‘Star Trek: Picard’ Review: Season 1 Finale Inspires Many Questions, Little Emotion
The “Star Trek: Picard” Season 1 finale is not a scream into the void but an incoherent gurgle. Here are 45 questions we have about this ghastly episode.
The “Star Trek: Picard” Season 1 finale is not a scream into the void but an incoherent gurgle. Here are 45 questions we have about this ghastly episode.
Exclusive: “Fear is an incompetent teacher,” Picard says in a clip from the season finale that especially resonates at this troubled moment.
“Et in Arcadia Ego, Part 1” is vintage “Trek,” and inspires questions about whether a new character is really Data’s evil brother Lore.
“Broken Pieces” has solid dialogue and character moments but is mostly table-setting.
In an interview with IndieWire, Chabon and Jonathan Del Arco talk about how “you can never go home again.”
This is an episode that conjures the feeling of “Star Trek” past while still forging a bold new path for the franchise’s future.
Picard reunites with Hugh, and all that intrigue with Soji and the Romulans finally boils over.
Supervising producer Kirsten Beyer talks about the difficulty of writing Jeri Ryan’s Seven of Nine 20 years later in the character’s story.
‘Stardust City Rag’ is a lean, mean episode — one more violent than any ‘Trek’ has ever been. And it mostly justifies it.
It’s been over 17 years since we last saw the beloved captain — and so much has changed even diehard Trekkies might be confused.
Captain Jean-Luc Picard is back! The CBS All Access series sends the retired captain on a return trip to space. And that’s pretty much it.