Showing posts with label PIC Season 2. Show all posts
Showing posts with label PIC Season 2. Show all posts

Monday, 30 January 2023

Annie Wersching 1977 - 2023


Seemingly out of the blue, the Star Trek Universe has lost one of its most recent additions to the family.

Perhaps as widely recognised for her roles in 24 and Bosch, Annie Wersching may well remain as one of fandom's best parts of Picard's second season. But at the age of just 45, the actress has sadly lost her battle with cancer.

As the third and most recent incarnation of the Borg Queen, Wersching was a key element of the story with her social media feeds full of shots from her time on Picard. Indeed, Wersching was becoming something of a staple of conventions in 2022 however her online activity seems to have slowed in August of last year. Indeed, it seems that she kept her diagnosis - confirmed in 2020 - very private. Already there is a GoFundMe campaign which has raised $135,000 to help support her three children following Annie's death.

Breaking out thanks to her role as Agent Renee Walker in the groundbreaking 24, Wersching had an active onscreen career as well as voice acting in the game The Last of Us which has recently been converted into a series in itself.

Fans of Star Trek may not remember that Wersching actually first appeared in Enterprise back in it's first season episode Oasis alongside the late Rene Auberjonois.

Some Kind of Star Trek offers its condolences to her family at this sad time. 

Sunday, 10 July 2022

Picard S2: As Divisive as Before


Let’s get it out there to begin with. Picard season two was not perfect. Nor was season one but in many respects this second stint in the adventures of Admiral Jean-Luc marked a definite upturn - but in what precisely?

Choosing to utilise two of Trek's favourite things - time travel and Q, Picard jumped back into the 21st Century in a much more personal adventure than before.

It all started out with a bang and the return of the Borg, facing off against an assembled fleet of assorted Starfleet classes. This immediately made up for last season's copy-and-paste fleet of Inquiry Class vessels. Could season two actually be making headway and raise the fairly average height bar?

Setting up both this and Picard's family dilemma, the early part of the ten episode run took viewers into a parallel totalitarian Earth changed by a single event in the past. Certainly a new twist on the old Mirror Universe trope, the alternative path crammed a lot into its single hour of the show but it did bring us possibly the best Borg Queen to date.

Annie Wersching was perfectly cast in the role of a more speculative monarch and one torn from the collective by the galaxy conquering General Picard. A universe where the Borg were defeated and it's not good? An interesting concept if nothing else.  Wersching proved to be the perfect foil not for Patrick Stewart as we might have expected but for Alison Pill's Jurati. The use of the Borg Queen as a devil on her shoulder through the time in the 21st Century was rather chilling as she began to consume the doctor.

Jurati and the Borg Queen's relationship does take up a big swig of the ten episode run. The verbal sparring which leads to a standoff and unfortunate assimilation. Ok, it leads to what we would suspect is a break away Borg faction (lot of speculation in this season as to what things lead to...) and Pill leaving the main cast but it gives her an explosive and memorable arc in which to do so. Many will remember her for the red dress, singing Pat Benatar or being the Big Reveal but for me Jurati was the stand out character across the season, garnering the best screen time and perfectly partnered for a good chunk of it with Queen Wersching.

Tasked with investigating the 21st Century, Seven and Raffi continue some good hearted banter and relationship quibbles as they look for clues and also for Rios.

In a plotline that's been done over numerous times and certainly fits with Trek's choice to target current issues it's on the nose around illegal immigrants. For Star Trek though it used to be about subtlety and prodding these subjects in a much less conspicuous manner. Perhaps a sign of the times but it is quite heavy-handed in retrospect. Santiago Cabrera is great and at least Rios does have an arc this season  which isn't something that fits for Seven or Raffi. Bear with on this one.

While both the main story and the second line that follows Rios and his ultimate decision to remain in the 21st Century do have a clear path, the third line that traces Adam Soong's genetics work and "final" daughter, Kore does work on its own but it has zero payoff for the main threads. 

Yes, it manages to return Isa Briones to Picard as another Soong relative but it seems almost tacked in. None of the main characters interact with her and while the surprise cameo in the finale was more than welcome it doesn't quite make sense as to why the Watchers would choose to take her out of her time. Theoretically her disappearance would be realised by Adam Soong alone but I was surprised that it didn't play a more integral part to the story. Wil Wheaton's return did manage to raise an "Oh my f**king god" reaction because it was well worth including and seeing the being formally known as Wesley Crusher one more time.

So that's my issue in that this season has some really great, strong story threads but then when you combine them it all sort of falls apart a bit in terms of the bigger picture. The Rios story for one twists and turns with car chases, prison breaks, a more than inconspicuous nod to the US immigration policy and all the while you can't help but think this is just a way to take Santiago Cabrera out of the show. Spoiler; it's exactly that.

Of all the cast short-changed this season I did feel that Jeri Ryan got a short straw. Aside from losing the Borg implants following their sideways step into a universe where Annika was President, Ryan had very little to do until virtually the last scene of the season. Watch back when the crew are discussing Talinn's plan to jump into Picard's mind and Seven stands in the background and says not a single word for the whole of that piece. In some ways you can understand why there has been a slimming down of the cast ahead of the TNG reunion for season three.

Orla Brady's Tallinn and Laris roles are highlights of the season and bringing the actress more to the fore than she was allowed in season one. Tallinn is a bit of a plot device but does tie into the larger Trek mythology as does the brief return of another canon character almost at the very close of the season.

The big focus of the season though comes down to Q's fixation with Jean-Luc leading to the universe jump and then journey back to the 21st Century. Offering a chance for the admiral to get to know himself a little better, the concept that one of his relatives had to be on the mission to Europa does seem like a crucial moment in franchise timeline history but would she really have got this far in the programme with doubts this obvious?

Penelope Mitchell does a good job as the troubled astronaut and at least by the end there's the realisation that if she didn't complete the mission then Adam Soong's line of work would have taken precedent (for note there's a statue of him in the alternative 24th Century which is a massive clue in hindsight).

But there's more to this than a distant relative because Jean-Luc is obsessing over his own childhood at the chateau. This season chose to base itself around the Picard family estate and it uncovers a lot more than a few layers of dust. Why this only rears its head now when he's been back there for years is anyone's guess but the choice to cover mental health is hit and miss at best.

Played by Madeline Wise, the character of Yvette Picard initially scopes as a loving mother but there's mental fragility that the series explores but perhaps handles heavy-handedly on occasion, especially at its tragic end. Should there have been a warning of what was the season's most graphic piece of content? Maybe and I guess that depends on your perspective but it certainly shocked which you would hope it would given where it can lead if not handled carefully.

Now, knowing a little of Patrick Stewart's background, this mental health story may well have been borne from his mind although the father figure, played here by Battlestar Galactica's James Callis, is a more kindly figure than Stewart has described. His solution to Yvette's illness isn't what you would expect given the importance society places on such issues now let alone in the future.

It's also an odd season because there's no point I would say that there was a standout episode. I could rank all ten in order of preference but there's none that stand out more than the first and the last (maybe the alt-universe one too). Even in the middle there was a lot to like even if it was, on the other side, inconsistent and went from breakneck to dead stop at an odd rate.. There was a touch of humour, some great action  

Flashing back to an earlier piece I put together hurriedly at the beginning of the season, Picard has brought a real breath of fresh air to the franchise for me. I was missing the craziness of Lower Decks and the unexpected genius that is Prodigy. Discovery has tried to step up but each of the subsequent series have taken the lead and run with it. Even Discovery spin-off Strange New Worlds is a class unto itself and I can only see it becoming stronger.

Picard's second season did indeed feel like the intended homage to The Voyage Home but upped the ante. While that movie was played for a lot of laughs and lightness after the doom and gloom of The Wrath of Khan and The Search for Spock, this run of ten episodes hasn't shied away from both real world events and the darkness that previous generations have sprinkled into the timeline especially the 21st Century.

Season two does just have that bit of everything though. For the TOS fan we have the return of the Watchers first revealed in Assignment: Earth with Gary Seven, numerous Easter Eggs back to The City on the Edge of Forever in the set dressings. With TNG there's the well publicised return of Guinan played by both returning Whoopi Goldberg and newcomer to the franchise, Ito Aghayere who is superbly cast in the role. Importantly Guinan's return isn't stupidly overplayed with her only included at necessary points in the story rather than fully tagging along for the show.

OK, Picard worked for me at a "dark time" in my relationship with Star Trek and for a lot of people it just didn't and I can respect that just in the same way that I would hope others would respect my opinion that it was good enjoyable fun. One thing I would absolutely say that the season blew out of the park was Q's final scene with Picard. Season one's send off to Data was excellent after such an up-and-down year but with Q it went straight for the emotions and my god did it work. Best scene of the season, best scene of the show and possibly, maybe, the best scene of the Kurtzman era. What smarts is the fact it doesn't come from the best show of our present age. 

Picard always feels as though it's got a great idea but in the execution it just gets muddled in the middle. Season two starts strong with loads of prospects. There's the Borg, new ships, alternate times but then the 21st Century feels a bit bulked out. The Renee Picard story is high stakes but it never reaches the heights of tension and excitement that you would want. Guinan's role is inconsistent and we have almost a whole episode of interrogation by a "rogue" police officer that adds nothing to the plot and has no long lasting effect. Even the officer's flashback is pointless to the overall season.

But I still enjoyed it even though there were bloated moments of nonsense. At least it all came back round to the Borg arrival at the beginning. The problem there is that it makes you question the justification for Q to send Picard and co through time in the first place. What actually is the point to the adventure? What's the reasoning or sending them all over the place?

Maybe on a re-watch things will become clearer as they did when I sat down for a second viewing of the first ten episodes. With the knowledge of what is to come for season three, season two does come across as a hurried cut off for several of the show's characters to make way for the TNG cast. Is this a chance for a better send off than Nemesis or a cheap shot to grab at an audience that has, according to social media, had serous issues with where the show has gone so far?

The final batch will answer that definitively but for now Picard's second season lies in a pool of mediocrity that many hoped it wouldn't. I'll keep with my view that it was entertaining but there's a concrete fact it's not where fans would have wanted it.

Where's your head at after season two? Has it changed on a binge/rewatch?

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Monday, 21 March 2022

Restoring the Faith


The last few months have been some of my most trying when it comes to the Star Trek franchise.

Personal issues plus some challenges within the fan community brought my love for Trek into serious scrutiny. A change in jobs has meant a lot more travel time but provides the benefit of added family time at weekends.

Yes, that's meant less time to write for SKoST and so reviews have been a little difficult to keep up with. Fear not, normal service will resume but possibly at a reduced rate. 

Anyhow, I really, really struggled to get excited about Star Trek. Perhaps personal overkill, maybe just way too heavy immersion and effort on related projects but I had to stop. So I did and fairly abruptly which likely pissed a lot of people off. If it did and you were one of those, I apologise but it had to happen and while I won't lay my soul open here I hope you can understand my decisions.

So I did walk away for a while. There were a couple of reviews sprinkled in but the effort and the will just weren't behind them. For that, my apologies. Even the wonderful Prodigy didn't seem to lift my Trek spirits and the current season of Discovery felt as though it was dragging by the midpoint. Was I bothered about the 10-C? Did it feel like another Anomaly of the Season? Totally did. At least with the animated Prodigy it felt as though there was some form of closure to the first ten episodes. 

Prodigy was better than I expected. The plot, the characters; I actually connected with the show and it's links into Voyager were a big win. A Moral Star was a brilliant closer with everything you could want - except for it being live action. For a kids show the ending wasn't 100% positive

So what has changed? What's reignited my flame? 

Picard.

While Strange New Worlds' trailer might have shot the series in the foot before its even off the ground, Picard's trailers have teased something... spectacular. A supposed homage to The Voyage Home combined with more modern Star Trek elements, season two offered hope for the future of the franchise.

Only two episodes in (The Star Gazer and Penance) and it has delivered in blazing fashion. I would even go as far as to say that this is already building up to be the best season of Kurtzman-era Star Trek to date.

But why?

The anticipation was certainly a factor as was the chance to see Q and Guinan back on the screen after almost two decades but Picard's second season has importantly learned from the fan reaction to season one. Now that's something that does actually bear up better on a binge watch and aside from space flowers I can't pick too many faults. But let's hold that debate for another time.

Season two feels more tightly written. The choice to skip 18 months has brought Starfleet back into the picture more and that initially seems to have helped the show regain more of its Star Trek qualities. Maybe that's a very superficial change yet having the USS Stargazer, that expanded fleet of multiple ship types, Raffi and Rios back in uniform - it all makes a massive difference to the ambience of the series. No more copy and paste Inquiry Class fleet and the images we've seen off the back of it are simply gorgeous and make rather superb PC wallpapers.

I digress. Admittedly there's an anomaly in episode one and I did kind of start to apply the brakes however get past that and this season is clearly about the characters, Picard's choices in life, the drama of a changed historic event and Annie Wersching's amazing portrayal of the silenced, lonely Borg Queen. 

Robo-Picard doesn't feel as angry this year. Demons seem to have been exercised and he's at peace at least until a beautifully unhinged Q turns up. Picard never hit him but the boot is on the other foot this time. This is probably De Lancie's best performance as the omnipotent creation since Death Wish and to see this darker side of Q is addictive to relish.

Not since Q Who have the Borg and Q appeared in the same episode nor has the latter been as devilish in any way since that encounter back in TNG's second season.

An alternative take on reality is always going to be a winner and whatever Q's motivation s behind changing the past might be, the journey to see this adventure though looks to be touting itself as one of Star Trek's finest...possibly ever.  There's a familiarity here, a warmth to the series and a great sense of drama that Discovery just doesn't seem to be carrying at the moment. 

A significant win for Picard in relation to its characters is that their "wokeness" is not the selling point. There's no "Look at Me I'm X, Y or Z" and instead the characters exist in their own right not because of a certain thing and might, in turn by X, Y or Z. Picard is dealing with situations and allowing its characters to evolve because of the things they encounter not in spite of them. Discovery might take a look and learn a few things - and it's not all down to one person winning the day. Looking at you, Michael.

But I don't want to dwell on that since it gets into all sorts of discussions and to be fair I have nothing against Discovery, but it's just not satisfying my Star Trek cravings at the moment. 

The Star Gazer truly felt cinematic at points - the arrival at the rift, the attack on the bridge and also managed to max out on suspense with the return of those classic canon characters. Season two feels right. There's action and adventure but at the centre is a recognisable cast  facing a new challenge. Even Penance stepped up the game with its transition into the new take on the timeline and the return of the Borg Queen. There is a conspicuous absence of Isa Briones (Soji) after her turn in episode one and dare I say it the series benefits from that slight reduction in cast size with Seven effectively taking her place in the ensemble.

I have a renewed sense of anticipation for the next episode of Picard and what it will hold. The trailers tell us it will be in the 21st Century (2024) and already there are some more humorous tones that have helped shape the season. Even the suggestion of a potential romance between Picard and Laris proved to be a highlight and we know that Orla Brady will be back.

Picard has stepped up to the plate in rather impressive style in just two episodes and I for one am very happy to see the change in tone. Just a shame we know it's only going to last three seasons in total.

For now Jean-Luc and his associates have lifted the bar of standards and expectations for the franchise in its latest incarnation. Looks like there's strong hope for it still and at least 18 more episodes of PIcard to keep us entertained.

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