The primary season of the collection closed with the title character receiving a brand new lease on life, which felt greater than somewhat manipulative, however by no means thoughts. Patrick Stewart stays grand firm within the title function even in his altered state, after a finale that basically traded in a single main dying for an additional.
Nonetheless, the narrative unfolds at a too-leisurely tempo by means of the primary three episodes, and entails Picard and his unlikely crew touring again in time to the twenty first century to thwart an existential risk. Whereas there is a lengthy historical past of that, together with previous sojourns in “Trek” mythology, messing round with timelines “Terminator” model is a type of science-fiction wrinkles that runs the danger of lapsing into head-exploding territory.
“Picard” nonetheless stays maybe probably the most marketable title beneath a “Star Trek” banner that Paramount, in its eagerness to supply must-have content material for its streaming service, has basically overfished. The roster piloted by producer Alex Kurtzman (joined on most by Akiva Goldsman) already consists of the “Star Trek”-branded “Discovery,” “Brief Treks” and the animated collection “Prodigy” and “Decrease Decks.” One other live-action entry rooted within the unique collection, “Star Trek: Unusual New Worlds,” is due in Could.
“Picard’s” newest mission — returning to the previous in an effort to construct a brighter future — is thus inadvertently consultant of the place the place the “Trek” franchise presently finds itself. And whereas seeing Stewart on the helm is in some respects reward sufficient, the producers rely a bit too closely on that goodwill with a season that, three hours in, feels as if it is barely gotten out of drydock.
“Star Trek: Picard” season 2 begins March 3 on Paramount+.