Summary
- Star Trek: Discovery season 5 reveals a bombshell treasure hunt that ties back to Star Trek: TNG “The Chase.”
- Mysterious villains Moll and L’ak create chaos, leaving behind a trail of destruction on Kumal.
- Captain Saru to become a Federation Ambassador, leading to the first Kelpien-Vulcan wedding in Star Trek history.
The ending of Star Trek: Discovery‘s exhilarating season 5 premiere dropped a jaw-dropping bombshell that the treasure Captain Michael Burnham (Sonequa Martin-Green) is hunting for comes from Star Trek: The Next Generation season 6, episode 20, “The Chase.” Written by Discovery showrunner Michelle Paradise and directed by Olatunde Osunsanmi, Discovery‘s season 5 premiere, “Red Directive,” introduces three new major characters, the villains Moll (Eve Harlow) and L’ak (Elias Toufexis), and Starfleet Captain Rayner (Callum Keith Rennie), and sets up Discovery season 5 as a sequel to the classic TNG episode about who created humanoid life in the galaxy – and how.
Moll and L’ak escaped the clutches of Captain Burnham, Captain Rayner, and Cleveland Booker (David Ajala) on the desert world of Q’Mau. After a synthetic merchant named Fred (J. Adam Brown) opened a Romulan puzzle box Moll and L’ak stole from an 800-year-old Romulan starship, Fred double-crossed Moll and L’ak and was killed by the renegade lovers. L’ak and Moll then detonated an explosive in the mountains, creating an avalanche. The combined shields of the USS Discovery and the USS Antares protected the people of Kumal, but Moll and L’ak escaped with the Romulans’ journal. However, Captain Burnham knows more than the rogues do about the treasure thanks to Discovery’s crew. And, as Lt. Sylvia Tilly (Mary Wiseman) said, the answers are wild.
Star Trek: Discovery Season 5’s Treasure & Progenitors Explained
Who were the Progenitors in Star Trek: TNG’s “The Chase”?
“The greatest treasure in the known galaxy” in Star Trek: Discovery season 5 is the technology Ancient Humanoids used to create sentient humanoid life. A hologram of an Ancient Humanoid (Salome Jens) was encountered by Captain Jean-Luc Picard (Patrick Stewart), members of the USS Enterprise-D crew, as well as a group of Romulans, Klingons, and Cardassians in Star Trek: The Next Generation‘s “The Chase”. The Ancient Humanoid revealed that her long-dead race seeded the galaxy billions of years ago to create humanoid life forms in their image, and that the humanoid species in Star Trek‘s galaxy share a common ancestry.
“The Chase” was Star Trek: The Next Generation ‘s attempt to explain why so many aliens in Star Trek are essentially humans with bumpy foreheads and physical variations.
Star Trek: Discovery season 5’s premiere reveals that the United Federation of Planets and Dr. Kovich (David Cronenberg) dubbed the Ancient Humanoids “The Progenitors”. 800 years ago, a Romulan scientist named Dr. Vellek (Michael Copeman) found and hid the Progenitors’ technology, which can literally create life and would be catastrophic if it fell into the wrong hands. However, Moll and L’ak (and, logically, whoever hired them) learned about the Progenitors’ technology. The ability to create, and possibly destroy, humanoid species is an existential threat to the galaxy, which is why the Federation needs Captain Burnham to find it first.
In Star Trek: Discovery season 5’s premiere, President T’Rina (Tara Rosling) said the Tholian Republic and the Breen Imperium are rising, and they could be looking for the Progenitors’ technology.
Moll & L’ak Keep Escaping, But Who Are They?
Star Trek: Discovery’s new villains are a mystery.
Star Trek: Discovery season 5’s version of Bonnie and Clyde, the villainous Moll and L’ak are mysterious former couriers who have had several past encounters with Captain Rayner of the USS Antares. Moll is human but L’ak is an unknown species with no known information in the Federation database. They are also hired guns, so they must have an employer yet to be revealed.
While little is revealed about Moll and L’ak, what is clear is they are lovers with deep affection for each other. Cleveland Booker doesn’t know Moll and L’ak from his years as a courier, but he could tell by the way they escaped from the USS Discovery and USS Antares that L’ak and Moll are in love and are having fun together. In a way, Moll and L’ak are an echo of what Book and Michael Burnham were like when they were couriers traveling the galaxy together in the year before the USS Discovery arrived in the 32nd century.
Saru Will Become A Federation Ambassador & Marry T’Rina
Wedding bells are coming to Star Trek: Discovery.
Captain Saru accepts Federation President Laira Rillak’s (Chelah Horsdal) offer to become a Federation Ambassador. Saru has been serving as First Officer of the USS Discovery despite his higher rank since Star Trek: Discovery season 4, but being Captain Burnham’s Number One is not really a role that utilizes the Kelpien’s skills and potential. Saru also chose to leave Discovery and become an Ambassador to be closer to his love, President T’Rina.
Star Trek: Discovery season 5 will soon have the first Kelpien-Vulcan wedding and the first wedding between 2 major Star Trek characters in 22 years.
Originally, T’Rina told Saru not to factor her into his decision to take the Ambassador position, but she actually wanted Saru to leave Discovery, which would allow them to spend more time together. And T’rina went a step further and proposed to Saru in a very Vulcan-like fashion, suggesting they “codify our mutual agreement in a more official capacity”. Saru seemed to say yes, which means Star Trek: Discovery season 5 will soon have the first Kelpien-Vulcan wedding and the first wedding between 2 major Star Trek characters in 22 years since Will Riker (Jonathan Frakes) married Deanna Troi (Marina Sirtis) in Star Trek: Nemesis.
Star Trek Weddings | Movie/TV Show |
---|---|
Miles O’Brien and Keiko Ishikawa | Star Trek: The Next Generation |
Rom and Leeta | Star Trek: Deep Space Nine |
Tom Paris and B’Elanna Torres | Star Trek: Voyager |
Benjamin Sisko and Kasidy Yates | Star Trek: Deep Space Nine |
Worf and Jadzia Dax | Star Trek: Deep Space Nine |
William Riker and Deanna Troi | Star Trek: Nemesis |
Burnham & Book Are Still Broken Up
They should have called each other.
Star Trek: Discovery‘s top love story, Michael Burnham and Cleveland Booker, didn’t quite heat up in season 5’s premiere. Burnham and Book have been separated (but with no hard feelings) ever since Book commenced his penance for the Federation after breaking multiple laws to destroy the Dark Matter Anomaly in Star Trek: Discovery season 4. Burnham turned to Book for his courier expertise to help her catch Moll and L’ak, and if she’s honest, because she wanted to see Book again.
Michael and Book agreed not to restart their relationship.
Book remains penitent and is committed to righting his wrongs with the Federation and with Michael, but there is now an understandable awkwardness between them. Book has a role to play on the USS Discovery as long as Moll and L’ak are at large, but on Kumal, Michael and Book agreed not to restart their relationship. However, this isn’t the end of Burnham and Booker’s love story, and it’s hard to imagine they won’t get back together at some point in Star Trek: Discovery season 5.
Captain Rayner Is No Fan Of Burnham
What is Rayner’s problem?
Star Trek: Discovery season 5 introduced Callum Keith Rennie’s Captain Rayner of the USS Antares as a new series regular character, and he brings a new dynamic to the show. Gruff, impatient, and no-nonsense, Rayner evokes previous hardliner Star Trek Captains like Captain Edward Jellico (Ronny Cox) in Star Trek: The Next Generation.Rayner is also resentful of Captain Burnham for some reason, and he finds humor in mocking Michael, asserting his command authority, and countermanding her orders.
Rayner seems jealous of the USS Discovery’s spore drive, and he mentions his displeasure that he doesn’t have a Pathway Drive on the USS Antares.
Although it wasn’t mentioned or factored into Star Trek: Discovery season 5’s premiere, Captain Rayner is a Kellerun, a species first introduced in Star Trek: Deep Space Nine season 2’s “Armageddon Game”. Rayner’s interest in Star Trek: Discovery season 5 is fulfilling his Red Directive mission objective, which is retrieving the treasure, as well as capturing Moll and L’ak, whom he has tangled with before. There is plenty more to learn about Captain Rayner in Star Trek: Discovery season 5.
Star Trek: Discovery Now Has Their Own Data
Fred could be good for Commander Paul Stamets.
Star Trek: Discovery season 5’s premiere introduced Fred, a Soong-type synthetic who is a merchant and fence on the planet Q’Mau. Fred obviously evokes the most famous Soong android, Data (Brent Spiner), which is another link between Star Trek: Discovery season 5 and Star Trek: The Next Generation, L’ak and Moll killed Fred after he double-crossed them, but after Fred’s body was beamed onto the USS Discovery’s medical bay, Commander Paul Stamets (Anthony Rapp) determined from his serial number, AS-7502Y, that Fred was built from the design of Dr. Altan Inigo Soong (Brent Spiner) from Star Trek: Picard.
In Star Trek: Discovery season 5’s premiere, Stamets lamented the Federation’s scuttling the spore drive program in favor of the Pathway Drive. Although Fred was “killed”, it’s possible Stamets and his husband, Dr. Hugh Culber (Wilson Cruz), can reactivate Fred. The 600-plus-year-old android may contain other secrets and answer many questions about events between Star Trek: Picard and Star Trek: Discovery‘s era. There are intriguing possibilities for Fred in Star Trek: Discovery season 5, and it would be odd if Fred really is dead after his lone appearance.
The USS Discovery is now “one of a kind” since it has the only working spore drive in existence.
The Next Clue In Discovery’s Treasure Hunt
Discovery is going to a planet with twin moons.
The USS Discovery’s next stop on the treasure hunt in Star Trek: Discovery season 5, episode 2, “Under the Twin Moons,” is Lyrek, a planet in the Vileen system, on the outer sector of the Beta Quadrant, that has 3 moons, 2 of which move in perfect sync. Captain Burnham figured this out after seeing images of Dr. Vellek’s Romulan diary pages retrieved from Fred’s database. One of the pages had a circular image which could be a literal treasure map, and the clues point to the Vileen system and the planet with twin moons. What Burnham will find on Lyrek remains to be seen in Star Trek: Discovery season 5, episode 2, but the chase is on to answer one of the biggest questions left behind by Star Trek: The Next Generation.