Star Trek: Strange New Worlds’ first season continues this week, and we’ve got a new collection of photos from “Spock Amok” to share with you today.
This week, the Enterprise crew gets some time off! Though Captain Pike (Anson Mount) must stay aboard for diplomatic negotiations with an odd alien species, the majority of the crew leave for some well-deserved downtime — except Number One (Rebecca Romijn) and La’an (Christina Chong), who take advantage of the nearly-empty starship to shake off their “no fun” reputations.
Meanwhile, Spock (Ethan Peck) and his betrothed T’Pring (Gia Sandhu) reconnect through an ancient Vulcan ritual… resulting in an outcome neither one expected.
Here are 23 new photos from this week’s episode:
STAR TREK: STRANGE NEW WORLDS — Episode 105: 'Spock Amok'
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Spock (Ethan Peck) and T'Pring (Gia Sandhu) on Vulcan. (Paramount+
Spock and T'Pring on Vulcan. (Paramount+)
Spock and T'Pring on Vulcan. (Paramount+)
Spock and T'Pring on Vulcan. (Paramount+)
Spock and T'Pring on Vulcan. (Paramount+)
Spock and T'Pring on Vulcan. (Paramount+)
Spock and T'Pring on Vulcan. (Paramount+)
Spock and T'Pring on Vulcan. (Paramount+)
Spock and T'Pring on Vulcan. (Paramount+)
Spock and T'Pring on Vulcan. (Paramount+)
Chapel (Jess Bush) relaxes. (Paramount+)
Ortegas (Melissa Navia) relaxes. (Paramount+)
Chapel on leave. (Paramount+)
Chapel and Spock chat. (Paramount+)
Chapel and Spock chat. (Paramount+)
T'Pring and Spock aboard the Enterprise. (Paramount+)
T'Pring and Spock aboard the Enterprise. (Paramount+)
T'Pring and Spock aboard the Enterprise. (Paramount+)
T'Pring and Spock aboard the Enterprise. (Paramount+)
T'Pring and Spock aboard the Enterprise. (Paramount+)
T'Pring and Spock aboard the Enterprise. (Paramount+)
T'Pring and Spock aboard the Enterprise. (Paramount+)
T'Pring looks concerned. (Paramount+)
And in case you haven’t seen it, here’s a preview clip from “Spock Amok” which debuted in last week’s episode of The Ready Room, along with the official Paramount+ trailer for the upcoming episode.
SPOCK AMOK — It’s a comedy of manners when Spock has a personal visit in the middle of Spock and Captain Pike’s crucial negotiations with an unusual alien species.
Written by Henry Alonso Myers & Robin Wasserman. Directed by Rachel Leiterman.
Star Trek: Strange New Worlds returns with “Spock Amok” on Thursday, June 2 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.
To the surprise of many fans overseas, convention organizer Showmasters has announced that the planned September 2022 Destination Star Trek — London convention has been cancelled.
While the company’s Destination Star Trek — Germany remains on track for its September 23-25 schedule, the London based convention is no longer going forward as Showmasters has chosen to reduce their European Trek events down to a single offering this year.
Here’s the official statement on the London cancellation, first shared through the company’s social media feeds.
We have decided to run just one big Destination Star Trek event this year. This means that Destination Star Trek Germany, taking place from 23rd to 25th September, will be the one official European Star Trek event in 2022. We know that this will be disappointing to some of you, but we look forward to new Star Trek events in the future in the UK.
However, there is also some good news for our loyal UK fans, as you will be able to enjoy a tribute to Star Trek at this year’s London Film & Comic Con 8-10 July, where many of the guests that were to attend Destination Star Trek London this year will be attending.
All ticket holders will receive an email regarding the event cancellation and what happens next.
Further information about the reason for cancellation, or next steps for fans looking for refunds on ticket purchases or related expenses, were not immediately available.
MAY 28 UPDATE: UK-based fansite Trek Central received this statement on the cancellation:
Following claims that Paramount Global had a hand in the cancellation of the U.K. event, we reached out for comment from them. See below! #DST Germany now remains the only Europe event this year 🖖 pic.twitter.com/N2WnRmZsV3
“Memento Mori” may just be the best episode of Star Trek since the franchise returned to television in 2017.
I have certain biases that inform this view — as some readers many know, I’m a sucker for starship combat action — but beyond that, this week’s new Strange New Worlds is simply spectacular. The stakes are high, the emotional core is strong, and despite a lot happening, it doesn’t feel crammed at all, allowing viewers all the time we need to process everything and enjoy an exceptional hour of television.
This week’s tale begins as the Enterprise is en route to deliver supplies, including a new air filter, to the Finibus III colony. It’s also Starfleet’s ‘Remembrance Day,’ an occasion leading much of the crew to wear little badges memorializing lost Federation starships — a tradition in which La’an Noonien-Singh (Christina Chong) has no interest participating.
She’s clearly uncomfortable with the practice, as made clear with her terse interactions with Number One when asked about her former ship SS Puget Sound; La’an no intention to relive the past, either in a commemorative or therapeutic sense.
The action begins when (as happens so often in Star Trek), the colony doesn’t reply to the Enterprise’s hails, and a landing party’s trip to the surface reveals the grisly site of a massacre. When 100 of the colony’s survivors are found on an old ore freighter, Enterprise docks with the ship to bring the survivors aboard — but as a child describes the colony’s destroyers, La’an immediately recognizes that they’ve just fallen into a Gorn trap.
The ensuing Gorn attack is brutal and swift, destroying the transport freighter and causing severe damage to the Enterprise as well, wounding both La’an and Number One (Rebecca Romjin). The new Gorn ship design is unique and alien, seeming more natural and predatory than the sleek lines of the Constitution-class.
Captain Pike (Anson Mount) initially wants to turn and fight the alien vessel, but La’an convinces him to withdraw as the Enterprise retreats to a nearby brown dwarf. With shields, optics and other systems knocked out by the brown dwarf, we end up in a perfect homage to a “Balance of Terror” or Star Trek II-style ‘sub hunt.’
Below decks, though, things are getting worse following the initial Gorn attack. Hemmer (Bruce Horak) and Uhura (Celia Rose Gooding), paired together as the young cadet rotates through various duties around the Enterprise, are trapped in the cargo bay with a damaged air filter that threatens to explode. Down in sickbay, already overwhelmed with casualties, Dr. M’Benga (Babs Olusanmokun) and Nurse Chapel (Jess Bush) are forced to rely on a dwindling inventory of medical supplies, resorting to “ancient” surgical techniques after the power goes out.
During a tactical briefing, the news for Pike grows worse: the only weapon the ship has is a single photon torpedo, with no working guidance systems. Our encounter with La’an’s own fatalism here is a bit forced (as are the repeated visons of her brother) but Chong and Mount manage to sell it with conviction. Despite her own fear, it’s her job to inspire hope and confidence in this situation.
While Hemmer and Uhura struggle with the air filter — with the cadet acting as the engineer’s hands, to the best of her ability, after the Aenar is injured — Spock (Ethan Peck) devises a method to turn the navigational deflector into a type of radar so that they can track the Gorn attack ship. After a tense moment where the enemy ship passes right over the top of them, Pike uses the intense gravity of the gas giant to drop the photon torpedo out on to the target. It’s a hit — but one that only signals three more Gorn vessels to join the Enterprise hunt… including an immense mothership.
The portrayal of the Gorn as relentless warriors is very well done — thinking back to the only-hinted-at Cestus III attack in “Arena” — especially since we never go see the lizard-like aliens at all. the brutality of their attack on Enterprise their highly-effective tactics force the ship to dive deeper into the brown dwarf’s gravitational pull.
The whines of the ship creaking, and shudders as the ship comes under fire make a more subtle, sensible tension builder than the usual explosions of rocks (or the still-baffling flamethrowers on the Discovery bridge) — it’s all part of how “Memento Mori” is so much closer to episodes like “Balance of Terror” or “The Doomsday Machine” than the show’s contemporary counterparts.
Even the B and C plots focused on the air filter and Una’s medical status seem a little closer to the ratcheting tension of an Original Series episode, with the added advantage of a larger budget giving us a lot more spectacle to look at — whether it’s the expanse of the ship’s main cargo bay thanks to the AR wall technology, or the grim reality of Chief Kyle (André Dae Kim) narrowly escaping a collapsing deck.
The side plot with Hemmer and Uhura, if a little constricted, is still a great development of both characters. Containing the two inside the isolated cargo bay gives Bruce Horak and Celia Rose Gooding room to work well with each other, and — even in the little snippets we see of the pair — Hemmer gets a lot more depth than previously portrayed, especially towards the end of the episode.
The hide and seek game with the Gorn is further complicated by the collapse of the gas giant, which is being drawn into the nearby black hole at pace. Slightly contrived, yes, but we do need something to get a resolution within 50 minutes before the episode starts to get tedious. La’an and Spock take a shuttle out to scout ahead, finding the two remaining Gorn ships flashing lights at each other in a strange sequence. With some faint recognition of their meaning, La’an insists that Spock perform a mind meld to search her childhood memories.
It’s a good mind meld sequence – is a little protracted – and we find out that La’an’s older brother Manu (Cameron Roberts) sacrificed himself to the Gorn so she could escape, while also giving her a guide their communications: the flashing lights are the Gorn’s take on Morse Code. I think they get away with the contrivance of the mind meld here because it’s not solving La’an’s trauma; in fact, even within the meld her subconscious is still maintaining barriers, this isn’t a quick-fix solution.
But still, it serves a purpose: the meld lets them figure out the lighting pattern, allowing the pair to fake a message to the Gorn mothership which tricks it into destroying its smaller companion vessel. Even though the odds now are even, time is running out for the Enterprise in more ways than one as the black hole is consuming the brown dwarf rapidly, while the damaged air filter is on a countdown to overload — which will destroy the ship.
With the Gorn still loitering outside, Pike decides to take a risk and make a break for it, using a combination of the black hole’s light distortion and the exploding air filter (dropped out into space from the cargo bay) as a diversion. It’s dramatic — perhaps a little over-dramatic, as we know Uhura isn’t going to get shot out into space in Episode 4 — but that’s nothing nothing that I can’t forgive thanks to the brilliant visuals of the Enterprise’s escape from the black hole, wounded but still flying.
It’s a hopeful ending, with the ship safe and La’an’s relationship with her traumatic past taking an early step on the path to improvement — but once again, Strange New Worlds isn’t going to let you leave that plot behind as the final beats strongly hint this won’t be the last time we’ll encounter the Gorn during Captain Pike’s era.
CAMP NONSENSE OF THE WEEK
Nothing can beat Ortegas’ (Melissa Navia) sardonic “Aye aye, skipper — dive dive dive!” response to Captain Pike. I was half-expecting her to say “Fly, big E, fly!” as they went into the black hole — but I guess you can only lean against the fourth wall so many times in one episode.
OBSERVATION LOUNGE
Spock’s explanation of the brown dwarf’s effects — and Pike’s counter that it will impair the Enterprise just as much as the Gorn — is a clear parallel to Saavik and Spock’s discussion in Wrath of Khan, as the Enterprise is about to lead Khan’s Reliant into the Mutara Nebula.
Spock’s makeshift motion sensor appears to be a prototype of the one used to track the Romulan Bird of Prey in “Balance of Terror,” even making the same sonar “ping” sound upon sensor contact.
The cargo bay where Hemmer and Uhura get stuck appears to be on the underside of the Enterprise secondary hull, in a similar location to the cargo holds seen briefly in Star Trek: The Motion Picture.
The ‘depth charge’ torpedo dropped onto the Gorn ship is launched from the bottom of the Enterprise saucer section, confirming the location of the torpedo tubes as established in the Original Series.
Captain Pike’s memorial badge honors the USS Discovery, which was reported as destroyed following the big battle in “Such Sweet Sorrow, Part 2.” While Discovery’s leap to the future is highly-classified, the ship’s apparent destruction became the public cover story for the events of that episode.
As La’an begins to sense Spock’s thoughts during their mind meld, archival Ethan Peck dialogue from “Such Sweet Sorrow, Part 2” can be heard as he recalls one of his final conversations with Michael Burnham.
I really, really liked “Memento Mori.” I don’t think Star Trek has produced anything like it since The Wrath of Khan. For a long time, the slow, tense scenes of the ‘sub hunt’ have been limited to the Original Series — but this episode is more than an homage to “Balance of Terror,” as it adds so much more the formula, with an unseen and dangerous enemy for the crew.
For the second episode in a row, the medical cast are side-lined despite being somewhat central to the plot. Considering the centrality of the McCoy’s role as Enterprise chief medical officer in classic Trek, as well as M’Benga’s place as one of three three POC characters in the main cast, this could be construed as a problematic omission — with all the action, though, it wasn’t a glaring issue.
Reimagining the Gorn as a genuine threat is an inspired choice, even if we’re never going to forget their iconic first appearance. La’an’s place in the limelight this week is deserved, if a little restricted; then again, what remained unsaid about her trauma and experiences is probably a deliberate move. Having the character open up and process over a period of time — instead of in 15 minutes at the end of an action-packed episode — is a substantially better idea.
There’s a lot going on in “Memento Mori,” and almost all of it is excellent.
Star Trek: Strange New Worlds returns with “Spock Amok” on Thursday, June 2 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.
The documentary was previously released on VHS, as a long-out-of-print DVD, or for purchase on limited streaming services, but for its 25th anniversary Shout! Factory has thankfully restored the documentary for the next generation of fans with a new 4K scan of the film’s original 16mm footage.
Most scenes are a nice upgrade from the original presentation. (Shout! Factory)
The film is a snapshot of the franchise’s fandom during during the apex of Star Trek‘s cultural impact: the Next Gen cast was commanding movie theaters while Deep Space Nine and Voyager were keeping Trek strong through weekly television broadcasts, all during a period where Star Trek conventions were scheduled nearly every weekend somewhere in North America.
It’s during this period that Denise Crosby (Tasha Yar of Star Trek: The Next Generation) and director Roger Nygard hit the convention circuit to meet fans, interview the stars, and did their best to learn about and understand the appeal of the Star Trek fandom in the days long before social media, group chats, or podcasts — when regional conventions, radio shows, and local Star Trek fan clubs took center stage.
I adore Trekkies — at least, I adore it today — but when I first watched shortly after its release, I instantly hated the film for what I thought were its cheap shots at fans, putting the most extreme examples on the big screen for the world to point and laugh at. “I’m a Star Trek fan,” I’d tell people, “but I’m not that kind of fan! Conventions, dressing up in costumes? You’ll never see me doing that.”
Young fan Gabriel Köerner shows off a few family photos. (Shout! Factory)
But as the decades have passed, what I’ve learned is that the only person who had reason to be embarrassed for that stance… was me.
I am now a proud convention goer, and I dress up in my Starfleet best any chance I can get — well, maybe not for jury duty — but revisiting Trekkies over the years has been a big part of my evolution from never-no-way-not-me to the comfortable Trek fan I am today.
The stars of this documentary are not the various Star Trek leads interviewed along the way — which include dearly-departed actors like Leonard Nimoy, DeForest Kelley, Majel Barrett Roddenberry, and Jimmy Doohan — but instead, the stars are the fans themselves.
Each of the Trek actors share stories about how fandom has touched them over the years, and why they ultimately came to see it as important.
Barbara Adams, also known as ‘the Whitewater juror.’ (Shout! Factory)
Let’s face it, though; Trekkies still divides fans when it comes into the conversation. Some viewers might see embarrassing people doing embarrassing things — like one fan who consistently wears full Starfleet regalia to her day job, another who’s taken his workplace into Trek merchandise overdrive, or an awkward teenager stressing out over imperfections in his homemade uniform — but I see people who love what they love, and don’t care what other people think of them.
It’s the powerful lesson of Trekkies: there’s joy in community and in doing the things that you love. Barbara Adams doesn’t care what you think about her decision to wear a Star Trek, costume to the nationally-covered Whitewaterjury interviews; she did it because she loves Star Trek, and believed that sharing the values of the United Federation of Planets compelled her to be loud and proud about her fandom.
We should never be ashamed of the things that we love, and if we want to find ways to express that — through writing, costume, convention attendance, collecting — more power to all of us as fans. To me, Trekkies is very clear about that.
Checking into a convention the old-fashioned way. (Shout! Factory)
Trekkies is also a time capsule to an era we can never return to. Yes, there are more Star Trek shows in production today than there were in 1997, so this is not some yearning for a Golden Age of Star Trek that has never come again (because it has!).
Instead, it’s a yearning for a very specific kind of age gone by: one of 1990s-era convention hallway carpets, of the early era of the Internet, and ways of connecting fans through fanzines, radio, and in-person meetings (gasp!) rendered nearly obsolete by Twitter, Facebook, Reddit, and a hundred other ways to digitally connect with like-minded fans.
I was a little too young (and a bit too British) to have ever experienced the vivacity of the 1990s American convention scene, and the way that fandom thrived before everyone had a phone in their pocket. But Trekkies lets me visit that world for a time, to see how fans lived, and what they cared about. (Remember when we all thought Playmates Star Trek figures would be worth something some day, as long as we never opened the packaging?)
Denise Crosby and director Roger Nygard recount their experience making “Trekkies.” (Shout! Factory)
The 4K upgrade for the movie is a welcome one — the picture is crisper, and the additional clarity of detail is welcome given the heavy grain, particularly during the convention sequences. This is still a documentary, though, and likely one with a rather limited budget even for 1997 — so don’t expect the new presentation to turn Trekkies into a cinematic masterpiece.
In addition to the movie, the new release also has a featurette entitled A Trek Back, in which Denise Crosby and Roger Nygard reflect on the process of making the movie and how it all came together — including their guerrilla interview process during a few mid-1990s conventions, and the string-and-duct-tape way they cobbled together crew and equipment to film the thing in the first place.
It’s a nice inclusion if you’re a fan of the film, but I can’t help but be a little disappointed that there wasn’t any kind of “Where are they now?” follow-up to the original documentary subjects. I know some of the fans featured in the movie have since passed away, but I hope they had happy and fulfilling lives — and I hope wherever the other stars of the film are right now, they are doing well.
Ready for duty, four-legged friend included. (Shout! Factory)
If you were one of the fans featured in Trekkies, and you’re reading this 25 years later, I just wanted to say thank you. Thank you for teaching me how to embrace my inner Star Trek fan, my authentic self. It’s a gift that I will be forever grateful for.
In addition, stick around to hear Eric’s wish for the remainder Star Trek: Strange New Worlds’ first season, and Alex’s wish to see more of the Enterprise starship interiors as the series continues!
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!
Star Trek: Strange New Worlds’ first season continues this week, and we’ve got a new collection of photos from “Memento Mori” to share with you today!
This week, the Enterprise encounters a group of dangerous alien vessels which are new to Starfleet’s records… but security chief La’an Noonien-Singh (Christina Chong) recognizes them as the terror of her youth: the Gorn.
Here are seventeen new photos from this week’s episode:
STAR TREK: STRANGE NEW WORLDS — Episode 104: 'Memento Mori'
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The Enterprise bridge during a dangerous encounter. (Paramount+)
La'an (Christina Chong) and Ortegas (Melissa Navia) at their stations. (Paramount+)
La'an and Ortegas at their stations. (Paramount+)
Captain Pike (Anson Mount) on the bridge. (Paramount+)
Captain Pike on the bridge. (Paramount+)
Spock (Ethan Peck) at his station. (Paramount+)
Spock at his station. (Paramount+)
Pike and Spock on the bridge. (Paramount+)
Pike and Spock on the bridge. (Paramount+)
Pike and Spock on the bridge. (Paramount+)
Pike and Spock on the bridge. (Paramount+)
The crew discusses their situation. (Paramount+)
La'an in the briefing room. (Paramount+)
Ortegas in the briefing room. (Paramount+)
Spock in the briefing room. (Paramount+)
Nurse Chapel (Jess Bush) in sickbay. (Paramount+)
Dr. M'Benga (Babs Olusanmokun) in sickbay. (Paramount+)
Of interest, many of the Enterprise crew this week are wearing the Starfleet memorial pins featured at the Strange New Worlds prop and costume display last month, with each recognizing a lost Federation vessel.
And in case you haven’t seen it, here’s a preview clip from “Memento Mori” which debuted in last week’s episode of The Ready Room, along with the official Paramount+ episodic trailer.
— Star Trek on Paramount+ (@StarTrekOnPPlus) May 21, 2022
MEMENTO MORI — While on a routine supply mission to a colony planet, the U.S.S. Enterprise comes under an attack from an unknown malevolent force. Pike brings all his heart and experience to bear in facing the crisis, but the security officer warns him that the enemy cannot be dealt with by conventional Starfleet means.
Written by Davy Perez & Beau DeMayo. Directed by Dan Liu.
Star Trek: Strange New Worlds returns with “Memento Mori” on Thursday, May 26 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.
Factory Entertainment is returning to Star Trek tea time this year — following their Excelsiorand Enterprise-A sets in 2020 — with the next entry in the captain’s tea set line: Captain Picard’s Enterprise-D teacup and saucer from Star Trek: Generations.
Barely seen on camera, this Galaxy-class tea set was crafted for the first Star Trek: The Next Generation big-screen outing and used in Captain Picard’s quarters as he tearfully shared tragic family news with Counselor Troi.
The teacup prop seen in STAR TREK: GENERATIONS.The original props, sold at auction in 2020.
The original Enterprise-D teacup set from Generations went up for action in late 2020, but Factory Entertainment has created their own edition for fans to bring home, as part of this year’s San Diego Comic Con product exclusives — but fear not, as you can preorder your own for home delivery even if you can’t make it to the convention.
Factory Entertainment’s version of the Enterprise-D tea set.
Available for order today, the Star Trek: GenerationsEnterprise-D teacup set retails for $45 at Factory Entertainment’s website and will ship around July 25. Limited to only 1000 pieces, this convention-exclusive will also be available on site at SDCC.
In addition to the Enterprise-D teacup, Factory Entertainment is also releasing a variant of their existing Original Series Type I phaser bottle opener — this convention-exclusive edition features silver highlights around the grip and beam emitter, and is available for preorder at a $25 cost.
The silver-accented Original Series phaser bottle opener.
Factory Entertainment is also giving a way one of their convention-exclusive phaser bottle openers through the below form.
The new game arrives October 14 for PlayStation 4, PlayStation 5, Xbox One, Nintendo Switch — and through Steam and Stadia for PC gamers — and features the full television voice cast, who reprise their roles as their animated characters in the interactive adventure.
Allowing up to two players to lead the Protostar crew during gameplay — as Dal and Gwyn, of course — the trailer features a variety of puzzles and combat challenges using elements from the Star Trek: Prodigy series, including Starfleet phasers and Gwyn’s morphing metal weapon.
STAR TREK: PRODIGY — SUPERNOVA Gameplay Screenshots
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Here’s the official press release:
Outright Games, the leading global publisher of family-friendly interactive entertainment, in partnership with award winning developer, Tessera Studio’s, Paramount Consumer Products and Nickelodeon, today announced an original video game Star Trek Prodigy: Supernova based on the original Paramount+ animated series Star Trek: Prodigy. The all-new game marks the first ever family-friendly Star Trek game aimed at younger players.
After the U.S.S. Protostar picks up strange readings from a dying star, Dal and Gwyn must race against time to save their friends, their ship, and an entire planetary system before a supernova destroys them all! Using their unique skills to overcome ingenious puzzles, endure hostile environments and battle deadly robot armies, Dal and Gwyn must save their captured crewmates Jankom Pog, Rok-Tahk, Zero and Murf. But they soon encounter a deadly new enemy, one that will stop at nothing to destroy the U.S.S. Protostar and change the very course of history!
Key features:
JOIN STARFLEET – Play as Dal and Gwyn as they rescue their scattered crew. Play solo or in 2-player cooperative mode in this exciting action-adventure game.
GO BOLDLY – Explore the alien worlds of Orisi, Mirios and Taresse, each with its own hostile environments, puzzles, challenges and mysteries.
MAKE FIRST CONTACT – Make first contact with new alien species, learn about their history and discover their secrets.
CUSTOMIZE THE U.S.S. PROTOSTAR – Collect iconic items from the Star Trek universe and use them to customize the Protostar.
This new game is based on Star Trek: Prodigy, the hit animated series following a motley crew of young aliens who must figure out how to work together while navigating a greater galaxy, in search of a better future. The series stars Brett Grey as Dal, Ella Purnell as Gwyn, Rylee Alazraqui as Rok-Tahk, Angus Imrie as Zero, Jason Mantzoukas as Jankom Pog and and Dee Bradley Baker as Murf. Kate Mulgrew also returns to the franchise as the iconic Captain Kathryn Janeway.
Star Trek Prodigy: Supernova is coming in at maximum warp speed this October on PlayStation 4®, PlayStation 5, Nintendo Switch™, Xbox One, Xbox X|S, Steam and Stadia priced at $39.99 / £34.99 / €39.99.
We’ll keep bringing you all the latest news on the upcoming Star Trek: Prodigy — Supernova game as we get closer to its October arrival!
“Ghosts of Illyria” is a perfectly enjoyable, engaging, and interesting medical mystery — the additions to Number One’s backstory and the lore of the universe are great — but it’s also tied into a confusing allegory for medical bigotry that seems oddly tacked onto the sides and end. It’s a fun episode, though, with Rebecca Romjin taking center stage in this first Una-focused story.
Enterprise is investigating a mysterious abandoning Illyrian colony on planet Hetemit IX, at the edge of the Federation space. The Illyrians are a pariah species to the UFP, vilified for their prodigious use of bioengineering and augmentation to improve their genetics — all of which goes against the Federation’s anti-eugenics ethics. With a standing Starfleet order to investigate Illyrian sites, the crew heads down to check out the planet.
They are, however, forced to leave in a hurry to avoid an ion storm, nearly losing most of the landing party to interference before Hemmer (Bruce Horak) can save them with a little engineering genius. It’s a nice setup for a mystery, with special cliché touches like a faulty transporter, and mysterious glowing dust attaching itself to a hapless ensign confirming the homage to the classic medical mystery episodes of decades past.
Pike and Spock stare down the oncoming storm. (Paramount+)
The storm ramps up before the full landing party can be recovered, leaving Captain Pike (Anson Mount) and Spock (Ethan Peck) on the planet’s surface as Una (Rebecca Romijn) takes command in the captain’s absence. While Pike and Spock run for cover, a new crisis emerges on the Enterprise: those who beamed back to the ship fall victim to an overwhelming addiction to light, first driving poor Ensign Lance (Daniel Gravelle) to smash his head through a wall lighting panel in desperation.
Even Una seems to fall victim to the mysterious ailment for a short time, until an energetic glow beings to shine from her body — seemingly curing the officer, but we’ll get back to that later — but putting her on edge as she’s called to sickbay for examination. Cleared for duty by Dr. M’Benga (Babs Olusanmokun), Una begins researching classified Illyrian science until La’an (Christina Chong) arrives and the pair discuss the security chief’s childhood issues about her ancestral relationship to Khan Noonien Singh.
The light addition soon begins to spread quickly around the ship, as La’an’s mild rant against Illyrian bioengineering trails off as the lieutenant begins to jam her face into a nearby desk lamp; it’s a slightly-unnerving moment that only science fiction can pull off successfully.
Una’s body burns brightly. (Paramount+)
While things start to unravel up in orbit, Pike and Spock have found shelter in the abandoned colony’s library. Spock’s consultation of the records shows that these Illyrians wanted to join the Federation but were unfortunately wiped out as they tried to “de-engineer” themselves to get around the ban on genetic modification. As fascinating as this is, Pike and Spock are a little more distracted by the wailing light beasts that appear to be emerging from the storm in their direction.
Marooning Spock and Pike together was a fun B-plot, especially as we get to see them begin to get on each other’s nerves a little as they batten down the hatches. Stellar as it was on Discovery, Mount and Peck’s chemistry only gets better with every episode of Strange New Worlds, and it excels here as the pair banter over their fate — and that of the colonists.
Back on the Enterprise, Una does some detective work after Uhura (Celia Rose Gooding) finds her bunkmates huddled around a holographic star — and finds that the virus spreads through light waves. After that incident and the results of Nurse Chapel’s (Jess Bush) contact-tracing report, M’Benga initiates a full lockdown. (Deja vu, anyone?)
La’an loves lamp. (Paramount+)
Number One is, however, still holding back — throughout the episode, we can constantly tell she’s hiding something, and the hints we see of her researching Illyrian healing augmentation matching the strange body magic that healed her gives us a fair idea of what the twist might be before it comes.
Rebecca Romijn, however, makes us earn that twist, and we get a clear sense of her internal conflict and fear without a single word being uttered on the subject. Even her apprehension at the short term solution — shutting off all the lights — seems to be qualified by whatever she is holding back. Romjin sells it all beautifully.
Meanwhile, Pike and Spock have barricaded themselves into prevent the light monsters from getting to them. Spock’s attempt to “arm himself with knowledge” is futile, however, when the light beasts break through the doors… and proceed to protect him and Pike from being injured by the ion storm. It’s an unexpected swerve, perhaps leaning on the benevolent energy beings we have seen in prior shows (such as the Companion).
Pike and Spock dive under the mysterious energy. (Paramount+)
But with Hemmer succumbing to the virus and M’Benga soon after, Una reveals the reason she managed to survive unscathed: she’s an Illyrian herself, engineered to resist any infection. Her heritage, which should prevent her from serving in Starfleet at all, may now hold the key to saving the day. This confirmation of a long-standing ‘beta canon’ backstory for Una, if in a slightly different form to its appearance in Vulcan’s Glory, is a very nice addition to the narrative.
It doesn’t appear to be much help, though, as her augmented immune system cannot help the crew. We do, however, get a nice little speech from Doctor M’Benga about the pointlessness of bigotry, before Una must run off the solve the last, big crisis: La’an has escaped, and nearly creates a warp core breach while chasing that light-addicted high.
Is it a bit nuts to go straight to the warp core when a desk lamp could do instead? Yes. Is it fitting with the usual absurdity of strange viruses in Star Trek? Also yes! At the very least, it does give us a great fight scene, backdropped by the surging warp drive and enhanced by La’an’s rather vicious reactions to Una’s genetic heritage.
Not a great idea. (Paramount+)
Her close contact with La’an requires Una’s body to once again flare up and fight off infection, but this time that healing effect spills over to the security chief — a secondary healing process that finally gives Chapel something to use in creating a shipwide cure, giving the nurse another opportunity to show off her genetic skillset (following the alien disguises she created back in the season premiere).
Number One’s augmented genes have saved the ship, even if they have done damage to her relationship with La’an. Their make-up conversation in the still-unnamed ship’s dining hall is brief and blunt, revealing a little more about the security chief’s past, and how she was bullied for her ancestry. We also get some sense of how difficult Una’s past has been, and the difficulties of hiding her past from authorities, and from her friends.
She knows why the Illyrians have a different ethical code — how their justifications can be understood to be benevolent, and at odds with the supremacist agenda of Khan and his Augments — but she is still afraid of how Federation society views her. I think it works, really; we know the danger augments are from both the Original Series and in Enterprise, but pointing out their flaws may be unique. As we saw in Deep Space Nine, the UFP’s fear of them blinds them to even more dangerous acts of bigotry.
Old friends, new paradigm. (Paramount+)
This point about conviction and belief is hammered home by Spock’s conclusion about the Illyrian colonists, whose own good-faith act likely led to their own demise. They were doomed by their principles and chose to pass on with their integrity intact, and this self-belief in the face of a hopeless situation — something that is very clearly becoming a consistent theme in Strange New Worlds — rings home to Captain Pike.
With her true heritage revealed, Una attempts to surrender herself to Starfleet’s judgment. Pike’s refusal to accept her resignation is a good scene, if a bit by the numbers; to him, Una is the exception, as much a counter to Starfleet’s idea of Illyrians as the colonists were — and that is worth protecting her from regulations.
Even though her position is safe aboard the Enterprise, this view doesn’t sit well with Una she’s deeply uncomfortable with her heroism being the thing that saves her; in a strong callout of the politics of the model minority belief; Una longs for the day when she doesn’t have to worry about being thought of as “one of the good ones” and Illyrians can simply just be accepted for who they are.
Pike won’t accept Una’s resignation. (Paramount+)
Considering the (possible) allegory between Illyrian affliction and Sinophobic reactions to the spread of COVID-19,an active call out of exceptionalism like this was refreshing, even if it felt a little tacked on right at the end of the episode. On the other hand, it does point towards Una’s heritage and its conflict with Starfleet regulations and Federation bigotries becoming an ongoing plot point in the future.
But Una’s place in Starfleet isn’t the only open question the episode leaves us with, as we learn that M’Benga’s medical transporter systems allowed the ‘light virus’ to get aboard the ship in the first place. It seems that the good doctor wouldn’t allow anyone to modify its systems during the last visit to Spacedock… because he’s keeping his daughter in transporter stasis within its pattern buffer!
Clearly the beginning of a long-term story, this certainly gives us all a deeper insight into the extreme efforts M’Benga is willing to employ to save his family, but let’s hope that — beyond the ethical and moral quandaries that emerge from freezing a kid in a transporter — the writers don’t forget there’s a kid in there the next time there’s a shipwide disaster.
Stasis suspended for storytime. (Paramount+)
CAMP NONSENSE OF THE WEEK
This week’s award must go to the Light Virus itself, just for the classic Trek weirdness of people sticking their faces and hands into light fittings, holographic suns, planetary mantle and, um, an impending warp core breach.
OBSERVATION LOUNGE
This episode takes begins on Stardate 1224.3.
Ontario Place serves as the real-life filming location for the abandoned Illyrian colony.
Illyrianswere first encountered on-screen in “Damage,” where the crew of the Illyrian vessel in that episode looked quite different. It’s possible this might later be explained away as a genetic difference — or it’s possible the Enterprise-era species just has a similar-sounding name.
Space style. (Paramount+)
La’an spits the derogatory term “Augment” at Una after learning Number One is an Illyrian (the same slur used against her as a child thanks to her Khan heritage); this term for genetically-engineer beings came into use in the Enterprisethree-part Arik Soong storyline.
La’an continues to use her nickname for Una (“Chief”); we’ll likely learn more about their backstory in a future episode.
It’s clear that La’an’s heritage as a descendent of Khan isn’t a secret; how that will play into Spock’s future encounter with the genetic superman in “Space Seed” remains to be seen.
The Federation’s ban on genetic engineering extends well beyond Earth, it seems, as Illyrians are forbidden to join the Federation due to their society’s use of gene modification science.
Rebecca Romijn and Christina Chong film their Engineering fight. (Pixomondo / Paramount+)
In “Dr. Bashir, I Presume,” Chief O’Brien tells Dr. Bashir that he doesn’t “think there’s been a case dealing with [a genetically-engineered Starfleet officer] in a hundred years.” That episode takes place 114 years after “Ghosts of Illyria.”
M’Benga holds his hand scanner seemingly backwards while examining both Una and La’an in sickbay (with the rotating internal mechanism pointed towards himself). The “reverse” end of the scanner features a lighting element, so it’s possible this end of the scanner has a different function from the rotating side.
Normally closed off, M’Benga’s sickbay has a second-story auxiliary level, available to expand capacity in emergency situations.
The transporter-buffer stasis process is apparently safe for long-term use, as long as the subject is occasionally rematerialized — perhaps explaining why poor Matt Franklin never made it out of the Jenolan’s buffers in “Relics.”
M’Benga’s daughter, Rukiya (Sage Arrindell) is being held in transporter stasis to slow the progression of a disease called “cygnokemia.”
“One of the good ones.” (Paramount+)
I honestly wanted a bit more from “Ghosts of Illyria.” The introduction of the Illyrians themselves — both through the legacy of the colonists, and Una’s heritage — was a great addition to the Star Trek universe, with the questions it raises about medical bigotry and longstanding societal fear, and I just wish that they hadn’t felt tacked on to the end of the episode and had been weaved deeper into the narrative.
While we got some taste of La’an’s anti-Augment, it would have hit home harder had those preconceptions about Illyrians been more thoroughly laced within the narrative. On the other hand, this neat, fun, and exciting medical mystery will serve — hopefully — as a jump-off point to explore both Una and M’Benga’s characters in the future.
Star Trek: Strange New Worlds returns with “Memento Mori” on Thursday, May 26 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: Strange New Worlds’ first season continues this week, and we’ve got a new collection of photos from “Ghosts of Illyria” to share with you today!
This week, the Enterprise explores a deserted alien world — but when the ship’s landing party beams up, they find that more than just sensor scans have returned to the Enterprise as a strange sickness begins to spread among the starship’s crew.
Here are ten new photos from this week’s episode:
STAR TREK: STRANGE NEW WORLDS — Episode 103: 'Ghosts of Illyria'
1 of 10
Una (Rebecca Romijn) and Pike (Anson Mount) during an away mission. (Paramount+)
Pike and Una during an away mission. (Paramount+)
Pike during an away mission. (Paramount+)
Ensign Lance (Daniel Gravelle) during the away mission. (Paramount+)
Una leads an away mission. (Paramount+)
Una leads an away mission. (Paramount+)
M'Benga (Babs Olusanmokun) treats Una in sickbay. (Paramount+)
M'Benga in sickbay. (Paramount+)
Chapel (Jess Bush) in sickbay. (Paramount+)
Chapel in sickbay.
And in case you haven’t seen it, here’s a preview clip from “Children of the Comet” which debuted in last week’s episode of The Ready Room, along with a 90-second trailer for the upcoming season.
GHOSTS OF ILLYRIA — The U.S.S. Enterprise encounters a contagion that ravages the ship. One by one, the entire crew is incapacitated except for Number One, Una Chin-Riley, who must now confront a secret she’s been hiding as she races to find a cure.
Written by Akela Cooper & Bill Wolkoff. Directed by Leslie Hope.
Star Trek: Strange New Worlds returns with “Ghosts of Illyria” on Thursday, May 19 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.