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STAR TREK: STRANGE NEW WORLDS Sets a Course for Old-School Exploration and Adventure — SPOILER-FREE Review

Expectations for Star Trek: Strange New Worlds, the latest entry into the ever-expanding Star Trek Universe, are not just high, but also personal — after all, it was the fans who shouted MORE, PLEASE! after Star Trek: Discovery brought the pre-Captain Kirk Enterprise crew into the modern era.

There was just something special about the three 1960s-era characters. Captain Pike and all-business first officer Number One — seen in action only in the discarded 1964 Original Series pilot “The Cage” (with footage reused in “The Menagerie”) — and a young version of half-Vulcan Spock, whom we know better than any other Trek character.

It seemed obvious to fans that there was more story to tell here, more boundaries to push, and quite simply more time needed with the extremely-likable trio; the sheer charisma of these actors was nearly enough to will the show into existence all by themselves.

I’ve had the opportunity to watch the first five episodes of Strange New Worlds’ 10-episode season, and not only is that charisma still burning brightly, but these characters turn out to be the catalyst for a production that transcends any one character — and any one genre of Star Trek.

The USS Enterprise explores the unknown in the series’ opening credits sequence.

Debuting May 5 on Paramount+ and CTV Sci Fi Channel in Canada, Strange New Worlds’ modernness shines through, of course, in things like the set designs, costumes, and visual effects, but also within the narratives of the characters themselves —who they are and what they are challenged by feeling particularly “of the moment” to our own current era. But while the show is clearly of 2022, it simultaneously feels particularly classic to the original spirit of Star Trek.

Yes, this is a relatively episodic series, with “emotional serialization” as the creative team has helpfully phrased, but the way it most resembles the Original Series is the way it uses its science fiction lens to directly relate to the issues affecting its audience. This show understands the responsibility it has in carrying on the legacy of Star Trek in that respect and and these early episodes set the tone for that, in some refreshing and bold ways.

Beyond all that, however, Strange New Worlds is quite simply fun. Even while events may flow from ship-in-danger high-stakes action to smaller, low-stakes comedic moments, the Enterprise characters are allowed to experience a full range of emotions — even Spock, in his Vulcan capacity for such things — and the result is a fully immersive and entertaining experience, regardless of scenario.

The standalone format has also gives the scientific and philosophical ideas associated with each adventure a chance to percolate in the show (and in my mind!) for just the right amount of time, without growing stale.

Anson Mount as Captain Christopher Pike. (Paramount+)

Even with the episodic nature of the show, it appears there will be plenty of room for our characters to grow and change, as it brings us back to the legendary starship about half a year or so after our last extended visit to the Enterprise in “Such Sweet Sorrow, Part 2.”

These first outings have set up some very interesting storytelling prospects for the Enterprise crew — both cheerful and foreboding — with perhaps the darkest being Christopher Pike (Anson Mount) trying to grapple with the dark vision of the future (thrust upon him in “Through the Valley of Shadows”), a heavy weight on the good captain’s mind as the series begin.

This man is still gentle and inspiring, a man who’s unique brand of non-toxic, rugged masculinity is only more deeply enhanced by his knowledge of his own future. The question of how this knowledge will effect his choices as a leader is a complicated one, and it goes to some interesting places in these episodes. Anson Mount has said that “Pike’s superpower is empathy,” which causes him to be a deep thinker — one I would follow anywhere — and a ferocious defender of the people under his command, and to those they are called upon to help.

Una Chin-Riley’s (Rebecca Romijn) entire aesthetic in Strange New Worlds acts as a tribute to the history of her character; “Number One” owns her hyper-competence — and her stoicism — while flashing her femininity unabashedly. Her look is big, bold, and glamorous. The writers have also imbued Una with layers beyond her best-in-Starfleet professionalism; a revelation from the season’s third episode has the potential to test Una in ways that could take her way outside of her comfort zone.

Celia Rose Gooding as Cadet Nyota Uhura. (Paramount+)

On the lighter side of things — while no one gets trapped in a turbolift like in “Q & A” — the feel of the Una-Spock pairing from that Short Trek tale is replicated across varying stories.

This approach allows us to spend a little bit of time with everyone, sometimes in match-ups I didn’t expect — like the unsure-but-talented young cadet Uhura (Celia Rose Gooding) seeking some engineering tutoring from wise Aenar chief Hemmer (Bruce Horak), bold and fun-loving Nurse Chapel (Jess Bush) and effortlessly-cool navigator Ortegas (Melissa Navia) poking fun at each others’ past shore-leave mishaps, and rough-edged security chief La’an (Christina Chong) spending off-duty time with friend and mentor Una trying to shake off their stuffy, no-fun-allowed reputations.

As one might expect from the current keepers of the Star Trek kingdom, Strange New Worlds also takes advantage of its placement within the timeline, as other characters from the Kirk era find their way into the show in supporting roles which serve the character development of our main cast, like T’Pring (Gia Sandhu), betrothed to Spock (Ethan Peck).

Babs Olusanmokun as Dr. M’Benga. (Paramount+)

But perhaps the biggest surprise is Babs Olosanmokun’s portrayal of Dr. M’Benga, a gentle and sweet man who will do anything for his patients — as his backstory is both thought-provoking and full of unexpected desperation, which opens up a lot of possibilities for the good doctor’s future.

As for the starship itself, the updated Enterprise sets are just the right mix of retro-sexy and modern sparseness. There is a certain deliberateness to how the sets are dressed and utilized that fully embraces the Enterprise as both a character unto herself and as a mirror reflecting the people who inhabit her.

This can be seen in the crew quarters in particular, ranging from Number One’s orderly decor to Captain Pike’s warm and inviting home aboard ship. Other standouts include the new engineering set, functional and industrial as one would hope, but made even more immersive through use of the often-utilized AR wall technology to really bring the massive power plant to life.

The Enterprise bridge set, as we’ve mentioned in previous articles, has been slightly modified from its short appearance in Discovery Season 2; its sleek curves and yummy candy-colored console buttons — combined with the modern production technologies afforded to the Strange New Worlds production design team — makes it a command deck worthy of a leader with the luscious hair of Captain Christopher Pike.

(And boy, the first time the ship goes to red alert? Hot stuff.)

The main engineering bay aboard the USS Enterprise. (Paramount+)

Returning to a focus on exploration, boldly going, and all of those traditional Star Trek aims, Strange New Worlds does just what it says on the tin. Creating a whole new alien civilization almost every week is a daunting undertaking, but the series runs head-on into that challenge, using the AR wall in a way that feels a bit better-integrated than as seen in Discovery’s fourth season — the digital team at Pixomondo is clearly developing their talent with the technology as time goes by and that’s starting to show on screen.

But beyond alien landscapes, the series seems willing to try new things with costuming, alien designs (including the return of a Berman-era favorite species in a minor role), and most impressively so far, starship action — there’s a particularly juicy space battle that really showcases the possibilities and skills of the visual effects team, and I hope to see this getting pushed even further as we get deeper into the series.

Strange New Worlds has an episode for everyone, and the great thing about the episodic approach is that if this week didn’t strike your fancy, a whole new adventure is on deck for the next outing. What is consistent, however, is the quality of the characters, the thought-provoking ideas, and the absolute embracement of the Star Trek legacy.

Rebecca Romijn as Number One; Anson Mount as Cristopher Pike. (Paramount+)

And speaking of episodes, here are the first five episode titles of Strange New Worlds’ ten-episode season, running through the month of May.

    • May 5: “Strange New Worlds” (101)
    • May 12: “Children of the Comet” (102)
    • May 19: “Ghosts of Illyria” (103)
    • May 26: “Memento Mori” (104)
    • June 2: “Spock Amok” (105)

For those of you outside the regions where Strange New Worlds is set to debut this week — and we know there are a lot of you clamoring to know when you’ll be able to see this show! — we spoke to Trek franchise boss Alex Kurtzman at April 30’s premiere event about that very topic.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q6M1HvCuN6c

Do you want to watch smart people work together to solve a problem in for an hour every week? Me too! For those who have really been clamoring for a return to form, Star Trek: Strange New Worlds is the show you’ve been waiting for.

Jenn Tifft is the co-host of the SnapTrek Podcast
When she’s not aligning EPS conduits, she can be found on Twitter.

Star Trek: Strange New Worlds debuts on Thursday, May 5 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 debut June 22 in the UK and Ireland when Paramount+ launches in those countries.

Additional international distribution has not yet been announced.

Watch the STAR TREK: STRANGE NEW WORLDS Opening Credits!

We’re just days away from the May 5 premiere of Star Trek: Strange New Worlds, and to whet your appetite for the new series, Paramount+ has revealed the prequel show’s new opening credits sequence!

Series lead Anson Mount performs the legendary Star Trek narration, making this the first time the “Space: the final frontier…” monologue has been used in the television landscape since the 2005 Star Trek: Enterprise series finale. (The so-called “captain’s oath” was utilized, of course, in the closing moments of each Kelvin Timeline film.)

Following the starship’s start-up sequence, the opening credits follow the USS Enterprise as it warps through a variety of interstellar locations — reminiscent of Star Trek: Voyager’s exploratory-style title sequence.

In addition to the gorgeous visuals, Jeff Russo’s new Strange New Worlds title theme is an modern spin on Alexander Courage’s classic Star Trek tune, with a pounding percussion track underscoring the adventurous nature of the series. (Russo’s musical contribution is limited to the Strange New Worlds theme, as Star Trek: Prodigy composer Nami Melumad has command of the series’ episodic score.)

Speaking to TrekCore and some other members of the press in mid-April, Anson Mount shared his excitement about recording the iconic Star Trek narration for the Strange New Worlds credits.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GojKnB1uQwM

I knew I wanted to do that speech! I knew it like I knew I wanted to eat — so I was very grateful when [showrunners Henry Alonso Myers and Akiva Goldsman] told me I would be doing it.

We kind of did it on the fly, on set, as a temp track for the editing process, but I really wanted to make sure I got it right. So they sent a bunch of equipment to my place in Connecticut to set up basically a sound studio in my basement.

I was there recording while our tech guy was in New York and our post-production crew was in Los Angeles, all networked. We’re slogging this out, doing many, many takes: combining a sentence from this take, a sentence from that take, making sure everything is sounding the way we want, doing several versions.

This is back in October, and there was a moment when I said, “Guys, can we just take a moment here and acknowledge the fact that we are going to remember this moment for the rest of our lives?”

I mean, it is a very, very select group of people who have the privilege to work on this speech. Everyone was like, “Yeah, yeah, that’s really cool!” There was a pause, and I said, “Of course… you realize right now William Shatner is in orbit.” 

It was also a good lesson for me: don’t ever try to out-do Shatner!

Composer Jeff Russo also talks about the theme song in the below video released today on the Paramount+ YouTube channel, which seems to be a mash-up of content from the April 28 and May 5 episodes of The Ready Room after-show.

What do you think of the new Star Trek: Strange New Worlds opening credits? Let us know your thoughts in the comments below!

Star Trek: Strange New Worlds debuts with its premiere episode — aptly titled “Strange New Worlds” — on Thursday, May 5 on Paramount+ in the United States, Australia, Latin America, and the Nordics, as well as on CTV Sci Fi Channel in Canada.

Additional international distribution has not yet been announced.

STAR TREK: PICARD Review — “Hide and Seek”

From the anguish of mental health, to the power of connection, to a mind-bending deconstruction of the Borg, “Hide and Seek” packs a wallop or two or three as the powerful, impactful, game-changing penultimate episode of Star Trek: Picard’s second season.

In many ways, this episode could have served as a satisfying season finale — albeit with more than a few threads left to untangle — so the fact we still get one more episode to deal with things like Q, Renée Picard, time travel and more, just further imprints exactly how successful this unique 10-chapter season of Star Trek has been.

(Of course, let’s be clear: if you already have an issue with the Picard narrative choices –basically a full season of Star Trek taking place on modern day Earth with nary a spaceship in sight — this episode will do nothing to change your mind. But who knows, maybe the finale will!)

Jurati (Alison Pill) in a mental stand-off with the Borg Queen (Annie Wersching). (Paramount+)

The structure of this episode is a simple one. Agnes Jurati (Alison Pill) is still exerting her influence from inside the emerging new Borg Queen, who is trying to seize control of La Sirena — while simultaneously utilizing Adam Soong’s (Brent Spiner) new drone army to hunt down the crew.

That heroic crew quickly splits up into three sets of pairs: Picard (Patrick Stewart) and Tallinn (Orla Brady) in the tunnels underneath Chateau Picard, Seven (Jeri Ryan) and Raffi (Michelle Hurd) working their way through a number of fire fights to get all the way back to the ship, and Rios (Santiago Cabrera) and Ramirez (Sol Rodriguez) being beamed back to Tallinn’s apartment to protect her and her son.

Through those many machinations of “Hide and Seek,” we see two heavy themes of the season collide in the episode, where the basic tenet that the galaxy is filled with lives that need saving is being showcased. Or put in another way, the world is filled with people that need our help. People that have been disenfranchised by the Borg and ICE (yep, you read that right), or who have suffered without help or sympathy from debilitating mental health issues.

Raffi (Michelle Hurd) and Jeri Ryan (Seven of Nine) catch their breath. (Paramount+)

The deconstruction of the Borg that takes place in “Hide and Seek,” is nothing short of brilliant. There has been a lot of talk through the years about the Borg being overused and being a Trek antagonist with nothing left to mine, but here showrunner Terry Matalas has turned the Borg into something vital in our 21st century life. An era currently being defined by democracies sliding closer and closer toward fascist futures highlighted by poverty, racism, and a gigantic wealth gap.

Through the prodding of Jurati, who is slowly being assimilated as the new Borg Queen, we see the Borg for the first time being presented a new way. Instead of being the same old Borg (you can read Borg as “corporation” or “government”) hellbent on acquiring power and status, they can alternatively turn their focus toward embracing the strength in people they’ve previously discarded as weak.

In Jurati’s vision, the Borg could be a real collective for the first time: a collective based not on assimilation, but salvation. Imagine the resources of a delusory organization like ICE being used to help people, so they could contribute to a community for the benefit of everyone. Sounds like something pulled directly from the Federation charter.

If the producers of this show aren’t making a direct correlation that ICE should be abolished and instead turned into a governmental arm designated to integrate people into new communities to help make something distinctive and beautiful and better, then allow me to do it right now. Abolish ICE. Put the resources into communities to help them.

The queen sees multitudes of multiversal failures. (Paramount+)

The “top-shelf, over-reaching, Icarus-worthy arrogance” of today’s modern leaders cannot imagine the way immigrants in countries around the world fight harder for what they choose. They can’t see a world in which you lose no battles because you made no enemies. And they certainly fail to understand how attachments grow and deepen to strengthen a society when people aren’t being discarded and replaced.

It’s here, with Seven mortally wounded by a stab from the resistant Borg Queen, that Jurati’s vision uses one of the great analogies in Star Trek history, highlighting the incredible journey of Jeri Ryan’s beloved character, Seven of Nine.

In a goosebump-inducing moment, she argues that Seven, who was once loved by the Queen herself, is the perfect example of the best of what we could be. Someone who used her Borg half to serve the best of humanity. “Let’s build a universe of Seven’s,” Jurati says to close out her incredible deconstruction of what it means to help those in need so they can help you in return.

Although not quite a culmination — as we’ll see how things play out in the finale — this development is incredibly satisfying as the new Borg Queen is seen leaving the crew behind on Earth and whisking away as part of a deal to save Seven and consider Jurati’s ideas to evolve into “something new, something better.” (I guess we really are going to see her again on the bridge of the Stargazer!)

A new queen emerges. (Paramount+)

Beyond those developments with the Borg, the episode also brings Picard’s painful childhood memories to the forefront, where he acknowledges for the first time the memory of his mother’s tragic suicide. The chilling reveal of his mother’s death could well have come with a trigger warning for the way it effectively captures the heartbreak and the pain of the death of a loved one. It’s not easy to watch, and maybe that’s the point: discussions of mental health are not always easy to have, and too often are pushed aside for a little “pick me up” speech or worse, ignored altogether.

As they’ve done all season –- and I really don’t understand those folks who are saying they don’t think the stories being told have been cohesive -– the episode’s key narrative themes are woven together by unifying threads. Elements like the fear of loss, and also longing for connection, longevity, and discovery. Whether it be Seven and Raffi, or Raffi and Elnor, or Rios and Ramirez, or Soong and Kore, or Agnes and the Borg Queen, you simply need to “do the math, you always lose, in every universe” if you remain stuck in the past and don’t work through your relationships and trauma.

As for Picard, his childhood trauma is a shocking reveal that deepens our understanding of a character we’ve lived with for 35 years. In telling this part of the story, we see for the first time Picard with both his parents in a family setting (minus older brother Robert, who is away from home “at school” as established in the season premiere). The pseudo-idyllic flashbacks to their home life see Maurice (James Callis) addressing Yvette’s condition and her “progress,” but it’s obvious she is not doing well.

The family Picard. (Paramount+)

The interaction leads to a game of hide-and-seek that is a catalyst for the trauma that affects Jean-Luc. After Yvette (Madeline Wise) suffers a breakdown (much of which was previewed two episodes prior in “Monsters”), Maurice locks her in her room for her own protection so she won’t harm herself. Although not clearly stated, I can only assume she was only problematically detained for a short period as Maurice moved to make arrangements to get her the immediate medical attention she needed.

Of course, with mental health that is one of the challenges – getting people help when they can be extremely resistant to the idea. It’s not a simple equation and there certainly aren’t easy answers. Sadly, Yvette’s pleas for the young Jean-Luc (Dillon Von Halle) to free her from the room were heeded by the young boy which leads to him finding her a short time later in their beloved solarium, having hung herself.

For Jean-Luc the horrific memory of his mother’s tragic death has been buried deep inside, to the point he hasn’t dealt with it in any meaningful way. It’s a moment that has helped shape the hard exterior of a man who has never truly allowed himself to fall in love or to give himself over full-heartedly to another person. It was also the act of a child imperceptibly fulfilling his mother’s final wish.

Yvette Picard (Madeline Wise) on the edge of emotional collapse. (Paramount+)

Throughout the season we’ve seen Yvette and Jean-Luc both talking about her love for the stars and her desire to “look up” toward them in times of adversity. In her final inspirational moment with her son, she tells him that the exquisite light in the night sky is actually just the echo of a star that has long since faded — like herself. And she implores him to promise her that “when you remember me, you will ignore the coldness of the dying star and remember instead her light and the infinite love she so very much had for you.”

And that is exactly what Jean-Luc did his entire life. The writers even poignantly address Picard’s vision of his aged mother in “Where No One Has Gone Before,” acknowledging it as an admission that he had buried his pain so deep that he would sometimes fantasize about interactions with his mother having lived into her golden years. It’s a beautiful touch from a writer’s room that is once again not only paying attention, but also paying tribute to 55 years of Star Trek.

Elsewhere, two other important elements in the series were addressed in “Hide and Seek.” First, with Seven revealing for the first time that she had looked at joining Starfleet when she returned from the Delta Quadrant but was shot down because of her Borg past — an event that spurred her to go full Fenris Ranger. Another example of not embracing those in need to help make yourself stronger.

Elnor (Evan Evagora) returns… in holographic form. (Paramount+)

And sadly, we see the return of Elnor (Evan Evagora) as an Emergency Combat Hologram, who shares a quick moment with Raffi to absolve her of the guilt she has been feeling in guiding him to stay in Starfleet because of her own insecurities. (He’s only a hologram, but somehow he shares some memories and emotions of Elnor through the time of his death. That Confederation tech is good stuff!)

The inclusion of this scene, as well as the fact that La Sirena just warped away from Earth with Elnor’s body on board, would seem to indicate that maybe we aren’t going to get some kind of magical reset button that brings Elnor back to life. I certainly hope I’m wrong.

Finally, there are a number of showdowns between Picard and Soong that don’t amount to much but will surely be a part of the finale when we likely see more with the Europa Mission and Renée Picard, who was part of a cryptic, departing message from Queen Agnes, who says, “There must be two Renées. One who lives, and another who dies.”

Her meaning is still unknown… but this spaceship pilot isn’t the first Picard we’ve known with that first name.

Rios (Santiago Cabrera) watches his ship fly off into an unknown future. (Paramount+)

OBSERVATION LOUNGE

  • Despite his noted Luddite stance, Maurice Picard reads from a padd at home — likely due to the outdated nature of print media in the 24th century. (Old books are still around, but it’s probably difficult to read the day’s news on anything except a digital device.)
     
  • Young Jean-Luc has a model ship of Doug Drexler’s NX-refit, finally bringing that post-Star Trek: Enterprise starship design into mainstream Star Trek canon.
     
  • An Excelsior-class ship — complete with lit warp nacelles — is on display in the Picard family living room.
An NX-refit model on the Picard kitchen table. (Paramount+)
An Excelsior-class model on display in the Picard home. (Paramount+)
  • Like the “real” La Sirena, the version of Rios’ ship from the Confederation timeline also has a built-in holographic projectors; this reality’s ship however can create illusory replicas of anyone who boards the ship.
     
  • Like Data’s programming in Star Trek: First Contact, Agnes locks down La Sirena’s computers from Borg access using a fractal encryption lock.
The Confederation developed mobile holoemitter technology, it seems. (Paramount+)
  • Hologram Elnor wears a mobile holo-emitter on his arm, similar in design to the one worn by The Doctor in Star Trek: Voyager.
     
  • We learn this episode that after Voyager returned to the Alpha Quadrant, Seven of Nine attempted to join Starfleet — but was denied entry to service, despite Captain Janeway’s protests. (Icheb probably had no issue: while he was assimilated, the young man’s only exposure to “Borg life” was the few months he spent inside a maturation chamber.)
One chapter in history closed; another yet to be written. (Paramount+)

With one episode to go, this special season of Star Trek: Picard has positioned itself for a finale that will likely set-up the launch of an epic third season reunion of the entire cast of Star Trek: The Next Generation in 2023.

Jim Moorhouse is the creator of TrekRanks.com and the TrekRanks Podcast. He can be found living and breathing Trek every day on Twitter at @EnterpriseExtra.

Star Trek: Picard concludes its second season with “Farewell” on May 5 on Paramount+ in 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 2 Soundtrack Arrives This Week

The second season of Star Trek: Picard still has a week to go, but the musical score from Jeff Russo is beaming down to Earth tomorrow!

Released as always through Lakeshore Records, a 31-track collection of Star Trek: Picard Season 2 music is set to arrive on the usual set of digital music services (including Spotify and Apple Music) April 29, full of composer Jeff Russo’s score — along with Alison Pill’s rendition of the Pat Benatar classic “Shadows of the Night” which the actor performed in “Two of One” this season.

Announced through ScreenRant today, here’s the full track listing:

01. Season 2 Main Title
02. Look Up
03. Let’s See What’s Out There
04. The Pressure of Legacy
05. Penance
06. Seek The Watcher
07. Best Laid Plans
08. What’s My Full Name?
09. Disappointment In Leadership
10. Family Secrets
11. Your Ancestor
12. A Melancholy
13. A Taste of Freedom
14. Maximum Security Function
15. Lies Upon Lies
16. The Journey Inward
17. The True Monster
18. My Spaceship
19. Deepest Truth
20. My Truth
21. Build Back Better Borg
22. Opening the Door
23. Honoring the Deal
24. The Travelers
25. Where You Belong
26. Guardian at The Gate
27. Second Chances
28. Fly Me To The Moon
29. Shadows Of The Night (feat. Alison Pill)
30. Season 2 End Credits (201)
31. Season 2 End Credits (209)

If Picard music is your jam, you can pre-save the digital release through these links.

Star Trek: Picard concludes its second season on May 5 on Paramount+ in 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.

Extended STAR TREK: STRANGE NEW WORLDS Feature Teases the Show’s Cast and Storytelling Ahead of May 5 Series Premiere

We’re now just one week away from the Star Trek: Strange New Worlds series premiere, and a new extended featurette shines a spotlight on the upcoming show.

Debuting in this week’s episode of The Ready Room, a new eight-minute presentation titled Journey to Strange New Worlds: The 55-Year Pick-Up includes interviews with all nine series regulars, executive producers Alex Kurtzman, Akiva Goldsman, and Henry Alonso Myers, and teases some new sets and alien worlds from the series.

(Jump to the 2-minute mark to begin watching.)

In addition, a short clip from next Thursday’s series premiere was showcased at the end of The Ready Room episode, illustrating Captain Pike (Anson Mount) heading back to join the Enterprise in spacedock.

Star Trek: Strange New Worlds debuts with its premiere episode — aptly titled “Strange New Worlds” — on Thursday, May 5 on Paramount+ in the United States, Australia, Latin America, and the Nordics, as well as on CTV Sci Fi Channel in Canada.

Additional international distribution has not yet been announced.

New STAR TREK: STRANGE NEW WORLDS Cast Photos Beam Down!

The May 5 premiere of Star Trek: Strange New Worlds will be here before we know it — and today Paramount+ has released their publicity photos for the new series’ Season 1 cast!
 
The USS Enterprise command team is lead by Captain Christopher Pike (Anson Mount), first officer Una Chin-Riley (Rebecca Romijn) and science officer Spock (Ethan Peck).
 

Filling out the bridge crew is navigator Erica Ortegas (Melissa Navia), security chief La’an Noonien-Singh (Christina Chong), and Starfleet cadet Nyota Uhura (Celia Rose Gooding).

Finally, overseeing sickbay is chief medical officer Dr. M’Benga (Babs Olusanmokun), along side trusty nurse Christine Chapel (Jess Bush).

As of this writing, no promotional photos were released of Aenar officer Hemmer (Bruce Horak), the chief engineer of Captain Pike’s Enterprise.

Star Trek: Strange New Worlds debuts with its premiere episode — aptly titled “Strange New Worlds” — on Thursday, May 5 on Paramount+ in the United States, Australia, Latin America, and the Nordics, as well as on CTV Sci Fi Channel in Canada.

Additional international distribution has not yet been announced.

STAR TREK: LOWER DECKS Season 2 Comes to Blu-ray on July 12

The crew of the Cerritos is coming back for a third year of adventures later this summer, but before we get back to the Star Trek: Lower Decks story, the second season of Star Trek’s animated comedy series is beaming down to Blu-ray and DVD this July!

Announced today via StarTrek.com and soon available for preorder, Star Trek: Lower Decks — Season 2 is coming to Blu-ray and DVD on July 12 with all 10 episodes and a good selection of bonus material — including audio commentaries, something sorely missed in the Season 1 release.

A SOUND FOUNDATION
The first season of Lower Decks earned an Emmy nomination for Outstanding Sound Editing for a (half-hour) Comedy or Drama Series, or Animation for the episode “No Small Parts”. As sound for an animated series is particularly important, go behind the scenes in an interview with the team that creates the dynamic audio for Lower Decks while they discuss how they bring the series to life.

LOWER DECKTIONARY: SEASON TWO
The start of Season Two sees our heroes separated by death and distance. In this featurette, take a deep dive into all things Season Two through interviews with the producers, cast and creatives about developing and executing the characters’ journeys in the second season.

AUDIO COMMENTARIES
· EP 202 “Kayshon, His Eyes Open” by Mike McMahan, Jack Quaid and Jonathan Frakes
· EP 205 “An Embarrassment of Dooplers” by Mike McMahan and Jack Quaid
· EP 207 “Where Pleasant Fountains Lie” by Tawny Newsome, Paul Scheer and Garrick Bernard
· EP 209 “wej Duj” by Mike McMahan, Gabrielle Ruiz and Kathryn Lyn

SEASON TWO EASTER EGGS (Episodes 201-210)
SEASON TWO ANIMATICS (Episodes 201-210)

Unfortunately, we’ve confirmed that Season 2 will not be released with a Steelbook packaging option this time around — surely a disappointment to physical media collectors who were looking forward to continuing the Star Trek Steelbook trend from the last few years.

As soon as preorder information for Star Trek: Lower Decks Season 2 is available, we’ll share those updates right away.

Star Trek: Lower Decks airs on Paramount+ in 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: Lower Decks
Season 1 Blu-ray

Star Trek: Lower Decks
Season 2 Blu-ray

New STAR TREK: PICARD Photos — “Hide and Seek”

Star Trek: Picard’s second season reaches its penultimate episode this week, and we’ve got a new collection of photos from “Hide and Seek” to share with you today!

After getting free from FBI custody last week and reuniting with Raffi (Michelle Hurd) and Seven (Jeri Ryan), it’s time for Picard (Patrick Stewart), Rios (Santiago Cabrera), and Tallinn (Orla Brady) to stop the assimilated Jurati (Alison Pill) and Adam Soong (Brent Spiner) from taking control of La Sirena.

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

And in case you haven’t seen it, here’s a preview clip from “Hide and Seek” released during last week’s episode of The Ready Room, and the official Paramount+ trailer.

HIDE AND SEEK — Picard and his crew fight for their lives as they come under attack from a new incarnation of an old enemy. But to survive, Picard must first face the ghosts of his past. Seven and Raffi have a final showdown with Jurati.

Written by Matt Okumura & Chris Derrick. Directed by Michael Weaver.

Star Trek: Picard returns April 28 with “Hide and Seek” on Paramount+ in 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.

EXO-6 Visits DEEP SPACE NINE with Captain Benjamin Sisko — and Unveils Additional Prototypes of Future STAR TREK Figures

After breaking into Star Trek: The Next GenerationVoyager, and the Original Series, 1:6-scale action figure company EXO-6 is heading to the Bajoran Sector to kick off its line of Star Trek: Deep Space Nine releases!

Captain Benjamin Sisko is the next 12-inch figure coming from the young company, now up for preorder in two separate editions to accommodate different price points. Based upon the later-season look of Avery Brooks’ on-screen alter ego, this version of Captain Sisko has stepped right out of the Dominion War for collectors to bring home.

The standard edition of EXO-6’s Captain Sisko figure retails at $215 USD, and includes a bevy of accessories including a miniature baseball, a Type III Federation phaser rifle, removable uniform jacket, captain’s vest with working-zipper undershirt, a Starfleet padd, a Type II hand phaser, a tricorder — and a glass of alcohol for recreating the darkest moment of the Dominion War, “In the Pale Moonlight.”

EXO-6 has also listed a more basic edition of the Sisko figure for $180 USD — labeled as an “essentials” version” — which includes only the baseball, padd, tricorder, and Type II hand phaser accessories. (This Sisko figure will not have a removable jacket.)

Each Captain Sisko figure is expected to ship to pre-order collectors in the second half of 2022.

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Fans who attended the Mission Chicago convention earlier this month got a look at plans for the future of EXO-6’s Star Trek license, as the company showcased more than two-dozen prototypes from all corners of the Star Trek universe — stretching all the way back to “The Cage” and touching upon nearly every live-action television series, and multiple films.

In addition to the photos we captured on-site, EXO-6 founder Schubert Tam appeared on the Adam Savage’s Tested YouTube channel in early April for a pair of extensive interviews about the company and his drive to expand the 1:6-scale Star Trek world.

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

STAR TREK Takes Over New York’s Paley Center Starting April 27, with STRANGE NEW WORLDS Exhibit and PRODIGY Family Activities

After making a splash at the Mission Chicago convention earlier this month, the lovely Star Trek: Strange New Worlds costume and prop exhibit is heading to the Big Apple as the Paley Center for the Media is set to launch a new look at the final frontier in the coming days.

The Visional Universe of Star Trek: Strange New Worlds opens April 27, where the props, costumes, and (replica) set pieces first seen at the Chicago convention will beam down to the Paley Center’s New York City venue.

Along with the screen-used pieces, the first public screening of the new series’ first two episodes will debut on Sunday, May 1 — four days ahead of the Paramount+ premiere on May 5 — with reservations open to the general public starting April 22 at the Paley Center website.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d6Vaz66niIg

Not only will Strange New Worlds get time in the Paley Center’s spotlight, however: throughout the next month, the venue will hold daily screenings (Wednesday-Sunday) of many of the franchise’s pilot episodes, including “The Cage,” Discovery’s “The Vulcan Hello,” TNG’s “Encounter at Farpoint,” Picard’s “Remembrance,” and Lower Decks’ “Second Contact.”

Young Star Trek fans will also have a reason to visit, as Star Trek: Prodigy and the original Animated Series will also get weekend screenings, along with Prodigy “family activities” which include craft projects for kids.

For more details on the Paley Center for the Media’s Star Trek exhibit, running April 27 – May 29 in New York City — including ticket purchases and reservations for the Strange New Worlds premiere on May 1 — head over to the Paley Center’s website.