TV & Beyond on 2025-06-30 20:45:00

TV & Beyond on 2025-06-30 20:45:00

“Star Trek: Lower Decks” was a 30-minute animated sitcom version of “Star Trek,” set shortly after the events of “Star Trek: Voyager.” That show lasted a successful five seasons before coming to a close in 2024. While “Lower Decks” was in production, Paramount also launched “Star Trek: Prodigy,” a CGI-animated series produced by Nickelodeon. That show was meant to be more kid-friendly than other “Star Trek” shows, and featured a cast of teenage characters. That show lasted two seasons, spread over 2021 and 2024. 

As for the other two animated “Star Trek” shows, there may be some debate as to their taxonomy. The stop-gap anthology series “Short Treks” ran for two seasons from 2018 to 2020, and, as the title implies, was constructed of short, independent stories within the Trek universe. Two of the shorts in the show’s second season were animated, so that may count as an animated series unto itself. “Short Treks” then, in turn, gave birth to the all-animated series “Very Short Treks,” a new anthology series of brief, crass, non-canonical comedic cartoons. That series ran for five episodes in 2023. 

How do these animated shows rank? Let us slip into our judge’s robes and make some tough calls. 

5. Very Short Treks

The “Very Short Treks” series was created by Casper Kelly, the mastermind behind “Stroker and Hoop,” “Too Many Cooks,” and the Cheddar Goblin sequence from “Mandy.” Kelly clearly has a twisted sense of humor, and handing him “Star Trek” is like handing a handkerchief to a hay fever sufferer and then asking them not to get any mucous on it. Of course, Kelly created one of the silliest — and dumbest — “Star Trek” projects to date, mocking the franchise relentlessly, and doing so with the participation of many of the show’s various cast members. 

The idea behind “Short Treks” was to pay homage to “Star Trek: The Animated Series,” which turned 50 in 2023. Kelly animated all his shorts in the style of “Animated Series,” which was produced by Lou Scheimer’s famous Filmation studio back in the day. Kelly, however, was clearly not interested in traditional “Star Trek” stories about exploration and diplomacy, nor was he interested in making small character studies of well-known Starfleet characters. Instead, he created aliens with underwear heads. He made a species that considers it polite to wipe boogers on visiting Federation officers. He created a character named Ass Face. 

“Star Trek” can certainly stand some irreverence, as its main characters tend to be stuffy, ultra-formal, uniform-wearing diplomats. And goodness knows I love a good booger joke or Ass Face gag. But I don’t know what the heck this is. It knows enough about “Star Trek” to make inside jokes, but it also seems to hate the series. One might say that “Very Short Treks” is all in good fun, but that would only be true if it were fun. 

4. Short Treks

When “Short Treks” debuted in October 2018, it seemed to have a mercenary function. At the time, the first season of “Star Trek: Discovery” had just come to an end, and its planned second season wouldn’t debut until the following January. CBS All Access (not yet named Paramount+) clearly wanted to keep subscribers on the hook until then, so the network seemingly rushed “Short Treks” into production, releasing one short every few weeks, just far apart enough to keep the monthly subscription fees renewing. The shorts were clearly very low-concept, and most of them were filmed on mostly empty “Discovery” sets, usually with only a few actors on hand. 

Few of the shorts are standouts, and they didn’t get truly creative until later in the show’s run. In the second season, “Short Treks” ran its first animated episode, called “Ephraim and Dot,” directed by noted composer Michael Giacchino. The short followed the adventures of Ephraim, an outsize spatial tardigrade, as it infiltrated the tiny tunnels in the hull of the U.S.S. Enterprise. It was pursued by a repair drone, Dot, that aimed to eject it. Thanks to a few glimpses through portals, Ephraim was inside the Enterprise during the events of “Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan” and “Star Trek III: The Search for Spock.” 

The second animated episode of “Short Treks” was called “The Girl Who Made the Stars,” and was directed by Trek regular Olatunde Osunsanmi. This one was about a young Michael Burnham (the main character from “Discovery”) listening to an old African folk tale told by her father. It has very little to do with “Star Trek” and is only okay. 

Indeed, most of “Short Treks” is only okay. Despite its fitful moments of ambition, it always felt a little mercenary, done for financial reasons instead of creative ones. It never had the thrill of something like “Liquid Television,” and never added importantly to Trek canon. You can skip it.

3. Star Trek: Prodigy

The beleaguered “Star Trek: Prodigy” was infamously canceled while its second season was in production, and unceremoniously dropped from Paramount+ altogether. The show was eventually picked up by Netflix, which aired its second season, but many Trekkies wondered why “Prodigy” warranted such harsh treatment. Was it the CGI animation? Was it because it was aired by the kid-friendly Nickelodeon? Was it the elongated story arcs? It’s hard to say.

It could have been because “Prodigy” started out in a very non-“Star Trek” place. At the start of the series, the main characters — a group of runaway teenage slaves — had never heard of Starfleet before, and had never encountered a Starfleet vessel. In the first few episodes, though, they find an abandoned ship called the U.S.S. Protostar, board it, and are instructed on how to use it by a hologram of Captain Janeway (Kate Mulgrew) of the U.S.S. Voyager. Despite the “Star Trek” iconography, the villains and action made “Prodigy” feel more like “Star Wars.” 

Over the course of the series, however, the teen runaways — operating at the behest of the hologram Janeway — began to think of themselves as a crew that had to work together and employ their personal expertise in creative ways. By the end of the first season, they are all in Starfleet back on Earth, happy to have outgrown their dark past. “Star Trek,” the show argues, is better than “Star Wars.” 

The second season was an even more elaborate story about time travel, retrieving the Protostar from villains, and reuniting many old, familiar faces. The show seems shaky at first, but quickly becomes pretty great. It didn’t deserve its fate.

2. Star Trek: The Animated Series

If one were particularly daring, one could rank “Star Trek: The Animated Series” even higher than the original “Star Trek” series. Gene Roddenberry oversaw its creation, and many of the original show’s writers returned, this time unbound by the limits of live-action special effects. The show’s animated medium suddenly allowed “Star Trek” to become truly alien, featuring impossibly crafted starships, aliens with multiple limbs, underwater episodes, and a visit to the planet where Satan lives (yes, really). Also, because the series was only 30 minutes (as opposed to the original show’s one-hour time slot), the writers had to be more efficient in their storytelling, allowing plots to unfold more naturally and engagingly. Some may find the following statement heretical, but there was less extraneous character stuff. 

The biggest problems with “Animated Series” are that it cut corners as often as possible, leaving a lot of the animation static and dull to look at. There are many extreme close-ups of characters’ faces where only their mouths are moving. Backgrounds are reused to a noticeable degree, and the exact same three music cues can be heard again and again and again. “Animated Series” could get creative with its aliens and visuals, but they didn’t really move around a lot. 

Still, the writing was sharp, and many of the episodes dealt with heady themes and weird sci-fi ideas just like the original “Star Trek.” Its two seasons can likely count as the final two years in the U.S.S. Enterprise’s five-year mission — which only took eight years to complete. 

1. Star Trek: Lower Decks

Prior to its release in 2020, “Star Trek: Lower Decks” started out on the wrong foot. It sold itself as a comedy version of “Star Trek,” which wasn’t what Trekkies wanted at that time. You can’t undercut your own franchise’s seriousness from within, Paramount. That was the job of satirists. And indeed, the first episode of “Lower Decks” wasn’t very good, stressing a flippant, “Family Guy”-style sense of humor inside the “Star Trek” universe. Things didn’t bode well. 

But then “Lower Decks” got to its feet and took off at a sprint. Its premise was novel, in that it was a series about the undervalued, lower-ranked officers on a starship, the ones who have all the crap jobs. Additionally, it took place on an unimportant Starfleet vessel, the U.S.S. Cerritos, that never took care of terribly important missions. “Star Trek” is a vast universe undergirded by a complex bureaucracy and a fleet of grunt workers, all of them required to make sure that a utopia can be achieved. For ensigns, though, it doesn’t always feel like a utopia. Sometimes it feels like you just have a s***ty job. 

The brilliance of “Lower Decks” came, though, as its main characters began to grow. Ensign Beckett Mariner (Tawny Newsome) liked people to think of her as a rule-breaking firebrand, but she is eventually interrogated about her behavior, and she reveals some serious insecurities at work. The series develops naturally, all while remembering that these people have terrible jobs and screw up more often than “Next Generation” characters. It’s one of the best Treks of them all.

TV & Beyond on 2025-06-30 20:30:00

TV & Beyond on 2025-06-30 20:30:00

big flashy belt buckles, and tight pants. According to Jessica Radloff’s 2022 book “The Big Bang Theory: The Definitive, Inside Story of the Epic Hit Series,” Helberg and the show’s costume designer Mary Quigley worked extremely hard to create Howard’s unforgettable look, which did evolve over time … even if they encountered some strange technical issues at the start.

“Howard’s look was so bold that by the time I stepped out onstage wearing that outfit, I knew who this guy was,” Helberg recalled to Radloff before telling her that there were some amazing wardrobe malfunctions initially. “I think there were a couple pairs of jeans that I needed assistance with because they were so tight, particularly around the calf,” he said. “There was some buttering up of the thighs to get the pants off.” Heberg explained that in the pilot, Quigley had to make a unitard turtleneck because the clothes he wore were so small that he thought the turtleneck was probably for a six-year-old. Understandably, it didn’t stay tucked into his pants. “She had to sew on a diaper with snaps that would basically hold it in place and prevent it from coming undone,” he said.

Understandably, Helberg was a little worried about this intense process at first, but once he and Quigley figured it out, it was smooth sailing. “I thought if the show picked up, this is going to be a long go. But eventually we found some turtlenecks from the long and tall kids department and we could tuck them in,” the actor revealed. “And then to get all those sharp belt buckles so close to so many vulernable parts, plus the tight pants, and the pin on my turtleneck that would jam into my neck … I was always trying to get used to being smothered by my own wardrobe. But it was also negative twenty degrees in the studio when we would shoot, so it kind of went a long way.”

The Big Bang Theory’s costume designer Mary Quigley took inspiration from a Hollywood legend for Howard Wolowitz’s fashion sense

“Wolowitz’s look was certainly out there at the time,” Mary Quigley openly told Radloff in the book. “In the way he was written, he thought he was the suave one. If anyone had a closet full of different clothes, it was him.” The turtleneck Howard wore was his odd interpretation of how Clark Gable used to dress on hiatus between films, because as Quigley tells it, Gable used to wear white turtlenecks with a white sweater over his shoulders with white pleated pants. As for his colorful skinny jeans, the inspiration was pulled from the looks of The Beatles and The Monkees, which inspired Howard’s signature mop-top haircut. “He thinks he’s kind of a rock star.” (Quigley’s joke here is particularly funny when you consider that, at one point, the series almost cast a rock star as Howard’s absent father.) “Sometimes I’d get the jeans at Urban Outfitters, but I also dyed a lot of white jeans because I really wanted a saturated color,” Quigley concluded.

Still, there’s one specific piece of Howard’s costume that Quigley and Simon Helberg will never fully explain, and that’s Howard’s signature pin in the shape of a little alien. “The reason why Howard wore the alien pin is between Simon and I, and never to be told,” she told Radloff. “Simon and I swore we would never tell anyone why we did it. But there were lots of different alien pins because I had multiple colors depending on what he was wearing. And then the belt buckles were an example of his flashiness.”

When Radloff asked Helberg if the alien pin was there for a “fascinating reason or just silly,” Helberg coyly told her, “It may be a little bit of both. That’s all I’ll say.” 

Howard’s style changed throughout The Big Bang Theory, except for one important feature

Throughout “The Big Bang Theory,” Howard evolves both as a character and just as a human being, particularly after he meets and settles down with the girl of his dreams, Bernadette Rostenkowski-Wolowitz (Melissa Rauch). According to executive producer and writer Steve Holland, the show made this clear in Howard’s costumes. “Howard basically wore the same thing, but we tried to pull away from the bright, bright colors,” Holland said of the character’s sartorial growth. “It was almost subtle enough that when we were doing an episode in season [11], if we showed a flashback, you could see him in those bright green lime pants, which we had kind of gotten away from… just small changes to let the character grow up a little bit.” Mary Quigley added, “He also began to wear slightly more muted plaid shirts instead of tight T-shirts over the turtlenecks.”

There was one thing that never changed about Howard, though, and that’s his helmet-style hair. “It was kind of unspoken that I would never do anything drastic to my hair, so it was always possible to achieve Howard’s look,” Simon Helberg said to Jessica Radloff. After acknowledging his co-star Kaley Cuoco’s surprising hair transformation before the season 9 premiere of “The Big Bang Theory,” Helberg continued, “But they never did tell us that we couldn’t do anything; it was just sort of expected that when we came back from summer hiatus, we had the same look. I’m sure I could have lobbed to change it, but I felt like it was very specific to him and he would never see any reason to upgrade that style. They flat-ironed it and sprayed it to keep it in place. It had a little movement, but I just wanted it to look like a solid block of hair that you’d find on an action figure or something.”

“The Big Bang Theory,” including all of Howard’s signature looks, is streaming on HBO Max now.

‘Sinners’ on Max Will Include a Black American Sign Language Version

‘Sinners’ on Max Will Include a Black American Sign Language Version

‘Sinners’ on Max Will Include a Black American Sign Language Version

Max will debut Sinners in the U.S. on Friday, July 4, when viewers will be able to watch it two ways: by 1) streaming the exact theatrically released version, and 2) choosing Sinners in Black American Sign Language (BASL). It’s the first time a streaming service has interpreted a film into BASL, Warner Bros. says.

BASL is “a distinct dialect of American Sign Language (ASL) with its own dynamic history and unique grammar, signing space, rhythm, facial expressions and cultural nuances,” reads an announcement released Monday. Max says the release of Sinners in BASL marks “a major step forward in accessibility, representation and visibility in streaming.

“For the first time, the Black Deaf community will have streaming access to a more immersive experience in their language,” the press release continues. The written announcement also encourages Max subscribers who sign in ASL but are unfamiliar with BASL to “follow along with this interpretation.”

Sinners with BASL is interpreted by Nakia Smith, “an influential voice in the Black Deaf community, who delivers a powerful interpretation with cultural depth and linguistic richness that aligns with the film’s themes and historical timeline,” Max said. Smith performs the BASL as directed by Rosa Lee Timm.

Timm has directed ASL versions of Warner Bros. Pictures’ Beetlejuice Beetlejuice and A Minecraft Movie. Max also boasts ASL (again, not BASL) versions of The Last of Us, Barbie and Godzilla x Kong: The New Empire.
 
“Accessibility within streaming is not a one-size-fits-all approach. Our goal at Max is to make these great stories accessible to all audiences in a way that is authentic to the content and the communities we serve,” Naomi Waibel, senior vp Global Product Management at Warner Bros. Discovery, said in a statement. “Sinners with Black American Sign Language is an example of how culturally nuanced access can enrich the viewing experience for our audiences.”

Sinners, produced by Proximity Media, was written and directed by Ryan Coogler. It stars Michael B. Jordan (in a dual role) and Hailee Steinfeld.

Cynthia Erivo, Michael Bay Tackling Adaptation of Sci-Fi Thriller ‘Saturation Point’ for Universal

Cynthia Erivo, Michael Bay Tackling Adaptation of Sci-Fi Thriller ‘Saturation Point’ for Universal

Universal Pictures, which has Jurassic World: Rebirth opening this week, is keeping the jungle monster action going with what could be a new sci-fi horror franchise.

Cynthia Erivo, who stars in the studio’s Wicked movies, has teamed up with Michael Bay and Brad Fuller of Platinum Dunes to adapt the sci-fi action thriller Saturation Point for Universal.

Minnie Schedeen will write the script, adapting the novel by Adrian Tchaikovsky, known as a master of British sci-fi and an Arthur C. Clarke and BSFA Award winner.

The 2024 book is part climate thriller in which the Earth has a zone so hot and humid it makes it hard for humans to survive. Naturally, into this zone must go our protagonist, Dr. Jasmine Marks, who leads a search and rescue mission and who will discover that the zone is far deadlier than initially believed. Not only that, her corporate bosses may not be telling the truth (shocker, right?) and not all forms of intelligent life in the zone are necessarily human.

Erivo will produce via her Edith’s Daughter banner, along with the shingle’s Solome Williams. The company has a first-look deal with Universal.

Bay and Fuller will produce through Platinum Dunes’ first look with Universal. Alex Ginno will executive produce and oversee the project for Platinum Dunes.

Universal’s senior vp production development Ryan Jones and director of production development Christine Sun will oversee the project for the studio.

Cynthia Erivo, Michael Bay Tackling Adaptation of Sci-Fi Thriller ‘Saturation Point’ for Universal

Adrian Tchaikovsky, Minnie Schedeen, Michael Bay

Tom Pepperdine; Courtesy of Subject; Mat Hayward/Getty Images

Erivo is coming off of an Oscar nomination for portraying the green witch Elphaba in Wicked, which grossed almost $800 million worldwide while earning 10 Oscar nominations and two wins. She reprises the role for Wicked: For Good, which arrives in theaters on Nov. 21.

Horror and action are part of Platinum Dunes’ DNA. The banner was behind the hit A Quiet Place and The Purge franchises. Among other moneymakers are Ouija plus live-action takes on Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles.

Tchaikovsky, known for the fantasy series Children of Time, is repped by the Mic Cheetham Agency and UTA. Schedeen, who has projects set up at Amazon MGM and New Line, among other studios, is repped by UTA, Untitled and Ziffren Brittenham.

M3GAN 2.0’s James Wan Name-Drops An Iconic Thriller While Describing Spinoff Movie SOULM8TE, And I’m So In

M3GAN 2.0’s James Wan Name-Drops An Iconic Thriller While Describing Spinoff Movie SOULM8TE, And I’m So In

The horror genre’s renaissance is showing no signs of slowing down, to the delight of fans like me. Some of the best horror movies from recent memory come from Blumhouse Productions such as the M3GAN movies. Producer James Wan recently spoke about that franchise’s developing spinoff, and name dropped a classic title when sharing its inspiration.

M3GAN 2.0 is in theaters now, continuing the burgeoning franchise with a sequel inspired by Terminator 2. While fans wait for news about a possible threequel, theres’ another upcoming horror movie coming together within the same world. The spinoff is titled SOULM8TE, and Wan spoke to EW about how it’ll be different from the M3GAN films. In his words:

Sign me TF up. M3GAN’s PG-13 rating allows for a wider audience, but there are fans like myself who wish those movies were Rated R, and could therefore be more bloody. But it sounds like SOULM8TE will be a more adult take, and is inspired by Fatal Attraction aka one of the best ’80s movie ever. So I could not be more sold on the forthcoming spinoff. Will we get more bunny boiling? Only time will tell.

Blumhouse and James Wan are finding new ways to expand it. Later in that same interview, the horror legend spoke about how SOULM8TE will be different than its predecessors, saying:

2025 movie release list. It’s currently unclear when SOULM8TE is going to hit theaters, but we here at CinemaBlend will be paying close attention to here the horror franchise goes next.

Cinespia Unveils August Lineup With ‘Point Break,’ ‘Psycho,’ ‘Zoolander’ and Full Moon Slumber Party

Cinespia Unveils August Lineup With ‘Point Break,’ ‘Psycho,’ ‘Zoolander’ and Full Moon Slumber Party

Cinespia Unveils August Lineup With ‘Point Break,’ ‘Psycho,’ ‘Zoolander’ and Full Moon Slumber Party

Cinespia has finalized its August lineup.

The popular outdoor movie series at Hollywood Forever Cemetery (presented by Amazon MGM Studios and Prime Video) has set screenings of Kathryn Bigelow’s Point Break starring Keanu Reeves and Patrick Swayze on Aug. 2; a full moon slumber party featuring a double feature with Joel Schumacher’s vampire thriller The Lost Boys starring Kiefer Sutherland, Jason Patric, Corey Haim, Corey Feldman and Jami Gertz, and John Landis’ seminal horror entry An American Werewolf in London on Aug. 9; Ben Stiller’s modeling world comedy Zoolander starring the actor opposite Owen Wilson on Aug. 16; and Alfred Hitchcock’s slasher classic Psycho starring Anthony Perkins, Janet Leigh and Vera Miles on Aug. 23.

An additional film is expected for Aug. 24. As always, Cinespia deejays will spin sets before and after each screening. Other highlights: A free photo booth, beer and wine bars, concession stands and more. For the spooky vampire and werewolf double feature, guests are encouraged to bring blankets and “dress for the darkness.”

“We’ve lined up a month of unforgettable stories that have stood the test of time,” offered Cinespia founder John Wyatt. “These films aren’t just fan favorites, but cultural touchstones meant to be shared and celebrated amid fellow fans under an open night sky.”

More information can be found here.