
Pike (disguised as an Eldredth) and Spock (his Eldredth disguise failed)
Strange New Worlds
Series: | Star Trek: Strange New Worlds |
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Episode Number: | 101 |
Production Number: | 103 |
Original Air Date: | |
Directed By: | Akiva Goldsman |
Written By: | Akiva Goldsman, Alex Kurtzman, and Jenny Lumet |
The series premiere of Star Trek: Strange New Worlds picks up shortly after the point where season 2 of Star Trek: Discovery leaves off. The Enterprise is undergoing repairs and Captain Pike is taking some leave to come to grips with the glimpse of the future he got from the time crystal. His self-imposed exile is cut short when his Number 1, Commander Una Chin-Riley has gone missing while on a first contact mission.
Casting Type | Actor | Character |
---|---|---|
Recurring | Adrian Holmes | Robert April |
Recurring | Dan Jeannotte | George Samuel Kirk |
Recurring | Gia Sandhu | T'Pring |
Recurring | Melanie Scrofano | Marie Batel |
Guest Star | Samantha Smith | Eldredth Leader |
Opening with a voiceover from Commander Una Chin-Riley, which we later learn came from her last received mission log before she was declared missing, we quickly learn that this is going to be a first contact storyline.
In Bear Creek, Montana, Captain Pike ignores the perpetual beeping of his communicator as he enjoys a romantic breakfast with Captain Batel and watches The Day the Earth Stood Still on a television set. Later while riding his horse through a snow-covered landscape, the horse is frightened by the landing of a shuttle bearing Admiral Robert April. April informs Pike that Una has gone missing, and Pike and the Enterprise are being reactivated to find out what went wrong with Una's first contact mission and rescue her and the rest of the team.
We next see Spock and T'Pring getting engaged and preparing to consummate their new engagement when Pike calls
"Spock... are you naked?"
"No, captain."
"No, Chris. He's not. He was about to be. It's a special night."
"...Sorry."- Pike, contacting Spock on Vulcan while he was about to make love with T'Pring
Pike and Spock return to the Enterprise (following an obligatory "ship-porn" scene where Pike arrives at the repaired Enterprise on the shuttle Stamets (presumably named after Paul Stemets from the Discovery, though this is never confirmed).
We are introduced to the rest of the main crew and the ship heads to Kiley 279 to find out what happened to the U.S.S. Archer (almost certainly named after Jonathan Archer from Star Trek: Enterprise) and the team led by Una who has gone missing. Whenever he has a moment to think, Pike is haunted by memories of the future of himself in the beep chair he saw in Discovery season 2.
As the Enterprise drops out of warp, they find the Archer's transponder ping, but there is no subspace chatter at all. Very strange for a civilization that had apparently just achieved warp drive. The ship is intact and functional, but there are no life signs on the ship, and no bodies either. As the Enterprise approaches the planet, they are attacked by plasma torpedoes, but fortunately, La'an's quick thinking prevents any damage.
After further analysis, Spock determines that this civilization had not created a warp drive for exploration, they had instead created a warp bomb for destruction. They are able to roughly locate the crew of the Archer on the planet but radiation makes it impossible to simply beam them up.
So Archer, Pike, and La'an head to sickbay to have their genes messed with to turn them into matches for the inhabitants of the planet but there is a foreshadowing warning that the treatment may not last very long on Spock.
The team beams down and locates the building where their people are being held, there are some shenanigans on the ship as Nurse Chapel realizes that the treatment is not going to last long for Spock and they beam a treatment into his eye so that he can use a retinal scanner to access a facility, and they locate their missing crew.
Here Una reveals that the reason this species developed warp technology at all was because this planet is close enough to where the battle at the end of season 2 of Star Trek: Discovery happened that the scientists were able to reverse engineer warp technology from readings they took of what lit up the night sky. Not being ready to join the galaxy, they applied this advance in technology towards weapons development instead of exploration.
Realizing that General Order 1 had already been irreparably broken, Pike decides to show himself to the people of this planet and try to convince them not to use this technology they reverse-engineered to blow themselves up. He reveals himself and Spock to the leaders of the faction that had created the bomb, who refuses to stop the project. Pike decides to reveal the Enterprise to the entire planet by bringing it down into the atmosphere, but even that doesn't convince the leadership of the Eldredth
After a conversation with La'an back on the ship where she reveals her tragic backstory involving the Gorn, Pike returns to the planet and gives a passionate speech about how 20th and 21st century Earth nearly destroyed itself in the Eugenics Wars, Second Civil War, and World War III. While speaking he presents a slide show of videos, including both some videos created for the show, but also some real and recent video clips including some footage from the BLM Riots and the January 6th Insurrection.
A montage sequence implies that at least the masses got the message and intend on seeking peace, but it is left somewhat ambiguous if the governments of the planet will.
Enterprise returns to Starbase 1 where Pike and Una meet with Admiral April. April asks Pike if he is ready to return to active duty, and he smiles as we are cut to his Captain's Log
"Captain's log, stardate 2259.42. Earth – the dust and the sky – is my hearth. but Enterprise is my home. We can forward together, knowing that whatever shadows we bring with us, they make the light all the brighter. I am... a lucky man."
Aboard the Enterprise, Pike meets with Lieutenant George Kirk before giving a brief speech to the bridge crew including a segment of the famous Trek opening sequence, which Uhura finds "cool." We end with Pike ordering Ortegas to take them out, warp factor 2.
Strange New Worlds starts strong with this episode that both continues Pike's story arc from Star Trek: Discovery, establishes new characters, and gives a strong anti-war message in line with the great Star Trek messages of the past.
Some may take issue with literally showing footage from January 6th, but it really helps to drive the message home. I remember when I watched this for the first time the moment I saw that bit of footage under Pike's rousing speech, I felt it in my chest. Rewatching it again now ahead of Season 3, it hit just as hard.
The chemistry of the primary cast is fantastic and right from the beginning we get to see bits of the threads being laid down that will become halmarks of the show going forward.
Anson Mount is just as charismatic and charming as Pike here as he was on Discovery.
I think the lingering on his impending doom may have gone on a little too long here, but it is important, particularly for people who may not have watched Discovery to understand his pain, and to their credit, they don't spend a tremendous amount of time retreading.
On a Rating Scale based on Starfleet Ranks, I rate this episode at "Commander" a very solid episode.
HD3 Episode Rank:
Commander (A Tier)