The first five episodes of Star Trek: Strange New Worlds were screened for this review. If you want to remain completely spoiler-free for SNW, stop reading now.

For best results, cue theremin now. Bruce Horak as Hemmer Photo Cr: James Dimmock/Paramount+ ©2022 ViacomCBS. All Rights Reserved.

SNW is a return to more episodic live-action Trek storytelling, with an emphasis on theme and character. With a winning cast and connections to some of the most beloved storylines in the franchise, this one’s sure to be a crowd pleaser. But where the show really soars is in its uncompromising vision for our future.

Captain Christopher Pike

Captain Christopher Pike is one of the very first Star Trek characters, having appeared as the Captain of the USS Enterprise in the original pilot for Star Trek: The Original Series, “The Cage,” where he was played by Jeffery Hunter. After the series had been re-tooled and TOS had been centered on a new Captain, archival footage from “The Cage” was repurposed for the two-part episode “The Menagerie.” 

While the original Pike didn’t appear again, he cast a long shadow over the franchise, as well as the collective fandom’s memory. For example, the paralyzed older Pike (Sean Kenney) and his journey to a forbidden planet in “The Menagerie” was the subject of an extended parody in Futurama season four’s “Where No Fan Has Gone Before.”

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Mount as Pike on SNW. Photo Cr: Dimmock/Paramount+ ©2022 CBS Studios Inc. All Rights Reserved.

The new iteration of Captain Christopher Pike (Anson Mount) was introduced in the second season opening of Star Trek: Discovery, when he took command of the USS Disco in the wake of the revelation that Captain Gabriel Lorca (Jason Isaacs) wasn’t exactly who he said he was. In terms of the main Disco storyline, Pike played an important role, demonstrating the patience to win the trust of Michael Burnham (Sonequa Martin-Green), who had been badly burned by Mirror Lorca’s betrayal.

But while Pike played an integral role in seeing Disco through a portal to the 32nd Century at the conclusion of Disco’s second season, he also had a subplot of his own to unspool – one steeped in dramatic irony. In the episode “Through The Valley of Shadow,” time crystals caused Pike to experience the accident that will transpire and leave him in the wheelchair. If you’re wondering whether or not Pike’s tenure on Disco will affect SNW, this knowledge looms heavily over the Captain’s head as SNW opens and seems like it will be one of the season’s (or even show’s) most important ongoing plot lines.

The Weight of Our World

The origins of Pike’s first name gain special significance in the thematic light of SNW. According to Christian mythology, St. Christopher agreed to carry a child across a river, but partway, he nearly became overwhelmed by the child’s unexpected weight, remarking that he felt he carried the weight of the world on his shoulders. Before vanishing, the child says that he didn’t carry the world, but he did carry the one who made it.

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Photo Cr: Marni Grossman/Paramount+ ©2022 ViacomCBS. All Rights Reserved.

This obviously leads to a literal connection, as we see Pike shoulder the weight of responsibility again and again – not just those responsibilities associated with being the Captain of the Enterprise and its crew, but also the burden that comes with the knowledge that he must one day make a terrible sacrifice in order to provide a future for the next generation.

But there’s a thematic connection, too. It’s no secret that TOS was Gene Roddenberry’s vehicle for making philosophical and political statements during the 1960s, widely considered the most socially tumultuous time period in the United States in recent memory (at least until the 2020s came to play). These statements were encoded on every level of the narrative, from the themes to the plot to the casting choices on the bridge. Ultimately, TOS was meant to show audiences the world that humanity could collectively build if we could put aside capitalism, petty squabbles, and social hierarchy and instead cashed in on our unified potential.

SNW quickly establishes that it is here to follow in these footsteps as closely as possible, making it clear from the very beginning of the series that the show is speaking to us, the audience, watching in 2022. Like Pike, it seems like we’ve had a glimpse of our horrible future, and it’s hard to argue that as a collective species, we haven’t gone through some rough times lately – and it seems inevitable that we have hard times ahead.

Captain Pike serves to shoulder these burdens within the narrative, and to lead the way by example. While it is tempting to give into despair about what seems like our indelible fate, SNW argues that the only way to avoid this eventuality is to maintain hope, roll up our sleeves, and get to work building a world that is better for all of us.

A Modern Major General

In addition to its heady themes, SNW is also a lot of fun. While elements like Pike grappling with his fate or the engaging mentor-mentee relationship that develops between Number One (Rebecca Romijn) and La’an Noonien-Singh (Christina Chong) do provide some degree of serialization, SNW is predominantly episodic. 

Each episode goes out of its way to provide its own unique elements, keeping it fresh and exciting. And just as LOST would tell each episode from a certain character’s perspective, each episode of SNW is “character-centric.” 

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Chong as La’an on SNW. Photo Cr: Dimmock/Paramount+ ©2022 CBS Studios Inc. All Rights Reserved.

This goes a long way towards emphasizing another central theme for the show: community. As hinted at in the Star Trek: Short Treks episode “Q&A,” the crew of the Enterprise is something of a band of misfits who have found family on-board the starship. This theme is further explored by the supporting cast, not just through “main characters” like Cadet Uhura (Celia Rose Gooding), Chief Engineer Hemmer, and Lt. Erica Ortegas (Melissa Navia), but through glimpses of what’s going on in the Lower Decks, as well. 

Setting the tone for this community is Pike’s unbridled empathy, which proves integral again and again. Unification has often been a central thematic concern for Trek, and both its positive and negative elements have been extensively explored. With the crew of the Enterprise, we’re seeing a platonic ideal of community. 

As April departs, Pike takes command

SNW knows that it will have a lot of eyes on it, and it does not intend to squander that platform by attempting to remain “apolitical,” or trying to court a hateful demographics’ dollars by compromising its core thematic values. This is bad news for right-wing C.H.U.D.s, but good news for the rest of us.

Gooding as Uhura Photo Cr: Dimmock/Paramount+ ©2022 CBS Studios Inc. All Rights Reserved.

The show’s message is clear: our choice is simple. We will only reach the future together, and we can either work together to get there or continue to tear each other apart until there’s nothing left to shred. SNW implores us to choose the former, no matter inevitable the latter may seem.


Star Trek: Strange New Worlds premieres on Paramount+ on Thursday, May 5th, 2022.

8 COMMENTS

  1. “This is bad news for right-wing C.H.U.D.s, but good news for the rest of us.”

    How amusing it is that you can’t resist being as divisive as you claim those who see the world differently than you are.

  2. Wonderful to know you consider anyone who disagrees with you to be named after a 1980’s B-film about toxic waste being dumped in the NYC sewer system causing monstrous mutations. It’s even more hilarious as a writer that was the only thing I took away from your….shall we call it a “journalistic endeavor?” And believe me when I say that is being generous. You know as little about Star Trek and the canon of it all as the current stream of (again, being generous) “writers” who have given us such gems as Discovery or turned Picard into a synthetic human. The fact Data himself existed on three thumb drives was a master class in stupidity.

    The majority of people who care about these shows you made sure to insult and offend. But of course you most likely meant to because like most of the folks who count themselves among your colleagues and friends you were conditioned to believe your opinions above all matter so much. Maybe Jar Jar Abrams will give you a job if you get woke enough, eh?

  3. Star Trek “fans” who hate “disgusting woke crap” LMAO

    I’m sorry, but if you had any self awareness, you would see how hilarious that is.

  4. Insults from the writer and wokeness gone insane on Star Trek… Star Trek has been trashed for sometime now-due to all the left wing woke stuffing being pushed more and more for years now..BUT this one seals it in the ‘underground’ forever….to borrow the vocabulary of the far left author….. It will flop badly…and myself and others that I know: that are/were fans,——> WILL NOT BE WATCHING.

  5. This premiere of SNW was a big “Meh” from me, the pacing was off, there was zero tension or dramatic progression and zero charisma or chemistry to be seen on screen. If this is any indication it’s going to be very preachy, but no one delivers like William Shatner. The only interesting character seems to be the Khan descendant, at first I thought that was Cara Gee but she just sounds like her. She is a carbon copy of that Orville super-strong girl, which is kinda catch-22.

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