Empire (UK)

STAR TREK: DISCOVERY SEASON 3

★★★★ OUT NOW / NETFLIX EPISODES VIEWED 6 OF 13

- JAMES DYER

SHOWRUNNER­S Alex Kurtzman, Michelle Paradise CAST Sonequa Martin-green, Doug Jones, Anthony Rapp, Mary Wiseman

PLOT After the events of Season 2, Discovery is propelled 900-plus years into the future. With no way back, the crew struggle to come to terms with a universe very different from the one they knew, and without the Federation to guide them.

FOR THE LAST two seasons Discovery has been stuck on the canonical naughty step. Beginning a decade before The Original Series, the show has tried to carefully pick its way through the china shop of existing Trek lore without breaking anything valuable. But with the introducti­on of the Enterprise in Season 2 and the arrival of familiar characters like Spock and Sarek, the show’s existence started to raise problemati­c questions (why did no-one else develop a magic mushroom drive? How many secret siblings does Spock actually have?) that set Trekkie teeth to grinding. And so, with this third season, Discovery has wiped the slate clean. Instead of creating an alternate timeline like the J.J. Abrams movies, it has instead flung itself forward to the 32nd century, setting the calendar 800 years later than any Trek series to date.

The effect is both delightful and jarring in equal measure. Gone is the comforting familiarit­y of Starfleet and the Roddenberr­y galaxy we know and love, replaced by an environmen­t that feels more alien than Voyager’s Delta Quadrant ever did. The exemplary season opener, ‘That Hope Is You’, wastes no time in acclimatis­ing viewers to the show’s new normal. The universe “took a hard left” with the advent of a destructiv­e phenomenon known as The Burn, which destroyed most warp-capable vessels. Space is now fragmented, lawless and chaotic; a broken, feral place where hope hangs on by a thread — in short, an environmen­t that veterans of 2020 will feel quite at home in.

Much of the expedition­ary catch-up comes via David Ajala’s Book: a courier, cat-lover and Han Solo-esque scoundrel whose bickering flirtation­s with Michael Burnham are hugely enjoyable. Sonequa Martin-green’s Burnham is given the opportunit­y to shrug off her permascowl too, demonstrat­ing a playful sense of humour hitherto in short supply and which peaks with a cracking, drug-induced giggle-fit that hints at a less po-faced third season for the show.

Also joining the roster in Episode 4 are non-binary actor Blu del Barrio as Adira and trans actor Ian Alexander as Gray, further bolstering Discovery’s impressive commitment to representa­tion and marking an interestin­g character dynamic that will play out as the series progresses.

With former showrunner­s Aaron Harberts and Gretchen Berg having left under a cloud, Alex Kurtzman is now joined by series writer Michelle Paradise, and the pair have begun their tenure at the helm with a season ripe with potential. Both setting and dynamic have been upended, with technology we’ve never encountere­d and a ship that has gone from advanced prototype to museum-piece in the blink of an eye. Discovery has set itself up to embrace themes of hope, rebuilding, and emerging from the ashes — sentiments that can’t help but feel both welcome and apt at the close of our very own Year Of Hell.

VERDICT A palate-cleansing season in a fresh new setting, Discovery boldly goes where no Trek has gone before, and is all the better for it.

 ??  ?? Book (David Ajala) and Burnham (Sonequa Martin-green) weren’t exactly dressed for the beach.
Book (David Ajala) and Burnham (Sonequa Martin-green) weren’t exactly dressed for the beach.

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