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Star Trek: Discovery is boldly going into its third season this week… but thanks to a game-changing time jump, it feels more like a maiden voyage.
“In many ways, it was like doing a Season 1 show, because we were kind of starting over again,” Discovery executive producer and co-showrunner Michelle Paradise tells TVLine. That’s because Season 3 of Discovery — premiering this Thursday, Oct. 15 on CBS All Access — leaps forward a whopping 930 years into the future, far beyond where any previous Trek series has gone before. (If you remember, Season 2 ended with Burnham and the Discovery crew flying into a time-traveling wormhole.) What does the universe even look like in the year 3188? Figuring that out was part of the fun.
“We’re firmly in a new future where we are past all established canon,” Paradise says. “I keep calling it ‘fresh snow.’ We’ve got a landscape in front of us that we can populate as we like.” But that doesn’t mean the new season won’t resemble the Trek we know and love, Paradise reassures us. “Being beyond canon doesn’t mean that we ignore anything… but what going to the future lets us do is take a look at past canon in new ways. So species that may have been friendly toward one another, or not friendly to one another: Can we mix those up in new ways?”
The massive time jump also puts a new spotlight on Burnham and the Discovery crew as characters, since they don’t have the ties to Trek canon that they had in the first two seasons. Stranded in this strange new world together, the Discovery crew has to rely on each other more than ever. “Since they’re going so far into the future, all of these characters are leaving everyone else behind,” Paradise notes. “We get to really challenge them in new ways, and we get to dig deeper into all of these characters that we’ve come to love over the past couple of seasons.”
They’re not alone, though: Season 3 also introduces a host of new characters who are already living in this new future, including a charming rogue named Book, played by Supergirl alum David Ajala. In the premiere, Burnham crash-lands on an untamed planet along with Book, and they hit it off right away — “hit” being the operative word. “There’s a spark,” Paradise concedes with a laugh. “They meet each other when they’re fighting each other, so that’s definitely spark-y.” When Book is first introduced, “we’re not entirely sure what to make of him,” she adds, but “there’s a much, much deeper layer to him, and his motivations are maybe different than what we would expect them to be.”
Burnham is forced to follow Book’s lead in the premiere, since she is “a stranger in a strange land,” as Paradise puts it. “Having someone who is there and can help her guide her through, at least in the beginning, story-wise, that was really important. And they will continue to be in each other’s orbits as the season progresses.” Does that include any potential for romance? Paradise won’t rule it out: “As far as a spark goes, who knows where that kind of thing goes?”
Season 3’s big question, though, is what happened to Starfleet and the Federation; Burnham learns from Book that the Federation crumbled after a mysterious incident known as “The Burn.” Like Season 2’s Red Angel storyline, “The Burn” and how it impacted the Federation will be this season’s central mystery to unravel, Paradise hints, and will be “driving Burnham and the crew of the Discovery through the entire season.” The more things change on Discovery, it seems, the more they stay the same.
Got predictions for Season 3 of Star Trek: Discovery? Beam down to the comments and share them with the rest of the crew.
I am so excited for season 3!!
One of the few bright lights of 2020!
Can’t wait. Discovery’s been epic television from the beginning. Very glad they’ve moved away from the Klingons and Ash.
Can’t wait for Thursday!!
Haven’t been a big fan of discovery so far. Really didn’t like S1, but thought S2 was a bit better and more in line with the star trek universe. I did like how they were able to rectify the out of context S1 with the S2 finale. So I am going into S3 with an open mind. Leave the past to the Pike/Enterprise centered show. Now please hurry with more Picard!!!
As Star Trek fan from the 1970’s. It’s about “hope” for the future. Especially for minorities like me, because that’s all we have, that humans can do better. If Discovery has destroyed the Federation to make a point. I’ll never watch it again.
I think it’s worth staying with the show through to the end… but I’m hopeful that the endgame would be the prevention of the destruction of the Federation, if not the endgame of this season then certainly an endgame for the show at some point.
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They gotta know that the fall of the Federation as long-term canon for the 3100s would be wildly unpopular.
They already say “Burnham” multiple times an episode – now they’re going to start saying “The Burn” multiple times an episode? Delightful.
Also, I’m very disappointed that this show continues to misunderstand that Trek could, at its core, be an optimistic look at where the future could take us – not dark and insidious, and wiping out the Federation (only to probably bring it back cuz yay time travel) doesn’t inspire me. Still, I hope the story is good – I can be optimistic about the future. See? Not that hard.
CBS is taking a big risk with this storyline. I hope it works out. I guess they had to do something. No more Klingons would be nice!
Book wouldn’t be a Shepherd, would he? Now that would be an interesting crossover.
+1
RIP Ron Glass
Oh this was bad… Can’t believe I’m saying this, but “lower decks” is more Trek than this!
Oh wow, this show is still on? Huh.
Michelle Yeoh? I’ll watch.