After a six-week hiatus, Star Trek: Discovery’s fourth season continues this week — and we’ve got a new collection of photos from “All In” to share with you today!
Desperate to catch Cleveland Booker (David Ajala) and Ruon Tarka (Shawn Doyle), who stole Starfleet’s new prototype spore drive in an effort to destroy the DMA at the end of the last episode, Captain Burnham (Sonequa Martin-Green) and the Discovery crew head to one of her old haunts from her year spent as a courier to track down the renegade pair.
Here are five new photos from this week’s episode.
Vance and Captain Burnham (Sonequa Martin-Green). (Paramount+)
President Rillak (Chelah Horsdal) at Starfleet Headquarters. (Paramount+)
Saru (Doug Jones) and Burnham aboard Discovery. (Paramount+)
Saru and Burnham aboard Discovery. (Paramount+)
And in case you haven’t seen it, here’s a preview clip for the second half of Discovery’s fourth season, released a few weeks ago during the show’s January hiatus.
ALL IN — Following a hunch, Captain Burnham tracks Book to an old haunt from their courier days and gets drawn into a high-stakes competition for a powerful weapon.
Written by Sean Cochran. Directed by Christopher J. Byrne.
We’ve now had ten episodes to get to know our new Star Trek: Prodigy crew, and as the series enters its midseason hiatus, they’re finally able to stand on their own as a true Starfleet team. “A Moral Star, Part 2” is a satisfying place to stop and regroup, with many of the loose ends getting tied up before more unravel.
Where the story will take us from here is exciting, expansive, and places Prodigy squarely in the thick of things — in a way that makes it uniquely relevant to the very survival of our beloved prime timeline. I couldn’t have asked for anything better from this fledgling series or our fledgling crew themselves.
But first, we have some prisoners to rescue! We open back aboard the just-captured Protostar as The Diviner is on his way back to Tars Lamora, realizing the ruse our young heroes pulled off last week. (“We have a star to catch”, he quips from the engine room, which I have to admit is a pretty great line.)
The Diviner won’t be stopped. (Paramount+)
These scenes with the Diviner and Gwyn are hard to watch, as there is just so much under the surface of their fractured relationship. It’s striking when she uses her heirloom, “the only thing my father ever gave me,” as a weapon against him — and even more so when he uses them as handcuffs to restrain her. My kids got the importance of this, as they seemed particularly insulted that the heirloom was used against Gwyn in that way. (“He can’t do that!”, my oldest shouted.)
Back at Tars Lamora, the rest of the crew is scrambling to rescue all the miners after The Diviner’s attack on the Rev-12 ship — complicated by the lack of gravity, the power to the ship being damaged, and the fact that the miners still can’t understand each other without the help of our crew’s universal translators.
There’s a great bittersweet moment here, with two miners finally getting to talk to each other after laboring side by side for so long, and they seem close to declaring their feelings for each other. I ship it!
Rok has that Starfleet technobabble down pat. (Paramount+)
Rok and Jankom make their way to the engine room, and while Rok barricades herself in front of the door to try to keep the insectoid Watchers out, Jankom tries to fix the engine — but the Tellarite is out of his element as he doesn’t know what to do. Luckily, Rok studied up during her extended period alone, allowing the Brikar to confidently deliver a load of technobabble worthy of LaForge, Torres, or Tucker.
Kudos to Rylee Alazraqui for delivering this with authority and gusto! I really loved this role reversal — Rok’s transition from just the “muscle” to engineering wiz has been unexpected, and developed in such a unique way as to make her effortlessness with the subject seem completely believable.
This is honestly a great turn for Jankom, as well; Rok-Tahk is not the only one subverting expectations, as Jankom is nimble and agile when protecting Rok from the watchers. His multi-tool gadget hand is cleverly used here. I love the idea of the security officer wielding such a unique choice of weapon, especially for a “kid’s show” where I don’t really expect to see a lot of phaser fire.
His gadget hand reminds me of Captain America’s shield, in the respect that while it’s able to be used as an offensive weapon, that’s not really its primary or intended function. Jankom has the instincts and quick thinking to be great in this position, and I very much appreciate that each character has talents and abilities that don’t pigeon-hole them into one role — a trap a lot of children’s shows fall into.
Dal hooks up his combadge to the Tars Lamora control systems. (Paramount+)
We even get to see Dal show some abilities beyond his command potential, as he manages to jury-rig all the prisoners’ control anklets into universal translators — so they can spread the word quicker to get everyone onto the Rev-12. It’s very satisfying to witness the uprising, when they can finally communicate, as they mob Drednok.
My kids were very happy our young Caitian friend got to have the spotlight in such a kickass way as she decapitated the robot — but before he becomes the Caitian’s scratching post though, he manages to transport the missing protostar from Murf’s belly back aboard the NX-76884. Drednok has become a very interesting character to me, as he is definitely loyal to the Diviner — but not blindly, as he also has his own opinions on his plans.
It’s also fun that he can just die without repercussion, giving off some strong Weyoun vibes. The guy has to have a backup or three stashed someplace!
When we check back in with the Protostar, Gwyn is doing her best to try to get the shields down while The Diviner tries to intervene. We get the welcome reveal that the glorious goth-Janeway look was just an act, thanks to Gwyn’s quick thinking — she upgraded the hologram’s programming to not only prevent his override attempt, but also gave Janeway the ability to become ‘solid’ and physically interact with object.
Hologram Janeway has a few new upgrades to show off. (Paramount+)
Janeway versus The Diviner was a fun fight, with Janeway using her ability to appear and disappear to full advantage and then ripping apart the tube on his life support system. But Gwyn then pauses the Janeway hologram, so that the Diviner can tell her what he’s been keeping from her all this time — and we finally get to learn his true motivation.
The Diviner is a time traveler, sent back to some point in the past in an effort to prevent Solum’s first contact with the Federation. Originally, that event — which is due to occur in Gwyn’s future — caused a civil war amongst the Vau N’Akat, leading to the destruction of their civilization.
He blames the Federation, instead of the choices the Vau N’Akat made themselves, for this. Part of the reason is his insistence that the Vau N’Akat are superior to all other beings, which explains how callous he has been with the lives of others. The Diviner’s master plan is to use the Protostar as a weapon: when it comes into contact with other Starfleet vessels, it will send a “hacking” signal to those other ships, causing them to turn against the rest of the fleet to destroy Starfleet before they can ever get to Solum.
What happened — or will happen — to his people is a tragedy, but even Gwyn is wise enough to realize that you can’t simply “trade one tragedy for another.” The Federation isn’t perfect, of course, which is a theme worthy of exploring; I like that the focus here is on a man who believes his cause is righteous, allowing that belief to cloud and distort his every move, fueled by his hatred.
Gwyn learns the truth about The Diviner’s mission. (Paramount+)
His faction of the Vau N’Akat fought to “preserve their way of life,” which here as in real life translates into xenophobia and racism. In this respect, he is a villain both classic and modern — and way more complex than I gave him credit for when we first met him in “Lost and Found.” A true Trek villain!
In this episode, everyone gets their moment. We’ve already seen Rok and Jankom rock their new roles, and we get Gwyn fighting for time, and then trying to explain to her father why he’s so wrong. We have Dal, acting like a true captain, making the difficult decision to fire on the Protostar and then beaming over himself to try to rescue Gwyn — I’m not sure where it will go, but there is LOVE there! — and then: we have Zero.
I was glad that Zero had a chance to confront The Diviner, as he as well as Gwyn deserved that chance. Having Zero’s power turned on the bad guy after he forced it on others was fitting, and it’s hard to feel sorry for him. My feelings are reserved for Zero and for Gwyn only in this situation — and I would bet all my quatloos that we will see The Diviner and Drednok again.
We get a nice voiceover from Holo-Janeway, detailing Gwyn’s recovery from seeing Zero’s reflection and complementing our crew on how far they’ve come. It’s a fitting epilogue to these first ten episodes. We enter the midseason break with a crew who is a true family unit, with kids who have already come so far. I truly can not wait to see what they do next.
But that’s not the end of things…
Zero fights back. (Paramount+)
After the picture fades on the Protostar, the lights come back up above a Starfleet bridge console in an ending surprise that sets in motion the next phase of the Star Trek: Prodigy story, and a moment of pure joy for this hardcore Kathryn Janeway fan.
Back in the Alpha Quadrant, Vice Admiral Janeway’s starship Dauntless picks up a faint signal from the Protostar‘s engines, the third in recent days — each time the ship has gone into proto-warp this season — and it’s clear that she’s been waiting for a sign of life from her former first officer for a long time.
“I’m coming, Chakotay!” she proclaims in the last moment of the episode, which gave me chills! I had to explain to my youngest what was happening here, as she asked why Janeway was on another ship — but once I explained that this was the real person the Protostar’s hologram was based upon, she understood. (“Cool!”)
After this scene, they were all very interested for me to tell them more about Chakotay and the two characters’ history; I think Janeway wanting to find him gave him some street cred with them, as they all love their version of Janeway already.
Whenever Star Trek: Prodigy returns in the latter part of 2022, seeing this story continue from two sides of the galaxy — with a version of Janeway in both places — will be a real treat.
“Finally!” (Paramount+)
OBSERVATION LOUNGE
This episode concludes on Stardate 61103.1, the first “real” 60000’s Stardate in the Star Trek adventure.
When she works to stop The Diviner from escaping with the Protostar, Gwyn disables “Security Protocol S29” — a possible sly Chakotay reference, as Voyager Season 2, Episode 9 was the Chakotay-themed “Tattoo.”
After leaving sickbay after recovering from her Zero exposure, Gwyn wears an enormous cortical monitor on the side of her head — a longstanding Star Trek medical tradition.
A giant cortical monitor — Starfleet Medical’s greatest tradition. (Paramount+)
What happened to the Vau N’Akat is similar to what happened to the ill-fated planet seen in “Friendship One,” where contact with a Federation probe taught the species about antimatter. They experimented with the technology after the probe arrived, caused an explosion, and polluting their atmosphere — placing blame for the disaster squarely on the Federation.
Based on what we learned from The Diviner, I’m picturing his branch of the Vau N’Akat as similar to the Malcorians from “First Contact,”whose leader did not think they were ready to handle knowledge of alien life — but also similar to the Earth-based, anti-alien Terra Prime movement seen in Star Trek: Enterprise.
Vice Admiral Janeway’s USS Dauntless (NCC-80816). (Paramount+)
The Dauntless crew wears a version of the “All Good Things…” era Starfleet uniform, with black shoulders indicating a recent evolution from the 2370s-era designs, along with the bar-backed combadge seen in the “All Good Things,” “The Visitor,” and “Endgame” alternate futures — perhaps a sign that the timey-wimey story Star Trek: Prodigy has already introduced may still have time temporal twists and turns yet to come?
Commander Tysess, Dr. Noum, Vice Admiral Janeway, and Ensign Ascencia. (Paramount+)
The use of the “All Good Things” combadge aboard the Dauntless explains how that badge design could be seen in the Starfleet “crew chooser” hologram which opened Dal’s holodeck adventure in “Kobayashi Maru.”
The navigation console aboard the Dauntless includes a speedometer that tops out a little bit beyond Warp 10 — with the crew’s uniform and combadge design an evolutionary step to the “All Good Things” aesthetic, perhaps that alternate future’s Warp 13 speed isn’t so outlandish!
Warp 10 isn’t the top of the chart for the crew of the USS Dauntless. (Paramount+)
Announced as a cast member in October, actress Jameela Jamil makes her first vocal appearance as Ensign Ascencia, the navigator aboard Janeway’s Dauntless — though you may not have recognized her as the Brit uses an American accent for the Trill character.
Her “Federation Standard” accent made me laugh, though, because it reminded me of the flawless American accent used on The Good Place when she pretended to be Rhonda Mumps of the Bad Place Hot Dog Department. (“Pass the NASCAR ketchup!”)
Though they didn’t have any lines this week, additional new characters Commander Tysess (the Andorian voiced by Daveed Diggs) and Doctor Noum (the Tellarite voiced by Jason Alexander) can be spotted behind Janeway on the Dauntless bridge.
One more group hug to cap things off. (Paramount+)
I am already completely and utterly invested in this crew and their mission. But most importantly, my kids are all in with the Protostar and her crew. It’s a joy to watch them. Prodigy has really landed in a sweet spot where we can all feel like it’s “for us,” everyone — and there’s nothing more Star Trek than that.
Star Trek: Prodigy will return for ten more Season 1 episodes later in 2022; the series has already been renewed for Season 2, expected in 2023.
There’s been lots of speculation about what the next round of Star Trek television production may include, as Alex Kurtzman and the production team at Paramount+ and Secret Hideout look towards their next development cycle — and a long-rumored contender seems to be closer to fruition than ever before.
Starfleet Academy on Earth in the late 2360s. (“The First Duty”)
Deadline reports that the Academy-based concept is formally in development for Paramount+, and that Gaia Violo (co-creator of the Prime Video series Absentia) is expected to pitch a take on the series for a hopeful fast-track to production.
“The Star Trek universe on Paramount+ is going back to school.
A new offshoot, ‘Star Trek: Starfleet Academy,’ is in development at CBS Studios and Alex Kurtzman’s studio-based Secret Hideout for the ViacomCBS streamer, sources said. Sharing a name with the late 1990s video game, the series is set among the college of cadets mentored for leadership roles in the United Federation of Planets space force.
We hear ‘Absentia’ co-creator Gaia Violo is currently working on a take for the project. With the long-gestating ‘Star Trek’ spinoff ‘Section 31’ starring Michelle Yeoh expected to get a pickup soon, ‘Starfleet Academy’ is believed to be next in the Star Trek development pipeline behind it. It will be pitched to Paramount+ shortly, and the hope is to get it going in the next year, sources said.”
"There is another one, but I'm going to be tight lipped about that," Kurtzman says on further #StarTrek series beyond SECTION 31, which was teased earlier #TCA22
Earlier today Kurtzman described the Secret Hideout development process as “think[ing] several years out,” but with several years of new Star Trek shows still ahead of us — 1.5 seasons of Discovery, 1.5 seasons of Prodigy, 2 seasons of Picard, 2 seasons of Lower Decks, and 2 seasons of Strange New Worlds already announced — it’s likely the arrival of either of these two shows, should they move to production, is quite far away.
But it’s never to early to rekindle the conversation.
The cast and creatives behind Star Trek: Strange New Worlds hit the Television Critics Association press tour today, and along with the new poster we showed you earlier this afternoon, shared some tantalizing new details into the upcoming series that are sure to have fans talking all Spring.
While not much in the way of story-specifics were revealed, no surprise given that we’re still over three months away from the show’s May 5 premiere on Paramount+, a few nuggets from the show’s creatives did make waves — starting with the confirmation that Christina Chong’s character La’an Noonien-Singh is (as only speculated previously) most definitely related to the genetic superman himself, Khan Noonien Singh.
“She’s related to Khan, for sure,” said series co-showrunner Akiva Goldsman (as reported by Decider’s Alex Zalben on Twitter), directly tying her character to James Kirk’s nemesis in “Space Seed” and Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan. “Canon is almost always delightfully challenging, unless it’s a pain in the ass,” Goldsman also said, per Zalben’s reporting, indicating that the writing team does their best to adhere to canon unless that gets in the way of storytelling requirements.
Co-showrunner Henry Alonso Meyers also spoke about the canon question, as reported by StarTrek.com, saying that the writers “take canon very seriously on the show because we don’t want to break it, but we also want to have fun with it.”
"There is another one, but I'm going to be tight lipped about that," Kurtzman says on further #StarTrek series beyond SECTION 31, which was teased earlier #TCA22
Whether that is the long-rumored Starfleet Academy show (which Kurtzman also briefly name-checked at Star Trek Day in September) or something else, Kurtzman isn’t talking.
Michelle Yeoh’s Section 31 spin-off — first announced in January 2019 — still has some kind of life to it, at least, as Paramount+’s head of scripted programming Nicole Clemens said earlier today that development continues and some news on that show should be coming “soon,” but still nothing concrete past the it’s-still-alive standpoint.
With nine full seasons of Star Trek still ahead of us, already announced, any Section 31 news will be an interesting surprise — perhaps it’s in line to follow Picard after it departs in 2023, or will end up being some other kind of project separate from the ongoing shows.
We’ll just have to wait and see.
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.
We’re still over three months away from the arrival of Captain Pike, Number One, Lt. Spock, and the rest of the Enterprise crew, but today the first key art for Star Trek: Strange New Worlds has just beamed down!
The new Original Series prequel series is set to arrive on Paramount+ this May 5, and today’s new poster reveal out of the Television Critics Association Winter press tour features the modern-design Constitution-class USS Enterprise — under the command of Captain Christopher Pike (Anson Mount) — above the captain’s home, Mojave (seen on the horizon).
Pike himself is seen in near-silhouette, riding his faithful horse — in “The Cage,” the animal was called “Tango” — peering up at an image of Jupiter and the wide expanse of space he’s set to explore in the coming adventure.
Captain Pike (Jeffrey Hunter) and horse Tango in “The Cage.”The city of Mojave, seen in the background of this Talosian illusion.
Pike’s ready room aboard the USS Discovery also featured imagery from his Southwestern home — and horse-and-rider sculptures as well — during his stint aboard that series.
Captain Pike's ready room includes statuettes of horses with riders, a Native American-style blanket, and views of the southwestern United States, aligning with Mojave, his home on Earth, thought to be in the Arizona/Nevada area.#StarTrekDiscoverypic.twitter.com/jkx7eH10fi
Beyond that, our only real glimpse of the show have come from limited social media posts from the series’ cast — including this look at Celia Rose Gooding in her Cadet Uhura costume, and castmates Jess Bush (Nurse Chapel) and Christina Chong (La’an Noonien-Singh) in a classic-Trek-style Jeffries Tube.
Gooding was also briefly spotted in this new Paramount+ commercial that debuted over the weekend — along side Discovery’s Anthony Rapp and Picard’s Isa Briones — each humming part of the Halo theme song (as the game has been adapted into a Paramount+ original series coming in March).
Trek’s Anthony Rapp, Isa Brones, and Celia Rose Gooding join the Halo singalong. (Paramount+)
We’ll have lots more to report on the coming new Star Trek series as we get closer to the May 5 debut, but for now, keep your sensors locked here at TrekCore for all of our Star Trek: Strange New Worlds coverage in the months ahead!
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: Prodigy is back this week for the final episode of the winter season, and today we’ve got new images from “A Moral Star, Part 2” ahead of Thursday’s debut!
After last week’s bargain with The Diviner went awry, allowing the baddie to fly off with the Protostar under his command — and Gwyn along for the ride — Dal and the rest of the crew left behind at Tars Lamora have to find a way to catch up in the damaged Rev-12 ship.
Gwyn, corrupted Janeway, and the Diviner aboard the Protostar. (Paramount+)Jankom and Rok face Drednok. (Paramount+)Dal in action. (Paramount+)Zero, Jankom, and Rok on a mission. (Paramount+)
A MORAL STAR, PART 2 — When the plan goes awry, the crew must improvise. Meanwhile, Gwyn discovers a dark truth that will forever jeopardize their quest toward salvation.
Written by the Season 1 Writers Room: Kevin & Dan Hageman, Julie Benson, Shawna Benson, Lisa Schultz Boyd, Nikhil S. Jayaram, Diandra Pendleton-Thompson, Chad Quandt, and Aaron J. Waltke.
Directed by Ben Hibon.
* * * * *
In addition to these looks ahead to the Prodigy winter finale, we also have a few new teases for Star Trek: Picard’s upcoming seasons, as Season 2 is about to arrive and Season 3 continues filming.
Series showrunner Terry Matalas has shared three new photos of a Starfleet vessel’s bridge on his Twitter account over the last few days, including this gorgeous new 2399-era LCARS computer interface (over a curved display panel) created by series interface designer Andrew Jarvis,and a pair of close looks at the unnamed ship’s captain’s chair — including a classic Original Series era “Jettison Pod” button which was part of Captain Kirk’s armrest controls on the classic Enterprise.
Based on his “Bridge day” caption on the first image, it’s assumed these come from production on Picard Season 3, which still has some time left to film.
Star Trek: Prodigy returns with “A Moral Star, Part 2” on Thursday, February on Paramount+ in the United States, Australia, Latin America, and the Nordics, as well as on CTV Sci Fi Channel in Canada.
Star Trek: Picard returns to Paramount+ for Season 2 on March 3, followed on CTV SciFi Channel in Canada, then on Prime Video in all other global regions.
In addition, stick around to listen to Patrick’s wish for additional Star Trek: The Next Generation legacy character appearances on Star Trek: Picard, and a listener-submitted theory about how the five current Star Trek shows could pull off a crossover!
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!
We’re just over a month away from Star Trek: Picard Season 2’s debut on March 3, and the folks at Paramount+ have kicked off the winter weekend with a group of new photos from the upcoming premiere episodes.
Released on Friday night, these nine new photos (plus two previously-released images) from the first two episodes of Picard Season 2 don’t give anything away that hasn’t been shown off in the last few trailers, but they do give us our first great views of the new costuming worn by Patrick Stewart and castmates — along with John de Lancie, who returns as Q — in the ‘dark Starfleet’ timeline they’re thrust into.
Here are seven photos from the season premiere, which include a few moments at the ‘real’ Chateau Picard before the universe sends the Star Trek: Picard gang into a new reality.
STAR TREK: PICARD — Episode 201
1 of 7
Jean-Luc Picard (Patrick Stewart) and Laris (Orla Brady) in the chateau library. (Paramount+)
Picard reacts to news. (Paramount+)
Q (John de Lancie) appears to Picard in the alternate timeline. (Paramount+)
Q and Picard in the alternate timeline. (Paramount+)
Q and Picard in the alternate timeline. (Paramount+)
Q and Picard in the alternate timeline. (Paramount+)
Guinan (Whoopi Goldberg) and Picard reunite. (Paramount+)
Along with the premiere images, we also get four new photos from the second episode of the season, where Picard and crew are fully immersed in the ‘Darkfleet’ universe — we just made that up, but it sounds good, right?) — including Seven of Nine (Jeri Ryan) in her fascist administrative power suit (and without her Borg implants), Raffi Musiker (Michelle Hurd) and a handcuffed Elnor (Evan Evagora), and Dr. Agnes Jurati (Alison Pill) who has her own lab in this dark timeline… where the Borg Queen (Annie Werschung) awaits.
STAR TREK: PICARD — Episode 202
1 of 4
Picard in 'Darkfleet' attire. (Paramount+)
Picard visits Dr. Jurati's lab. (Paramount+)
Seven (Jeri Ryan), Picard, Raffi (Michelle Hurd), and Elnor (Evan Evagora) in Jurati's lab. (Paramount+)
Seven, Raffi, Elnor, and Jurati (Alison Pill) reunite. (Paramount+)
While this new timeline is certain to give some cosplayers new ideas, the images released also include good looks at some new Starfleet (and Darkfleet) official insignia crafted for the Picard gang to wear, including this fancy lapel badge worn by Picard in his home library — an homage to the Star Trek II-era classic uniform badges — and this sharp rank-striped Darkfleet delta worn by Picard and Jurati here (and seen on Raffi and Rios in trailers).
(Both badges are surely in the works already from fan builders on Etsy, and hopefully official licensees like Fansets as well.)
We still don’t know any Season 2 episode titles yet, or exactly how the season will be structured, but it seems evident that the big time-travel adventure back to 2024 will probably take until at least Episode 3 to begin, after the universe shift happens in 201, and we see more time spent in the Darkfleet universe on 202.
What’s missing from all these photos — as well as the vast majority of content seen in the Season trailers — is what Soji Asha (Isa Briones) is up to in Season 2.
Seen only briefly across all of the trailers so far, the Soong-created synth who joined up with the La Sirena crew last season is suspiciously absent from everything presented so far beyond a few fleeting glimpses — including every bit of footage shown around the Borg Queen, La Sirena, and the Darkfleet travel story — so there’s still at least one big mystery to solve.
Star Trek: Picard returns to Paramount+ on March 3, followed on CTV SciFi Channel in Canada, then on Prime Video in all other global regions.
Following immediately on the heels of the Protostar crew being reunited at the end of their temporal anomaly encounter in last week’s “Time Amok”, this week’s “A Moral Star, Part 1” picks right back up on the glowing eyes of the Dreadnok replica, which contains a message — and an offer — from The Diviner.
He offers the Protostar crew a choice: return the Protostar to Tars Lamora in exchange for freeing the ‘unwanted’ miners at the asteroid, or let the ‘unwanted’ suffer the consequences. “A Moral Star, Part 1” is an episode with huge moral stakes, which successfully pays off all the character development, team building, and world building of all the previous episodes to date.
Faced with this dilemma earlier in the season, Dal probably would have chosen to run. But when he is asked to make the choice on behalf of the crew whether to go to Tars Lamora or seek assistance from the Federation who might not be able to respond in time, Dal’s hesitation is differently motivated than it would have been earlier on. Earlier this season, Dal was a traumatized teenager who was out for himself. Now, he has grown a lot into the captain’s role, and his hesitation is around putting his crew in danger rather than whether he is jeopardizing his own wellbeing.
You don’t get to “A Moral Star, Part 1” without episodes like “Time Amok” and “Kobayashi” that have helped the characters gel into a team and pushed them on their journey towards becoming a real crew for the USS Protostar. And the episode’s story structure explicitly – but not in a bonk bonk way – guides younger viewers through the ways in which the episodes they’ve previously watched contribute to how this one develops.
With the agreement to work together to try and free the unwanted and to stop the Diviner, the crew works on hatching a plan. We’re given just enough here to have the strong sense that the crew knows what they’re doing, but not so much that when Gwyn later decides to go with the Diviner aboard the Protostar — and the Diviner double crosses the Prodigy crew — it’s not impossible that their plan has entirely failed.
After all, there’s still a whole second episode of this story still to go!
But before we get to Tars Lamora, let’s dwell for a minute on… those uniforms! We got a glimpse of the Protostar uniform at the end of “Kobayashi” with the reveal of Captain Chakotay, but this is the first time we’ve seen them fully with the colors. They are a cool design, reminding me very much of the test pilot uniforms worn in the Voyager episode “Drive.”
Perhaps the uniforms draw a connection to the Protostar being an experimental ship. I certainly wouldn’t mind it if someone made and sold a reproduction – I am sure we’ll see them crop up at Star Trek conventions later this year!
When the Protostar arrives at Tars Lamora, the Diviner alters the bargain: he will release the unwanted, but in return he must receive the Protostar — and Gwyn. Gwyn agrees reluctantly, but only if the Diviner agrees to give up his own ship, the Rev-12, to allow the unwanted to escape. After seeming tearful goodbyes, Gwyn boards the Protostar with the Diviner and they begin to leave.
But also because the Diviner is an evil dude, he destroys the power generators aboard the Rev-12 and seemingly condemns everyone on the asteroid to death. With control of the Protostar – including coopting hologram Janeway into an evil version of herself sure to fire the imagination of cosplayers and makeup enthusiasts everywhere – he leaves.
We also get the biggest indications yet about the Diviner’s motivations. Though they are not fully spelled out, I expect we’ll get that in the next episode, the Diviner’s connection to the Protostar is a profound one. He describes it as being “more than a ship. It is our salvation.” Does something about the Protostar – perhaps its demonstrated ability to time travel? – have an impact on the future of the Diviner’s species, the Vau N’Akat? Again, we don’t find out in this episode, but I expect we’ll find out next week.
Of course, we also learn that the Protostar crew were not as helpless as they appeared: they stole the experimental protodrive from the Protostar, having been eaten and contained within the indestructible form of Murf — paying off the photon grenade joke from earlier in the season in a really great way.
Now with the protodrive, our heroes rush to save the unwanted and get the Rev-12 functioning before the Protostar and the Diviner return for the ship’s advanced propulsion technology.
The twist is well played, particularly for the primary audience of the show. There are just enough hints along the way that do not entirely tip the episode’s hand and wink at the audience obviously that this is all a ruse on the part of our heroes, but all the same there are clues that will be fun to revisit with kids once they’ve had a chance to see the episode and experience the twist first hand.
For example, shortly before the ruse is revealed Jankom says the Diviner “double, double crossed us!” — and Murf is suspiciously absent from that entire sequence until his true whereabouts are revealed.
OBSERVATION LOUNGE
The show definitely seems to be laying the foundation for more of a romantic connection between Dal and Gwyn. I approve!
“This is a no-win scenario, Gwyn. This is our Kobayashi Maru!” I love an explicit callback.
In other references to previous episodes, we see the Caitian child from “Lost and Found,” and Gwyn also references her “catboots” line from the premiere.
I really liked seeing Rok, Gwyn, and hologram Janeway share a cup of coffee in the preparation montage.
Is “Go Fast!” Captain Dal’s catch phrase? If so, he settled on one sooner than Captain Saru, and it’s pretty great!
“A Moral Star” is an anagram for “Tars Lamora.”
This was another standout episode for the composer Nami Melumad, particularly the musical sequence leading up to the protowarp to Tars Lamora and the thoughtful inclusion in places of the original Alexander Courage Star Trek theme.
“A Moral Star, Part 1” is a great set up for next week’s mid-season one finale of Star Trek: Prodigy. If there is one criticism of the episode, it is that like all part ones it feels a little lacking by itself, because by necessity it is only telling half the story and needs to do a lot of set up for the inevitable second part next week.
But I am very excited to see how Prodigy’s first ten episodes draw to a close, and this has to have been one of the strongest first half seasons of any previous Star Trek show to date. Is a cliffhanger in the offing as we wait for the remaining 10 episodes of season one of Prodigy to premiere later this year?
EXO-6 continues its marathon of new 1:6-scale Star Trek figures this month with the soon-to-return trickster god from Star Trek: The Next Generation… Q!
The sixth release from the scaled figure company over the last year, the forthcoming Judge Q figure is due for delivery later this year, just in time for the omnipotent being’s return in Star Trek: Picard this spring.
Complete with all the accessories to bring Q’s “Encounter at Farpoint” and “All Good Things…” style to life, including his intricate gold chain and several pairs of red-gloved hands.
THE EXO-6 Q 1:6 SCALE ARTICULATED FIGURE INCLUDES:
– Fully Articulated Body: More than 30 points of articulation allow the figure to be displayed in multiple dynamic poses, approximately 32 cm tall.
– Realistic Portrait: Q’s portrait is lovingly rendered by top artists, with an excellent likeness of John de Lancie. Each head sculpt is specially hand-painted.
– Judge’s robes: Meticulously researched, this costume represents Q as a judge from 2079, a dark time in Earth’s history.
– Chain of office: The bejeweled gold necklace Q wears as a symbol of his judge status.
– Boots: Soft plastic boots sculpted to match the cut and style of the original series footwear.
– Hands: A total of six interchangeable gloved hands are included.
– Display Base: A hexagonal display base featuring the grid Q uses to hold the Enterprise in place.
– Autograph card: An informational LCARS card that can used to get an autograph from the performer and displayed with your figure.
EXO-6’s Judge Q figure is available for presale now for $205 with an initial $25 deposit; preorders will run through February 4.