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Hero Collector Announces STAR TREK: LOWER DECKS Starship Models, Plus A WOMAN’S TREK By DS9’s Nana Visitor

Star Trek Day has barely begun and already we’ve got another new set of announcements — this time, from our friends at Hero Collector — about a long-awaited expansion of The Official Star Trek Starships Collection, and a new book from one of the franchise’s best-loved actors.

The California-class USS CERRITOS.

First up is the news that Star Trek: Lower Decks is finally making the leap from its animated realm into the physical world, as the series’ hero starship — the California-class USS Cerritos — is set to kick off the first of a series of models based upon the Trek comedy.

Announced through StarTrek.com today, the Cerritos will be part of the XL Starships lineup, with a 9.75-inch-long replica of the California-class vessel slated for arrival to fans’ collections in January 22 — with the animated edition of Captain Riker’s Luna-class USS Titan to follow soon after.

The Luna-class USS TITAN.

While fans have wondered what’s taken so long, the crew at Eaglemoss/Hero Collector needed time to translate the animated VFX files for the two starship from their original form into a design that could be successfully produced in real life — in a way that faithfully replicates the ships as seen on-screen.

Here are two views of the Cerritos model shared on the StarTrek.com announcement today, to give everyone an idea of what the final product will look like:

While no additional photography of the physical models have yet been released — we’ll show them off as soon as they’re made available! — the Cerritos and Titan will each be based upon the ships’ appearances in Lower Decks Season 1 — which means the Lower Decks version of the Titan will be a bit different than the smaller model released back in 2017.

In addition to that great news, another surprising announcement comes from Hero Collector’s publishing arm today: Colonel Kira herself, Star Trek: Deep Space Nine actor Nana Visitor revealed on StarTrek.com this morning that she is writing a book focused specifically on the franchise’s portrayal of — and influence on — women.

Still in the works, A Woman’s Trek — From Uhura to Burnham: Star Trek’s Female Stars on Six Decades of Change and Empowerment  will include interviews conducted by Visitor herself, allowing readers to hear from Star Trek actors and writers from throughout franchise history, along with other authors, NASA scientists, and more.

In Visitor’s announcement video (which you can watch at the link above), there are a number of Trek actors spotted (including her DS9 co-stars Terry Farrell, Nicole de Boer, Penny Johnson Jerald, along with Discovery’s Mary Chieffo) — plus a number of behind the scenes contributors like writers, stunt women, and more all being interviewed for the project.

As of this writing, beyond “2022,” no specific release date has been set for A Woman’s Trek (since it’s still being written!) but as soon as we know more about when you’ll be able to read Visitor’s tantalizing new book, we’ll share that news with you here.

Are you finally ready to get your hands on Star Trek: Lower Decks ship models — and what other starship designs are you hoping Eaglemoss/Hero Collector makes from the animated series?

What are your thoughts on Nana Visitor’s new book project? Sound off in the comments below!

Factory Entertainment Debuts STAR TREK: TNG-Era Type I Phaser Hero Prop Replicas, Two Editions Slated for Release in 2022

While there’s sure to be a lot of news as today’s Star Trek Day festivities unfold, one of the most exciting things was just revealed this morning — as Factory Entertainment unveils their third set of Star Trek prop replicas from way, way back in the beginning of The Next Generation.

Following their take on Captain Picard’s Ressikan flute and the recently-announced TNG-era hypospray medical kit — along with their scaled-down Trek weapons collection announced last month — the company is continuing deeper into the world of Star Trek: The Next Generation with two editions of the early-season Type I hand phaser — also known as the “cricket” phaser, mainly used in TNG Season 1.

The all-silver Season 1 version of TNG’s Type I hand phaser.

First used in the series pilot episode, “Encounter at Farpoint,” followed by a few other Season 1 episodes (“Justice,” “The Last Outpost,” etc.), the small hand weapon was largely obsoleted after the first year due to its lack of visibility on screen.

The tiny phaser still made a few rare appearances later in Next Generation’s run — in episodes like “The Mind’s Eye” and “The Game” — and then one final appearance in Star Trek: Voyager’s “In the Flesh,” the only time it was used outside of TNG production.

The darker-colored later-season design, lastly used in VOYAGER’s “In the Flesh.”

Factory Entertainment’s new “hero” replicas — meaning they feature lighting and sound — set for 2022 are designed to replicate the two editions of the Type I phaser seen during this era of Star Trek production; a standard edition with black emitter and dark thumb panel, designed to emulate the later-season look, and a special “Season 1” design with an all-silver emitter and lighter-colored thumb panel.

Each version features integrated lighting to allow collectors to up the power level of each phaser, from ‘stun’ to ‘disrupt’ to ‘disintegrate,’ as well as sound effects to match — including what the company is calling “Crusher mode,” set to replicate the rapid-fire action that Wesley Crusher programmed into Type I phaser in “The Game.”

Wesley Crusher’s rapid-fire programming in use during “The Game.”

The phaser replicas themselves are produced from die-cast metal and ABS plastic, and like their medical set, will be packaged in a wooden display case that includes both the prop replica and a metal plaque.

Here’s a look at official photography of the prototype Type I hand phaser replicas from Factory Entertainment’s website.

Star Trek: The Next Generation Type-1 Cricket Phaser Prop Replica

Packing a hefty punch inside a compact body, this 1:1 scale replica of the iconic Type-1 Cricket Phaser prop from Star Trek: The Next Generation features a variety of electronic light and sound effects neatly encased in a heavy diecast metal frame.

Each numbered limited edition museum quality replica comes with a wooden presentation case, cast metal plaque and a certificate of authenticity/prop story booklet and will make a fine addition to any Star Trek collection.

Dimensions:
Type 1 Cricket Phaser — 3 x 1¼ x 1” (76 x 31 x 25mm)
Display Box — 6½ x 6½ x 3” (165 x 165 x 76mm)

This replica is a numbered limited edition and includes a cast metal plaque and certificate of authenticity/prop story booklet. (Requires 4 x LR44 batteries (Not Included due to shipping restrictions.)

Star Trek: The Next Generation Type-1 Cricket Phaser Prop Replica (Season 1 Version)

Factory Entertainment’s Cricket phaser replica has been copied directly from surviving resources in the CBS archives. During their long tenure, many different Cricket phaser props were made. These ranged from fairly primitive non-functioning ‘stunt’ props to quite elaborate ‘hero’ props with functioning electronics.

As is normal for productions, a number of modifications and changes were made to the different props over the course of time. This replica has been designed to capture the best elements of all of the variants in a single blended execution but with the distinctive all-grey paint scheme featured in Season 1.

Dimensions:
Type 1 Cricket Phaser — 3 x 1¼ x 1” (76 x 31 x 25mm)
Display Box — 6½ x 6½ x 3” (165 x 165 x 76mm)

The body of the replica is diecast in solid metal. Other parts are formed in ABS plastic. The wooden presentation case is etched with the Starfleet delta insignia and is designed to allow you to both store and display the replica.

Each of the two phaser replicas are set to ship to collectors in the Spring of 2022 — though as a Star Trek Day debut, they’re both available now on preorder.

The standard edition is available for preorder sales today for a price of $274.99, while the all-silver, special Season 1 variant is also up for preorder today at a price of $349.99; each requires a non-refundable deposit at the time of preorder.

So, Star Trek collectors: will you be ordering one (or both) of these new phaser replicas for your own Starfleet away team? As the company makes yet another foray into “hero” Star Trek: The Next Generation prop replicas, what’s on your wish list for their future projects?

Let us know your thoughts in the comments below!

FIRST LOOK: December’s Upcoming Additions to Hero Collector’s Official STAR TREK Starships Collection

Jupiter Station artwork by Rob Bonchune

We’re back with another look ahead to the future of the Official Star Trek Starships Collection, as it’s time now to see what Hero Collector has lined up for the holiday season: here are the new Star Trek models you can expect to arrive in December!

First up is the Star Trek: Picard-era Romulan Warbird, the next entry in the Star Trek Universe modern-series collection — seen in a massive armada above the planet Coppelius in the Season 1 finale, “Et in Arcadia Ego, Part 2.”

ROMULAN WARBIRD (#10)  — By the end of the 24th century, the Romulan Free State had updated its warbird designs to this new model – a finned, segmented attack vessel armed with powerful disruptors, its belly decorated with a painted bird-of-prey.

Though these ships saw use throughout the Romulan Free State, more sinister actors also put them to work – when the secretive Zhat Vash triggered an assault on the synthetic planet of Coppelius, over 200 of the new Romulan Warbirds joined their genocidal fleet.

The Romulan Warbird starship model measures in at about 8.5 inches wide, and is expected to retail at $54.95 / €49.99 / £39.99.

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Next is a brand new addition to the Star Trek space station roster, the massive Jupiter Station, referenced often in Star Trek: Enterprise and seen directly in Star Trek: Voyager (“Life Line”), the station was built out of multiple starship saucer section hulls stacked in a set of parallel structures.

JUPITER STATION (SPECIAL #28) — Located in the orbit of the Solar System’s fifth and largest planet, the Jupiter Research Station was an orbital facility for United Earth (and later the Federation) comprised of six stacked saucer hulls, divided between two sections.

Jupiter Station was a frequent stop for the crew of the Enterprise NX – 01, under Captain Jonathan Archer, thanks to its extensive maintenance, repair, and supply capabilities – and its role as a holographic training facility for MACO troops.

Designer Rick Sternbach drew inspiration from the classic appearance of the Spacedock, and speculated that the saucers may have been recycled from decommissioned UE vessels.

The complicated Jupiter Station model measures in at just under 7 inches high (and 7 inches wide), and is expected to retail at $74.95 / €64.99 / £49.99.

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For fans of the smaller-sized Star Trek shuttlecraft sets, Hero Collector is debuting its first all-alien shuttle set in December, as four in-demand ships make up the eighth pack of support craft.

In this four-pack, fans will find the Ferengi shuttle which debuted in “The Price” (here as ‘Quark’s Treasure’ from “Little Green Men”), the Klingon Toron-class shuttle from “Gambit, Part II,” the Xindi-Insectoid shuttle seen in Enterprise Season 3, and a 22nd century Vulcan shuttlecraft, as seen in “Fallen Hero.”

SHUTTLECRAFT SET #8: FERENGI, KLINGON, XINDI-INSECTOID, VULCAN — These four shuttles each represent one of Star Trek’s more prominent alien species – from the iconic Vulcan Shuttle to the small, one-crew Toron Shuttle used by the Klingon mercenary Koral!

Plus, the sinister (and notoriously difficult-to-steer) Xindi-Insectoid Assault Shuttle, as well as Quark’s personal Ferengi starcraft, which he named Quark’s Treasure before an illegal smuggling trip sent him through a time warp… and back to Roswell, 1947!

Each of the Ferengi, Xindi-Insectoid, and Vulcan shuttles measure in at about 3.25 inches in length, while the boxy Klingon shuttle is about 2.5 inches long. The four-pack of small ships will retail for $99.95 / €104.99 / £74.99.

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Finally, there’s a pair of new bonus starship models on the way, with two we can fully announce here and another two on the roster to follow in the months ahead.

Arriving in November is Steth’s coaxial warp drive ship from Voyager Season 4’s “Vis a Vis,” the first of two new Delta Quadrant ships to expand the Official Starships Collection this fall.

STETH’S COAXIAL SHIP (BONUS #30) — A small, lightly-armored Benthan starship, Steth’s ship was equipped with an experimental propulsion system known as the coaxial warp drive.

This technology allowed it to fold space, travelling vast interstellar distances in moments – but when it was hijacked by a DNA-swapping thief, its owner was left stranded in the wrong body, and the thief set his sights on the USS Voyager.

Also arriving in November is the Kazon carrier vessel, first seen in “Caretaker” and throughout the first two seasons of Star Trek: Voyager.

KAZON CARRIER (BONUS #31) — Originally designed by the alien Trabe, this powerful and heavily-armed warship – dubbed the Predator-class – was claimed by the Kazon after they overthrew their former masters. Aggressive and bent on revenge, the Kazon pursued the unfortunate USS Voyager in order to claim Starfleet’s superior technology.

Steth’s ship measures in at just over 5 inches long, while the Kazon carrier will be about 5.5 inches in length; each will retail for $29.95 / €24.99 / £19.99.

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Following these two bonus editions, you can also look forward to seeing the Nomad probe (from “The Changeling”) arriving soon as Bonus #32, while the Talarian Observation Craft (from “Suddenly Human”) slated as Bonus #33.

These ships were revealed on the back of recent Hero Collector ship model packaging, and we’ve confirmed their placement in the upcoming roster with the company.

(Image via eBay.)

Phew — now that’s enough new models to make any member of the Collector’s Guild jealous! We’ll be back next month with another round of first-look previews for the start of 2022, and will have more Hero Collector product review and preview news over the coming weeks.

Which of these new releases to you plan to add to your own Star Trek collection? Let us know in the comments below!

New STAR TREK: LOWER DECKS Images: “An Embarrassment of Dooplers”

This week continues Star Trek: Lower Decks’ second season, and we’ve got a new set of images from “An Embarrassment of Dooplers” today!

In this new episode, the Cerritos crew must carry an alien ambassador to Starbase 25 for an annual Starfleet command conference — one with a renown after-party — but as usual, both the ship’s command staff and lower-deck ensigns must navigate a variety of mishaps to get there.

Here are nine new images from this week’s episode:

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If you didn’t catch it at the end of last week’s episode, you can catch a preview for Thursday’s episode below.

Star Trek: Lower Decks returns on September 9 with “An Embarrassment of Dooplers” on Paramount+ in the United States and CTV Sci Fi Channel in Canada, followed by Amazon Prime Video (in select international regions) on September 10.

Star Trek: Lower Decks
Season 1 Blu-ray

Star Trek: Lower Decks
Season 2 Blu-ray

WeeklyTrek Podcast #151 — STAR TREK: PRODIGY’s Opening Title Sequence Unveiled!

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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 Trek Central assistant editor Dom Paris 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 Dom’s theory about what role the Borg Queen will play in Star Trek: Picard’s second season, and Alex’s theory about what the expected departure of Star Trek, Star Trek: Voyager, and Star Trek: Enterprise from Netflix means for the franchise’s streaming future.

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!

INTERVIEW: Mike McMahan on STAR TREK: LOWER DECKS’ Easter Eggs, Mugatos, and Looking Ahead to the Second Half of Season 2

We last talked with Star Trek: Lower Decks showrunner Mike McMahan just as the animated series was launching last year — and as the show approaches the halfway point of Season 2, it’s time to hear from Lower Decks’ own captain once more about Easter eggs, Mugato pronunciations, and a look ahead to the back half of the season.

Our team caught up with McMahan at CBS’s Season 2 premiere event in early August, where at the time we’d had the opportunity to watch the first five episodes of the season, including next week’s “An Embarrassment of Dooplers” — but don’t worry, there aren’t any spoilers for that upcoming episode here.

TREKCORE: There are so many more Star Trek Easter eggs in Season 2 so far, compared to last season — was it a mission to ramp up the franchise tie-in references this year?

MIKE McMAHAN: Well, look — we don’t ever go into an episode being like, “We’re going to make the Internet’s job hard this week, and put in extra Easter eggs!”

Occasionally, we’ll be talking to the artists, and suggest that we visit a location in an episode where there’s a bevy of potentially referential stuff in the background — like when you go to a diner and they have lots of accumulated stuff on the walls — and we did that a couple of times this season.

So the number of Easter eggs probably shot through the roof, just because of a couple locations [like the collector’s ship in “Kayshon, His Eyes Open”] and others that I don’t want to give away. No spoilers! Like, I love the lists of stuff people find, because my artists surprise me sometimes, too! They’ll sneak stuff in there.

An entire setting filled with items and references to Star Trek’s past.

TREKCORE: So even the artists are sneaking in things without you knowing it?

McMAHAN: I mean, it’s Season 2, right? So they get the game — the know what makes us laugh, and what we like. But yeah, sometimes they’ll slip something in that’s so esoteric….

Look, we’re an animated show that has to feel like Star Trek. So there’s never a reference, really, to real-world locations — they only reference stuff from the universe! So sometimes they’ll put in a reference to something that I will miss completely until we get to like color [review in post-production] or something, where I’m looking at things frame-by-frame.

I tell them, “Oh, you sneaky guys!” They made the decision because it felt like it was part of the Trek world — and as soon as you see it and understand why it’s there, it’s like “Yes! One hundred percent!” But the reason that I really like that is because when we’re writing and making these episodes, we want you watch it multiple times.

I think there’s a certain generation, now, that want to be able to look at their phones, or make pasta or whatever, and not be leaning into their TV. They grew up with TV as background noise — but we’re on Paramount+, and if you’re going to watch our show, you have to choose to watch it.

Lower Decks is for people who put on Next Generation or Voyager or any of them as comfort viewing. Even on Rick and Morty, every group of artists I worked with — all of the animators — they’re always running TNG and Voyager and other Star Trek in the background because there’s like a million episodes.

Riker’s ready room includes Union soldier cap (‘Death Wish’) and an Oberth-class model (‘The Pegasus’).

It’s like hanging out with their friends while they’re working all day. So a lot of Rick and Morty got animated with Star Trek running on the screens right next to them — and the same thing is happening on Lower Decks, except now we’re watching Star Trek for work.

When you finish an episode and it feels like, “Holy crap, they got a whole episode into just 22 minutes?!,” you watch it again. Then you watch it again. Then, once you know it well enough, you can turn it on in the background and let it wash over you — because we have only ten 22-minute episodes each year, and when you go back, I want you to see things you never noticed the first two or three times through.

But more important to me than Easter eggs are the reflections on earlier Trek, where there are things or actions that remind me of an episode I’ve seen or a character choice from the past that I remember, people finding those types of thing almost impress me more.

I almost get more excited for the connections you can make from a character or story point of view, because we’re trying to honor that as much as we are looking to show, like, a combadge you might recognize.

TREKCORE: So talking about things from the past, we have to ask you about all the pronunciation jokes in “Mugato, Gumato,” which is SUCH an ‘inside baseball’ Star Trek gag.

McMAHAN: I mean, look, we’ve all seen these episodes a thousand times like I’ve said — but when we decide to do something heavily based on a past episode, all of the Lower Decks writers watch it together [in their own homes] and we have a group text thread calling stuff out.

Ben Rodgers, who wrote that episode, just could not get over how NOBODY decided on a consistent way for the actors to pronounce “Mugato” in that episode [“A Private Little War”].

TREKCORE: DeForest Kelley couldn’t even say it the way it was written — to the point where they had to change the alien’s name.

McMAHAN: Oh, a hundred percent. They probably even cut out even more versions!

This time, watching it again, we digging into it in a new way, watching it with more than one person; your brain reacts in a different way, finding things that are funny because of how someone else observes things.

On top of that, you’re realizing the [production] mistakes they made, like now they didn’t go back and reshoot things because maybe the actors were getting prickly about mispronouncing this made-up word!

To us, that’s something to celebrate rather than something to make fun of.

The Cerritos under Pakled attack in ‘No Small Parts.’

TREKCORE: So looking ahead to the back half of the season — last year, things really ramped up as the finale approached, with the movie episode and then the big Pakled face-off in the end. Is that the trajectory for Season 2 as well?

McMAHAN: Well, accidentally I would say, the first half of Season 2 is like, “Hey, welcome back!” The second half, though, is more like “Okay — let’s go!”

I get a little bit of a chill knowing that the last episode you’ve seen is 205 [“An Embarrassment of Dooplers”], because to me that feels like a good mid-season finale. On another show, that could be a season finale, honestly, because of [how that episode goes].

To be honest, my very favorite episodes of Season 2 are in the second half of the year, and not just because they’re cinematic or theatrical — I mean, some of them are — but we just pushed to do stuff that breaks our own rules in those last five episodes.

So in the first season, we did the trial-episode-that-wasn’t-really-a-trial [“Veritas”], which was based upon me tuning into a Star Trek episode as a kid and not knowing the context about what was happening. Trying to explain that to the studio executives, I was like, “This is in the DNA of Star Trek to me.” Same thing with parodying the movies [“Crisis Point”] and having it turn into a big character therapy episode.

McMahan at the ‘Lower Decks’ Season 2 premiere event.

My very favorite episodes are in the second half of the season. And not just because they’re cinematic or theatrical, I mean, some of them are, but like we just, we pushed to do stuff that breaks our own rules in the second half of the season.

In that finale [“No Small Parts”], it’s like, how do you fit four stories, and comedy, and a really great-feeling Star Trek episode that means something into just 22 minutes. And in Season 2, you’re going to see we’re doing it again.

I’m writing the finale of Season 3 right now, and it’s king of happening again — and really it feels like it’s like that in every episode of Season 3. I just… it gets me really excited.

This interview has been condensed and edited for clarity.

Star Trek: Lower Decks returns on September 9 with “An Embarrassment of Dooplers” on Paramount+ in the United States and CTV Sci Fi Channel in Canada, followed by Amazon Prime Video (in select international regions) on September 10.

STAR TREK: PICARD Assimilates Annie Wersching to Reign as Season 2’s Borg Queen

Next week’s big Star Trek Day event is likely to be full of news on all the ongoing Star Trek productions, but a surprising casting announcement dropped this evening ahead of the big event: veteran actor Annie Wersching will be joining Star Trek: Picard…. as the Borg Queen.

Annie Wersching— and an early role guest starring with Rene Auberjonois on ‘Enterprise.’

First reported by Deadline, Wersching— who actually began her career guest starring in the Season 1 Star Trek: Enterprise episode “Oasis,” but has also starred in shows like 24Timeless, The Vampire Diaries and more — will be part of Season 2’s Picard storyline in a recurring capacity, becoming the third actor to take on the role of domineering cybernetic bad gal and leader of the Borg Collective.

Patrick Stewart and Alice Krige in ‘Star Trek: First Contact.’

Originated by Alice Krige in 1996’s Star Trek: First Contact, the Borg Queen serves as the face and voice of the Collective, personifying the unified mind of the half-organic, half-technological race in its quest for galactic assimilation and ‘perfection.’ (Archival footage from that film, including a shot of Krige as the Queen, appeared in brief flashback clips in Picard Season 1.)

Susanna Thompson and Jeri Ryan in ‘Dark Frontier.’

Susanna Thompson donned the latex and Borg prosthetics to play the Borg Queen for the majority of the character’s appearances in Star Trek: Voyager, as she sought to return Seven of Nine to the Collective in “Dark Frontier,” “Unimatrix Zero, Part I,” and “Unimatrix Zero, Part II.”

Kate Mulgrew and Alice Krige in ‘Endgame.’

Krige reprised the role in the Voyager series finale, facing off against a future Admiral Janeway in Voyager’s series finale (“Endgame”), and later filmed segments for the now-defunct Star Trek: The Experience ride Borg Invasion 4D.

With both Jean-Luc Picard and Seven of Nine (Jeri Ryan) as part of the Picard crew next season, the Borg Queen is the rare character that directly impacted both of them, each encountering one version of the Queen after they escaped from the Borg Collective.

Season 2 of Star Trek: Picard is already expected to be quite a trip through alternate pasts, futures, and timelines, as Q (John de Lancie) returns to put retired Admiral Picard (Patrick Stewart) through another crazy adventure — and as we’ve now seen the Borg Queen die twice in her past appearances, it’s likely that Wersching time as the Queen will also be part of one of Q’s alternate timelines.

Picard and Seven briefly discuss their shared experience with the Borg. (‘Stardust City Rag’)

We’re looking forward to next Wednesday, September 8, as Star Trek Day is surely going to give us a lot more insight into where Season 2 of Star Trek: Picard will take the series next.

Star Trek: Picard is in production on Season 2 now, which is expected to air sometime in 2022 on Paramount+ in the United States, CTV Sci Fi Channel in Canada, and on Amazon Prime Video in many international regions.

STAR TREK: LOWER DECKS Review: “Mugato, Gumato”

“Mugato, Gumato,” by Ben Rodgers, is Star Trek: Lower Decks’ first foray into edgier adult comedy whose laughs relies on grossing you out. While it is still an enjoyable episode of the show in many respects, a lot of the gross-out humor at play here does not feel like it quite fits comfortably in Star Trek.

I applaud the show for trying out different styles of humor to find the full palate of jokes that work in a Star Trek context, but I am not sure The Hangover-style humor necessarily lands in all cases here.

For every joke that did get a laugh out of me — like Shaxs (Fred Tatasciore) continuously tasting Mugato dung, or Patingi the Tellarite getting his head ripped off by a Mugato — the funniest jokes were still the ones deeply tied to Star Trek lore.

Shaxs is on the hunt for a gumato… or mugooto… or mugato? (Paramount+)

For example, I adored that one of the jokes at the heart of this episode relies on the production history of the episode that first introduced the Mugato. The shooting script (and closing credits) for “A Private Little War” called the animal creature “The Gumato, but after DeForest Kelley continues to mispronounce the alien as “Mugato,” the rest of the show’s dialogue was changed to match.

The credits from ‘A Private Little War.’ (CBS)

Every “mugato,” “mugooto,” and “gumato” joke in this episode worked for me, given no character would pronounce it the same way twice in succession — notice when Shaxs beams down he uses one version in the transporter room, and then the two others in quick succession once reading the surface of Frylon IV.

That kind of joke was much funnier to me than Boimler (Jack Quaid) and Rutherford (Eugene Cordero) getting stuck in a dead tree trunk while two of the creatures mated against it… as another one watched.

The only way to win Diplomath is for everybody to be disappointed. (Paramount+)

I also liked the dynamics between Mariner (Tawny Newsome), Boimler, and Rutherford in this episode. The idea that Boimler and Rutherford get taken in by a rumor — started by Mariner herself, we learn — that she is a rogue Starfleet black ops agent adds an interesting dimension to the episode, and deepens the relationship between the characters by showing how the “cool” Mariner and the supremely “uncool” Boimler and Rutherford work together as a team.

And ultimately, it’s not Mariner’s anbo-jyutsu skills that get the Cerritos’s crew out of a Ferengi prison, but it’s Boimler and Rutherford’s nerd skill at Diplomath, the Federation equivalent of the Ferengi game Tongo.

Tendi does what it takes to get her medical scans. (Paramount+)

Tendi (Noel Wells) also gets another nice storyline in this episode with Dr. T’Ana (Gillian Vigman), who like most doctors turns out to be her own worst patient — and how like in other stories throughout Trek history, many officers give the ship’s medical staff a hard time when it comes to their annual check-ups.

While there wasn’t a great deal of substance to her diagnostic mystery, I’m okay with a lot more cat jokes from this duo.

Denobulan puffer reactions never fail to get a laugh. (Paramount+)

CANON CONNECTIONS

  • The Denobulan researchers seen briefly after the opening credits possess the same defensive mechanism as Doctor Phlox displayed in “Home,” puffing out their faces in response to being threatened by a mugato.
     
  • In their small talk before being startled, the Denobulans are talking about the Klingon coffee raktajino.
     
  • Mariner, Boimler, and Rutherford play anbo-jyutsu — the ultimate form of martial arts — against each other in the Cerritos gym. This is the first time we’ve seen the blind-folded combat game since Will and Kyle Riker squared off in “The Icarus Factor.”
     
  • Mariner references the ship’s phaser range. We saw the Enterprise-D’s phaser range in “A Matter of Honor” and “Redemption, Part I.”
A Kzinti, introduced in “The Slaver Weapon,” is stationed aboard the Cerritos. (Paramount+)
Rutherford meets Ferengi in their financial arena. (Paramount+)
Stay quiet, Mr. Bradward! (Paramount+)

OTHER OBSERVATIONS

  • When the mugato is chasing Boimler and Rutherford, there is a direct homage to the Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring — the iconic scene where the hobbits are hiding from the Black Rider in the roots of a tree.
     
  • The game Boimler and Rutherford are playing is called Diplomath. The goal of the game is for each side to lose, being “equally unsatisfied with the negotiation.”
     
  • We learn that Mariner’s immediate posting before the Cerritos was the USS Atlantis — where half the crew had to be reassigned due to an outbreak of Kerplickian lice — making this her fourth known assignment (along with the USS Quito and Deep Space 9).
Mariner’s service record from her time aboard the USS Atlantis. (Paramount+)

Overall, “Mugato, Gumato” has a very funny premise, but its humor did not quite land for me in a Star Trek context.

I’ve enjoyed plenty of gross-out humor movies over my life, and still do, but I think there’s a time and a place for them, and I’m not sure that place is in Star Trek… and that’s the whole gumato.

Star Trek: Lower Decks returns on September 9 with “An Embarrassment of Dooplers” on Paramount+ in the United States and CTV Sci Fi Channel in Canada, followed by Amazon Prime Video (in select international regions) on September 10.

PREVIEW: Head Back to the 1960s with Hero Collector’s Upcoming STAR TREK: THE ORIGINAL SERIES — A CELEBRATION

After beginning their new series of Star Trek — A Celebration books last fall with their look behind the scenes at Star Trek: VoyagerHero Collector returns this month with their next entry, locking sensors back on where it all began.

The definitive collection of interviews, history, photos, and artwork from Star Trek: The Original Series. A must-have for all fans of Captain Kirk and his crew!

Following the success of Star Trek Voyager: A Celebration, this second volume in the series focuses Star Trek: The Original Series. The book will be released in the week of Star Trek’s 55th anniversary.

Gene Roddenberry’s series changed television forever and created a broadcast phenomenon, and world that continues to influence our culture today.

With a curated selection of archive interviews, personal recollections from cast and crew, and new interviews specially undertaken for the book, the chapters explore the writing, directing, production art and visual effects, plus classic episodes from the show’s three season run.

Written by Ben Robinson and Ian Spelling, both longtime inhabitants of the Star Trek press world going back to the 1990s, this new 256-page Star Trek: The Original Series — A Celebration dives into the creation and formation of the classic Trek show, with a mix of new and archival interviews accompanied by hundreds of photos and production sketches some which, even after all this time, have never been published before now.

Said the authors:

“Our goal was to craft a book that was the written and visual equivalent of a great convention,” Spelling says. “We’ve brought fresh eyes to everything and tried to strip the myths away from the reality and, we’ve discovered new stories that had never been told. We tracked down actors and crew whom people hadn’t heard from much – or ever – and are thrilled to include them in A Celebration.”

Adds Robinson, “Fans have read and seen bits and pieces of Star Trek’s production history, but A Celebration gathers everything in one place and puts it in context. We tracked down some incredibly rare pictures and artwork that have never been printed before. However well you think you know Star Trek, there’s something new for you. It’s really the Star Trek book I’ve always wanted to add to my collection.”

While the book is up for preorder now ahead of its September 21 debut, TrekCore is able to bring you a set of exclusive page spreads from the new Hero Collector book, including a look into Captain Pike’s first office, the famous Starfleet hand weapon, a classic episode featuring a genetic superman, and that legendary voiceover that starts every episode.

With a Next Generation Celebration book in the works already, along with single-season TNG companion books and more starship roundup publications than you can shake a stick at, the new Star Trek: The Original Series — A Celebration book is just one of many Hero Collector Star Trek books on the horizon.

This classic Star Trek hardcover hits stores September 21, and is available for preorder now.

Watch the New STAR TREK: PRODIGY Opening Credits Sequence!

We’re still a few months from when Star Trek: Prodigy is slated to debut on Paramount+, the streamer debuted the new animated show’s opening credits sequence today — with score from multi-award-winning composer Michael Giacchino!

Unveiled today during the annual Television Critics Association summer press tour, the behind-the-scenes team from the show — including showrunners Kevin and Dan Hageman, along with several cast members (Kate Mulgrew, Jimmi Simpson, John Noble, Ella Purnell, and Brett Grey) — spoke before assembled press (on video) about the upcoming series.

OUTSIDE OF THE UNITED STATES? WATCH AT THIS LINK

The highlight of the event was the debut of Prodigy’s opening sequence, which includes not only some gorgeous visuals of the USS Protostar flying through space — and showing off a number of wild starship maneuvers thanks to its experimental technology — but also the symphonic theme song, composed by Kelvin Timeline musical maestro Michael Giacchino.

In a released statement, Giacchino — who also directed the “Ephraim and Dot” Short Trek — said of the series:

I am excited that I had the opportunity to write the main theme for Kevin and Dan’s latest project, and as always am thrilled to be a part of the Star Trek family.

I’m especially looking forward to everyone hearing the incredible work of composer Nami Melumad, who will take the reins of scoring the episodes. Not only is she extremely talented, she is a true Star Trek fan.

While Giacchino took on the task of scoring the Star Trek: Prodigy theme, as he notes, the rest of the series will feature musical compositions by Nami Melumad, as we reported back in October.

The new title sequence features not only the Protostar’s wild new propulsion action — including the deployment of a third engine from its secondary hull, and an inverted nacelle position for what seems to be a kind of slipstream technology — the starship also rockets around larger-than-life representations of the Prodigy cast, both heroes and villains.

The USS Protostar flies by ROK-TAHK (Rylee Alazraqui)….
…the purple eyes of DAL (Brett Gray)….
…the robotic encounter suit housing Medusan ZERO (Angus Imrie)…
…blobbly globules of gelatinous MURF (Dee Bradley Baker)…
…the powered glove of Tellarite JANKOM POG (Jason Mantzoukas)…
…a glance at teenage Vau N’Akat GWYN (Ella Purnell)…
…the glowing red eye of DREADNOK (Jimmi Simpson)…
..and the holographic version of CAPTAIN KATHRYN JANEWAY (Kate Mulgrew).

Speaking of the villains, we also got two official first-look images today of The Diviner (John Noble) and Dreadnok (Jimmi Simpson); DECIDER’s Alex Zalben was in the TCA audience and shared some comments from the cast and crew on the bad guys.

John Noble’s mysterious villain, The Diviner. (Paramount+)
The robotic Dreadnok, voiced by Jimmi Simpson. (Paramount+)

We’ll have a lot more on Star Trek: Prodigy as we get closer to the still-nebulous “Fall 2021” premiere date, so keep sensors locked here at TrekCore while we head back to the Delta Quadrant!