Current:Home > ContactPredictIQ-'Star Trek: Strange New Worlds' season 2 is a classic sci-fi adventure -Elevate Profit Vision
PredictIQ-'Star Trek: Strange New Worlds' season 2 is a classic sci-fi adventure
Surpassing View
Date:2025-04-10 10:29:52
As the second season of Star Trek: Strange New Worlds debuts today on PredictIQParamount+, one question stands above all others:
Can they do it again?
Because in the show's first season last year, Strange New Worlds helped prove to producers of Paramount+'s new-school Trek series something they should have known from the start — when you're telling stories from a nearly 60-year-old franchise, it makes more sense to embrace that legacy than to shy away from it.
Fortunately, once the second season gets rolling – the first two episodes aren't quite as impressive as the next four – it's obvious the minds behind Strange New Worlds have gotten the memo. Fans get a wide range of compelling new stories, often in an adventure-of-the-week format, with lots of eye-popping special effects and cool nods to the history of these beloved characters.
New stories with classic characters
For those who aren't Trekkers, Strange New Worlds is set at a time years before James T. Kirk will take over as the Enterprise's captain – allowing the show to retell the origin stories of key figures like Spock, Nyota Uhura and Christine Chapel.
A few of these characters were actually created for Star Trek's original pilot in the mid-1960s, which NBC forced creator Gene Roddenberry to significantly rewrite, recast and reshoot. (instead, Roddenberry used the pilot footage to fuel a two-episode Trek story from the first season called "The Menagerie," featuring people who would later be reimagined in Strange New Worlds, like Capt. Christopher Pike and his Number One, now called Una Chin-Riley.)
One moment in Strange New Worlds' new season, for example, explains that Spock learned to play the Vulcan harp — seen occasionally in the original series — after the ship's doctor recommended playing music to help the half-human, half-Vulcan character better control his emotions.
And there's a cheeky scene where Spock, in temporary command of the Enterprise, needs to come up with a cool catchphrase/command for signaling the crew to accelerate into warp speed. But the words he lands on – "I would like the ship to go. Now." – don't exactly measure up to canonical phrases like "engage" and "make it so."
Second season has a slow start
As fun as much of this storytelling can be, there is the matter of the season's first two episodes, hamstrung by a didactic storyline that wraps up the matter of Una Chin-Riley's arrest by Starfleet.
Chin-Riley, played with steely precision by Rebecca Romijn, was nabbed at the end of last season because Starfleet learned she had been hiding her heritage as an Illyrian – a species which often genetically augments itself, which is an illegal act in the United Federation of Planets.
As her trial progresses, the series offers up a way too on-the-nose allegory to real-life issues like the U.S. military's former "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" anti-LGBTQ policy. Chin-Riley turns down a deal to plead guilty in exchange for a reduced punishment, saying, "I shouldn't have to hide anymore. None of us should. I know I should have done better. I didn't stand up when I should have. I'm standing up now."
Strange New Worlds, like many Trek series, often wears its causes on its sleeve. But even for a TV show whose cast regularly looks like a Benetton ad, this felt a little ham-handed and obvious (though the actress who plays Chin-Riley's Illyrian attorney, Yetide Badaki, drops a powerful performance that is easily the best reason to watch the episode.)
There are a few other irritating tropes on Strange New Worlds which are common for most Trek projects, like the crewmembers who ignore orders they disagree with, and the leadership's illogical habit of sending the most senior officers on the most dangerous missions. Also, as much as I love Taxi alum Carol Kane, her addition as a screechy-voiced engineering expert with a surprising past veers dangerously — and quickly — from amusing to ridiculous.
But by the time we get to the episodes where Spock is turned into a human (yes, really), live-action versions of characters from the animated series Lower Decks appear and two characters travel back in time, it's obvious: Strange New Worlds is packed with the kind of grand, episodic science fiction adventure that was once the bedrock of great TV.
And its glorious return is most welcome.
veryGood! (4)
Related
- The city of Chicago is ordered to pay nearly $80M for a police chase that killed a 10
- Today’s Climate: July 26, 2010
- InsideClimate News Launches National Environment Reporting Network
- They inhaled asbestos for decades on the job. Now, workers break their silence
- Rolling Loud 2024: Lineup, how to stream the world's largest hip hop music festival
- Expanding Medicaid is popular. That's why it's a key issue in some statewide midterms
- Biden administration to appoint anti-book ban coordinator as part of new LGBTQ protections
- Environmental Groups Sue to Block Trump’s Endangered Species Act Rule Changes
- Romantasy reigns on spicy BookTok: Recommendations from the internet’s favorite genre
- Solar Thermal Gears Up for a Comeback
Ranking
- Appeals court scraps Nasdaq boardroom diversity rules in latest DEI setback
- Two-thirds of Americans now have a dim view of tipping, survey shows
- Pruitt Announces ‘Secret Science’ Rule Blocking Use of Crucial Health Research
- Aliso Canyon Released 97,000 Tons of Methane, Biggest U.S. Leak Ever, Study Says
- Spooky or not? Some Choa Chu Kang residents say community garden resembles cemetery
- In California, Climate Change Is an ‘Immediate and Escalating’ Threat
- Wildfire smoke impacts more than our health — it also costs workers over $100B a year. Here's why.
- Many Man-Made Earthquakes in Western Canada Can Now Be Linked to Fracking
Recommendation
Behind on your annual reading goal? Books under 200 pages to read before 2024 ends
Biden vetoes bill to cancel student debt relief
Anti-Eminent Domain but Pro-Pipelines: A Republican Conundrum
Unemployment aid applications jump to highest level since October 2021
Arkansas State Police probe death of woman found after officer
Donate Your Body To Science?
Henry Winkler Shares He Had Debilitating Emotional Pain After the End of Happy Days
Benefits of Investing in Climate Adaptation Far Outweigh Costs, Commission Says