Michelle Yeoh’s Emperor Philippa Georgiou is a “bad bitch” in Paramount’s Star Trek: Part 31 teaser trailer
The surprises hold coming at Paramount‘s Star Trek Universe as the time-honored sci-fi franchise takes San Diego Comic-Con’s Corridor H by storm! Along with a number of bulletins for Star Trek: Courageous New Worlds, Star Trek: Starfleet Academy, and Star Trek: Under Decks, a Star Trek: Part 31 teaser trailer is right here to encourage Trekkies to “get in formation” as Michelle Yeoh does her greatest to return off as a “bad bitch” of the cosmos.
The undertaking stars Michelle Yeoh (The Brothers Solar, All the things In every single place All At As soon as) as Emperor Philippa Georgiou, who made her Star Trek debut within the first season of Star Trek: Discovery. Hailing from the Mirror Universe, Yeoh’s commanding character is an agent of the Federation spy group Part 31. Trekkies have waited years for Emperor Philippa Georgiou to return to the beloved sci-fi cleaning soap opera, and it’s lastly occurring! In Star Trek: Part 31, Emperor Philippa Georgiou should shield the United Federation of Planets whereas confronting the sins of her previous.
The trailer is ready to Beyoncé’s “Formation,” days after presidential hopeful Kamala Harris declared the Queen B’s Lemonade observe her battle cry for the upcoming election. The Star Trek: Part 31 teaser trailer offers edgy vibes in comparison with different Star Trek fare. The preview has perspective, a classy, nearly Blade Runner meets Cyberpunk 2099 look, and a solid of misfit characters performed by actors Omari Hardwick, Sam Richardson, and Kacey Rohl.
Part 31 will embody a youthful model of Rachel Garrett, the longer term captain of the USS Enterprise C, launched in Yesterday’s Enterprise, top-of-the-line episodes of Star Trek: The Subsequent Era. The character was briefly seen as a statue in Star Trek: Picard however hasn’t been seen within the flesh since that TNG episode. She’ll be performed by Kacey Rohl (Hannibal) in Part 31. The addition of Rachel Garrett places the timeframe of Part 31 someplace between the TOS films and the start of TNG, an period that hasn’t been explored a lot.
Star Trek: Part 31 screenwriter Craig Sweeny is aware of that the black-ops group has been controversial with followers since its introduction in Deep Area 9. “The concept is almost antagonistic to some of the values of Star Trek,” Sweeny mentioned in March. “Famously, there’s a spot for everybody in Roddenberry’s utopia, so I was like, ‘Well, who would be the people who don’t quite fit in?’ I didn’t want to make the John le Carré version, where you’re in the headquarters and it’s backbiting and shades of gray. I wanted to do the people who were at the edges, out in the field. These are not people who necessarily work together the way you would see on a ‘Star Trek’ bridge.”
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