moment I stepped onto that bridge 25 years ago, I knew that anything was possible. It has been! That’s truly the legacy of Star Trek. Once you undertake a role like this, the captain of a starship, you’re asking for a wild, wonderful, and phenomenal experiences to befall you. And so, they have. It was not a terrific surprise that I was called to voice the character that I created. It was simply a great pleasure. I thought it would have been so disappointing had they given it to somebody else to imitate me, but they didn’t. That’s the wisdom of [Executive Producer] Alex Kurtzman. Smart guy.”

That said, it wasn’t a no-brainer.

“No, it wasn’t actually,” she notes. “I gave it some real consideration over quite a long period of time. But I was so enamored of Alex Kurtzman’s approach and of his intelligence that I didn’t consider too long. The reality is, nobody else could voice it but me, in order to make it an honest success. I think people will respond to the face that it is Mulgrew’s voice in the embodiment of Janeway, but I’m thrilled that he asked me, and I’m thrilled to be doing it. It’s really been quite a happy and satisfying experience.”

Mulgrew begins to describe how Janeway came back to her “almost immediately,” but then course corrects to stress that the character “never left me.” As a result, when she sat in front of a microphone to record her dialogue for Prodigy, Janeway spilled out of her as if it were the 1990s and she was looping dialogue for an episode of Voyager.

“It’s so deeply imprinted,” Mulgrew says of Janeway. “She resides within. She never leaves, and she’s never far. When the scripts were given to me, the booth was closed. Particularly being within the circumstances of the pandemic, I felt a real need, almost a calling, to just get her back, and to let her go. That’s what happened. It was wonderful. Lovely.”

Star Trek Explorer #3 features a wide range of Trek content, including an interview with Q actor John de Lancie focusing on his return in Star Trek: Picard, a trip behind the scenes of Star Trek: Prodigy with the show’s creative leaders, and two new short stories: a Captain Proton adventure from Voyager writer Lisa Klink, and new Khan Singh short story from the master of Khan fiction, author Greg Cox.

The newsstand and subscriber-exclusive covers of STAR TREK EXPLORER #3.

You can read the full interview with Star Trek: Prodigy’s Kate Mulgrew, along with all of that other good stuff from the Star Trek Universe when Star Trek Explorer #3 goes on sale June 28 — head over to Titan Magazines’ site to subscribe, or to pick up back issues of the previous Star Trek Explorer releases if you missed them!

Blue Brixx Expands STAR TREK Brick-Building Kits into DEEP SPACE NINE, the Klingon Empire, FIRST CONTACT, and More!

Germany brick-building company Blue Brixx entered the Star Trek Universe last summer with a range of build kits from the final frontier — including Kirk’s Enterprise, the Enterprise-D, a Next Gen-era shuttlecraft, Original Series gadgets, and more — and now the second wave of Trek sets are expanding into the Bajoran sector and beyond!

In a lengthy preview video released over the weekend, the company showcased thirteen new Star Trek brick-building kits — similar to LEGO blocks — which include new Federation starships like the USS VoyagerUSS Defiant and USS Enterprise-Aand new alien vessels like the Romulan D’Deridex Warbird, and the classic Klingon D7 from the Original Series.

Along with those nine smaller builds, four larger-sized Star Trek builds are coming from the Blue Brixx team, starting with the Starfleet phaser rifle introduced in Star Trek: First Contact. The nearly full-size rifle will be a 2273pc kit, estimated to sell for about 170 Euro when released.

Next up is a pretty great rendition of the Klingon Bird of Prey fighter, introduced in Star Trek III: The Search for Spock — like the other starships and builds in the Blue Brixx lineup, this build of the classic Klingon ship comes with its own display stand when you’ve completed the 1539pc build.

Space Station Deep Space 9 is the next new addition! The Cardassian station, a 2889pc build which includes a tiny USS Defiant docked at its airlock port, is estimated to arrive at about a 200 Euro price point when it drops out of the wormhole late this year.

The final big new build is another great score for Star Trek: Deep Space Nine fans — the hearty runabout USS Rio Grande is the biggest Blue Brixx set to date: a whopping 3090pc kit. This modular build includes interior cabin details — including the rear lounge area seen only in TNG’s “Timescape” — and is estimated to cost 200 Euro as well.

You can see all of Blue Brixx’s Star Trek Universe build kit offerings at their website; because their license is limited to the German market, all purchases from other regions will require international shipping in addition to the build kits’ sale price.

Do any of the Blue Brixx Star Trek kits strike your interest — or have you bought some of their kits from the 2021 release lineup? Let us know your thoughts in the comments below!

New STAR TREK: STRANGE NEW WORLDS Photos — “The Elysian Kingdom”

Star Trek: Strange New Worlds’ first season continues this week, and we’ve got a new collection of photos from “The Elysian Kingdom” to share with you today!

This week, Dr. M’Benga (Babs Olusanmokun) continues to pursue a cure for his daughter Rukiya’s (Sage Arrindell) sickness — when suddenly, after a nebula gives the starship engine trouble… the Enterprise becomes home to a medieval fairy tale brought to life.

Here are 31 new photos from this week’s episode:

And in case you haven’t seen it, here’s a preview clip from “The Elysian Kingdom” which debuted in last week’s episode of The Ready Room, along with the official Paramount+ trailer for the upcoming episode.

THE ELYSIAN KINGDOM — The U.S.S. Enterprise becomes stuck in a nebula that is home to an alien consciousness that traps the crew in a fairy tale.

Written by Akela Cooper & Onitra Johnson. Directed by Amanda Row.

Star Trek: Strange New Worlds returns with “The Elysian Kingdom” on Thursday, June 23 on Paramount+ in the United States, Australia, Latin America, and the Nordics, as well as on CTV Sci Fi Channel in Canada.

The series will arrive to the UK and Ireland on Paramount+ on June 22; additional international distribution has not yet been announced.

STAR TREK Highlights From Prop Store’s Upcoming June Auction

Beginning on June 21, 2022, the Prop Store will begin their latest three-day summer auction of over 1,800 lots of props, costumes, and entertainment memorabilia — including a large number of notable Star Trek items.

Though this is not a dedicated Star Trek auction like the recent Star Trek: Discovery or upcoming Star Trek: Picard auction of props and costumes from each respective series, Prop Store has a nice selection of Star Trek items going under the hammer, including some truly iconic pieces that have not been seen in many years.

There are 131 Star Trek items being auctioned — that’s 100 more than last fall’s auction! — including at least one lot from most of the Star Trek TV shows and many of the movies. Trek prop and costume auction prices are not cheap, so come ready to spend if you want to win something, but there are likely to be lots among the 131 at lots of different price points.

Here are seven of the hottest items from this week’s auction block:

Light-Up Hero TR-580 Medical Tricorder (Mark VII)

Tricorders are the most iconic Star Trek props alongside phasers and communicators, and this gorgeous medical tricorder from Star Trek: The Next Generation is absolutely top of the line. A full “hero” version — which means that it lights up — the tricorder is equipped with the removable medical scanner that also illuminates.

I’ve not seen a nicer looking TNG medical tricorder come to market before, and think this one will sell very high — bidding is already up to a cool $8,000 as of June 19.

Jean-Luc Picard’s Artificial Heart

There are so many iconic props from The Next Generation in this summer’s auction, but perhaps the most iconic is Captain Jean-Luc Picard’s artificial heart, held up by Q in the episode “Tapestry” after Picard dies and Q greets him in the “afterlife.” Picard’s artificial heart was a central part of the character’s arc, and “Tapestry” is an iconic episode.

Light-Up USS Defiant Shuttle Filming Model

This beautiful shuttlecraft from the USS Defiant, screen matched to the third season Deep Space Nine episode “Destiny,” is an amazing piece of Trek history. (My favorite detail are the Sisko and Kira Playmates Toys action figures sitting in the shuttle’s cockpit!)

You can’t beat a starship model, and if you want to own one, they are becoming increasingly rare to get the opportunity to purchase. Bidding for this amazing model is also likely to go high, and is also already past $8,000 as of June 19.

Judge Q’s “Encounter at Farpoint” Trial PADD

One of the few surviving props that can be directly tied back to the Star Trek: The Next Generation pilot episode, “Encounter at Farpoint,” this is the light up PADD that contained the charges against humanity from the iconic courtroom scenes in which Picard faces off with Q.

Though the piece clearly has a lot of wear from age, it appears to be still light up and is likely to be extremely highly sought after. It’s rare to find a Next Generation prop that definitely comes from the pilot — with a starting price at a whopping $5,000.

Tau Cynga V / Vulan II Matte Painting by Robert Stromberg

A stunning Robert Stromberg matte painting used in Star Trek: The Next Generation — and later repurposed for Star Trek: Deep Space Nine — this matte painting began life as the surface of Tau Cygna V in “The Ensigns of Command.”

Matte paintings are incredible pieces of art, but they are big! This one is almost 70 inches long and 50 inches tall, so you need some serious wall space to contain it — and why is there a white area in the middle, you might ask? Isn’t it unfinished?

Nope: the unpainted area was left that way so that live-action footage could be edited in to make it seem like people were walking through the town.

TNG Main Engineering Master Systems Display Table Keypad

This year’s summer auction has a number of nice LCARS pieces from the USS Enterprise NCC-1701-D, but the nicest in my opinion is a systems readout display from the Master Systems Display Table at the center of Main Engineering.

From one of the two display screens that pop out of the table on either side, this iconic piece shows profile schematics of the Enterprise-D, and can be found in a number of episodes — pretty much anytime the scene takes place at the central table.

Seven of Nine’s Burgundy Duty Costume

There are a lot of great costumes in this auction, but none greater than Seven of Nine’s iconic burgundy catsuit, as worn by Jeri Ryan in Star Trek: Voyager. This costume, one of the most readily identifiable with the character, was used through most of the character’s appearance on the show.

Seven of Nine props or costumes are very rare, so I expect bidding will be fierce!

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The Adam Savage’s Tested video team visited Prop Store recently, to get an up-close and personal look at some of the upcoming lots headed to auction:

To see the complete list of Star Trek lots, for more information, and to register to become a bidder, you can visit Prop Store’s auction page here — and share with us what you’re most interested in acquiring in the comments below!

New 4K HDR Edition of STAR TREK: FIRST CONTACT on Paramount+

Last September saw the arrival of the first four Star Trek films in the ultra high-def 4K HDR (high dynamic range) format, and with hints of more to follow in 2022, Star Trek: First Contact is getting in on the action with a new transfer on the Paramount+ streaming service.

Available on P+ in the United States (unconfirmed in other international territories), a new 4K HDR transfer of Star Trek: First Contact was spotted first by Bill Hunt of The Digital Bits, with updated film detail and color grading. We have a few sets of screencaps comparing the new Paramout+ transfer with the original Blu-ray transfer from 2009, to give you a taste of what this new edition looks like.

An important regarding these shots: the Paramount+ caps below were taken from a non-HDR display, which does not present the truest look of the color from the new version of the film for still-frame web display.

We’ll have more “accurate” comparison caps from the new First Contact transfer from the hopefully in-the-works remastered Blu-ray release of the film, if and when such a Blu-ray is released.

(All “1” caps are from the 2009 Blu-ray; all “2” caps are from the current Paramount+ presentation.)

Star Trek: First Contact will be available on Paramount+ through July 31, after which the film will leave the streaming service (likely due to pre-existing contractual distribution agreements), though we expect it will be back before too long after that.

Star Trek V: The Final Frontier and Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country are expected to arrive on 4K UHD Blu-ray this fall, though no formal announcement has been made regarding those films. As of this writing, no official news on a 4K disc release of the Next Generation films have been announced — but all good things come to those who wait.

We’ve reached out to Paramount+ for comment on the new transfer of Star Trek: First Contact, and will update this post with any feedback we receive.

Star Trek: The First 4 Films
Remastered for 4K Blu-ray

Star Trek: The Original Series
Blu-ray Steelbooks



Terry Matalas Talks Returning NEXT GEN Stars — and Hints at Other Legacy Characters — in New STAR TREK: PICARD Interview

In celebration of “Captain Picard Day” on June 16, the Inglorious Treksperts podcast released an interview with Terry Matalas, the current showrunner for Star Trek: Picard whose illustrious career started in the Berman-era of Star Trek, and has continued through critically acclaimed shows like 12 Monkeys.

The interview with Mark A. Altman and Daren Dochterman was wide-ranging, covering the full extent of Terry’s career. But given Matalas is deep in post-production for Season 3 of Star Trek: Picard right now, the discussion trended in that direction — and Matalas had some very revealing comments to make about the upcoming third and final year of the show.

Most significantly, Matalas made his most extensive comments yet on the rumors of other legacy characters from the Star Trek universe who may appear in the final season, beyond the returning main cast of Star Trek: The Next Generation:

“There are some people from ‘Star Trek’ who come back in this season who aren’t the ‘Next Gen’ [primary] cast. I mean there’s one character who is in ‘Next Gen’ who I was like… I really want THIS character to come back.

And when they did [agree to return], that was weirdly more thrilling than everything else in totality.”

And when asked if Matalas had plans to stick around and produce any more content for the Star Trek universe — after Picard signs off for good — the showrunner offered this cryptic response:

“Uhh…. uhh…. [pause] …if this was a printed interview, you’d say, ‘The showrunner smiled devilishly.’

I think, to me, this is a period of time in the ‘Star Trek’ universe I’d love to spend more time in. There’s nothing less than 30 legacy characters across ‘Deep Space Nine,’ ‘Voyager’ and ‘Next Gen’ that you’d love to check in and see — you can’t get to them all in [‘Picard’] Season 3.

We don’t get to Miles O’Brien. I’d love to get to Miles O’Brien! There are people though — I could say one name to you right now that comes back, and [you’d be] like, ‘Oh my god, I want to know what happens!’

You’re going to find out. So I would love nothing more than to stay in the 2401 year to tell more ‘Star Trek’ stories in this universe… so that’s all I will say.”

But Matalas did acknowledge some hard choices had to made about inclusion of the original Star Trek: Picard cast in Season 3 as a result of the incoming legacy actors; Evan Evagora (Elnor), Isa Briones (Soji), Alison Pill (Jurati), and Santiago Cabera (Rios) all departed as series regulars after Season 2.

Said Matalas about the upcoming 10-episode run:

“We just don’t have infinite cash — or run time — to do justice to infinite characters.”

However, that does not mean that Picard’s last season won’t feature any new characters as the show heads towards its ultimate conclusion; the writer/producer shared how he sees the closing chapter of the show as the beginning of a new era for Trek storytelling.

“Season 3 is very much the passing of the torch from one generation to the next. I love the moment where old Bones is walking around the Enterprise with Data [in “Encounter at Farpoint”]. I love when Spock came on [in “Unification”] and had that arc with Picard.

The tapestry feels much richer when that happens. I think there are opportunities to tell the story of the next generation that crosses with the last.”

Speaking of the returning cast, Matalas spoke at length about his recruiting process that lead to the return of Patrick Stewart’s Next Gen co-stars, as Jonathan Frakes (Riker), Michael Dorn (Worf), Gates McFadden (Crusher), Marina Sirtis (Troi), LeVar Burton (La Forge) are set to join their former captain (and Brent Spiner, in an undisclosed role) for one final adventure.

“Say what you will about ‘Nemesis’ — good or bad — it didn’t feel like the end of those characters. They needed a send off and that was the core pitch to Patrick, and to all of them.

I called every one of them and talked about their characters, where you think their characters are, and I want to send you all off; I thought ‘Star Trek VI’ was a pretty great send off for the [Original Series] crew.”

He also shared some insight into those discussions with a few of the returning Trek stars:

“I wanted to make sure that [Gates McFadden] really had a very strong story. [Beverly Crusher is] a fascinating character who let her son go off into the universe who once had a romantic relationship with Captain Picard — and where [is that relationship] now?

LeVar [Burton] made me cry. There was a moment where I pitched what happened to Geordi, and he was so emotional that I got emotional… I was like, ‘Okay, this is one of those cool moments.’

Jonathan [Frakes] was [directing] on Season 2 with me, and I said ‘Hey, I have this idea. I want to tell you about Riker… and it’s a LOT of Riker.’ Frakes is fantastic in Season 3. We wrote to Jonathan [as an actor], so he has that sparkle in his eye throughout the whole thing.”

Matalas also promised that the final year of Picard would see the reappearance of the iconic, mushroom-shaped Spacedock orbital facility introduced in Star Trek III: The Search for Spock, and that the season’s music would have a highly cinematic quality — akin to Star Trek film scores of the likes of Jerry Goldsmith or James Horner.

Finally, the writer reflected on the entirety of Star Trek: Picard’s three-season run, now that every shot is filmed and things are headed towards the finish line:

“In a weird way, ‘Picard’ has become an anthology, in that Season 1 is very different from Season 2 — from Michael [Chabon’s] vision to Akiva [Goldsman’s] deep dive — to Season 3, [which] is different from those two.

All of them, though, [have] the focus of Picard, now dealing with some emotional aspect of his life that’s important.”

But just when will the third and final season of Star Trek: Picard make its way to viewers?

While there has been some speculation towards an early 2023 arrival from both fans and Star Trek cast alike, Matalas wouldn’t offer any answers: “That is above my pay grade,” he said, “I do not know.”

To listen to the entire hour-plus interview, head over to Inglorious Treksperts or play using the embedded controls above.

Star Trek: Picard is currently in post-production on its third and final season, which will eventually be available 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.

Star Trek: Picard
Season 1 Blu-ray

Star Trek: Picard
Season 1 Steelbook

Star Trek: Picard
Season 2 Blu-ray

Star Trek: Picard
Season 2 Steelbook

STAR TREK: STRANGE NEW WORLDS Review — “The Serene Squall”

While not entirely remarkable, “The Serene Squall” is a fun, enjoyable episode with some good added lore — and who doesn’t love pirates? Beyond that though, it doesn’t really tread new ground for either Strange New Worlds, or the Star Trek franchise as a whole.

Unexpectedly, we begin the episode with T’Pring (Gia Sandhu) hard at work at the Ankeshtan K’tilk Vulcan Criminal Rehabilitation Center — she refers to it as a ‘retreat,’ but it seems just like a fancy prison — where outside of her official duties, she’s been researching ways to ‘spice up’ her relationship with Spock… by reading Henry Miller’s Tropic of Cancer, Erica Jong’s Fear of Flying, and Maggie Wilson’s The Argonauts.

Spock (Ethan Peck) is rather taken aback by his fiancé’s headfirst dive into human sexual literature, and while he admits his appreciation for her efforts to understand his human side, it clearly makes him uncomfortable. It’s played for humor, but there’s a slight seriousness to it as well — in the sense that Spock isn’t ready to face the raw, external image of his identity that T’Pring’s research literature discusses.

T’Pring and Spock have a Zoom date. (Paramount+)

By the standards of Star Trek’s usual discourse on mixed-race identity, this is somehow above average — barely. Putting Tropic of Cancer aside for another day, Spock connects with Christine Chapel (Jess Bush) on the way to head to dinner with Dr. Aspen (Jesse James Keitel), a guest who boarded the Enterprise to assist in a search for three colony ships lost outside of Federation space.

Apparently, the ships are being threatened by a pirate vessel called the Serene Squall, which doesn’t seem to concern Captain Pike (Anson Mount) very much — at least, not until La’an (Christina Chong) reports that two of the three colony ships have been found… in pieces.

The lack of survivors among the wreckage seems to suggest that the pirates were after the colonists themselves for slave labor — a grim callback and reminder of the casual native of galactic slavery that was discussed repeatedly in both Enterprise and the Original Series. With the threat of Federation citizens ending up in chains, Pike chooses to take the Enterprise out into unclaimed territory, beyond the reach of any help from Starfleet.

Dr. Aspen, former Starfleet counselor. (Paramount+)

While the Enterprise searches for the colonists, Spock and Aspen engage with each other, with the counselor teasing more and more personal information from the Vulcan along the way. It’s a little bit wooden; perhaps even forced, and at worst is rather filler-y. It’s made up for by the tense scene when the ship gets trapped in an electromagnetic laser net (which viewers may recognize as apparent Tholian technology), and Spock has to pick the right asteroid to target to save the ship.

He’s horrified by the need to rely on his gut, which is a terrifying prospect, in a nice nod to some of the best Spock moments of years past, like when he is forced to rely on instinct and hunches instead of logic in “The Galileo Seven.”

Spock’s fear of his gut instinct (and his own reservations about being labelled either human or Vulcan) are easily deconstructed by Aspen, who points out that his species’ expectations limit him — something Spock has, apparently, not thought about before. He doesn’t have much time to reflect on this, however, before the Enterprise finds the last colony ship, where pirates are holding the missing civilians as hostages.

Some kind of, hmm, web? (Paramount+)

A routine landing party led by the “Boy Scout” captain himself goes wrong, however, as Pike and La’an soon learn that there are in fact no colonists on board the third ship at all — the entire scenario was a ruse to lure in the Enterprise, and the pirates use the chance to board and take over the starship while Pike and team are taken prisoner.

It’s a rather successful coup de main operation, with all of the bridge crew — save for Spock and Aspen — incapacitated in less than a minute, while Chapel flees into the Jefferies tube as the only other crewmate to avoid the pirates’ siege.

The plot bifurcates into two through lines here, with Captain Pike and his captive crew — including La’an, Number One (Rebecca Romijn), Ortegas (Melissa Navia), and Dr. M’Benga (Babs Olansunmokun) — trying to throw off their chains aboard the Serene Squall, while Spock, Chapel, and Aspen work to take back control of the Enterprise, Die Hard-style.

While Spock and Aspen head for sickbay, Pike tries his best to charm the pirate crew by cooking an alternative meal to the Orion gruel being served up by their current captain, which is definitely not a solution Kirk would have used.

“Can I cook, or can’t I?” (Paramount+)

Chapel meanwhile fights off two pirates with a hypospray, as Spock and Aspen head to Engineering while arguing over whether or not to abandon the ship to the marauders. It turns out that Aspen was married to a Vulcan, and their husband was killed by this group of pirates — which, though severe, is still not enough of a motivation to dissuade Spock from trying to take back the ship.

The Pike food gambit (and his own subtle twisting of the Orion captain’s arm) seems to pay off, as the Orion decides to sell the Starfleet captives to the Klingons — much to the pirate crew’s disdain. With Pike gearing up to start a mutiny, everything seems to be in the favor of our heroes… that is, until Spock and Chapel end up handing control of the ship inadvertently handing over full control of the Enterprise to the pirate crew’s leader: Dr. Apsen.

Aspen reveals that their real identity is Captain Angel of the Serene Squall, and Jesse Keitel ramps up her performance to a level near the vicious, camp brutality of Rainn Wilson’s turn as Harry Mudd in Star Trek: Discovery — but with even more cruelty here. Angel revels in how hurt and betrayed Spock is, which is a bit painful to watch, and just a bit more labored.

In a shocking twist…. (Paramount+)

But that first twist brings a second, as Angel reveals that Spock was in fact their sought prize the entire time; the pirate captain uses Spock’s relationship with T’Pring as leverage to force the release of a Vulcan dissident from the Ankeshtan K’tilk facility. Angel begins to threaten T’Pring with promised harm to Spock, if she doesn’t release someone named Xaverius from captivity.

With the fate of the Enterprise and T’Pring’s career at stake, Spock makes the drastic move of declaring his infidelity — a supposed affair with Chapel — as a gambit to prevent the prisoner transfer. He does so by saying he is in love with Nurse Chapel, which… yeah. They had to do this at some point, and I feel like half of us were dreading it. This isn’t the worst way they could have done it, but it’s not good either.

There probably wasn’t a good way, to be honest, but the fact that Chapel seems to immediately feel something after the two kiss is even more iffy. (Truthfully, I share Angel’s complete disbelief in it.)

The actors sell it — they really do! Jess Bush is excellent, but I can’t say I enjoyed it, or that her emotional reaction was well-earned. It seems to be enough for T’Pring though, as she joins in the act by immediately breaking off her engagement with Spock (to Angel’s shock), thus ending any chance of the prisoner exchange.

A little to convincing for Chapel. (Paramount+)

Before Angel can exact their fury on the Vulcan’s ship, the Enterprise goes into lockdown as Pike and crew swoop in aboard the Serene Squall, using override codes to save the day. Angel doesn’t stick around to end up in a rehabilitation center, beaming off before the crew can place them under arrest… but not before sharing that the mysterious Xaverius had “always talked about” him, cryptically sharing some final words of wisdom that appear to shake Spock to his core.

It’s a nicely-rounded ending with some tasty foreshadowing; first from T’Pring and Spock, who — despite renewing their engagement — are perhaps a little more more distant from each other, with Spock’s own humanity still misunderstood by his betrothed.

Chapel and Spock’s relationship also seems to be a little more fraught, with Spock’s attempts to apologize dismissed quickly — just as they had been by T’Pring — who points out that Spock would never cheat on his fiancé. He agrees, remarking that “She knows him well,” with a little apprehension — just as he also did with T’Pring.

However, he does share with Chapel something new: Angel’s parting words revealed to him that the dangerous, incarcerated Xaverius must be a pseudonym for someone the Vulcan has known for years…

…his emotional half-brother, Sybok.

Hoo boy. (Paramount+)

CAMP NONSENSE OF THE WEEK

This week’s award has to go to Jesse James Keitel’s delicious performance as Captain Angel — but special mention to Captain Pike’s talk-like-a-pirate banter!

OBSERVATION LOUNGE

  • Erica Ortegas continues her long run as the resident quip machine in this episode — for which I have no complaints — but the lack of any character focus on our helmswoman is beginning to show. Where’s the love for the Enterprise’s own Hawkeye Pierce?
     
  • Spock’s explanation of the two-day communication delay back to Starfleet — because of the ship’s distance from subspace relays — offers a simple and elegant solution to the varied communication times with Starfleet we see across the Original Series.
     
  • However, the subsequent piece of worldbuilding — that Starfleet doesn’t like its ships operating outside of Federation space — is a lot more confusing. If Starfleet doesn’t like
    having ships outside of the Federation, then where exactly has the Enterprise been exploring? Within the boundaries of the UFP? I get the point of the line, making it clear to viewers that Pike’s going out on a limb… but it should have been clearer as to what boundary exactly the Enterprise crossed in this episode.
Crossing the border without permission. (Paramount+)
  • The Squall’s Orion first mate’s plan to sell the Enterprise crew to Klingons is an allusion to key accusation against the Klingon Empire in “Errand of Mercy,” where Kirk attests to the Empire’s planetary labor camps. This is, however, the first time that such an accusation has been confirmed on screen.
     
  • The Enterprise crew was to be sold on Qu’Vat Colony, the Klingon world where Phlox was taken to cure the Augment virus in the Star Trek: Enterprise episode “Affliction.”
     
  • When Angel takes over the Enterprise, they fire the ship’s phasers as a test; eight beams, in four groups of two, are fired forward. Despite being the sort of person who is informed enough to know where exactly all the phaser batteries are on the Enterprise, I have no idea where those eight beams came from.
Stonn: Origins! (Paramount+)
  • T’Pring’s colleague on Ankeshtan K’Til is Stonn, the man who will ultimately win the Vulcan woman’s heart after her future falling-out with Spock.
     
  • Sybok (a.k.a. Xaverius) is said to be a member of of the V’tosh ka’tur — or “Vulcans without logic” — introduced in the Star Trek: Enterprise episode “Fusion,” and reintroduced to the modern era in “Spock Amok.” Sybok had been theorized to be a member of this dissident group by fans after its first appearance in Enterprise.
     
  • This episode marks the first mention of Sybok in 33 years, after his single appearance in 1989’s Star Trek V: The Final Frontier.

“The Serene Squall” isn’t a bad episode, or even a mediocre one. Keitel is exceptional as Angel, and I certainly hope we’ll get to see her back as that sneering, exuberant pirate, hopefully arm-in-arm with Sybok himself. But apart from that, it’s enjoyable enough — while allusions to the wider, dangerous galaxy are always good, compared to last week, it’s not really taking any big swings.

It’s a safe bet of an episode, from the pirate plot down to the Spock/Chapel kiss. Is that a bad thing? Possibly. One of my mild worries is that “Strange New Worlds” may not try anything wild with its formula, and will stick a little too close to old ground.

Insert international-fans-somehow-watching-this-show joke here. (Paramount+)

Most of the previous six episodes have in one way or another subverted a standard Trek episode formula, but this does just about everything by the numbers, from start to finish. I hope that isn’t a sign that they’re not willing to push the boundaries of their storytelling.

This does not, of course, mean I did not enjoy the episode. But there was room for more, I think. Explore different characters! (We’re still overdue for a full-fledged Ortegas episode!) But I’m not unhappy; it was well cast and decently paced, and will be an easy rewatch — but it could have been more.

Star Trek: Strange New Worlds returns with “The Elysian Kingdom” on Thursday, June 23 on Paramount+ in the United States, Australia, Latin America, and the Nordics, as well as on CTV Sci Fi Channel in Canada.

The first three episodes of the series will arrive to the UK and Ireland on Paramount+ on June 22 (with weekly releases following); additional international distribution has not yet been announced.