Captain on the deck! This text comprises spoilers for the season 5 premiere of “Star Trek: Decrease Decks.”
The crew members of the USS Cerritos are again in motion and so they have not misplaced an iota of the snark, humor, and ever-so-earnest love for “Star Trek” that made us all fall in love with the animated present within the first place. (/Movie’s Jacob Corridor delivered his glowing evaluate of the fifth and last season of “Decrease Decks” right here.) For many who missed the easy camaraderie prevalent among the many tight-knit group of Decrease Deckers, the straightforward chemistry between ensigns Beckett Mariner (Tawny Newsome), Brad Boimler (Jack Quaid), Samanthan Rutherford (Eugene Cordero), and all the remaining is an on the spot delight within the premiere. However for the hardcore Trekkies who’ve been craving the intense deep-cut references that this writing workforce has confirmed to be consultants at, there’s loads of that to be discovered, as effectively.
Essentially the most noteworthy occasion of this within the premiere may also be probably the most surprising — and probably the most refined. Titled “Dos Cerritos” (a superbly pun-tastic allusion to the mirror universe shenanigans on the middle of the episode), the episode wastes no time placing our Prime Universe characters on a crash course with … themselves. Due to a great ol’ customary quantum fissure, which Beckett complains is “the third one this month,” each variations of our solid find yourself caught and compelled to work collectively to return the “faux” crew again to their very own actuality. Apart from the requisite facial hair variations and different persona quirks, everybody appears roughly the identical as their counterparts; everybody, that’s, besides mirror-universe Mariner herself. A no-nonsense captain who preaches strict adherence to Starfleet protocol, her calls for of “no interpersonal battle” amongst her officers could not be extra totally different from our favourite insubordinate renegade.
To those that know their “Trek” historical past, it additionally doubles a brazen joke directed in the direction of Gene Roddenberry’s most notorious franchise edict.
The Gene Roddenberry rule that just about broke Star Trek
All people is aware of that the long run depicted all through “Star Trek” is supposed to be a thriving utopia, however informal viewers may not notice how a lot that exact same premise actively labored towards the franchise’s personal pursuits. There’s no scarcity of reward to be heaped upon the shoulders of Gene Roddenberry, the visionary who introduced his optimistic and aspirational (and, oftentimes, weirdly attractive) tackle science fiction to the world at giant. Typically, although, even his personal finest intentions made a multitude of issues.
Enter the Gene Roddenberry no-conflict rule, an extension of his extraordinarily rigid perception that humanity would inevitably arrive at a spot the place they might merely transcend the petty arguments, misunderstandings, and variations of opinion that plague us savages every day. Whereas it makes a certain quantity of sense, it additionally prompted one painfully apparent drawback: In fiction, the full absence of battle amongst your core solid of characters makes for an awfully boring story. Regardless of! Roddenberry enforced this rule to the strictest letter of the regulation, notably in the course of the early seasons of “The Subsequent Era,” and made it in order that no members of the USS Enterprise may ever expertise interpersonal battle amongst themselves, as a substitute solely clashing with the comparatively much less enlightened aliens and civilizations they encountered over the course of their missions. Starfleet has a status to keep up, in any case, no matter how ridiculous (or, satirically, pathologically unbalanced) it made the characters appear.
Sound acquainted?
Decrease Decks goes meta (once more) in season 5
Whereas some purists initially had a tough time getting on board with “Decrease Decks” and its tendency to show right into a parody of “Star Trek,” thank goodness this self-deprecating collection has by no means been above making enjoyable of itself. That intuition comes again to the fore within the premiere with the hilarious dynamic between our personal Beckett Mariner and “Captain Becky.” Though they get alongside splendidly at first, it quickly turns into clear that this model of Beckett will cease at nothing to keep up order among the many rank and file — even when it begins to creep into outright authoritarian territory. The mirror universe has at all times been used as a mirror (it is within the title!) to our favourite figures, holding up a darkish reflection of what they may grow to be in the event that they gave into their worst impulses. For Mariner, that quantities to a cruel iron fist that she wields over the officers beneath her command and her very particular phrasing of what is clearly her #1 rule: No interpersonal battle among the many crew.
By taking such a meta method, the “Decrease Decks” writers cleverly flip the screws on themselves — or, extra precisely, previous variations of “Trek.” Beckett basically runs her starship simply as Roddenberry would’ve needed, in concept. In fact, that proves to be a mistake that may solely be set proper by probably the most excessive of circumstances: a go to by their very own alternate-universe selves. Earlier than anybody claims that “Decrease Decks” is taking unfair pictures at its personal creator, suppose once more! There’s one thing to be mentioned for reusing the idea of the mirror universe, first seen in “The Unique Collection” and the traditional episode “Mirror, Mirror,” as a method of holding “Trek” to its highest requirements. The characters aren’t the one ones evolving and studying from errors — the franchise itself has needed to do loads of that over the many years, too. In that sense, “Decrease Decks” is simply the most recent hyperlink within the chain of progress.
New episodes of “Decrease Decks” stream on Paramount+ each Thursday.