“Star Trek: Starfleet Academy” has formally docked on Paramount+. It is the newest growth in a franchise that has extra time hops than Doc Brown’s pleasant DeLorean, however this present is perhaps probably the most puzzling addition but.
In some unspecified time in the future in time, each Trekkie has imagined what it should be wish to be a cadet and study all the varied disciplines required to hitch the Starfleet. Author Gaia Violo acknowledged this as effectively, envisioning a collection following an inflow of recent cadets set after the occasions of the divisive “Star Trek: Discovery,” whereas producers Alex Kurtzman and Noga Landau put their names behind it as showrunners. In typical Hollywood style, although, a spin on the idea simply needed to be shoehorned in right here.
Caleb has by no means dreamed of becoming a member of Starfleet, however he reluctantly accepts the chance. Whereas he is an outsider and insurgent at coronary heart, Caleb makes buddies with the likes of Klingon Jay-Den Kraag (Karim Diané) and Dar-Sha Genesis Lythe (Bella Shepard), and rubs a number of others the improper manner. It additionally does not take too lengthy for Caleb to show he might need what it takes to change into a Starfleet officer in any case, though that wasn’t on his preliminary bingo card.
Sounds harmless enough, right? Well, it was until someone decided this all needed to play out like a CW teen drama from the 2000s. Think Dawson’s Creek in space. There are noticeable sparks between Genesis and Caleb from the get-go, but he kicks off a romance with the Betazoid Tarima Sadal (Zoë Steiner) to add more awkwardness to the proceedings. Blink twice if you’re over love triangles on every show and want this trope to disappear for a decade at the very least.
Also, let’s not forget the forced and telegraphed tensions between the cadets, because teenagers need to hate each other for arbitrary reasons before they become bosom buddies in the end. Seriously, is Greg Berlanti ghostwriting this?
While “Star Trek” boldly claims to go where no man has gone before, YA drama might be one frontier too far. It isn’t like “Star Trek: Starfleet Academy” is hiding its influences either, as a poster proves to be an unabashed tribute to “One Tree Hill.”
Now, there’s nothing improper with watching 40 minutes of Chad Michael Murray brood and plod by way of a narrative that might have been an e-mail, however the issue right here is that Tree Hill and Starfleet combine like politics and unity. It is an actual sq. peg in a spherical gap state of affairs.
The teenager drama influences do not cease there, although. Whereas it is bought lots in frequent with the aforementioned 2000s period coming-of-age dramas, in apply, “Star Trek: Starfleet Academy” performs out like Hogwarts in house, and this is not a praise.
Ake is the eccentric Dumbledore archetype who generally speaks in riddles however needs her cadets to succeed – particularly Caleb, aka the Boy Who Lived (and Survived the Cosmos). Channeling their finest imitations of Severus Snape, Rubeus Hagrid, and Minerva McGonagall, the college members love snark and to overtly query if the cadets have what it takes, however whereas they’re harsh and condescending in public, they root for the cadets behind the scenes and know expertise after they see it. All that is lacking is for Gina Yashere’s Lura Thok to take Caleb apart and say, “Yer a wizard, Cally!”
Then take into account the Huge Unhealthy of the collection: Paul Giamatti’s half-Klingon, half-Tellarite Nus Braka. The Voldemort virtually hisses off him as he needs to divide and conquer, and he even has a particular attachment to Caleb and his mom.
He is fuelled by pure hatred and is evil as a result of… um, he is evil?! The best way by which Ake speaks about Braka signifies that he is a serious deal, and everybody must be cautious of him. Properly, at the least he has a nostril right here, so there’s that one distinction.
“Star Trek: Starfleet Academy” is aware of it may annoy the hardcore followers, and it overcompensates by way of numerous nods and winks to the franchise’s historical past, in addition to throwback characters from the previous. It tries too laborious to persuade everybody that it’s a “Star Trek” present at its core, however that is the hip, new “Star Trek” of 2026.
As an alternative, it comes off trying like Steve Buscemi’s Lenny Wosniak from the much-memed “30 Rock” scene the place he attire like a youngster and says, “How do you do, fellow youngsters?” In an try to attract in a brand new technology of viewers, it seems like a present that can enchantment to utterly nobody within the course of.
Perhaps “Star Trek: Starfleet Academy” might have labored with out the attachment to the well-known franchise. By releasing it from expectations and legacy, it might have ventured into whichever course it wished and never had everybody befuddled by its weird determination to inject YA drama and borrow from the Wizarding World.
Sadly, by taking place this pothole-ravaged journey, “Starfleet Academy” solely offers extra ammunition to those that consider all fashionable “Star Trek” exhibits – derogatorily referred to as NuTrek – must undergo the wrath of Khan, or the Web (it is the identical factor, actually). No less than we’ll all the time have Unusual New Worlds.
“Star Trek: Starfleet Academy” is out there to stream on Paramount+.