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Tyler Perry and Kerry Washington team up on the film "Six Triple Eight," spotlighting the only all-Black women's battalion in ...
People have been trying to make Star Trek 14 for almost a decade. At first, it seemed it would be a time travel movie ...
The cast and crew of Section 31 tell io9 why stories about the controversial Star Trek organization are necessary for the franchise's utopian vision. This week, Star Trek returns to the world of ...
Lower Decks' Tawny Newsome is developing a Star Trek workplace comedy, and Tawny's project can explore Star Trek's new frontier in a more satisfying way than Star Trek: Section 31 did. Star Trek: ...
But what does work? Section 31 had a lot stacked up against it—not just as Star Trek‘s first streaming movie, but one controversially centered around one of the franchise’s most divisive ...
First on their slate is Star Trek: Section 31, a spy-fi action flick in which Academy Award-winner Michelle Yeoh reprises her role as the somewhat-reformed tyrannical Emperor Philippa Georgiou ...
As the shadowy branch of Starfleet Intelligence gets its very own movie, we look back at Section 31's morally dubious history. The United Federation of Planets may hold itself up as a futuristic ...
"Star Trek" fans have endured some turbulent treatment over the past decade or so with the dizzying array of feature films, animated shows, and live-action TV series hopping around the franchise's ...
Section 31 has been a sorely divisive concept for “Star Trek” fans ever since it was introduced in “Deep Space Nine.” Some view its the covert, autonomous organization's existence as ...
Many “Star Trek” fans were more than a little skeptical of the announcement of a new television film in the franchise focused on Section 31. For those unfamiliar with the intricacies of ...
But in the case of "Star Trek: Section 31," premiering Friday on Paramount+, the product seems so much an expression of the process, it seems worth mentioning. "Star Trek" is a serial thing ...
Star Trek: Section 31 doesn't know what it wants to be. Is it a serious exploration of the criminal underbelly, a camp throwback to the noughties, or a tonally off combination of the two?