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Star Trek: Picard: The Art and Making of the Series

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An in-depth look at the making of Star Picard, a three-season spin-off of Star The Next Generation , and a must-have for all Star Trek fans.

Star Picard stars Patrick Stewart, reprising his role as Jean-Luc Picard from Star The Next Generation. The book explores each of the three separate season-long narratives, which tell the story of Picard in later years, as he is brought out of retirement on his family chateau to face old enemies such as the Borg, take command of a new starship, and ultimately reconcile with his past.

New characters such as Doctor Jurati (Alison Pill), Cristóbal Rios (Santiago Cabrera), Soji (Isa Briones) and Elnor (Evan Evagora) feature alongside appearances by old enemies and friends, such as Will Riker (Jonathan Frakes), Deanna Troi (Marina Sirtis), the Borg Queen (Annie Wersching), Guinan (Whoopi Goldberg), Data (Brent Spiner), and Q (John de Lancie). Season 3 sees a full-scale Next Generation reunion, featuring Worf (Michael Dorn), Dr. Beverley Crusher (Gates McFadden), and Geordi La Forge (LeVar Burton).


Alongside interviews with showrunners, writers, cast, and crew, discussing concepts and character arcs, “Spotlight” features explore makeup, costumes, art, and visual effects. A final section features reflections on the much-beloved character from its original incarnation in Star Next Generation through to its final satisfying conclusion.

This beautifully illustrated hardback, featuring behind-the-scenes and on-set photography, and a range of production art, is an in-depth exploration of a hugely popular and seminal Star Trek character.

208 pages, Hardcover

Published February 27, 2024

About the author

Joe Fordham

18 books2 followers

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Displaying 1 - 9 of 9 reviews
Profile Image for Jonathan Koan.
659 reviews457 followers
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March 26, 2024
I don't usually read and review Art books, as I like to stick to prose books. However, when the opportunity arose to review this book for Literary Treks, I decided to give this one a go!

The book's main focus is in the craft of the making of Picard Seasons 1-3. We see about 70 pages on Season 1, 50 Pages on Season 2, and 70 Pages on Season 3. It specifically features a lot of background information on the costumes, makeup, VFX, set decoration, and all around Production Design, with interviews from those involved in those departments.

There are also snippets throughout about story decisions, and those passages I found the most fascinating. I could have had an entire book of "tell-all" story decisions from the writing team exclusively and loved it. Alas, here we get a much smaller focus with nuggets of information, but not anything shocking or really unknown to us. Perhaps an "unofficial" nonfiction book will provide that information.

In terms of artwork, this is a very pretty book to have on the table, and certainly has a place above my Star Trek bookshelf. Unfortunately, I don't know about the appeal the book has. I estimate it will be much more limited in sales because of its design.

Overall, a very interesting book. Because I'm not familiar with art books I'm not going to give it a rating for now. I might come back later and give it one, but for now I'll simply say that I enjoyed the book, but I'm not sure I can recommend it with the $50 price tag, unless you are hardcore into Star Trek and behind the scenes books for Star Trek.
Profile Image for Alvaro Zinos-Amaro.
Author 68 books61 followers
February 28, 2024
In the just-published Star Trek: Picard: The Art and Making of the Series, visual effects editor and author Joe Fordham (Star Trek: First Contact: The Making of the Classic Film, Planet of the Apes: The Evolution of the Legend, with Jeff Bond) provides a swift pictorial history of the production and design of the show’s three distinctive seasons. Roughly a third of the book is dedicated to the first season, a bit less than a third to the second–which seems fitting, given that the second season itself felt padded, and large chunks of it took place in the year 2024–and the difference is made up by longer coverage of the far more satisfying and redemptive final outing. Chapters typically range from two to six pages, with a few dedicated spotlight features that highlight, say, Jeff Russo’s scoring for the first two seasons, or pay tribute to Annie Wersching, who played the alternate-timeline Borg Queen. Among those on record are Alex Kurtzman, Michael Chabon, Akiva Goldsman, Todd Cherniawsky, Jason Zimmerman, Brian Tatosky, Terry Matalas, and a dozen or so others. Besides the principals of each season’s cast, who are generally given voice, it would have been nice to hear the perspective of folks like Todd Stashwick (Liam Shaw) and the actual writers of key screenplays. But what we have paints enough of a picture to capture each season’s unique flavor and to get a sense of how things were run behind the scenes.

From the very beginning, it’s clear that the show was birthed in a power dynamic that disproportionately favored its star, and primary selling point, Patrick Stewart, over the show’s originators. Stewart was famously reluctant to return to the role of Jean-Luc Picard and was only willing to do so if certain storytelling conditions were satisfied. Alex Kurtzman and Michael Chabon essentially tailored the themes of the first season to address Stewart’s requirements. Stewart was preoccupied with the notion of fascism–he’s described as bringing Madeleine Albright’s book on the subject to a meeting–and, enthused by his dark turn in Logan, wanted a postmodern version of Picard at the show’s outset. The creative voices accommodated, and Stewart’s influence extended even to the show’s design aesthetic, informing, for example, Picard’s background artifacts in the chateau. A Federation that seems to be straying from its principles, a fear of synthetic lifeforms, a disheartened and alienated old man: one might be forgiven for thinking that these don’t sound much like the Star Trek of the past. The first section of this book, including Michael Chabon’s admission of a “very conscious sense of Lovecraftian horror” in his development of Romulan culture, makes clear that this was thoroughly by design. Some nice tidbits include how the Sunstone Winery in Santa Ynez was used for the chateau exteriors, or, for instance, how a skeletal gun design stemmed from a J. J. Abrams Star Trek movie, but I do wish there was more detail on certain topics, like the items from Picard's past in Starfleet Archives (p. 27).

Moving on to the second season, an interesting observation on page 88 relates to the effects that the Paramount and CBS merger had on what could be used in-story. There are a number of quotes by creators that I think capture what some viewers construed as narrative miscalculations, ranging from small details to broader character development issues. On p. 35, for example, the famous Vasquez Rocks location is described by Hanelle Culpepper as being “a fun Easter egg for the audience”–I experienced it as more of a distraction, and I think the location is famous enough to not be much of an Easter egg but more of an Easter boulder. Composer Jeff Russo didn’t seem to expect that folks would notice his use of Fred Steiner’s Romulan theme in season one, but it’s a pretty distinctive musical number for fans of the show. Kurztman talks about Picard being “still haunted by what remains of the Borg inside him”; Stewart himself “understood” that Picard “had never dealt with that trauma”; later on Goldsman declares that “Picard has childhood issues,” which explains the impetus for season two; and so on. On the production side, we learn, when Dave Blass talks about the menacing Borg ship at the start of season two (p. 82), that he imagined it had assimilated the Doomsday Machine–but there was no script on hand for the season finale at that stage, so he didn't know how the situation would resolve (the way it does makes the menace work at cross-purposes to the story, sadly retroactively undermining the logic of the sequence).

Terry Matalas’ attention to detail and clarity of direction is felt right from the start of season 3, indeed even going back to certain elements of season 2. Matalas, for example, wasn’t afraid to explicitly reference the first two feature films (p. 133), had a firm grasp on the central notion of the “passing of the torch from one generation to the next,” and relied on a number of veteran industry hands to recreate or evolve known visuals and elements, as for instance Dan Curry’s work on the kur’leth (p. 144), Stephen Barton bringing back the sound of the blaster beam–they even had the instrument’s original player, Craig Huxley, return to the fold!–and, most famously, the recreation of the Enterprise-D bridge, lovingly tended to by Mike Okuda, Liz Kloczkowski, and others. We learn that for the most important action sequences Matalas completed numerous storyboards–“more than in previous seasons”–and that he had precise ideas on how to make Vadic a memorable villain, a task in which he certainly succeeded. The specificity of his vision, and its considered continuity with The Next Generation and other Trek tales, manifested in every aspect of the show’s execution. Season 3 composer Stephen Barton talks about writing music “vivid in its coloration;” this strikes me as an apt summation of something that was lacking, in a broader dramatic storytelling sense, in the first two seasons. Those seasons had story colors, to be sure, but didn’t seem to know how to confidently combine them in evocative and affecting ways.

Fordham’s prose is polished and well-paced throughout, with a well-tempered mix of source quotes and descriptive passages. He is to be commended for penning one unified treatment of what at times almost feel like three separate series, which couldn't have been an easy task. Whatever your favorite moments of Star Trek: Picard are, you’ll likely find yourself wishing that those specifically were covered more extensively. Compared to other books of this nature, the “art” component does at times seem to outweigh the “making of” proposition, so if you’re looking for in-depth breakdowns of scenes or hefty recaps of pre-production briefs, you’ll likely be disappointed. The book’s twin conception is not necessarily a bad thing, however. The work of Neville Page, for example, and John Eaves, is showcased consistently, and their design permutations are often fun, even striking. Photo and sketch reproductions are high quality, as is the book’s paper finish. This is admittedly less of a reference book, or a completely candid making-of saga, and more of a pretty coffee-table tome, than some fans might have hoped for. But considering the changing identity of the show’s three seasons, which in essence give us a tripartite Picard–tripicardtite?–rather than one truly cohesive whole, and its numerous production challenges, I’d rather this archive be committed to posterity than none at all. It’s good to spend time with old friends. The Star Trek franchise, like the Klingons it portrays, seems to have a hard time admitting to knowledge of two words: defeat, and farewell. If this is truly the latter for The Next Generation cast, it’s good to see it ultimately triumph over the former.

Review originally published at Poppies of Terra (https://www.hexpublishers.com/column.php).
Profile Image for Caleb Dorsch.
15 reviews
June 23, 2024
Overall I enjoyed this and the majority of the art stills included are gorgeous. A handful of them are screencaps from the episodes, which sounds cool, but sadly, they are enlarged and zoomed in to the point of being grainy or blurry (because the screencaps are of visual effects in motion). A strange choice and ultimately the one that drops it a star from other coffee table art books. There are great tidbits I didn’t know about that I hadn’t seen from other sources or interviews, so still worthwhile. I came away having learned a few things and appreciated that most characters across the three seasons got a spotlight.
Profile Image for OneDayI'll.
1,457 reviews31 followers
March 1, 2024
This is an incredible behind the scenes collection. I adore this show. Well, all the Star Trek shows and movies, really. Well, a few were duds, but they're still classics lol. But there are a lot of interesting concepts they planned into this show. And I liked the history behind Ten Forward. It made my little geeky heart happy to find this on the local library shelf.
51 reviews
April 25, 2024
When CBS/Paramount decided it was launching a new Picard streaming series I had one question, “Would the new series be a continuation of the original Star Trek: The Next Generation?”
Yes, sort of.

Picard takes place approximately 20>25 years after the crew of the Enterprise went their separate ways.

Picard is now an old man, living at his vineyard with his Romulan housekeepers-seemingly content.

That is until he meets a certain young woman.

From there it’s full steam ahead as he encounter the heirs of Data, the Borg Queen, travels back in time, shifts to an alternate timeline, meets Seven Of Nine, reunites with Q and yes, teams up with his old crew. There is so much more.

I like it, it’s different and still familiar enough to jump right in where The Next Generation left off. I hope they do more.

Titan Books and author Joe Fordham delve into the three season, streamed series and its new cast of characters and reintroduction of classic characters including the Borg Queen, Hugh, Q, Lore, Seven Of Nine and others.

Each season was distinctly different from each other with their own unique adversaries and conflicts.

Star Trek Picard The Art And Making Of The Series examines how the series came about and the logistics of reintroducing the original Enterprise crew under Picard’s command.

Each character has changed over the years-look for some surprises.

The book covers the sets construction, character designs, ship and transportation concepts-including bringing back the original Enterprise D.

Delve into how the impressive visual, computer and practical effects were pulled off, and costume designs, ship interiors, weapons, technology construction.

Look for concept sketches, computer-generated 3D images, in-depth text, commentaries, insider info and other areas of expertise that it took to pull off such a complicated and technically challenging series.

I really like the dull-coat paper stock and high-gloss spot varnish text and photos dust cover.

John 16:33 - These things I have spoken unto you, that in me ye might have peace. In the world ye shall have tribulation: but be of good cheer; I have overcome the world.
Profile Image for Scott Williams.
696 reviews10 followers
April 14, 2024
This is great but it really just scratches the surface. I had hoped for more behind the scenes images — photos of props and costumes. I’m sure others would have hoped for more detailed ship images. We really need a follow up to the Reeves-Stevens’ Art of Star Trek book from the 90s. Nothing has come close to that one, for me.
Profile Image for ScottRichard Klein.
61 reviews1 follower
June 10, 2024
A great look at what went into the making of this series. It is full of insights as well as Easter eggs that make you want to watch it all over again. (Which I am doing.)
Profile Image for Tom.
5 reviews
April 9, 2024
This is a standard making-of book that focuses on production design elements such as costumes, makeup, and sets.

Fans of the show will enjoy it as a keepsake and high level look at the making of the show.

One book focused on three seasons of a TV show will not cover everything. Don't expect more than a broad overview.

A bit more detail would have been nice. For example, the page on the Daystrom institute mentions easter eggs and props developed for the sequence, but doesn't show or list them.
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