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Star Trek: Picard Finale Means Season 2 Could Be Loaded With Nostalgia

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Star Trek: Picard Finale Means Season 2 Could Be Loaded With Nostalgia

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Star Trek: Picard Finale Means Season 2 Could Be Loaded With Nostalgia

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Published on March 27, 2020

Screenshot Credit: CBS
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Screenshot Credit: CBS

As Jean-Luc Picard once said to Data: “Nicely done!” The finale of Star Trek: Picard has wrapped-up the show’s first season, and managed to finish off a few loose threads from Star Trek: Nemesis at the same time. (No, a Shinzon Tom Hardy cameo tragically did not appear.)

But, one feature of the Picard season 1 finale was a decided restraint against fan service or an outpouring of what we think of as conventional nostalgia. For the most part, the finale—and the series as a whole—focused on finishing what it set up, and little else. This means that when Picard season 2 happens, The Next Generation nostalgia could go into overdrive. Here’s why.

Spoilers ahead for Picard episodes 1-10.

To be clear, saying Star Trek: Picard avoided nostalgia or fan service isn’t exactly true. From Hugh, to Riker and Troi, and of course Data, the series honored the continuity of Star Trek in clever and sometimes very surprising ways. Data’s eventual “death” inside his quantum simulation is meant to make us remember how much we love Data, but this is also wraps up the left-over plot point from Nemesis about Data’s memories getting shunted over to B-4. And, from the point of view of Picard as a series, it also answers questions set-up in episode 1, specifically, is Data still “alive?”

Similarly, when Riker warped-in with a giant fleet of new Starfleet ships, it’s not like we got the cameo party that some of us predicted or hoped for. A hologram of Geordi wasn’t holding Data’s hand as he died, and all the androids and android friends who came before didn’t speak to Data through the Force the massive quantum simulation that housed Data’s memories. As a series, Picard deployed call-backs and “fan service” strategically, because outside of the stories of legacy characters like Seven of Nine, Data and Jean-Luc, this series needed to establish its own mojo. This is similar to Discovery Season 1. Yes, Michael Burnham was established as Spock’s human sister, and yes, Spock’s parents were major characters, but, that season stopped short of giving us an actual appearance from Spock.

And Picard season 1 is the same. If Crusher, La Forge, Worf, and Naomi Wildman all crashed the Zhat Vash party along with “acting Captain” Riker, the finale of Picard would have become fan service for the sake of fan service. The stories of Raffi, Rios, Jurati, Soji, and Elnor would have suddenly been overshadowed by a 3-second cameo of Beverly Crusher saying, “Fuck you Romulans!” (In my head Bev drops a lot of F-bombs now, too.) But this didn’t happen, which means, the crew of the La Sirena was given their origin story, and it felt like it belonged uniquely to them.

Screenshot Credit: CBS

In Picard season 2, some more overt fan service could sneak back into the show without messing things up for the new characters. Again, this already happened in Discovery season 2; Captain Pike, Spock and Number One were a welcome addition to the DISCO ensemble because Burnham, Saru, Stamets, Culber, and Tilly had already established themselves. If La Sirena meets Beverly Crusher or Gunian in Season 2 of Picard it will be a fun event, but it won’t have to take the spotlight away from the new characters.

In this way, Picard season 2 is poised to be closer to Star Trek: The Original Series than any spin-off since The Next Generation. The mission of the La Sirena isn’t clear and unlike the buttoned-up days of TNG, the galaxy is a little wilder in 2399. In TOS, Kirk and company were supposedly exploring strange new worlds, but they were also just as often, trying to maintain some kind of sense of justice and order out in the galaxy. Because La Sirena isn’t part of Starfleet, some of Kirk’s cowboy diplomacy from the old days might give Picard season 2 a more retro vibe. Plus, in theory, there’s no major season-long arc that season 2 has to tackle. The last shot is literally leaving things wide-open for La Sirena to have a variety of different kinds of adventures.

Does this mean Picard season 2 will see Trek revert to being more episodic rather than serialized? It’s tough to say. But, the finale of Picard season 1 has certainly opened that door, in a bold way that hasn’t happened for quite some time.

We don’t know when season 2 of Picard will arrive, but based on this finale, one thing is for sure, It will be very, very different.

Star Trek: Picard is streaming all of season 1 on CBS All-Access right now.

Ryan Britt is a longtime contributor to Tor.com and the author of the book Luke Skywalker Can’t Read and Other Geeky Truths (Plume 2015.) His other writing and criticism have been published in InverseSyFy WireVulture, Den of Geek!the New York Times, and StarTrek.com. He is an editor at Fatherly. Ryan lives with his wife and daughter in Portland, Maine.

About the Author

Ryan Britt

Author

Ryan Britt is an editor and writer for Inverse. He is also the author of three non-fiction books: Luke Skywalker Can’t Read (2015), Phasers On Stun!(2022), and the Dune history book The Spice Must Flow (2023); all from Plume/Dutton Books (Penguin Random House). He lives in Portland, Maine with his wife and daughter.
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Bob
5 years ago

Well, compared to the other recent ST series, Picard has done a decent job. It feels very team based with a strong central character. Unlike Discovery whereeeverything in the universe revolved around one character. It was quite controversial and had really split reviews. I was well on the haters camp. So I hope Picard avoids Discovery or anything to do with it.

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Robert
5 years ago

Star Trek: Picard is the dark reboot that boldly goes where nobody wanted it to.

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CC
5 years ago

They oughta get back to the carefree tone of say, Chain of Command Parts I & II. That’s the stuff!

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5 years ago

@3 Are you suggesting a full season of looking for the fifth light?

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David
5 years ago

It was a moronic end to a moronic season. 

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Philippa Chapman
5 years ago

It was part of this speech that Picard quoted from Shakespeare that made me think…

“Prospero:
Our revels now are ended. These our actors,
As I foretold you, were all spirits, and
Are melted into air, into thin air:
And like the baseless fabric of this vision,
The cloud-capp’d tow’rs, the gorgeous palaces,
The solemn temples, the great globe itself,
Yea, all which it inherit, shall dissolve,
And, like this insubstantial pageant faded,
Leave not a rack behind. We are such stuff
As dreams are made on; and our little life
Is rounded with a sleep.”

Picard and Soji’s relationship. She begins somewhat like the daughter/granddaughter Picard never had. Miranda, lost from herself. Picard as Prospero, cast adrift, yet with purpose.

At the end of this 1st season, she’s found out who she is and is moving into her own power.  The relationship between Picard and Soji gains echoes of that between Prospero and Ariel.

Picard’s life is ended with a kind of sleep, yet he reawakens as himself in a new body [new to him].

It will be interesting to see whether the Prospero/Picard resonances continue into season 2.

 

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Bob
5 years ago

Tim Harford, the presenter of More or Less recently discussed the statistical nature of people whose like of products almost predicted its failure. Apparently I fitted that catagory. I hope my liking for Picard has not doomed it.

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Puff the Magic Commenter
5 years ago

@5: This is an incorrect opinion. ST:P was terrific. So is Discovery.

Signed, A Star Trek fan who’s been watching since 1966.

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4 years ago

There were two rather large things not wrapped up in the ST:P1, which can be explored in season 2 – one is that fact that there’s a semi-functional Borg cube and a lot of Ex-Bs now sitting on a planet that also holds a lot of Soong androids. The other thing is the implications of the whole thing for the Romulans, both Tal Shiar, Vad Ghash and their wider society. We never see what happened to Narek, and Nerissa isn’t confirmed dead (I’d not trust her to be dead without a body), so they may also return in the next series. I’d like to have had a bit of resolution with Narek in the finale, but I’m absolutely fine with these two plot threads continuing into the next series and giving it it’s shape, along with Picard’s new android body  

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