Home Blog Page 85

WeeklyTrek Podcast #161 — ViacomCBS Manages to Beam Out STAR TREK: DISCOVERY to (Most) International Viewers

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 our own Jenn Tifft 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 Jenn’s theory about what role The Diviner will continue to play in Star Trek: Prodigy, and Alex’s wish for Simon & Schuster to pick up the pace of their Star Trek fiction publishing program to include more of the new shows on air.

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!

Amazon Prime Video Debuts SHATNER IN SPACE on December 15

After his trip to the Kármán line aboard Jeff Bezos’ second Blue Origin flight in October, Star Trek legend William Shatner will be the focus of an Amazon Prime documentary special debuting next week.

A one-hour special debuting on Amazon’s Prime Video service on December 15, Shatner in Space documents the actor’s trip up to the edge of space earlier this fall aboard the highly-publicized Blue Origin flight; Shatner appeared via video at the normally-massive CCWP Worlds convention in Brazil today to announce the project.

Here’s the official announcement from Prime Video:

Shatner in Space, a One-Hour Special Documenting William Shatner’s Life-Changing Flight to Space, to Premiere December 15 on Prime Video

Prime Video and William Shatner today announced that Shatner in Space, a one-hour special, will premiere on Prime Video on Wednesday, December 15 in the U.S., Canada, UK, Australia, and New Zealand, with additional territories launching in early 2022.

The announcement was first made by Mr. Shatner during a virtual panel for CCXP Worlds, the virtual version of the world’s largest fan convention in São Paulo, Brazil. The special details the events before, during, and after Shatner’s life-changing flight—which made him
the oldest person to ever travel to the cosmos—and the growing friendship between the Star Trek icon and Blue Origin founder Jeff Bezos, whose dreams of space travel, like many, were inspired by the original Star Trek series.

“My time in space was the most profound experience I could have ever imagined,” said Shatner. “This special documenting my journey gives a dramatic view of that experience, and my hope is that it inspires the world to see we must go to space to save Earth.”

Shatner in Space is produced by Amazon Studios, Blue Origin, Film 45, Jason Ehrlich Productions, and Bright Spot Content.

October’s Blue Origin crew: Audrey Powers, William Shatner, Chris Boshuizen, and Glen de Vries

Sadly, one of Shatner’s fellow passengers on the flight, tech company founder Glen M. de Vries died in a plane crash just weeks after the Blue Origin launch; it’s unknown at how much focus the other three passengers on Shatner’s flight will get in this one-hour special.

Shatner in Space will debut on Amazon’s Prime Video service on Wednesday. December 15.

STAR TREK: DISCOVERY Review: “Choose to Live”

Star Trek: Discovery gets right to the Qowat Milat action in “Choose to Live,” but it doesn’t stop there when it comes to exploring what that now-familiar phrase can mean for the various members of the USS Discovery crew.

While making a dilithium delivery run, the USS Credence is boarded by Qowat Milat intruders who steal the ship’s haul… killing a Starfleet officer in the process. Word quickly gets back to Federation and Ni’Var leadership, both groups keen to apprehend this not-necessarily rogue — but at least misbehaving — member of the Romulan sect.

In the interest of galactic diplomacy, a joint mission to apprehend the misfit is proposed, lead by Captain Burnham (Sonequa Martin-Green) and Lieutenant Tilly (Mary Wiseman), but partnered with a pair of Qowat Milat sisters, one of whom is Burnham’s mother Gabrielle (Sonja Sohn).

I always welcome the return of Sonja Sohn to Discovery, especially after her character found a place among the Qowat Milat in the 32nd century. I continue to find the dynamic between Gabrielle and Michael to be fascinating; they’re mother and daughter, yes, but at this point in their lives they function together much more as respected colleagues than as family.

“Unification III” delved much deeper into their challenging mother-daughter dynamic, and it’s nice to see that while their relationship continues not to be a particular warm one, it no longer seems to be a painful one for Michael. Learning to accept that the most absolutely candid version of a loved one is someone who isn’t particularly loving must be difficult even for someone who grew up on Vulcan.

After tracking the stolen dilithium to a seemingly lifeless moon using Book’s borrowed ship, they begin explore a large internal cavern, but not before they’re ambushed by J’Vini (Ayesha Mansur Gonsalves), the renegade Qowat Milat. Gabrielle’s companion is killed, but the group presses forward to find what appears to be an enormous and ancient underground mausoleum — finding signs of grave robbery and the corpse of an unknown alien — but nothing that would explain J’Vini’s interest in the crypt.

Following the tracker’s signal they eventually find an engine platform and realize the entire moon is actually a dormant ship; they quickly plan to lure J’Vini out by having Tilly sabotage the engine (and then hang around alone as bait.) Though she’s still outnumbered three to one, J’Vini still gets the drop on our group — and we also learn that she was the Qowat Milat nun who rescued Gabrielle after the human landed in the 32nd century.

While holding Gabrielle at knifepoint, a tense J’Vini explains what’s going on: those dusty ‘crypts’ are actually cryochambers which malfunctioned eons ago, leaving the occupants — an alien race called Abronians — in stasis far longer than intended. An Abronian who was awoken by “grave” robbers used his dying moments to reach out telepathically to J’Vini, calling for help and cementing an oath to protect the ship and its inhabitants.

As for why she was stealing dilithium, she wanted to be able to move the moon/ship in case the massive gravitation anomaly showed up — because at present, the Federation apparently won’t give dilithium to individuals, only governments.

J’Vini’s need to maintain secrecy about the Abronians makes at least some sense after we learn that their bodies contain large traces of latinum, which — combined with their helplessness while in cryostasis — makes them attractive targets for particularly heartless scavengers.

What doesn’t make a lot of sense to me is why she would continue to be as rigid as she is once Burnham offers to repair the computer that controls the malfunctioning cryo units. Giving Burnham the ultimatum that she has only as long as it takes Tilly to repair the engines — not a whole lot of time — seems more likely to ensure failure than success.

Even if taking on a lost cause is more about protecting something during its death throes than actually thinking a solution can be found, being overly restrictive about a solution when one presents itself seems antithetical to the purpose of the oath, no?

Regardless, Burnham and Tilly are successful in their repairs, we briefly get to see streams of smaller Abronian ships flying toward the planet the moon-ship is orbiting (though we don’t learn anything more about the species). J’Vini’s oath is fulfilled, and she willingly agrees to be taken into custody.

Rewinding a bit, Tilly’s entire reason for being part of this mission — at Saru’s recommendation — stems directly from her desire to try new things, and get out of her comfort zone; as she put it, her comfort zone had become uncomfortable.

Tilly has long had trouble understanding where she fits, and the show has played many times with putting her in situations she doesn’t feel ready or suited for, ostensibly to prove otherwise. In this case, she was surprised to be chosen for the mission but didn’t seem hesitant about it, and other than a small snafu with her sword (and really, who among us wouldn’t play with a sword if handed one?) she was a capable and confident.

Contrast this with Tilly’s stint as Discovery’s first officer last season, which was framed as a positive — a way for Tilly to see her own capabilities — but to me just seemed like a miserably overwhelming experience for her. In “Choose to Live,” Tilly seems to have come a long way from her days as reluctant first officer, and initially I thought this mission might have been a step in the right direction for how she sees herself and her place in Starfleet.

But her discussion with Gabrielle about choosing to live, understanding that paths in life can end, and that people can always choose a new path forward has me wondering if Tilly is still searching.

While all of this is happening, Stamets (Anthony Rapp) and Book (David Ajala) take up that invitation to visit the Ni’Var Science Institute while trying to decipher the gravitational anomaly which destroyed Kwejian. Except for one missing thing — tachyons — the data collected in last week’s venture suggest to Stamets that the anomaly may actually be a primordial wormhole, something he says is better described as a “dark matter anomaly” than a gravitational one.

Though he ultimately relents, Stamets isn’t sure about having Book come along; in a moment that adds depth and emotional awareness to Stamets — who can sometimes come across as little more than “constantly grumpy smart guy” — we learn that his hesitance has nothing to do with thinking Book would be an annoyance or an irrelevant participant in the discussion.

Instead, he worries because he “can’t bring these scientists up to speed without a clinical, forensic discussion of [his] loss” and he wants to spare Book the pain of the experience.

Book insists he’ll be okay and the two of them head down to the Ni’Var Science Institute — or, a floating platform above it, I suppose — where Stamets briefs several bored looking Vulcans and Romulans about his hypothesis. Unfortunately, they confirm Stamets’ own concerns that tachyons were not present, firmly concluding that Stamets’ hypothesis about primordial wormholes cannot be correct.

(Seems their minds are just as hard to change as they were back in T’Pol’s day.)

Stamets pushes back on their certainty, and this is when President T’Rina (Tara Rosling) steps in. She points out that tachyons create Cherenkov radiation characterized by a blue glow when they interact with a planet’s atmosphere, and that a mind meld with Book — who saw the anomaly as it neared the planet — would confirm whether or not such a glow was present in the skies above Kwejian when the anomaly hit.

While the scientists had been conferring previously, T’Rina had spoken with Book about his obvious grief and the need to free himself from it instead of suppressing it. The offer of a mind meld, which to Stamets seems like an unnecessarily traumatic thing,, seems to Book like a chance to begin better processing his emotions.

Through the mind meld, T’Rina sees that there wasn’t any Cherenkov radiation present — confusingly, there are some blue streaks in the memory, but I believe those are reflections from Book’s ship lights — while Book has a chance to see his nephew’s face, and the beauty of Kwejian one last time. Scientifically, they may be no closer to understanding what the anomaly is, but this was not a fruitless endeavor as it gave the man a small semblance of peace.

Back aboard Discovery, Book continues to allow himself to remember and think upon memories of Kwejian that had originally been too painful, realizing that he doesn’t want them to fade alongside the grief that eventually will.

The other major event this week takes place in sickbay, as Guardian Xi (Andreas Apergis) returns via hologram to perform a Trill ritual to transfer Gray (Ian Alexander) to his new body — the zhian’tara, first seen in DS9’s “Facets,” an absolutely canon-perfect way to separate the two minds.

Gray’s synthetic body is complete and ready to receive his consciousness, provided he’s aware of and willing to accept the risks involved in the transfer — including the risk of being permanently lost if his consciousness doesn’t ‘stick’ to the new synthetic body.

Dr. Culber (Wilson Cruz) and Xi each ask questions about consent  — and his internal emotional state — to which Gray gives full and nuanced answers. But when Adira (Blu del Barrio) acts as a go-between to relay those responses,  they significantly truncate and summarize Gray’s statements. From a production perspective I understand why: the audience already knows Gray’s full answer, and repeating it twice in short succession might sound odd.

But from an in-universe perspective, as well-meaning as Adira may have been, it made me a bit uncomfortable. Given that part of Gray’s purpose as a character is to explore aspects of agency, independence, and self-concept, it seems like an unintentional subversion of all of these to have Adira paraphrase Gray — instead of relaying Gray’s own precise and deliberately-chosen words as an interpreter should.

The zhin’tara removes Gray’s consciousness from Adira, but it’s not immediately apparent if the transfer to his new synth body has worked — leaving Adira with time to kill as they anxiously await Gray’s resurrection. While Gray’s body remains unconscious, Culber takes them to Discovery’s very lush new bar — complete with fireplace! — to unwind and relax.

Despite a few games of darts and some kind words from Culber, Adira simply can’t stay away from Gray’s side, soon returning to sickbay to sit and wait with him. When Gray  eventually does wake up, he finds Adira holding his hand.

“Choose to Live” wraps up as Discovery brings J’Vini back to Federation Headquarters — but much to Burnham’s dismay, the renegade nun won’t be held in Starfleet custody for killing that officer, but instead will be taken back to Ni’Var to face punishment there.

Burnham is surprisingly upset by this turn of events, repeatedly wondering if she’ll be held accountable and worrying that there won’t be justice for the dead Starfleet officer. To be honest, this confused me. What exactly was Burnham hoping for out of Starfleet’s penal system that won’t be served just as well on Ni’Var, or at the direction of the Qowat Milat?

Based on her reaction, either Burnham was secretly pining for the death penalty (not likely), or she thinks Ni’Var is planning to throw a tickertape parade for J’Vini and then set her free (again, unlikely). If anything, the Qowat Milat seem like they’d be frighteningly harsh in their punishments, given their comfort with dispassionately killing people during swordfights.

Regardless of what exactly Burnham was getting at, Admiral Vance (Oded Fehr) takes the opportunity to remind her of her role in the “orchestra” that is Starfleet and the Federation. As a starship captain, Burnham may be the solo violinist, but she doesn’t set the tempo — that’s Vance’s job as the percussion — and she doesn’t know everyone else’s part.

It’s President Rillak who serves as the conductor, leading all the musicians so they can perform at their best, while coaxing the most harmonious music out of a diverse group. It’s a somewhat belabored metaphor, but it works.

OBSERVATION LOUNGE

  • Cherenkov radiation is very real, responsible for the telltale blue glow of underwater nuclear reactor cores. While tachyons are purely hypothetical, it’s scientifially correct that if they did exist, they’d emit Cherenkov radiation.
     
  • “It is difficult to ride two vale beasts with only one set of buttocks,” says Saru, who I have to thank for this incredible Kelpien adage. (I will definitely be using this in the future.)
     
  • Book has started wearing his Kwejian amulet again, which contains the sap of a sadly now extinct tree. It’s the same type of amulet that Leto was given moments before Kwejian’s destruction, seemingly symbolizing a rite of passage.
     
  • Now that everyone can just beam wherever they want by using the personal transporters built into their tricombadges, the new bar/lounge seems to be built on the bones of the no-longer-needed transporter room standing set.
     
  • Like our old friends on Deep Space 9, the new bar on Discovery is manned by a Ferengi and has a Lurian enjoying the facility — this time, though, the Ferengi and Lurian are wearing Starfleet uniforms.

Previous seasons have sometimes felt disjointed to me — with A, B, and C-stories interweaving unrelated events simply because they all had to get time to move the plot forward — but so far, Discovery Season 4 has found ways to carry themes throughout each episode that much more successfully connect each independent storyline.

“Choose to Live” is no different, as Book, Tilly, Adira and Gray each find ways to embrace or accept life with all of its challenges, difficulty, and beauty. So far, this has helped each episode this season feel a little more like a complete, cohesive whole — while still maintaining the serialized storytelling audiences have come to expect from the show.

It’s a nice balance, and I’m glad Star Trek: Discovery has finally found it.

Star Trek: Discovery returns with “All Is Possible” on December 9 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 Paramount+ and on Pluto TV in select international locations.

EXO-6 Crosses Over to STAR TREK’s Mirror Universe with 1:6 Spock

After paying visits to the Enterprise-E and USS Voyager, the EXO-6 1:6-scale action figure company is taking a trip to the Mirror Universe, as the company beams Commander Spock of the ISS Enterprise out of the Terran Empire.

Announced today and going up for preorder on Thursday, December 2, the 1:6-scale Mirror Spock figure — complete with signature goatee and gold sash — arrives at a 12-inch size, and includes the typical assortment of alternate hands and figure accessories similar to EXO-6’s previous Star Trek releases.

This character from “Mirror, Mirror” is the first entry in EXO-6’s figure lineup from the Original Series, and the first from the evil Terran Empire — though the company has already revealed plans for an Emperor Georgiou figure to follow.

Here are all the specs from EXO-6’s announcement:

Fully Articulated Body: More than 30 points of articulation allow the figure to be displayed in multiple dynamic poses, approximately 30 cm tall.

Realistic Portrait: Spock’s portrait is lovingly rendered by top artists, with an excellent likeness of Leonard Nimoy with a beard. Each head sculpt is specially hand-painted.

Terran Empire Uniform: Meticulously researched, this uniform matches the pattern and color of the original costume recreated in 1:6 scale. Magnets are sewn into the uniform so the phaser and dagger can be attached. The Terran insignia and medals are permanently attached to his tunic.  (The uniform is not removeable.)

Boots: Using leather-like material cut in the original style of the knee-high boots worn in the Star Trek: The Original Series episode “Mirror, Mirror.”

Hands: A total of nine interchangeable hands are included so he can be displayed holding the phaser or the dagger and do the Vulcan mind meld.

Display Base: A hexagonal display base featuring the transporter pad will provide additional support for the figure. Two different inserts for the floor of the base can represent the transporter pad or the center of the transporter array.

Along with the figure itself, the Mirror Spock product will also include these character-specific accessories:

Phaser Type 2 / Type 1: The pistol-grip type 2 phaser is the weapon of choice for any landing party expecting hostile aliens. The smaller Type 1 phaser can be removed and used separately.  Both have magnets allowing either to be worn on the utility belt or directly on the pants as they were in the 3rd season.

Dagger and sheath: Standard issue for Terran Empire officers, the dagger is perfect for up close and personal assassinations.

Agonizer: A device unique to the Terran Empire, one touch of the agonizer to a shoulder causes unimaginable pain. An excellent tool for adjusting the attitudes of wayward crew members.

While formal pricing will be unveiled when preorders open at EXO-6’s website on Thursday, the company noted that the Mirror Spock figure will retail at a higher price than its four previous releases, due to the well-publicized global logistics challenges facing companies all around the world and other manufacturing cost increases.

“EXO-6 has always given collectors value in every figure released. Just like every other collectible company, the recent difficulties with shipping, manufacturing and other pandemic related problems affect us as well.

With this figure there will be a modest price increase, to reflect not only these difficulties but also the more complex character.”

An unfortunate situation for collectors, but an understandable one given the nature of the global supply chain impact of the COVID-19 pandemic.

More details about this 1:6-scale Mirror Spock figure can be found at EXO-6’s website when preorders open Thursday, December 2 at 12PM ET / 5:00 PM GMT.

If you think you’ll be adding this Star Trek figure to your own collection, or if you’ve purchased any of EXO-6’s previous releases, let us know in the comments below!

INTERVIEW: David Mack on OBLIVION’S GATE, the Apocalyptic End to the STAR TREK: CODA Trilogy — and TREK’s Literary Continuity

The world-ending Star Trek: Coda trilogy draws to a close this week with the publication David Mack’s Oblivion’s Gate, which concludes 20 years of literary continuity across most of the Star Trek novels published since the early 2000s — and it is a huge story.

My review of this third and final entry to the Coda saga will be out soon, where you’ll find my thoughts on how it served the wrap-up-the-Trek-litverse goal it promised, but in the meantime read on below as I dive into Oblivion’s Gate with author David Mack!

You can also find plenty of additional Star Trek: Coda coverage here at TrekCore, including my review of Dayton Ward’s Moments Asunder and James Swallow’s The Ashes of Tomorrow.

Finally, if you enjoy this conversation with David Mack, be sure to read my previous interviews with the Coda writing team, as authors Dayton Ward and James Swallow help to share the full behind-the-scenes picture on this massive literary project.

There are some MAJOR SPOILERS ahead for the ENTIRE Star Trek: Coda trilogy in the interview ahead — including how the massive tale ends! — so if you haven’t read all three books yet, come back after you’ve caught up!

TREKCORE: I’ve talked to Dayton and James about this — what’s your perspective on joining this team, and why did you want to write this conclusion for the Trek literary storyline?

DAVID MACK: We all tell pretty much the same story, naturally. In early 2018, the Star Trek television team at Secret Hideout began developing the series that became Star Trek: Picard. I was apprised of this by my friend Kirsten Beyer, one of the co-creators of Picard.

Around the same time, my friend Dayton Ward, who had at that time just begun working for the Star Trek licensing team at ViacomCBS, was seeing memos and outlines, etc., about the new show. As he noted details about its setting in the Star Trek chronology — 2399, at the end of the 24th century — he experienced the same realization that I was having at the same time: Treklit was about to have a canon continuity problem.

Specifically, because most of the stories in the post-finale, serialized continuity of the Star Trek novels published since 2003 (and some that went back as far as 2001) were set after the events of Star Trek: Nemesis — which was set in 2379 — many major events that had transpired as part of the novels’ shared continuity were very likely to be rendered apocryphal by new canon details in the back story of Picard.

Because tie-in fiction for Star Trek is expected to be consistent with the canon films and episodes as they exist at the time the tie-in work is written, I knew (as Dayton did) that once Picard debuted, the 20-year-long literary continuity was going to be rendered incompatible with canon.

We also knew that our publisher was likely to choose one of only two likely approaches to this situation: either it would simply cease producing the Star Trek books with serialized continuity and abandon their ongoing narratives, or, it would choose to do some sort of finale to bring the long narrative journey to a close. But in order for the publisher to choose the latter option, someone would have to pitch the editors an idea worth publishing.

Knowing that, both Dayton and I independently began imagining what might constitute such an “event,” and how we might go about getting it done.

A decade ago, I might have pitched a trilogy idea such as this on my own, and tried to write it solo. In recent years, however, the Star Trek books publishing schedule has contracted to fewer than 10 titles per year, so at this point the idea of handing an event trilogy to one writer might stir up a lot of bad blood among the other Trek authors.

Also, Dayton and I both knew that to get a project like this done in less than three years from pitch to publication would mean splitting up the work. It would take multiple authors, all working nearly simultaneously, to enable such an event project to be released without delays over a number of consecutive months.

It likely won’t surprise many folks to know that when Dayton and I considered who should work on a project such as this, he and I both listed each other on our rosters.

We also both were thinking that, in addition to the core trilogy, there might be a few other “breadcrumb” books that would be published ahead of it, to tie off some long-running story lines and to subtly set the stage for the trilogy; of course, the “breadcrumb” books ended up being kiboshed by the publisher — there was just no room for them in Star Trek’s already crowded publishing schedule.

But before we knew that, I had made up my mind with regard to my preferred collaborators. For me the “Dream Team” was always going to be me, Dayton, and James. We had worked well together in the past on Star Trek Vanguard, the Star Trek: The Fall miniseries, and the Tor/Forge tie-in novels for 24. Taking on this project with them felt to me like “getting the band back together.”

In July of 2019, James was in NYC for a convention of the International Thriller Writers. His visit coincided with the July 4th weekend, so I invited him to come with me and my wife to a friend’s barbecue in New Jersey. At the barbecue, I pitched James my idea for an epic trilogy to end the 20-year Star Trek literary continuity, told him why I thought it should be done, and asked him to come aboard.

“Absolutely not,” he replied. His refusal took me by surprise; I had thought he would jump at the idea. But he didn’t like it. He recoiled from the idea of a story that would, at least superficially, seem to undo decades of work done not just by us but by dozens of our friends and peers.

I needed to sell him on it. I made the case that there would be no stopping the juggernaut of Star Trek: Picard, and that once it arrived, some kind of decision would need to be made concerning the fate of the interconnected literary continuity. And here is where I turned him around: “Who would you rather made these decisions, James? Someone in Alex Kurtzman’s office, or us? And if the editors choose to publish an epic swansong for the last two decades of work that we and our friends have done, who would you rather see writing it than you?”

At that point, James was swayed. We spent the rest of the afternoon talking about the story with fellow Star Trek authors Keith R. A. DeCandido and Glenn Hauman, over brisket and beers. A couple of weeks later I went to the Shore Leave Convention in Hunt Valley, MD, to pitch my and James’s story to Dayton, in the hope that he would come aboard.

That was when I learned Dayton had been noodling on his own version of an almost identical story idea for the same length of time that I had — but he had far more detailed inside information than I did, so when he told me some part of my idea wouldn’t be workable because of canon events that would be revealed in Picard, I tried to adjust my pitch to compensate.

That’s when he stopped me and shook his head: “Dude. It’s so much worse than you think.” He was right, of course, but we forged ahead. Because his idea was so similar to the one James and I had concocted, we decided to join forces and develop the core story as a team. This was the beginning of what Dayton later came to refer to as “the Plan.”

TREKCORE: Oblivion’s Gate doesn’t just end Coda, but it feels like an end to many of the major stories you had a hand in over the last two decades as well — like Kira’s role as “Hand of the Prophets,” the Mirror Universe characters, and so forth.

What was it like revisiting so much of your own previous work, and trying to tie up all of those elements?

MACK: At times, the experience of revisiting so much of my past work in a single volume felt eerily nostalgic. In some cases, I took the opportunity to comment obliquely on my past works, or on critics’ receptions of them; in others, I focused on making sure that I took full advantage of the opportunities for closure that a project such as this affords.

The funny thing is, before James and I teamed up with Dayton, my original version of the pitch did not include the Borg, and it had made no use of Kira’s past anointment as “the Hand of the Prophets.” I had envisioned the time-travel aspects of this story to be more like what was done in Avengers: Endgame — a light-hearted, poignant, and ultimately consequential tour through Treklit’s greatest hits, as it were.

Once Dayton made his case for the Borg being at ground zero of the temporal disruption event, which set the point of divergence for The First Splinter timeline at 2373, I knew that the finale plot would have to entail a journey back into that nightmare vision of Earth — and, for Picard, one last confrontation with the enemy he thought he had seen the end of in 2381.

The inclusion of Kira’s status as “Hand of the Prophets” came about during development, when it became clear how pivotal she and Sisko were going to be in The Ashes of Tomorrow. I gave Kira that moniker in my 2006 Deep Space Nine novel Warpath, and it was meant to be part of editor Marco Palmieri’s long-term Ascendants story arc. I think David R. George III made use of it in that capacity, but when we saw the possibility of using it in a different context for Coda, we couldn’t resist the opportunity.

As for the Mirror Universe elements, of course, I knew I wanted to take those characters for one last spin before closing the book on this continuity. Likewise, Dayton, James, and I tried to include nods to as many different elements of the shared literary universe as we were able to do, within the constraints of the story — like the brief appearance of the S.C.E. crew from the Starship da Vinci, and similar cameos and guest sequences across all three books.

TREKCORE: Oblivion’s Gate explains that the literary continuity began from the “all Borg” alternate timeline seen in Star Trek: First Contact, the glimpse of an assimilated Earth that drove the Enterprise-E crew to go back in time.

How did you settle on that moment, which the book calls “The First Splinter,” as the divergence from on-screen storytelling?

MACK: You can blame the inclusion of the Borg entirely on Dayton Ward! When Dayton was considering how far back he would need to rewind the continuity to address all of the many changes Star Trek: Picard was likely to inflict upon the continuity, he knew that doing the bare minimum likely would not be good enough.

He couldn’t simply find some way to rewind to 2385, the year of the synths’ attack on Mars in Picard. By that late point, there were too many major discontinuities between the history of Picard and that of the post-Nemesis novels. Just rolling back to Nemesis didn’t explain the discontinuities of the A Time to… novel miniseries, which was a prequel to Star Trek Nemesis.

So, not only did we need to go back farther in time, we also needed to find a plausible trigger for a temporal divergence event. Fortunately, Dayton had already found it: the Enterprise-E’s jaunt back through time in Star Trek: First Contact.

Set in 2373 — well behind any point the Picard producers were likely to muck about with — First Contact was an ideal candidate for a temporal event that could spawn our new unstable timeline. (We had to do some temporal tap-dancing and technobabble soft-shoe to explain how the Borg Earth of 2373 could still be visited after the events of the movie, but I think we pulled it off.)

Of course, once we agreed on that as the “original divergence event, or ODE,” it became obvious that we were going to need to make major use of it in the trilogy’s conclusion, as a key step to “doing what must be done.”

At first I bristled at the idea of having to use the Borg again, after all I had done to take them off the Treklit board in Star Trek Destiny. But I got over that and came to see it as an opportunity to let Picard face his greatest fear and foe one last time — a fitting last hurrah for his big send-off.

TREKCORE: Despite its scope and size, the Coda trilogy didn’t touch on all of the characters in the literary continuity — was there anyone you wished you could have included that didn’t make the cut?

MACK: I would have liked to have had a bit more time with Ambassador Spock in book three, but for the sake of narrative momentum, I had to cut some bits I had planned for him. Likewise, it would have been nice to have been able to take some asides to revisit Jake Sisko and his family, along with Kasidy and Rebecca, before it all came crashing down.

But the truth is, I just didn’t have the time for such tangential explorations, and the story was already on the verge of becoming unwieldy. As it stands, I like the pacing of Oblivion’s Gate, even though it’s the longest Star Trek novel I’ve ever written (over 140,000 words).

In the best of all worlds, we’d have had unlimited time to polish the story, rewrite, expand ideas, etc. But we were all on various deadlines and dealing with other sources of pressure in our real lives, so we did what we could in the time we had.

If there are other stories that readers wish could have been told before the curtain fell… well, that’s life. And death. Things get left unfinished, words left unsaid, deeds left undone.

TREKCORE: For those that did make it, which of the character moments really pleased you — and which were the hardest to write?

MACK: The one that took me by surprise, popping up its head only after we started hammering out the shape of the story, was the star-crossed romance subplot for Commander Worf and K’Ehleyr of the Mirror Universe.

It takes the characters by surprise, as well, and watching them both get knocked for a loop by it was some of the most fun I had while writing Oblivion’s Gate — even though I knew it all had to lead to one of the book’s most profound moments of tragedy.

But there are so many moments that would qualify as hard to write… how do I choose just one? La Forge saying his final farwell to Data; Beverly Crusher witnessing Wesley’s last sacrifice; the glorious deaths of Worf and his family; Riker feeling the deaths of Deanna and Natasha through the empathic imzadi bond; Picard succumbing to “oblivion’s inevitable embrace.”

Basically, all of Part III: The Measure of a Life.

TREKCORE: The Coda trilogy ends on a definitive, that’s-all-there-is conclusion — was that always the approach, or did you look to leave on a more open-ended note?

MACK: That decision was probably the single greatest point of contention among us, and it was one that took us quite some time to resolve. The notion of the fictional in-universe timeline being disrupted and coming undone obviously grew out of the real-world circumstances that had led to Coda’s development; the new TV series had to take priority over the novel continuity.

Another issue we debated was what would constitute a sufficiently “epic” story to serve as the sign-off for 20 years of work? It couldn’t just be another local threat overcome. I felt we needed something massive, something beyond astronomical — the kind of thing that defies true understanding of its scale. The notion of a “temporal apocalypse” seemed to fit the bill.

Even so, we went back and forth for weeks, maybe even months, over how to resolve the story. Should the characters be able to reverse the threat and save their timeline? Should they save their timeline by somehow severing it from the rest of the multiverse? Or did we want to leave the ending ambiguous, so that readers could decide for themselves whether it ended or continued?

Each approach has its merits and its faults. On the one hand, a “happy ending” might seem like a good way to end things, but how does one make such a conclusion feel earned? And if we posited that the Treklit universe would continue, albeit beyond our further observation, how was that any different from simply abandoning its story arcs? If the conclusion of an epic such as this is merely a salvation of a status quo that we don’t get to see again, then we’ve accomplished exactly nothing. Our heroes have sacrificed nothing, fought and died for nothing.

Similar dramatic weaknesses plagued all versions of the “happy ending,” to one degree or another. Severing the Treklit timeline from the multiverse to save the multiverse seems like a fine notion — except, again, what have we done but preserve a status quo at no real cost? What would be the consequence of severing a timeline from the multiverse? How does that change anything? Does it make the timeline unstable? Subject it to spontaneous unraveling? How do we dramatize that? How does that make for an ending?

Of course, taking the “downer” ending has its own dangers. No doubt it would have some vocal minority of our readers hollering that we just “killed” Treklit for nothing, that it was all just some mindless bloodbath or some such nonsense. Never mind if our characters knowingly make a sacrifice for a greater good they will never enjoy — some folks would see only the loss and not the courage or the selflessness that it represents.

An ambiguous ending felt like a cop-out. A dodge. An attempt to avoid criticism from either side. It’s also not an ending. One of the risks of storytelling is that, sometimes, one must make a choice, a dramatic decision, that will leave some portion of one’s audience unsatisfied.

When we made our decisions about the ending of Oblivion’s Gate — how it would be represented, and what it all would mean — we had a clear dramatic objective in mind. Some readers will appreciate it; some will not.

All I can say to those who don’t like our choice is that we stand by it.

TREKCORE: Now that Coda has finally landed, can we expect more Star Trek writing from David Mack anytime soon?

MACK: Sadly, no. My consultancies on the animated Star Trek series Lower Decks and Prodigy have both concluded, and I am not presently under contract for any new work, at Star Trek or anywhere else. I have some ideas and outlines done for new original novels, but I suspect it will be a very long time before those are ready to go out on submission.

I keep hoping that the phone will ring and I’ll get a call to join a Star Trek series’ writers’ room, or that the editors will ask me to write a novel for Star Trek: Strange New Worlds or a tale of the Fenris Rangers for a Star Trek: Picard novel.

But for now my schedule is alarmingly blank… so if there are any tie-in book editors out there looking for someone to write a novel (*cough* Star Wars), please contact my agent!

David Mack is the award-winning and New York Times bestselling author of thirty-six novels of science fiction, fantasy, and adventure, including the Star Trek: Destiny and Cold Equations trilogies. His writing credits span several media, including television (for episodes of Star Trek: Deep Space Nine), short fiction, and comic books.

He resides in New York City. More information can be found at Mack’s official website.

The entire Star Trek: Coda trilogy — Dayton Ward’s Star Trek: Coda #1 — Moments Asunder, James Swallow’s Star Trek: Coda #2 — The Ashes of Tomorrow, and David Mack’s Star Trek: Coda #3 — Oblivion’s Gate — are in stores now.

New STAR TREK: DISCOVERY Photos: “Choose to Live”

The third episode of Star Trek: Discovery’s fourth season beams down this week, and we’ve got a new collection of photos from “Choose to Live” to share with you today!

Last week the Discovery crew learned that the gravitational anomaly threatening the galactic civilization is not only dangerous, but extremely unpredictable — and this week Star Trek: Discovery introduces another dangerous force in the form of renegade Qowat Milat nun.

Now based on planet Ni’Var — formerly Vulcan — the warrior clan introduced in Star Trek: Picard survived to the 32nd century (as we learned last season), still taking up lost causes and even including Captain Burnham’s mother Gabrielle Burnham (Sonja Sohn) into its ranks.

Meanwhile, Dr. Culber (Wilson Cruz) continues work on resurrecting Gray (Ian Alexander) into a new body.

Here are 18 new photos from this week’s episode.

Also returning is Ni’Var president T’Rina (Tara Rosling), who appears to mind-meld with Book (David Ajala) in the wake of his home planet’s destruction in the season premiere, while Burnham (Sonequa Martin-Green) and Tilly (Mary Wiseman) chase after the renegade Qowat Milat in Book’s ship.

T’Rina offered the help of the Ni’Var Science Institute in addressing the anomaly’s mysteries in last week’s episode, and it looks like Book and Stamets (Anthony Rapp) head down to the orange-skied planet taking up her offer.

In case you haven’t seen it, here’s a trailer for this week’s new episode:

CHOOSE TO LIVE — Burnham and Tilly hunt the killer of a Starfleet officer as Stamets and the science team race against the clock to prevent the anomaly from killing anyone else.

Written by Terri Hughes Burton. Directed by Christopher J. Byrne.

*  *  *  *

In addition to all of the above “Choose to Live” content, Paramount+ has also released this in-depth, behind-the-scenes video covering the production’s new AR wall set — a fascinating look into how the world of Discovery has expanded with this new technology.

(Unfortunately, this video seems to be region-locked and may not be viewable outside the United States. If a region-free version appears we’ll update this article.)

Star Trek: Discovery returns with “Choose to Live” on December 2 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 Paramount+ and on Pluto TV in select international locations.

STAR TREK: PRODIGY Pilot to Air on Nickelodeon December 17

While we wait for the series to return from its unexpected winter mid-season break, kids’ cable network Nickelodeon is set to broadcast the opening hour of Star Trek: Prodigy for non-Paramount+ subscribers in just a few weeks.

Now, while the show is off until January, the studio is taking advantage of its ViacomCBS synergy and broadcasting “Lost and Found,” the pilot episode of the series, on Nickelodeon as a special event on December 17 to draw in families who don’t have the streaming service.

Several viewers caught a commercial advertising the yet-unannounced broadcast premiere and uploaded a recording of the ad to YouTube.

Star Trek: Prodigy, which streams exclusively on Paramount+ in the United States, is produced by Nickelodeon Animation Studios and began life as a series destined for a first-run home on the Nickelodeon cable network; the show was later changed to become a Paramount+ title, with promises that it would “later” be seen on the kids’ channel at some point in the future.

At this time, this looks to be only a broadcast of “Lost and Found” as a special event, and not a full series arrival on the cable network.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=to9YZpYK-xM

In addition to this cable broadcast, the show’s premiere episode is also available to watch now on Nickelodeon’s website and on YouTube through Nickelodeon Cartoon Universe.

Prodigy returns on January 6 after a break for the holiday season, when the animated series will be back for another five episodes before its long 2022 hiatus.

Star Trek: Prodigy streams on Paramount+ in the United States, Australia, Latin America, and the Nordics, as well as on CTV Sci Fi Channel in Canada.

A Few Glimpses of the STAR TREK: THE MOTION PICTURE – DIRECTOR’S EDITION Remastering Project

Back in September, we got our first look at the remastered Star Trek: The Motion Picture – Director’s Edition project, thanks to a sneak preview out of Star Trek Day — and there are a few additional glimpses into the restoration efforts now available from the official website.

Producer David C. Fein, who also participated in the original Director’s Edition restoration for the 2001 DVD release, shared these photos from inside the mixing studio where the team is hard at work bringing the special edition of the film up to modern 4K UHD resolution for next year’s debut.

The brain trust behind the project — Fein, Michael Matessino, and Daren Docterman — examines the entry to V’Ger’s inner chambers on the big screen.

Fein’s caption: “Together again… From right to left, Michael Matessino, Daren Dochterman, and I are back twenty-one years later to see how our baby has evolved.”

The Ilia probe appears from the Enterprise sonic shower.

Fein’s caption: “To boldly go back…”

A mysterious shot that Fein says is both “unfinished” and “new” from Spock’s spacewalk sequence; the digital sequence may be a new reflective element to apply to the Vulcan’s spacesuit helmet during his EVA.

Fein’s caption: “Reviewing Spock’s Spacewalk… What’s this you ask? Well it’s… not something changed, (and a little unfinished), and NEW.”

The underside of the Enterprise primary hull as it prepares to leave Spacedock.

Fein’s caption: “ATMOS mixer Michael Babcock experiences his first adventure on board the U.S.S. Enterprise with us!”

The Motion Picture credits were toned gold in the DVD edition of The Director’s Edition, compared to their white color in the theatrical release; this new edition keeps that golden hue.

Fein’s caption: “The reason we’re here… Bob would be so thrilled at how far we’ve come. The ATMOS mix — with all of its subtleties — is such an active participant in telling the story, now more than ever!”

In addition to his photos, Fein also shared a video of the ATMOS sound mixing process, with a focus on the musical score around Admiral Kirks’ approach to the Enterprise. You can watch that video at the official Star Trek website.

Fein’s caption: “The ATMOS music mix is breathtaking! Jerry Goldsmith’s original music mixer for the film in 1979, Bruce Botnick, experiences his work on the big screen for the first time! (Including the first look at the 4k reflection shot with Kirk, a fan favorite!)”

The remastered Director’s Edition will debut on Paramount+ in 2022, but we have no doubt it will eventually come to 4K UHD Blu-ray and standard Blu-ray disc formats after the P+ exclusivity window closes.

Currently, only the theatrical edition of Star Trek: The Motion Picture is available on 4K Blu-ray in the new four-film set as well as in a standalone release, which features the remastered presentation on standard 1080p HD Blu-ray.

Star Trek: The First 4 Films
Remastered for 4K Blu-ray

Star Trek: The Original Series
Blu-ray Steelbooks



STAR TREK: DISCOVERY Review: “Anomaly”

In this week’s Star Trek: Discovery episode, we find Book struggling with loss, Adira and Gray sharing the excitement and anxiety that comes with change, Tilly working on herself, and both the Federation and its galactic neighbors trying to understand the enormous gravitational anomaly in their midst.

A few days have passed since the end of “Kobayashi Maru,” and a shattered Book (David Ajala) has spent that time in seclusion aboard his ship, examining and reexamining every bit of information he has — in an attempt to understand exactly what he witnessed in the skies above Kwejian in the moments before its destruction.

Stamets briefs the Federation/Starfleet leadership. (Paramount+)

It’s clear that he’s given a statement at some point because Discovery’s senior officers are well prepared to brief the Federation’s upper echelons — as well as the leaders of several non-Federation worlds — but otherwise he’s not talking.

The briefing is quick, economical, and surprisingly unbureaucratic: the gravitational anomaly is huge, moving, and poses a threat to any system in its path. It’s also poorly understood; after President T’Rina (Tara Rosling) graciously offers the services of the Ni’Var Science Institute (neé Vulcan Science Academy), Discovery is sent out to collect some much-needed data.

Before the central action of the episode gets underway, we have the chance to catch up with Saru (Doug Jones), who’s back aboard and back in uniform. Culber may be the ship’s resident mental health professional — more on that later — but Saru continues to be a person people seek out for counsel.

By no means did I dislike Saru’s turn as captain last season, but the dynamic between Michael Burnham (Sonequa Martin-Green) as captain and “Mister Saru” as her first officer and advisor feels right in a way that the opposite never did for me. I’m happy to see him back.

Saru and Burnham reunite. (Paramount+)

Speaking of getting someone back, we finally get a much-awaiting update on how exactly Discovery plans to resurrect Gray (Ian Alexander) from Trill ‘ghost’ to physical being: by having Dr. Culber (Wilson Cruz) catch up on the events of Star Trek: Picard!

Using the work of one Dr. Alton Soong, Gray’s new body will be a ‘golem’ synthetic — a biological construct — just like Jean-Luc Picard after the events of “Et in Arcada Ego, Part 2.” Gray’s new body will exactly mimic his original, minus one pesky mole; like Picard, Gray will now age normally despite the synthetic design of his new body.

This exchange also allows the writers to play a bit with Discovery’s unusual place in the Star Trek timeline. Culber mentions that one of the few success stories was a Starfleet admiral named… Picard, was it? He stumbles a bit on the name, because clearly he’d never heard it before as a man who comes from a century before Picard’s name became famous.

What a simple and effective way to underscore that what should have been Discovery’s future is now its distant history, and that this time-displaced crew is still learning things that natives to the 32nd century — and viewers like us — take as common historical knowledge. It’s a Lower Decks-esque wink and nod to its place in canon, but in Discovery’s style and tone.

It also serves to address fan concerns that death no longer means much after the Soong-built golem resurrection of Admiral Picard: Culber notes that the process rarely worked after Picard’s “rebirth,” and that people just gave up on it because of the low success rate. Soong’s said in “Et in Arcadia Ego, Part 1” that he just did bodies — Bruce Maddox was the “substrates man,” meaning the real expert to keep the process working was gone.

Gray’s experience surviving one consciousness transfer already makes him uniquely suited for this attempt, despite the past historical failures — and the bit about ‘customizing’ the new body by removing an unwanted mole is a nice moment on the desire to ‘correct’ ones own body during transgender transitioning. but more on this is sure to follow in the next few episodes.

Gray sees a hologram of his soon-to-arrive new body. (Paramount+)

Now, back to the action! Discovery catches up with the titular anomaly, and finds it has a thick cloud of debris surrounding it — which means someone has to fly inside it to get the needed sensor data.

Book’s ship is the obvious vehicle of choice, but Burnham’s not so sure Book is the best person to pilot it. He pushes back, though, and while there’s really nothing she can do to stop him, she can at least make sure he’s as safe as possible flying a mission that would be dangerous under the best of circumstances — and with Book’s compromised emotional state it’s doubly so.

Eventually it’s decided that his ship be tethered to Discovery — thank you, programmable matter! — but he’s got to take Paul Stamets (Anthony Rapp) along with him to manage the sensor work. Before they lose both spore drive pilots in one dangerous mission, it’s decided that Stamets will be going along as a holographic projection while his body stays safe back on the ship.

Neither man is particularly happy about this team-up, between Book’s emotional state and Stamets’ discomfort being confined to a small ship with a man he’s barely spoken to… plus the fact that each is under the impression that the other hates them.

Once the mission gets underway, things get dicey fast aboard both Book’s ship and back on Discovery. Rough gravitational waves begin to rock the ship, tossing crew from their stations and slamming them down to the deck plates as the artificial gravity systems give out.

Awkward… (Paramount+)

While all this is going on, Lt. Tilly (Mary Wiseman) and Ensign Tal (Blu del Barrio) try to determine both the cause and frequency of the gravitational waves.

Tilly, as both the ranking officer and a person trying to perform complex analysis in a very short period of time, is curt with her orders to Adira — who bristles at someone checking their work — but nothing that seemed to me to be unprofessional or unexpected given the circumstances.

Culber, who is on the bridge providing medical care to various injured crewmembers, thinks differently and decides that right in the middle of an emergency, it’s a good time to ask Tilly to talk about her feelings regarding last week’s incident aboard Deep Space Repair Beta 6.

Meanwhile, the pair aboard Book’s ship start up another heart-to-heart conversation while simultaneously dealing with emergency repairs, navigational problems… and the general attention-grabbing task of trying not to be killed by space debris and a gravitational anomaly that’s powerful enough to chew through a planet.

Crisis and counseling. (Paramount+)

Of course I want these characters to work through whatever’s going on between them — but look, this isn’t the best time! As with Burnham questioning the president in “Kobayashi Maru,” I have to say I don’t understand Discovery’s habit of writing intimate character moments in the middle of intense action sequences.

Perhaps the show is worried that with far future technology that’s so advanced and powerful to essentially be magic, the action sequences will seem sterile, or overly slick,  or simply won’t have high enough stakes, so they attempt to ground them with the emotions of the characters. If indeed this is the concern, it’s a valid one — not just for Discovery but for any genre fiction that can, by nature of the universe it inhabits, easily “magic” itself out of problems.

But if the goal is to inject small human moments into scenes with grand and impersonal technology to make them feel warmer and more real, it’s unfortunately having the opposite effect for me. There’s something that feels so unnatural about the construction and timing of these conversations and the fact that no one — other than maybe the sorely-missed Jett Reno — ever snaps back with a “Hey, can we do this later?!” that it makes me hyper-aware of the writing underneath the moment.

Surf the wave. (Paramount+)

Anyway…. Tilly and Adira figure out that the gravitational waves are only going to keep coming, and that Discovery won’t be able to withstand many more of them. Because Stamets needs more time to collect data from the anomaly, Burnham reluctantly agrees to disconnect the tether and move the ship to a safer distance.

By the time Stamets and Book are ready to leave the anomaly, Book’s navigation has been knocked out, his ship is quickly losing power, and — seeing flashbacks to his final moments on Kwejian with his brother and nephew — Book himself is losing the will to return to safety. The one thing that keeps him from giving up entirely is the need to physically get the data back to Discovery, as the vital information can’t be transmitted.

With some quick thinking from Tilly, who figures out the form and frequency of the gravitational waves, and Bryce (Ronnie Rowe, Jr.) who we learn is an avid kite surfer — check the “learn something about the bridge crew” box — they plan to have Book “surf” a gravitational wave out of the anomaly.

Just one problem: Book’s ship is unable to perform the navigational calculations itself so the team back aboard Discovery is going to have to guide him through it.

Very scientific. (Paramount+)

Here’s where things get a little wobbly for me. Instead of merely having the ship’s computer — which is already running all the calculations for the waveform — simply do the countdown for Book, Burnham decides to have the 2D visualization turned into a 3D model to be played on the programmable matter console on the captain’s chair. The idea is that she will physically feel the waves and intuit the patterns and tell Book when to accelerate so he can catch the crest.

From a character perspective, I get it — Book is having to let himself trust someone else for the first time since his planet was destroyed. This is especially apparent when Book hesitates after receiving Burnham’s “Go!” misses the first wave, and needs a supportive pep talk from her in the few minutes before the next wave.

But from a practical perspective, it seemed so unnecessary and imprecise that instead of being drawn into the drama of the scene I was busy thinking back over the dialogue to see if I’d misunderstood something about the plan — though in the end it works, and Book flies home with the sensor data intact.

Book is not having a great time. (Paramount+)

Of course, that hasn’t saved the day: before the credits roll, we learn from Tilly that the gravitational anomaly can move at random — which means it can’t easily be avoided,  and is a threat to any planet or people anywhere. Where will the anomaly show up next, and is its erratic motion a sign of intent?

I’m starting to wonder if maybe it’s something like the Planet Killer from “Doomsday Machine,” or the Cetacean probe from Star Trek IV… or V’Ger, which was also huge, immensely powerful, and surrounded by a debris field that couldn’t be penetrated by sensors. Hmm…

Until next week… (Paramount+)

OBSERVATION LOUNGE

  • Sara Mitich’s (Nilsson) blonde wig looks a little bit better this week. Thank you.
     
  • The opening credits sequence comes twelve and a half minutes into the episode’s 49 minute runtime. If this isn’t a record for longest open, it’s surely close.
     
  • Opposite his combadge, Saru sports a large black and gold crest that’s a “Kelpien symbol for community and service” that advertises his status as a councilmember in his village.
     
  • Discovery, of course, is not the first Star Trek ship to have two captains serving on a ship’s bridge; Spock held the rank of Captain from Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan forward.
     
  • When Discovery jumps to the anomaly’s location, we get a refreshing change of view as the camera stays aligned to the ship — and the galaxy outside twists around it during the spore drive burst.
     
  • If Stamets could be fully-tangible as a hologram, even through the worst of their flight turbulence, why couldn’t Book fly his ship remotely in the same manner — allowing the crew to protect both spore drive pilots?
Activate the cone of silence! (Paramount+)
  • In an nice upgrade, a sound-dampening force field can now be projected around the Discovery captain’s chair when a private communication channel is active.
     
  • An alarming amount of fire repeatedly shoots from ports on the bridge walls during this episode’s chaos: are there propane lines running through there? Whatever the explanation, it sounds like they should get that checked out next time they fly past the Archer Spacedock — it’s one thing to have rocks explode out of consoles in a time-honored Trek tradition, but this takes things to a whole new level. (Maybe Discovery got the Truckasaurus upgrade package installed during the refit.)
     
  • Discovery’s refit included at least one holodeck (or “holo,” as it’s awkwardly named) — and like Picard’s stateroom aboard La Sirena, Burnham has it set up right in her quarters. (I look forward to some Victorian romances and Old West action!)
     
  • The slow march towards “Calypso” continues, as Discovery’s self-aware sphere-data-driven computer has named herself Zora (Annabelle Wallis) in the months since Saru’s departure.
     
  • According to Sonequa Martin-Green in last week’s The Ready Room, she performed Burnham’s wirework zero-gravity scenes just 12 weeks after the birth of her second child — a feat that requires some serious core strength.
“Let’s fly!” (The Ready Room / Paramount+)

The final 10 minutes or so of “Anomaly” are, I think, the best of the episode and also emblematic of what Season 4 has so far been most successful with: quieter character moments that give people the space to discuss their feelings, fears, concerns, and hopes with one another — without asking them to juggle the emotional and the action-packed simultaneously.

Stamets and Book learn that each has misunderstood the other and that they have no reason for antagonism; Adira shares their uncertainties with Gray, that they’re happy for his happiness and excited that he’ll finally get to be seen and heard and be an independent person again, but anxious about the possible dangers of the transfer to his new body; Tilly tells Culber of her own uncertainties and asks if he’ll see her professionally, as a therapist; and Book finally allows himself to feel his grief and open himself up to Burnham’s comfort and love.

Hopefully Zora doesn’t have a “Naked Time” program. (Paramount+)

That Discovery is so willing to give time to these moments makes the fact that they keep also crowding them into action sequences even stranger. Regardless, I’m happy that so far, Season 4 is being generous with breathing room in the story that had been lacking at times in previous seasons.

Star Trek: Discovery returns with “Choose to Live” on December 2 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 Paramount+ and on Pluto TV in select international locations.

STAR TREK: DISCOVERY International Distribution Plans Unveiled, Season 4 Heads Overseas November 26 on Paramount+, PlutoTV

After last week’s bombshell announcement that Star Trek: Discovery fans around the world were going to lose their way to watch the series, today ViacomCBS Networks International has announced a global distribution plan to allow Trekkies outside of North America to stay connected to the series.

The cast and crew of Discovery were caught just as off-guard as the rest of us last week, and actors Wilson Cruz (Culber) and Anthony Rapp (Stamets) were immediately happy to celebrate the restoration of Discovery’s global reach today.

Here’s the full statement announced by ViacomCBS Networks International, who manages distribution of Star Trek: Discovery around the globe.

To all of the International Star Trek: Discovery fans: we hear you. We love this series too. We love it for the incredible cast, the hardworking crew, the imaginative storytelling, the groundbreaking, diverse characters who bring the show to life and what it represents to so many people around the world.

Star Trek has always put its fans first. We want to do the same. Therefore, during this transition, we are doing everything we can to get the new season to you as soon as possible.

Where Paramount+ is available in Australia, Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Denmark, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, Finland, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua, Norway, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Sweden, Uruguay, and Venezuela, the first two episodes will be available Friday, November 26, with new episodes being released weekly.

We are also offering Star Trek fans in these markets a new membership promotion on Paramount+ for 50% off for the first three months with code STARTREK. (New Paramount+ members only; redeemable on https://www.paramountplus.com/; promotion valid until December 15, 2021.)

In Austria, France, Germany, Italy, Spain, Switzerland, and the United Kingdom, Pluto TV, the leading free streaming television service, will drop new episodes at 9pm local time on the Pluto TV Sci-Fi channel each Friday, Saturday and Sunday, with a simulcast running on the Star Trek channel in Austria, Switzerland, and Germany. This will begin with the first two episodes on Friday, November 26.

In the UK, Germany, France, Russia, South Korea and additional select countries, we are also making Season 4 available for purchase on participating digital platforms beginning Friday, November 26.

We too are super fans of Star Trek and incredibly proud of Discovery. We promise to give this franchise and its loyal fans all the global love and visibility it deserves in our expanding universe on Paramount+.

For those unfamiliar with it, Pluto TV is a free ad-supported streaming service owned by ViacomCBS which already streams Star Trek episodes fairly consistently; Pluto TV can be watch both in a browser and on various digital devices.

We do not yet know if Discovery Seasons 1-3 will be included in the international Paramount+ distribution plan announced today, or if only Season 4 will be part of this new availability; as we know more we’ll be sure to update things here.

Either way, it’s a very good thing to know that our fellow fans around the world will have a way to keep up with those of us in North America as Discovery Season 4 continues.

Star Trek: Discovery returns with “Anomaly” on November 25 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 Paramount+ and on Pluto TV in select international locations.