Home Blog Page 67

STAR TREK: PICARD Beams Down on Blu-ray and DVD on October 4

The most recent run of Patrick Stewart’s return to Star Trek wrapped up in May, and the complete ten-episode run of Star Trek: Picard Season 2 will be available for collectors to bring home on Blu-ray and DVD this fall.

Announced today through StarTrek.com, all ten episodes of the series’ second year will arrive in three-disc Blu-ray, Blu-ray Steelbook, and DVD collections on October 4, complete with an advertised hour of bonus features.

  • THE U.S.S. STARGAZER: The featurette takes a deep dive into the creation of the U.S.S. Stargazer from conception to build out and features exclusive timelapse photography alongside Production Designer Dave Blass, who brought the original TNG art department onboard, including the famed Star Trek graphic artist Michael Okuda, and design artists Doug Drexler and John Eaves to recreate the latest U.S.S. Stargazer.
     
  • THE CHATEAU: Led by Production Designer Dave Blass and Prop Master Jeff Lombardi, the featurette explores the transition of Picard’s chateau following its redesign and conversion to the Dataverse in season one.
     
  • THE TRIAL IS OVER: The intimate, behind-the-scenes look connects fans with John de Lancie who reprises his role as Q, playing a significant part in the season two story arc.
     
  • REBUILDING THE BORG QUEEN: The featurette showcases actress Annie Wersching as she discusses stepping into the role of the Borg Queen. After 25 years, the iconic character returns through advanced design and production techniques, which are further discussed by Designer Neville Page, Prosthetics Master Vincent Van Dyke and Make-Up Department Head James MacKinnon.
     
  • PICARD PROPS: Property Master Jeff Lombardi takes fans on a tour that showcases the various props created for Star Trek: Picard – Season Two.
     
  • PICARD PASSAGES: Alongside cast and crew, fans will follow the heroes from Star Trek: Picard through time and space as they encounter old and new friends, as well as challenges, in the latest season.
     
  • GAG REEL
     
  • DELETED SCENES

While it’s nice to see the Picard run continuing its Blu-ray Steelbook release packaging for physical media collectors — unlike Lower Decks, which dropped the special case release for its second season — the lack of audio commentary tracks in the Season 2 bonus features is a disappointment for those who enjoy those more-in-depth behind-the-scenes conversations about episodes.

We’ll have preorder links to Star Trek: Picard Season 2 as soon as they’re available, so be sure and check back soon if you want to add the episodes to your own collection!

WeeklyTrek Podcast #183 — Insight From STAR TREK: STRANGE NEW WORLDS’ Vulcans, and New Merch Announcements!

4

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 Infinite Diversity Podcast co-host Thad Haid to discuss all the latest Star Trek news.

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

In addition, stick around to hear Thad’s wish for an animated/live-action Star Trek crossover, and Alex’s musings about the bare Star Trek novel landscape for 2022 and ’23!

WeeklyTrek is available to subscribe and download each week on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, YouTube, and Spotify — and we’ll be sharing the details of each new episode right here on TrekCore each week if you’re simply just looking to listen in from the web.

Do you have a wish or theory you’d like to share on the show? Tweet to Alex at @WeeklyTrek, or email us with your thoughts about wishes, theories, or anything else about the latest in Star Trek news!

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

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

This week, the Enterprise crew chases after a convoy of missing colony ships with the help of visiting specialist Dr. Aspen (Jessie James Keitel) — only to find themselves in the midst of a dangerous encounter with a group of space pirates.

Here are 22 new photos from this week’s episode:

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

THE SERENE SQUALL — While on a dangerous humanitarian mission, the crew of the U.S.S. Enterprise stumbles into a harrowing game of leverage with the quadrant’s deadliest space pirate.

Written by Beau DeMayo & Sarah Tarkoff. Directed by Sydney Freeland.

Star Trek: Strange New Worlds returns with “The Serene Squall” on Thursday, June 16 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.

Michael Burnham Begins EXO-6’s STAR TREK: DISCOVERY Lineup

EXO-6’s growing Star Trek character figure collection has caught up to the modern franchise era as Commander Michael Burnham arrives as the first entry in the company’s Star Trek: Discovery lineup.

Based upon Sonequa Martin-Green’s character from the second season of Star Trek: Discovery, Commander Burnham is the first 1:6-scale figure from the Kurtzman era — though the company has already made it clear that other characters like Saru, Emperor Georgiou, and Captain Christopher Pike are not far behind.

Like EXO-6’s previous releases, the 1:6-scale Burnham figure includes a number of accessories. Along with several interchangeable hands, the figure will arrive with a Starfleet communicator, tricorder (with removable hand scanner), a hand phaser (which can be disassembled), and a larger 2250s-era phaser rifle.

The Burnham figure is available for preorder now at EXO-6’s website at a cost of $215 plus shipping; delivery is expected later this summer.

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

Weekend STAR TREK News Roundup: The Gorn and STRANGE NEW WORLDS, and LeVar Burton Talks Geordi’s PICARD Return

As we head into the new week and the back half of Strange New Worlds‘ first season, it’s time to round up some bits of franchise news that have beamed down in recent days — all are minor spoilers, so steer clear if you’re trying to stay completely safe!

*   *   *

Starting with the current series, Star Trek: Strange New Worlds co-showrunner Akiva Goldsman responded to a fan comment about the future of Nurse Christine Chapel’s love live this week, telling readers to ‘stand by’ for the arrival of her future fiancé, Dr. Roger Korby.

Korby appeared in the Original Series episode “What Are Little Girls Made Of?,” where the scientist discovered an android production facility on planet Exo III, and was eventually replaced by an android himself after he was critically injured.

*   *   *

Strange New Worlds brought the ‘boogeymen’ Gorn into the series in last month’s “Memento Mori,” and franchise boss Alex Kurtzman strongly hinted this week that viewers will get a close encounter with an updated take on the reptilian race at some point in the show’s future.

Speaking on The Ready Room with Wil Wheaton this week, Kurtzman described the challenges of bringing the 1960’s rubber-suited creature design into the modern era as a combination of practical builds and digital enhancement.

“The game you play with the Gorn is: okay, we can’t actually afford to do full CG characters, because that’s a wildly expensive proposition on a television budget. So how do you you merge the two? Ho do you use puppetry and how do you use CG — and in what way — how do you light it?

And all of those things play into hopefully creating an experience where you can’t tell the difference between them, and it feels vivid and real and scary.”

(Also? Without providing any details, Kurtzman confirmed that a future Star Trek Universe crossover event is in the works — so start your speculation engines running!)

*   *   *

Star Trek: The Next Generation actor LeVar Burton spoke to Yahoo! Entertainment about his return to the franchise in Star Trek: Picard’s third and final season, sharing a few bits of character detail about Geordi La Forge’s life in the early 25th century.

“[Our ‘Next Gen’ crew got] to put on our space suits and play these characters again! We all thought the ship had sailed on a conscious goodbye. When me made our last movie, ‘Nemesis’ in 2002, we expected there to be another one, and then things changed. So this was a great gift to us. This season of ‘Picard’ is a love poem to ‘Next Generation’ and we get to see these people that we grew to know and even love at this new point in their lives.

It was a lot of fun on so many levels. I also get to work with my kid: my daughter, Mica, plays one of Geordi’s two daughters. So the whole storyline really is about the next generation of ‘The Next Generation’ in many respects.

It’s nice to see that the infamously-single La Forge found the family life in the decades since we last saw him aboard the Enterprise-E, and having Mica Burton portraying his in-universe daughter — seen here together at Star Trek Day 2021 — is a perfect choice.

The other bit of info of note in Burton’s comments is his mention of putting on “space suits,” a term the Next Gen cast has often used to refer to their Starfleet uniforms — meaning La Forge may still be in active Starfleet service, as he was seen in the alternate “Timeless” future.

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

STAR TREK: STRANGE NEW WORLDS Review — “Lift Us Where Suffering Cannot Reach”

“Lift Us Up Where Suffering Cannot Reach” is probably going to upset a lot of people, as it’s about uncomfortable truths — and the sacrifices that societies are happy to make to continue. It is also exactly the kind of story that Gene Roddenberry, Gene Coon, and D.C. Fontana would have written for the Original Series.

Enterprise is on a star-mapping survey in the Majalan system, just beyond the edge of Federation space. While Captain Pike (Anson Mount) reflects on his previous visit to the region a decade ago, Cadet Uhura (Celia Rose Gooding) is in the middle of her rotation under Lieutenant Noonien-Singh (Christina Chong) in security, who is being a rather predictable hardass – though it’s mainly played for laughs more than anything else.

Even Pike’s imitation of La’an seems to reflect a general good humour about the security chief, rather than any real concern for Uhura. It’s nice — what is less nice, however, is the fact that an alien shuttle is under attack within the system. Enterprise comes their rescue, shrugging off several attacks from the cruiser, which does virtually no damage to the Starfleet vessel before a glancing phaser hit knocks it down.

The shuttle’s three passengers soon escape to the Enterprise: a child, an older man and a young woman, who recognizes the captain as the man she met when he was still a lieutenant.

Minister Alora (Lindy Booth) was rescued by Pike from a shuttle accident a decade earlier, where it appears they had some… chemistry. Compared with Kirk’s constant smooth-talking, Pike’s awkwardness is a little stilted – even forced – but it makes a nice alternative to the stereotypical man of action.

It turns out the kid is the First Servant of Majalus (Ian Ho), the soon-to-be leader of the planet. Alora and the other caretaker — his father, Gamal (Huse Madhavji) — had been caring for him on the moon, where he studied and prepared for ‘ascension.’ (We’ll get to that later.) Alora is evasive about the origin of their attacker, pointing to a nearby alien colony as potential kidnappers, and opposing any investigation. Starfleet regulations overrule her, however, and Pike orders the cruiser searched for clues.

Meanwhile, Dr. M’Benga (Babs Olusanmokun) is spending some more alone time with his daughter Rukiya (Sage Arrindell), only to be interrupted by the need to check up on the First Servant. I didn’t expect them to come back to Kiya so quickly, or to have so much focus on her this episode. Good stuff, really.

It was also nice (and a little cliché) to see elder Gamal scorn the sickbay as an “abattoir,” refusing to let M’Benga or Nurse Chapel (Jess Bush) heal the First Servant’s wounds. Instead, he heals the child at a quantum level, a procedure that fascinates the CMO greatly — and sets M’Benga’s sights on a possible path to cure his daughter’s sickness.

Planetside, Uhura and La’an clear the crash site ahead of Spock (Ethan Peck) and Alora’s arrival, who quickly discover two strange things: a strange medical device, and an oath coin, which the Majalun recognises as belonging to one of the First Servant’s guards. While the child remains on the Enterprise, Pike joins Alora on Majalus itself, a fantastical floating world reminiscent of TOS’s Stratos, complete with flying shuttles and holographic diaries.

Upon checking all the guards, however, Alora finds the traitor, who attempts an escape through the palace gardens — before they are stopped by Pike and minister, who kills the rebellious guard by accident. Alora is a little distraught afterwards, but not enough that she needs to be alone that night, as Captain Pike joins the Captain Kirk Alien Sex Club.

Even Pike is unable to enjoy an evening without dark reflection, however, as he tells Alora about his own destiny and the future accident, which is being treated less as death here (like it was in the first two episodes) and more as a severe injury. The minister suggests that Pike come and join them on Majalus, where he could be healed by their medicine.

It would mean accepting their way of life, which, at this point at least, he seems open to considering.

Shipside, Uhura’s lunch is interrupted by La’an, who requests that she translate a collection of data slates that the security chief ‘liberated’ from the crash site. La’an being a rulebreaker of sorts is another security chief cliché, but it does give her a little more depth – she understands that the rules aren’t everything, even if that understanding is making Uhura’s life a little harder.

M’Benga’s own life is a little more complicated too, especially when he returns from the mess hall to find his daughter and the First Servant playing hopscotch. It’s a bittersweet scene, and the child actors do their best to sell the innocence of it all. I even got the sense that the First Servant did understand the reasoning for keeping Kiya in the transporter.

But Uhura has managed to decipher the alien data tapes, learning that they’re encoded in a sister language of the Majaluns, meaning that the attacking ship who took down the First Servant’s shuttle isn’t from an alien world at all: Prospect VII is a Majalun colony.

Before Pike can deal with this revelation, however, Gamal and the First Servant decide to leave of their own accord. Before they can be stopped, however, an alien cruiser kidnaps the First Servant, destroying itself in an attempt to escape the Enterprise’s tractor beam at warp. This is a somewhat-obvious fake-out, but it does give us a great inkling of the deeper meanings behind the First Servant’s sacrifice, as Alora begins to panic about how the death of the child will mean the floating city will fall to the planets’ surface.

Pike seems confused, but it’s brushed over quickly when Uhura presents evidence that Gamal of helping the colonists kidnap his own son. Before Gamal can explain himself, Spock whisks Pike down to the lower decks, where they find the First Servant hiding in a cargo crate.

At the child’s urging, they whisk him down to the surface for his jubilant coronation. Pike and Una (Rebecca Romijn) still have suspicions, questioning Alora and Gamal respectively about their motives. Alora remains evasive, however, while whatever Gamal told Una cannot be relayed to the captain due to planetary shielding.

Pike finds out soon enough, however, when he is invited underneath the city to the planet’s ascension chamber, where the First Servant undergoes the ritual to perform his duty – forming the neural network at the core of the computer that maintains Majalus’ paradise. It’s a gruesome twist, especially as we’re shown the remains of the previous First Servant.

Strange New Worlds doesn’t pull its punches in this scene, and frankly it shouldn’t. This is a brutal recognition of how certain societies are willing to sacrifice their youth to maintain their principles. I think it’s probably a good thing this episode didn’t come out last week, considering the tragic events in Texas — but it’s topical, whether the writers meant it to be or not.

Watching a child willing go to his brain death, with no reservations right up until the very last moment is horrifying. There is nothing Pike can do about it, and he has no choice by the watch with us as the First Servant is bonded forever to the machine. The captain, knocked out by the guards, wakes up in Alora’s bedroom, but there’s no affection between them now. Pike – who knows that in a decade, he will put his life on the line for children – is horrified by someone who openly sacrifices a child for their society.

Alora tries to explain that they have no choice, that their founders – for whatever reason – designed the system as such, which is about as heavy handed an allegory for the 2nd Amendment debate as is possible, I think. Even Alora isn’t a fan of it but sees it as the only way to keep their society alive. Pike is still horrified but has no reply to the minister’s counterpoint about suffering in the Federation.

Unlike the Next Generation era, where the Federation is expressly considered a utopian paradise, Pike can’t quite say that about life in the 23rd century — it doesn’t make it okay, though. Majalus will, at the very least, be a state that Starfleet will avoid for now.

CAMP NONSENSE OF THE WEEK

This weeks’ honoree has to be Captain Pike’s terrible impression of La’an. Who doesn’t love a dodgy British accent?

OBSERVATION LOUNGE

  • The Enterprise transporter room is located on Deck 6.
     
  • Similar to the tricombadges seen in Star Trek: Discovery’s new era, Alora’s secretary has a holographic planner.
     
  • The cruisers from Prospect VII appear to be fitted with weapons turrets and long-barreled lasers, a first for a franchise which has generally avoided ‘space battleship’ turrets for most of its history.
‘Star Trek: Discovery’ actor Avaah Blackwell pulls double duty. (Paramount+)
  • One of the Majalun guards is played by Star Trek: Discovery’s Avaah Blackwell, a stunt actor who has who has appeared as multiple alien roles and occasionally as Lieutenant Ina on that series.
     
  • The framework for the story may be inspired by Urula K. Le Guin’s tale The Ones Who Walk Away from Omelas.
     
  • Pike’s first visit to Majalus was in the late 2240s, as a lieutenant; this was presumably before his assignment as Robert April’s first officer aboard the Enterprise.

“Lift Us Up Where Suffering Cannot Reach” leaves me feeling deeply uncomfortable. That’s excellent! It should! I think no-win ending is perfect. It’s going make a fair few people unhappy — perhaps seeing it as “too dark” or something — but this is what Star Trek is meant to do.

This week’s episode is a proper and extremely relevant morality tale in Trek tradition, and even if it is clunky at times, it’s no more clunky than, say, “The Cloud Minders” or “A Taste of Armageddon.” A lot of the plot is squeezed into the last act, which could have been rectified, but doing so might have meant losing out on the development we got for M’Benga and Uhura, who both got some great time in the limelight this week.

This episode of Strange New Worlds will probably be talked about for a while, as it should.

Star Trek: Strange New Worlds returns with “The Serene Squall” on Thursday, June 16 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.

Tuesday STAR TREK News Roundup — Khan Funko POP! Figure, STRANGE NEW WORLDS Casting, and a 20-Pound USS Enterprise!

We’re just a few days from the next new Star Trek: Strange New Worlds episode, so now seemed like a good time to catch up on some of the bits of Trek news that have beamed down over the last few days!

Saturday, June 4 marked the 40th anniversary of Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan, and to mark the occasion the official Star Trek website debuted an exclusive Khan Noonien Singh Funko POP! figure. This is available for preorder now at the StarTrek.com store if you’re a Funko fan, with anticipated delivery in early 2023.

The franchise has also partnered with Los Angeles-based ice cream company Cool Haus to produce a limited “Wrath of P’Khan” ice cream — made with candied pralines and caramel — set to be available through a special food truck wrapped for the anniversary, headed to California after a brief stop in New York City this past weekend.

From StarTrek.com:

Ringing in National Ice Cream Day on July 17th, the Coolhaus vehicle will make its way to Los Angeles’ busiest spot, Santa Monica at 2nd Street and Santa Monica Boulevard, in the peak of summer to bring the celebration and custom ice cream to Star Trek lovers in the city of Angels.

The ice cream truck will also be heading to San Diego Comic-Con this year with streaming service Paramount+. They will be handing out Wrath of P’Khan ice cream sandwiches and celebrating the anniversary with fans of the franchise at the largest convention of its kind in the world.

Announced today via the official Star Trek Universe twitter account, actor Jesse James Keitel will be beaming aboard the Enterprise in the upcoming seventh episode of Star Trek: Strange New Worlds (set to air June 16).

She will be guest starring as “Dr. Aspen” who — per Variety — will be a non-binary character who “will develop a surprising connection with Spock.” Keitel, a trans woman, was the first openly transgender actor to hold a series regular role on network television (in ABC’s “Big Sky”); she currently stars in the new take on “Queer as Folk” on NBC’s Peacock streaming service.

Hero Collector is running a “humble bundle” charity drive allowing fans to nab a collection of more than twenty digital editions of their Star Trek hardcovers — for a heck of a discount.

Available for purchase through June 25, the Hero Collector sale includes 22 Star Trek books, from the Star Trek Shipyards titles to the Star Trek Celebration series retrospectives and more. Any donation for $25 USD or greater will get you all 22 books, with proceeds going to benefit the non-profit environmental organization One Tree Planted.

Finally tonight, toy manufacturer TOMY International has launched a crowdfunding campaign to bring a 34-inch, 20+ pound die-cast replica of the classic USS Enterprise to fans — banking on preorder demand to move forward with the project.

Aiming to raise $3 Million for the ambitious endeavor — that’s 3,000 orders at a $599 USD price point each — TOMY plans for the 1:350-scale Enterprise model to include a number of features, like the mentioned-but-never-seen ability to separate its saucer section.

Gary Kerr, expert who consulted on the Smithsonian Enterprise conservation project, worked with the TOMY design team in development of this product.

Features include:

· Authentic die-cast reproduction of the original 11 foot Enterprise NCC-1701 prop used when filming the series

· Exquisitely crafted with over 250 meticulous details that will bring the Enterprise to life

· Revolving nacelles with lights, articulated and lit hangar deck, illuminated bridge, glowing impulse drive, and more

· Primary hull separates from secondary hull and can be displayed as such with included display stand(s)

The crowdfunding window is only open through July 11, 2022, so if you want to get an order in — and you’ve got the space (and sturdy shelving!) for this heavy-duty Enterprise model, head over to the TOMY site to place your buy now.

Keep checking back to TrekCore for more Star Trek news as it breaks!

REVIEW — Factory Entertainment’s STAR TREK: TNG Medical Kit Prop Replica Set

First announced last summer, Factory Entertainment’s second Star Trek: The Next Generation prop replica — a hypospray medical set from Dr. Crusher’s sickbay — began arriving to collectors this spring, and after a short delay (there is a lot of Star Trek happening lately if you haven’t noticed!) it’s time for us to check out this replica for ourselves.
 
Factory Entertainment’s take on the Next Generation hypospray is the first licensed version of the 90’s Trek medical device, and the hand-held injector is accompanied by three vials of colored “medicine,” a hand scanner typically seen paired with a medical tricorder, and a small metal plaque.
 

The hypo itself is quite hefty for its size thanks to the die-cast metal form, weighing it at nearly 6 ounces with a 5-inch length — but the solid feel in the hand really adds to the illusion that it’s a “real” Star Trek device. The head of the hypospray unscrews to access the battery compartment, because the replica has integrated electronics for sound playback.

Opposite the polished injection nozzle are a pair of buttons which play a long and a short “hiss” to mimic the sound effect heard when a Next Gen doctor treats a patient. Each require the button be held down for the duration of the sound effect’s length to hear the entire thing.

The three vials of colored liquid (pink, indigo, and green) pop right into the hypo’s handle thanks to built-in magnets which hold them in place; while there’s no sound effect to go with them, the magnets are quite strong and there doesn’t seem to be any risk of them falling out of place unexpectedly.

While “copied directly from surviving resources in the CBS archives,” the hypo replica design has been based upon an amalgamation of multiple props created for The Next Generation. As Factory Entertainment’s included product documentation describes:

As normal for productions, a number of modifications and changes were made to the different original props over the course of time. These replicas have been designed to capture the best elements of all the variants in a single blended execution.

As for the hand scanner, it’s a bit of an odd inclusion given that it was only seen in use without a paired tricorder once in all of Next Generation history (by Dr. Pulaski in “Up the Long Ladder”) — but for what it is, it’s a fairly nice version of the TNG Season 1 and 2 scanner (with only a single red light to indicate function).

The hand scanner also plays a scanning sound effect which approximates the sound of a medical tricorder; this device also unscrews to access an internal battery compartment. The flashing red light is brightly lit and nicely colored, however, the plastic casting around the LED bulb is relatively thin — in dark environments the red light bleeds through the plastic itself. (Some internal paint or something could have resolved this issue.)

The entire set is housed in a wood and glass display case which holds everything quite snugly — though perhaps a bit too snugly, as it was quite a challenge to extract the hand scanner and vials from the interior compartments.

Early deliveries to buyers did result in a small number of damaged cases due to a packaging issue — however the company did quickly initiate a replacement program within days of the first reported problem to take care of any fans who received damaged deliveries. (Factory Entertainment told us their shipping processes have already been modified to avoid a repeat of the unintended situation.)

Overall, while the $399 price tag is far from inexpensive, it’s a very solid recreation of one of the hallmark props of Berman-era Star Trek production — and one we’re glad to see a licensee take a chance on after so many years.

For those of you still interested, the Factory Entertainment Next Generation Medical Set is still available until their produced inventory runs out.

While the hypospray set is finally in the hands of collectors, the next Factory Entertainment Star Trek replica is due for arrival this summer — some preorder customers have already gotten word the Next Gen cricket phaser replica may be headed for delivery soon — the company is only just getting started on their line of Star Trek products.

Along with the scaled replicas we showcased last month, Factory Entertainment has shared with us that their upcoming plans include a TNG Season 1 hero “dustbuster” phaser replica, a full-size replica of Geordi La Forge’s VISOR device (with display case), and a full-fledged Next Gen Season 5 hero medical tricorder replica with planned LCD display screen and hero hand scanner (with green and red lights).

In addition to all that, they’re also working on a replica of Dr. McCoy’s Original Series hypospray as well, along with their own version of the Terran Empire dagger seen in “Mirror, Mirror” — and a one more fun item from Star Trek: The Motion Picture… an Illia Probe sensor unit (and accompanying Admiral Kirk insignia), coming later this year.

Keep checking back to TrekCore for all the latest news on Factory Entertainment’s plans, and more from the world of Star Trek merchandise and collectables!

WeeklyTrek Podcast #182 — UK Fans Lose the ‘Destination London’ Convention, and Gain Local STAR TREK Paramount+ Debut Details

0

On this week’s episode of WeeklyTrek, brought to you in partnership between The Tricorder Transmissions Podcast Network and TrekCore, host Alex Perry is joined by Snap Trek podcast cohost Ross Webster 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 listen to Ross’s wish to actually see an updated Gorn in Star Trek: Strange New Worlds, and Alex’s hopes that Paramount Global continues to expand their exclusive merchandising as a way of getting cooler and more interesting items into the hands of fans.

WeeklyTrek is available to subscribe and download each week on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, YouTube, and Spotify — and we’ll be sharing the details of each new episode right here on TrekCore each week if you’re simply just looking to listen in from the web.

Do you have a wish or theory you’d like to share on the show? Tweet to Alex at @WeeklyTrek, or email us with your thoughts about wishes, theories, or anything else about the latest in Star Trek news!

New STAR TREK: STRANGE NEW WORLDS Photos — “Lift Us Where Suffering Cannot Reach”

Star Trek: Strange New Worlds’ first season continues this week, and we’ve got a new collection of photos from “Lift Us Where Suffering Cannot Reach” to share with you today!

After the Enterprise answers a distress call from a ship under attack, Captain Pike (Anson Mount) finds that the vessel carries Alora (Lindy Booth), a woman he met and fell in love with many years earlier — and that the attackers may have been after a young child on board, who is destined to rule her planet.

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

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

LIFT US WHERE SUFFERING CANNOT REACH — A threat to an idyllic planet reunites Captain Pike with the lost love of his life. To protect her and a scientific holy child from a conspiracy, Pike offers his help and is forced to face unresolved feelings of his past.

Written by Robin Wasserman & Bill Wolkoff. Directed by Andi Armaganian.

Star Trek: Strange New Worlds returns with “Lift Us Where Suffering Cannot Reach” on Thursday, June 9 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.