Showing posts with label cbs all access. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cbs all access. Show all posts

Tuesday, 3 May 2022

STAR TREK: STRANGE NEW WORLDS & HALO hitting British and Irish television in June

Paramount+ has confirmed its launch date in the UK and Republic of Ireland: 22 June. The service will launch both as a stand-alone service and also as part of a Sky Cinema subscription.


The launch roster for the channel will include Star Trek: Strange New Worlds, Halo, City on a Hill and The Man Who Fell to Earth. Legacy shows that were formerly on other services will also transfer over, including Star Trek: Discovery, Billions and Yellowjackets.

The stand-alone subscription will be a reasonable £6.99 with the first seven days free, significantly cheaper than Netflix and slightly more expensive than Apple TV+. Pricing for the Republic of Ireland has not yet been confirmed.

The launch date does leave UK and RoI SF fans holding out for Halo (which began airing in the US on 24 March) and Strange New Worlds (which launches this week) some considerable amount of time behind the curve, which is likely to drive up piracy in the meantime.

There have been complaints about the addition of yet another streaming service to the roster. The UK and Ireland currently enjoy using Netflix, Amazon Prime TV, Disney+, NowTV, BritBox and Apple TV+ (alongside the free, homegrown BBC iPlayer and All 4). This isn't as bad as the US, which has several more options (including Paramount+, Peacock and Hulu), but is getting up there. With the recent, significant cost of living increases, viewers are getting choosier about what platforms to keep using and which to drop. It'll be interesting to see if Paramount+ can pick up a significant UK viewer base.

Monday, 5 April 2021

Paramount+ drops a ton of STAR TREK news

Paramount+ - the revamped version of CBS All Access - have dropped a motherlode of news about the upcoming Star Trek seasons via Twitter. There's a lot to unpack here.


First up, Paramount and Nickelodeon have unveiled the look for Kathryn Janeway in Star Trek: Prodigy. They also confirmed that Janeway herself is not appearing in the show. Instead, it turns out that Janeway is the face of Starfleet's Emergency Training Hologram, used to help civilians pilot a Federation starship if the crew are incapacitated. They also revealed that Star Trek: Prodigy takes place in 2383, five years after the USS Voyager returns to Federation space, but will be set in the Delta Quadrant, raising interesting questions about how the Federation starship (presumably the USS Prodigy) central to the story ended up there. We still don't have an air date for Prodigy, although it was originally targeting a mid-2021 release.

Second up, Star Trek: Lower Decks Season 2 will air in August this year and will see a return for Jonathan Frakes as Captain William Riker of the USS Titan, although given how Season 1 ended, that's not a major surprise. The producers have also confirmed that Lower Decks has been renewed for a third season, presumably to air in 2022. The trailer also indicates that at one point the team gets to pilot a Miranda-class starship (think of the USS Reliant or Saratoga).

Next, Star Trek: Discovery Season 4 (which wraps shooting soon) has a shiny new trailer and confirmation of a 2021 air date, probably in the autumn.

Finally, Star Trek: Picard Season 2 also has a new trailer and confirmation of a 2022 debut. Tantalisingly, the trailer (and a separate tweet) confirms the return of John de Lancie as Q in live-action. Q had a brief cameo appearance in Lower Decks but it's good to see him return to test his wits against Picard as well.

Monday, 8 March 2021

Paramount puts yet another STAR TREK movie into development

Paramount Pictures has put another Star Trek film script into development, the fourth in as many years, as the studio attempts to resurrect the movie franchise after a successful television relaunch.

A question Paramount have been struggling with is whether to continue the "Kelvin Timeline" of the J.J. Abrams-produced trilogy of Star Trek (2009), Star Trek Into Darkness (2013) and Star Trek Beyond (2016), or to take a different tack. Paramount's recent re-merger with CBS also grants them access to the characters and designs from the relaunched Star Trek television universe, and indeed the original shows as well.

A fourth film in the Kelvin Timeline, featuring Chris Pine, Zachary Quinto etc reprising their roles, was developed for some time with S.J. Clarkson tapped to direct. The script reportedly involved time travel that would reunite Pine's younger Captain Kirk with his father, played by Chris Hemsworth. The project stalled due to budget problems and Pine and Hemsworth (who have both become much bigger stars in the meantime) being unwilling to accept a lower pay grade for appearing in the film. Reportedly some of these issues later eased, with Pine apparently willing to come back on board, but by that point momentum behind the project had died.

Meanwhile, Quentin Tarantino joined the party with a view to developing a more adult Star Trek film, later suggesting his idea was a feature-length take on the original series episode A Piece of the Action, in which the Enterprise crew visit a planet that has become a pastiche of human gangster films. Tarantino developed the idea for a year or two before deciding against directing in favour of producing. Paramount's interest in the project seemed to evaporate once Tarantino decided not to direct, although officially it remains on the backburner.

Noah Hawley (Fargo, Legion) then joined the bandwagon and apparently developed a new idea set in the Trek universe featuring an original cast of characters (after some initial confusion suggesting his script might involve Pine's crew). Hawley and Paramount agreed to develop the idea but it also seems to have lost momentum.

The new script is being developed by Kalinda Vazquez, a veteran of Star Trek: Discovery, Fear the Walking Dead, Runaways, Once Upon a Time and Prison Break. Vazquez was even named after an alien character who appeared in the original Star Trek episode By Any Other Name. Vazquez is currently developing a TV series based on Roger Zelazny's novel Roadmarks for HBO, with George R.R. Martin producing.

The new film's content is unknown, but apparently it is a brand new idea not related to any of the previous film scripts or ideas. It is unclear if the film would be set in the original "Prime Timeline" of the various TV series, or involve any of the characters from the shows Vazquez has worked on. However, it appears that J.J. Abrams' Bad Robot is producing, perhaps hinting at a return to Abrams' previous setting.

This is only a development deal and so far the film has not been formally greenlit. There is also no director attached at present.

The problems in getting a movie off the ground seem to stand in stark contrast with the success the franchise has had on television. Currently no less than five seasons of Star Trek are in simultaneous production, a record for the franchise: Season 1 of Prodigy, Season 2 of Lower Decks, Season 4 of Discovery, Season 2 of Picard and Season 1 of Strange New Worlds. Prodigy is due to launch this summer, whilst Season 2 of Lower Decks is due in late 2021. The other shows are expected to launch in 2022 (though there are some reports that Discovery's post-production is being accelerated to get it on air before the end of the year).

Thursday, 25 February 2021

Paramount reveals more information on STAR TREK's future on TV

On 4 March, US streaming service CBS All Access will be rebranded as Paramount+, a move that the company hopes will attract a swathe of new subscribers. The streamer is weaponising nostalgia on a formidable scale, recently announcing plans to reboot shows such as Frasier and Rugrats in an attempt to attract new (or old) viewers.


CBS All Access itself has enjoyed surprising success, wracking up 20 million subscribers in its first three years on air (reportedly a target the streamer had not expected to reach until several years later). Although not troubling the likes of Netflix (who have more than 100 million more subscribers), it's an impressive performance for a service with a limited roster of shows only available in the United States. Much of this success has been credited to the Star Trek franchise: every legacy episode  of the original series and spin-offs is on the service, along with new shows Discovery, Picard and Lower Decks, and the forthcoming Prodigy and Strange New Worlds.

The Star Trek team, led by Alex Kurtzman, has also several more shows planned, with one announced: Section 31, to be headed by Michelle Yeoh. However, that series has been delayed several times, reportedly being gazumped in the production schedule by Strange New Worlds. In a new interview with Deadline, Kurtzman has confirmed that Section 31 is currently on hold pending one of the existing shows finishing. The feeling was that the fan hunger for Strange New Worlds was greater than for Section 31 (fan anticipation for which is, it has to be said almost non-existent).

In the same interview Kurtzman also confirms that they have decided that five is the sweet spot for Star Trek shows in simultaneous production, and will not bring in a new show until one of the current shows finishes. Discovery is currently shooting its fourth season, Picard and Lower Decks are both filming their second years and Strange New Worlds is just about to start shooting its debut season, whilst Prodigy is wrapping production on its first season ahead of an anticipated mid-2021 debut.

Intriguingly, Kurtzman also confirms that Picard has a relatively short shelf-life, determined by the availability and health of lead actor Patrick Stewart, who turns 81 this year. What that shelf-life is, is unclear, but it indicates that the plan might be to wrap that show after two or three seasons rather than it being an ongoing concern, as Discovery and Strange New Worlds are.

Kurtzman also indicates that will no MCU-style big crossover plans for the franchise, with the plan being to keep the shows separate for the time being.

The move may be part of a decision by Paramount - which re-merged with CBS last year after a decade of separate operations - not to put their eggs all in one basket. CBS All Access was seen as being too reliant on Star Trek fans, whilst the plan now seems to be to bring in other shows and franchises to help boost Paramount+'s success.

Star Trek: Prodigy, is the next show to debut on the streamer. A 3D-animated series aimed at a younger audience, the show will have the first-ever all-alien cast in Star Trek, and will see Kate Mulgrew reprise her role as Captain/Admiral Janeway from Star Trek: Voyager in a recurring role.

Friday, 8 January 2021

Star Trek: Discovery - Season 3

The USS Discovery has been propelled forwards to the 32nd Century as part of a move to hide important technical data that threatens their timeline. Upon arrival they discover that the galaxy is in ruins, the result of a disaster known as "the Burn" which made dilithium inert and thus destroying every ship with an active warp core at the time. The Federation has fallen from more than 350 member civilisations to a bare handful, and is facing a threat from a competing alliance known as the Emerald Chain, which believes in money, slavery and advancement through struggle, concepts the Federation left behind a millennia earlier. As the crew of the Discovery try to settle into this bleak new world, they realise their Spore Drive gives them the ability to do what no-one else has done before: to discover the origin of the Burn and help restore the Federation to its former glory.


The first two seasons of Star Trek: Discovery were an exercise in frustration: superb actors, occasionally really good ideas and tremendous production values constantly being let down by spotty plotting, nonsensical scripts and character arcs that we are often told are happening but of which we see little to no evidence on-screen.

Season 3 of Star Trek: Discovery is, unfortunately, more of the same, although it does emerge as probably the series' strongest season by a nose. It has a terrific setup, with the Discovery and its crew emerging into a genuine brave new world and having to find out what is going on, and some superb new production design, with the Federation and non-Federation starships of the 32nd Century being a battery of impressive, intriguing ideas, such as ships made of programmable matter which can switch size and shape in an instant which feel like they've come out of an Iain M. Banks novel.

Early episodes in the season include some of Discovery's best, bolstered by promising new additions to the cast such as David Ajala as Cleveland Booker and Blu del Barrio as Adira Tal. There's some genuinely interesting worldbuilding and it turns out that removing Discovery's previously grating tendency to contradict well-established Star Trek canon allows the show to breathe freer and more enjoyably. We even get some moments of genuine character development, such as Saru hosting a dinner for his bridge crew in which we get to see how what's happened has impacted on them. Such a scene would be de rigueur on an episode of The Next Generation or Deep Space Nine, but Discovery has so rarely bothered with such scenes that seeing one is genuinely surprising, and welcome.

By the latter half of the season, though, the show is starting to slip backwards to type. We get a lengthy new visit to the Mirror Universe which no-one asked for or wanted, and achieves little rather than making us remember that Michelle Yeoh's character is a mass, mass-murderer who still hasn't faced justice or redemption. The show then beams her off into her own spin-off series through the most contrived means possible. The three-part season finale is a morass of murky, confused CGI, confused character motivations that seem to contradict themselves from one scene to the next and wholly unearned praise and promotions. It does prove superior to the previous season finales though, particularly when the reason for the Burn is revealed not to be completely nonsensical and a few strong ideas are treated well (such as the notion of someone who's spent their entire life on the holodeck and doesn't understand what reality is).

The series does advance a few previous annoying tics and makes them even more grating: characters burst into tears several times an episode, often for no discernible reason; the audience is asked again to care about the departure of a regular bridge crewman despite that crewman receiving virtually no prior character development and mainly being a glorified extra (Commander Nhan what now?); some regular crewmembers vanish inexplicably mid-season without a trace (where did Lt. Nilsson go?); and some brand new crewmembers suddenly show up out of nowhere and are treated as if they've always been there (who is Lt. Ina and where did she come from?).

This season also features possibly the single most inexplicable shot in the 55-year history of the entire Star Trek franchise, when a battle takes place in a turbolift and it's revealed that the turbolifts are moving around some kind of weird, other-dimensional space which is considerably larger than the entirety of Discovery itself. Previous seasons had individual shots which were like this (including one on the Enterprise in Discovery Season 2) but they could be dismissed as one-off oddities, but this was a whole, extended action sequence taking place in this utterly surreal space. I have absolutely no idea what the hell was going on in this sequence or where it was taking place, since it clearly could not be on the ship (crewmen even point at a schematic of the turbolift system in the episode and it shows ordinary narrow tubes, as you'd expect).

An additional character oddity is Sonequa Martin-Green whispering half her lines for dramatic emphasis, something I don't remember her doing in previous seasons but now does continuously, which required constant volume adjustments because everyone else is speaking perfectly normally. As an acting choice that contradicts previous characterisation, this is the weirdest I've seen on television since Littlefinger started speaking with a Batman voice in Season 3 of Game of Thrones.

Against that, Season 3 of Discovery does a fair few things right. Doug Jones' spell as captain is superb, with him investing Saru with real feeling, warmth and a continuing sense of otherworldliness. He is easily the best actor and best character on the show, and the season's focus on him is a great choice. The accomplished Anthony Rapp also has much more to do with Stamets after a low-key second season. Despite the whispering issue, Martin-Green is at her best this season and is helped by Burnham having more of a discernible, actual character arc which makes a virtue of her previous terrible choices. The revisiting of old races like the Trill and the Romulan-Vulcan alliance is well-handled. Osyraa is the best enemy the show has thrown up so far, a relatively petty empire-building villain who has unexpected depths, and makes for a reasonable bad guy (especially when she turns out to have a few laudable qualities). The season also arguably achieves its goal of really putting the Federation against the wall and interrogating its values and finding that they still hold true. The weakened Federation rejecting a chance for peace that comes with too many caveats and concessions to a mass-murderer is a politically weak move but a morally strong one, and is laudable.

The result is, yet again, a season (***½) which has a lot of strengths which make the show watchable, and a lot of grating weaknesses. After three seasons Discovery should be a lot better than this, and it's a shame it isn't. It also doesn't help that Discovery has serious competition: The Mandalorian and The Expanse are comprehensively, across-the-board much better shows, and even Discovery's own animated spin-off, Lower Decks, is cleverer and has a lot better writing. But the show is at least showing signs of progress (albeit haltingly slowly) and getting better. The show airs on CBS All Access in the United States and Netflix in most overseas territories.

Friday, 9 October 2020

CBS releases trailer for THE STAND

CBS has released the first trailer for its upcoming adaptation of Stephen King's novel The Stand.

The Stand is set in a United States where almost the entire population has been wiped out by a disease dubbed the "superflu" and the survivors are drawn to two charismatic figures with very different views of how the aftermath will pan out.

The ten-part mini-series will debut on CBS All Access in the USA on 17 December.

Thursday, 8 October 2020

Kate Mulgrew to reprise role of Captain Janeway on STAR TREK: PRODIGY

Kate Mulgrew is reprising her most famous role, as Captain Kathryn Janeway from Star Trek: Voyager, for upcoming animated series Star Trek: Prodigy.

The new animated series - the second from the new Trek franchise, after Lower Decks - is aimed at a younger audience and will premiere on Nickelodeon, with a possible later appearance on CBS All Access. The series will be unusual in that it does not focus on a Starfleet crew, but instead a group of youngsters from various races who find themselves in control of a derelict Starfleet vessel. It's unclear how Janeway will interact with the new characters, or, indeed, what the timeframe for the series will be.

Star Trek: Prodigy is in production at the moment and expected to debut in 2021.

Tuesday, 25 August 2020

THE STAND mini-series to hit screens in December

The latest adaptation of Stephen King's classic horror novel The Stand is due to start hitting TV screens on 17 December.

The Stand, originally published in 1978 but thoroughly revised in a second edition in 1990, tells the story of a global pandemic known as the "superflu" (also "Captain Trips") that wipes out more than 90% of the world's population. The American survivors are gathered into two camps, each offered guidance by a mysterious figure, one good and one evil, before they are forced into a final confrontation for the soul of humanity.

The Stand is one of Stephen King's two best-selling novels, a position it seems to alternate with It.

The new version of the story - the second, following a successful 1994 ABC mini-series - will debut on streaming service CBS All Access. Consisting of ten episodes (released weekly), it makes several changes to the story, approved by Stephen King. The first is that the story will start in the post-apocalyptic timeframe and will then flash back to events before the superflu. The second is that the infamously-criticised ending has been changed and revised by King, with an extensive new coda added. King himself has written the final episode of the new version to oversee these changes personally.

The new adaptation stars James Marsden as Stu Redman, Greg Kinnear as Glen Bateman, Henry Zaga as Nick Andros, Whoopi Goldberg as Mother Abigail, Owen Teague as Harold Lauder, Alexander Skarsgård as Randall Flagg, Heather Graham as Rita Blakemoor, Amber Heard as Nadine Cross and Marilyn Manson in an unspecified role.

The new version of The Stand does not have an announced international partner as yet, although based on previous CBS All Access deals it is likely to air in the rest of the world via Netflix or Amazon Prime.