Home Blog Page 73

WeeklyTrek Podcast #176 — Looking Ahead to STAR TREK: MISSION CHICAGO and the Remastered MOTION PICTURE Director’s Edition!

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 Shore Leave Podcast co-host Marina Kravchuk 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 Marina’s wish to see more of Next Generation cast members in Star Trek: Picard, and Alex’s theory about which city in the United States the new Star Trek Missions convention will head to next.

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!

Watch the All-New STAR TREK: STRANGE NEW WORLDS Trailer!

It’s a big week for the Star Trek franchise — between First Contact Day on Tuesday and the three-day Mission Chicago convention which launches on Friday —  but Paramount+ is kicking off this big week of Star Trek excitement right from the jump with an all-new look at Star Trek: Strange New Worlds!

After five days of character-focused teasers (Pike · Number One · Spock · Uhura · M’Benga · Chapel · Ortegas · Hemmer · La’an), the streamer has begun the countdown to the May 5 series premiere with a brand new trailer for the upcoming series, promising adventure, exploration, and action with the crew of Captain Pike’s USS Enterprise.

From Captain Pike (Anson Mount) beaming down to interrupt a group of squabbling diplomats, to Lt. Commander Spock (Ethan Peck) getting logically sexy with that pointed-eared lady, to Cadet Uhura (Celia Rose Gooding) beaming down to a comet in flight, the Enterprise crew has a lot going on as they “go where the aliens are.”

In addition to the trailer, Paramount+ also unveiled new key art for the show’s first season, featuring the nine leading characters ready to begin their exciting journey into the unknown — and a new set of photos showing off the Enterprise crew.

There surely will be more news to come over the next days and weeks as we inch ever-closer to next month’s series premiere, so keep your sensors locked here at TrekCore for all the latest as it breaks!

Strange New Worlds stars Anson Mount as Captain Christopher Pike, Rebecca Romijn as Commander Una Chin-Riley (Number One), Ethan Peck as Lt. Commander Spock, Celia Rose Gooding as Nyota Uhura, Babs Olusanmokun as Dr. M’Benga, Jess Bush as Nurse Christine Chapel, Melissa Navia as Lt. Erica Ortegas, Cristina Chong as Lt. La’an Noonien-Singh, and Bruce Horak as Lt. Hemmer.

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. Additional international distribution has not yet been announced.

Chris Pine Says STAR TREK Movies Need to Operate Outside “the Billion-Dollar Zone,” Has Met with Director Matt Shakman

Progress on 2023’s announced Star Trek sequel film may be moving at a snail’s pace, but even though no scripts have made it to the Kelvin Timeline cast — expected to return for the for next year’s project — cast captain Chris Pine has a few new things to say about what kind of expectations need to be placed on Trek movie production moving forward.

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

‘Star Trek Beyond’ director Justin Lin with Chris Pine on that film’s Vancouver set. (Paramount Pictures)

Pine has already shared in a number of recent interviews that he hasn’t seen any scripts for the supposedly-on-the-way movie — and that he was a surprised as the rest of his Enterprise crewmates to learn of the announcement in February — but he has met with Trek 2023 director Matt Shakman and the team at Paramount Pictures about the project.

Speaking with Deadline this week, Pine shared:

I met the director, Matt [Shakman], who I really like. I met a producer on it that I really like. I know JJ [Abrams] is involved in it in some respects. I met the new people over at Paramount, which is many different kind of relations.

I really liked them. Everybody seems excited about the prospect of it. There’s just simply no — I don’t have a tangible script to look at.

Pine himself walked away from the Star Trek universe in 2018 after salary negotiations on a then-proposed fourth Kelvin Timeline film fell apart, following claims that the studio wasn’t meeting previously-contracted pay requirements after Star Trek Beyond box office numbers came in much lower than expected.

The actor told Deadline that he thinks studio overreach is something that’s been a challenge to manage in the last few Star Trek outings, and that if the film franchise is to continue, it may not be such a bad idea to set sights on a somewhat lower target.

We always tried to get the huge international market [with ‘Star Trek.’] It was always about making the billion dollars. It was always this billion-dollar mark because Marvel was making a billion. Billion, billion, billion.

We struggled with it because ‘Star Trek,’ for whatever reason, its core audience is rabid. Like rabid, as you know. To get these people that are interested that maybe are ‘Star Wars’ fans or think ‘Star Trek’ is not cool or whatever, proven to be … we’ve definitely done a good job of it but not the billion-dollar kind of job that they want.

I’ve always thought that ‘Star Trek’ should operate in the zone that is smaller. You know, it’s not a Marvel appeal. It’s like, let’s make the movie for the people that love this group of people, that love this story, that love ‘Star Trek.’ Let’s make it for them and then, if people want to come to the party, great.

But make it for a price and make it, so that if it makes a half-billion dollars, that’s really good.

Zachary Quinto, Chris Pine, and Karl Urban at the 2016 ‘Star Trek Beyond’ fan event. (Paramount Pictures)

He admits, though, that such a lower-level outing may not be as feasible in today’s theatrical marketplace as it has been in the past — after factoring in all the costs associated with marketing, distribution, and other elements of film production.

[We] operate in a system now which I don’t know how much longer we have of you have to spend 500 million dollars on a film to reach… even you have to pay all sorts of people back.

So to make a billion… a billion is the gross. You haven’t brought your net in. [If] I had my business suit on, that’s what I would do, but I don’t know where that is. That’s all above my pay grade.

Pine’s comments are a familiar refrain to anyone who remembers the lackluster Star Trek Beyond marketing campaign, which failed to raise much outside-the-fanbase interest in that 2016 film — but as the actor notes, it may not be all that simple.

The currently-untitled 2023 Star Trek film is set to be directed by Matt Shakman, with Paramount Pictures intending to bring back Chris Pine as Captain Kirk, Zachary Quinto as Spock, Karl Urban as Dr. McCoy, Zoe Saldana as Uhura, Simon Pegg as Scotty, and John Cho as Sulu.

Anton Yelchin, who played Chekov in the previous films, passed away in 2016 and his role is not expected to be recast.

Captain Pike Caps Off the Week of STAR TREK: STRANGE NEW WORLDS Crew Introductions

After a week of introductions to his Enterprise crew, the final Star Trek: Strange New Worlds character teaser has just beamed down — featuring the man himself, Anson Mount’s Captain Christopher Pike.

Pike’s vision of his delta-ray damaged future hasn’t escaped the Enterprise captain — as one of his character arcs for the show looks to see how this knowledge of his fate weighs on the starship commander.

He may also share the details of his vision with Spock — one of only a few he can speak to about it, given their shared knowledge of Discovery’s fate — perhaps setting up motivation for the Vulcan’s actions in “The Menagerie.”

The transporter room.
The Enterprise in orbit.
Captain Pike in command.
Officiating a wedding.
A strange energy.
Beaming down.
Wearing tactical gear.
The future awaits.

Anson Mount, Ethan Peck, Rebecca Romijn, and the creative team behind Strange New Worlds are hitting the stage at Star Trek: Mission Chicago next weekend, where we expect to learn a lot more about the upcoming series — which is just one month away.

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. Additional international distribution has not yet been announced.

Una Chin-Riley is STAR TREK: STRANGE NEW WORLDS’ Enterprising Number One

Star Trek: Strange New Worlds heads into the weekend with one more new character promo, tonight focused on the smart and capable first officer of the USS Enterprise — Rebecca Romijn’s “Number One,” Commander Una Chin-Riley.

Originated of course by Majel Barret in 1964’s “The Cage,” Romijn inherited the role when the character returned in Star Trek: Discovery Season 2 and subsequent Short Treks back in 2019. She got a first name for the first time in “Such Sweet Sorrow, Part 2” — Una, named for Star Trek novelist Una McCormack — but the officer’s full name has now been cemented with her role in Strange New Worlds.

This new promo seems to indicate La’an is having trouble adjusting to her role in the senior staff, allowing Una to mentor the security officer a bit from her own personal experience. Also spotted are more of her fight with La’an Noonien-Singh in main engineering (along with a strange glow from within her body), Enterprise docked at a large space station, the inside of Captain Pike’s ready room, a firefight on the bridge as aliens board the ship, and the new lounge set.

The Strange New Worlds promotional engines continue to warp ahead towards next month’s series premiere, so keep checking back for more news here at TrekCore!

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. Additional international distribution has not yet been announced.

STAR TREK: STRANGE NEW WORLDS Beams Up Mister Spock

Star Trek: Strange New Worlds closes out the week with yet another new promotional video, this time centered around the Enterprise’s half-Vulcan science officer — Ethan Peck’s Lt. Commander Spock.

Peck took over the role of ‘prime universe’ Spock from the departed Leonard Nimoy in 2019, joining the franchise in Star Trek: Discovery Season 2 and the subsequent USS Enterprise-centric Short Trek “Q & A”. In Strange New Worlds, the actor takes on Spock full-time in the years between “The Cage,” leading up to the original Star Trek series.

Seen in Discovery holding the rank of Lieutenant, the officer has received a promotion since we last saw him to the rank of Lt. Commander.

In the new teaser, we see Spock aboard the Enterprise, but also back on his Vulcan homeworld as he appears to be going through a number of traditional rituals — with lots of visual callbacks to “Amok Time,” including some close encounters with a Vulcan woman (Gia Sandhu) who seems quite likely to be T’Pring… his betrothed mate.

The Strange New Worlds promotional machine keeps on moving as we get ever closer to the upcoming series premiere, so keep checking back for more news here at TrekCore!

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. Additional international distribution has not yet been announced.

Nurse Christine Chapel Joins the STAR TREK: STRANGE NEW WORLDS Medical Team

Star Trek: Strange New Worlds keeps the character introductions going with the second member of the show’s medical staff — giving us a first look at Jess Bush as Nurse Christine Chapel.

A character originated of course by Majel Barrett in the Original Series, Christine Chapel made three-dozen appearances between the classic Star Trek series, Animated Series, and TOS feature film — but little is known of Chapel’s life before Captain Kirk’s time aboard ship.

“What Are Little Girls Made Of?” tells us that in her student days  she fell in love and became engaged to scientist Roger Korby, however this relationship took place at least five years before the Original Series time period — and possibly even before the Strange New Worlds era — as Korby spent at more than half a decade on planet Exo III.

In addition to her top-notch work in the Enterprise medical team, we also get a taste of the Australian actor’s take on Chapel’s distinctly non-Australian accent, and then see her crawling up a Jefferies tube, flirting with the ship’s resident Vulcan in a nod to the characters’ classic Trek dynamic, and experimenting with La’an Noonien-Singh’s genome — probably not a great idea.

The Strange New Worlds promotional machine keeps on moving as we get ever closer to the upcoming series premiere, so keep checking back for more news here at TrekCore!

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. Additional international distribution has not yet been announced.

STAR TREK: PICARD Review — “Fly Me to the Moon”

Each episode of Star Trek: Picard’s second season seems to pack in more and more, while moving at a faster and faster pace — and that is once again true in this fifth installment, “Fly Me to the Moon.”

As an example of how much is jammed into this week’s new episode, we get answers to several questions: Who’s the blonde girl? What is Q’s plan? Who is that Laris lookalike? When will we see Brent Spiner? Where’s Isa Briones?

On top of all that, we also get Round 3 of Jurati vs. the Borg Queen, and finally complete the Seven, Raffi, and Rios guided tour through Los Angeles. That’s a lot. And it all works. (Especially when the pressure is off, and you sit down to watch this one a second time. Which we recommend you do right now.)

Renée Picard, astronaut. (Paramount+)

The episode quickly answers two of the questions above. First, we learn the identity of the woman Q was trolling in last week’s episode: it’s Renée Picard (Penelope Mitchell), an astronaut taking off in a few days on the pioneering Europa Mission to Jupiter… and, clearly, an ancestor of one Jean-Luc Picard.

The other early answer aligns with the information about Renée Picard, as we learn that the Laris lookalike in 2024 is named Tallinn (Orla Brady), assigned to monitor the hugely important historical figure. The visual of Tallinn “beaming” into her home office with Picard is one of the most memorable Trek images we’ve seen in a while. A strikingly beautiful callback to classic Trek’s “Assignment: Earth” and the vault transporter used by Gary Seven, another “supervisor” assigned to monitor some important happenings on Earth.

The confirmation that Tallinn is one of the mysterious “supervisors” from Trek’s ancient history is executed with perfection by the Picard production team, who give us the answer we expected about her identity, while also building on the lore of these guardians who are often charged with protecting a single thread in “the tapestry of history.”

But the producers also keep the mystery alive, as we leave this episode not knowing anything more concrete about the strange interlopers on Earth than when “Assignment: Earth” aired more than 50 years ago. It’s a fun, satisfying connection to the Original Series.

Tallinn, a ‘supervisor’ overseeing the fate of Renée Picard. (Paramount+)

For 24 years, Tallinn has been protecting Renée, but now as the launch approaches, the smart, overachiever is filled with self-doubt that is being festered by Q (John de Lancie). He tried to snap her into a place of fear and self-loathing in “Watcher,” but with his powers amiss, he has been forced to get his hands dirty by instead trying to lead her astray as a counselor in therapy sessions. He’s doing whatever he can to stop her from succeeding on the mission.

Q has also been busy on earth helping scientiest Adam Soong (Brent Spiner) with his genetic research. This version of Soong (famous in the Confederation Timeline for his decree that a “safe galaxy is a human galaxy”) is the fourth human variation played by Spiner, to go along with multiple appearances as Noonian, Arik and Altan Inigo, dating back more than 30 years.

Soong is researching a genetic cure for his daughter, Kore (Isa Briones). Following a short appearance in “The Star Gazer,” it’s nice to see the young actor back on screen, and even better to see her now playing the flesh-and-blood daughter of Spiner’s character — in contrast to the android daughter created by Bruce Maddox and modeled after Data’s original daughter, Lal. (The Data/Soong family tree is complicated!)

Q offers Adam Soong a miracle. (Paramount+)

In this scenario, Q is offering to assist Soong with research that will allow Kore to live a normal life — she has a defect that won’t allow her to be exposed directly to sunlight. Q teases Soong with a small sample of what his cure can do and, in exchange for his help, promises him the full dose by intoning, “Does the name ‘Picard’ mean anything to you?” As with many story beats in this very serialized season of Picard, we’ll have to wait for another episode to find out exactly what Soong’s role in Q’s plan will be.

Back on the road in L.A., Raffi (Michelle Hurd) and Seven (Jeri Ryan) have freed Rios (Santiago Cabrera) in an anti-climactic bus hijacking. The scenes leading to Rios being freed are punctuated by one telling moment in which we are reminded what Raffi’s single-minded focus is in 2024: she wants to reset the timeline and resurrect Elnor.

We see Elnor (Evan Evagora) briefly as the bus passengers escape, though it’s only a mirage; Raffi quickly sees that it’s just a similarly-built young man and not the departed Romulan cadet. The fleeting glimpse of the young Australian actor reminded me how much I miss the Qowat Milat warrior, too.

Kore, daughter of Adam Soong. (Paramount+)

On La Sirena, the Borg Queen (Annie Wersching) is determined to escape her confinement as a strung-up legless torso by assimilating a new body… and she wants it to be her new bestie, Agnes (Alison Pill). The Queen works the system to capture a French police officer and threatens Agnes with an ultimatum: join with me or the police officer becomes my host.

This Borg Queen can do more than just help you with your nicotine addiction, she is promising the “forever invisible” Jurati that if she allows their two minds to merge, she will be “loved, completely” and “truly seen” for the first time. It’s a scary and appealing proposition that is ultimately greeted with a single blast from Jurati’s shotgun.

The reveal of Annie Wersching’s torso hanging in the back of La Sirena to open this scene is a classic horror movie moment, directed with extreme style and confidence by Jonathan Frakes. Of course, it was Frakes who first brought the Borg Queen to life for the first time in Star Trek: First Contact with the original shot of her legless torso famously being hung from the rafters before merging with her body.

Raffi hallucinates Elnor’s face. (Paramount+)

To further emphasize the horror movie vibe permeating the scenes with the Borg Queen, once the entire crew reunites on board La Sirena, they are greeted by Agnes covered in the dead Borg’s blood. Following that gory reveal the tone and pacing of the episode abruptly changes — in a surprising, but somewhat successful way — as we move from the body horror genre to a fun, heist-film romp as the crew turns their attention to a gala being thrown in honor of the Europa Mission.

The gala is starting in a few hours and the team is now focused on Renée Picard, who they need to help guide through the evening safely to make sure nothing derails her plans to lead the mission to Jupiter.

The crew knows that if Renée drops out, there will be no Europa Mission and no hope — a bad combination for a historical period in which records are scarce and incomplete and “everyone hates everyone.” The discussion about this era in Trek between Picard and Tallinn is a nice callback to the different ways Trek has represented the window of time between the late 1990s and First Contact in 2063, which through certain lenses could be considered contradictory.

The Borg Queen won’t take ‘no’ for an answer. (Paramount+)

At the gala, our crew is hoping to guide the young Picard without making contact, but first they need to gain access to the party via some classic Hollywood heist movie shenanigans involving IDs, invitations and computer hacks… you know the drill. In a few quick glimpses of the party, we see Renée struggling and thinking about her recent failed flight simulator test, we see Agnes purposefully get picked up by security so she can get closer to their main server for hacking purposes.

In a surprise twist, we see a flashback to Jurati’s killing of the Borg Queen, who prior to dying made physical contact with the lonely cyberneticist and was able to assimilate her consciousness into the young doctor’s body. Those dang nanoprobes!

Back at the Gala, the full-bodied Borg Queen is now a part of Agnes, and we see the two sitting together as a single mind, plotting their next steps as one consciousness that together is now so much more. From her confident smile to her décolleté style, the whole “being the Borg Queen thing” definitely suits Jurati. And although Jurati seems to be no worse for wear, we have to give Round of 3 of this season-long battle to the Borg Queen.

Oh… and did you happen to dial Q’s telephone number?

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TMdF90pB4SE

OBSERVATION LOUNGE

  • Tallinn’s transportation device, just like Gary Seven before her, is housed behind a massive bank vault-style steel door.
     
  • “Assignment: Earth” was originally conceived as a backdoor pilot for a possible Gary Seven spinoff series (which obviously never came to fruition), but it’s remarkable that it took the franchise more than 50 years to return to the idea of high-tech Supervisors and their role in Star Trek history.
     
  • Tallinn’s control tablet seems to be of Romulan origin, despite her human-looking ears; the device’s screen features Romulan writing, and its trapezoidal-shaped holographic display is distinctly Romulan as well.
Tallinn’s tech looks very Romulan, even if she’s got human ears. (Paramount+)
  • Astronaut Renée Picard was mentioned by Admiral Picard in “The Star Gazer,” described during his Starfleet Academy speech as a “great-great cousin” who was “instrumental in early exploration of [Earth’s] solar system.”
     
  • According to her passport Renée Picard’s was born November 22, 1996… which just so happens to be the same day Star Trek: First Contact premiered in the United States.
     
  • Renée Picard’s passport lists the document’s issue and expiration dates in the Europe an format (DD-MM-YYYY), however her birth date is listed in the US format (MM-DD-YYYY).
     
  • The spaceship taking Picard and crew to Europe is called the “Shango X-1.”
     
  • Historical records of the Europa mission are tough to find in the future; the only information known about Renée Picard was that she discovered a microorganism on Io which “she believed was sentient,” which she brought back to earth.
Renée Picard’s passport. (Paramount+)
  • The Borg Queen is the first Star Trek character to make a cellular phone call since young Jim Kirk hung up on his stepfather back in 2009.
     
  • Seven mentions Raffi’s son Gabe (Mason Gooding), seen last season in “Stardust City Rag.”
     
  • Confederation tricorders have the ability to release both electromagnetic pulse and sonic stun blasts.
     
  • Thanks to his handcuffed state, Rios’ bus companion Pedro knocks out the ICE officer using the classic-double-fisted Star Trek hit.
     
  • Lea Thompson makes a cameo appearance as Dr. Diane Werner, head of Soong’s review board; Thompson was the director of both “Assimilation” and “Watcher” this season.
     
  • Next to Dr. Werner sits “Dr. Vasily Rozhenko,” likely an ancestor of Worf’s adoptive father.
He’s got all the schematics and diagrams at home. (Paramount+)
  • Adam Soong drives a Tesla, another confirmation that Elon Musk exists within the Star Trek universe, following the tech mogul’s multiple name-drops in Star Trek: Discovery’s early days.
     
  • Accused of performing “unmonitored, unregulated, illegal… genetic experiments with a privatized military organization; spearhead operations on soldiers,” it certainly sounds like whatever Adam Soong was up to was — or will be — a key part of the Eugenics Wars.
     
  • Soong is also said to have violated “the Shenzhen Convention,” a (fictional) international ban on human genetic experiments which may be based upon this 2018 incident where a scientist in Shenzhen, China claimed to have edited the genes of twin girls.
     
  • With his revered status in the Confederation, the atmospheric scrubbers seen in use in that timeline’s dark future likely stem from the protective force fields Soong uses to protect Kore from sunlight.
     
  • Jurati’s fake identification bears the name “Holly Eva Visser.”
Well, that’s probably not good. (Paramount+)

Halfway through the second season, Star Trek: Picard is continuing to deliver the goods with great characters, mysteries and time travel. “Fly Me to the Moon” advances themes, crosses genres and generally is having a ton of fun helping to drive the series’ overall narrative.

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 returns April 7 with “Two of One” 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.

Dr. M’Benga Joins the STAR TREK: STRANGE NEW WORLDS Crew as Captain Pike’s Chief Medical Officer

Star Trek: Strange New Worlds continues to introduce its cast of characters today, as the Enterprise medical staff reports for duty — starting with Babs Olusanmokun’s medical officer, Dr. M’Benga.

Now serving as chief medical officer aboard the Enterprise — fitting in between Dr. Boyce (“The Cage”) and Dr. Piper (“Where No Man Has Gone Before”) — this new promo also gives us our first good looks at the new sickbay set, as well as the doctor’s unique blue wrap-around uniform.

M’Benga was an expert on Vulcan physiology and stepped in to serve as acting chief medical officer when Dr. McCoy was away from the Enterprise. The character appeared in two Original Series episodes (“A Private Little War” and “That Which Survives”), and while he had no first name identified on screen, he did get one in the Star Trek: Vanguard novel series (there called “Jabilo M’Benga.”)

The Strange New Worlds hype is just getting started, to keep your sensors locked here to TrekCore for all the latest news as it breaks!

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. Additional international distribution has not yet been announced.

STAR TREK: STRANGE NEW WORLDS Beams Up Hemmer, the Aenar Engineer Keeping the Enterprise at Warp Speed

Star Trek: Strange New Worlds keeps its promotional machine going with a fourth new character introduction video — following Uhura, La’an, and Ortegas — as Bruce Horak’s blind Aenar character Hemmer becomes the next featured face to beam aboard the Enterprise.

https://www.instagram.com/p/CbvuKiAJ2z-/

Introduced in the fourth season of Star Trek: Enterprise, the Aenar are a blind, telepathic ‘cousin’ of the Andorian race — and Hemmer is the first time we’ve seen a member of that subspecies since the prequel series. The character is played by actor Bruce Horak, who himself is legally blind.

The teaser also gives us a few additional looks at the Enterprise engineering bay, an updated set which features the classic red railings and angled power conduits of the Original Series, but with a new heavily-technical engine core powering the ship.

Also seen is Number One (Rebecca Romijn) leading a landing party, a transporter operator (Andre Dae Kim) wearing another new uniform design, more from the Uhura (Celia Rose Gooding) welcome party in Captain Pike’s quarters, and another look at that downed Constitution-class starship.

One of our readers on Twitter also spied what looks to be a revamped Orion ship in the new teaser as well:

These character teasers are likely to continue throughout the week as we approach next Tuesday’s “First Contact Day,” so keep your eyes on TrekCore in the days to come!

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. Additional international distribution has not yet been announced.