thanks to a series of movies starting with 1979's "Star Trek: The Motion Picture." A total of 13 "Star Trek" movies were released in theaters, but it's been eight years since the most recent film ...
Start with Star Trek movies for an easier introduction due to shorter runtimes. Star Trek: The Motion Picture has aged well and serves as a great entry point. Star Trek (2009) explores an ...
After the previous three Star Trek series put William Shatner, Patrick Stewart, and Avery Brooks in the leading roles, Voyager featured a female captain: Elizabeth Janeway. Actress Geneviève ...
"Star Trek" fans have endured some turbulent treatment over the past decade or so with the dizzying array of feature films, animated shows, and live-action TV series hopping around the franchise's ...
The Oscar-winning actress reprises her role from 'Star Trek: Discovery' in the franchise's first non-theatrical film. By Frank Scheck Scientists say that our universe is constantly expanding.
Star Trek might be a franchise about humanity overcoming its divisions and working together for the common good, but Star Trek fans remain divided on almost everything. And no question breaks the ...
including a Deltan Section 31 member (a la Persis Khambata’s character in “Star Trek: The Motion Picture”) and a half-black, half-white Cheronian first seen in the original “Star Trek ...
Answers range from a rabid fan base that kept Star Trek alive after its second season to a network putting support behind a recognizable IP. But the truth is far more simple: Star Trek ...
Section 31 will infuriate Star Trek fans and bore everyone else. Even with the golden opportunity to play interplanetary outlaws, none of the cast (except Richardson) are anything but annoying.
the Next Generation crew graduated to full-on movie star status with 1994's "Star Trek: Generations". But as Jean-Luc and co got busy meeting Starfleet royalty (hello, James T Kirk) and smashing ...
Star Trek: Section 31 doesn't know what it wants to be. Is it a serious exploration of the criminal underbelly, a camp throwback to the noughties, or a tonally off combination of the two?