Star Trek: Lower Decks bows out on business as usual

Star Trek: Lower Decks bows out on business as usual

The following article discusses the fifth season of Star Trek: Lower Decks and older Treks.

Thereā€™s no such thing as ā€œdeadā€ in Star Trek, the sprawling, perpetual opus that has thrived in spite of itself for almost sixty years. What started as a cornball space-ships and punch-fights show for atomic-age kids and their parents has become (gestures around) all this. So Iā€™m not writing too much of an obituary for Star Trek: Lower Decks despite its fifth season being its last. Given Paramountā€™s fluid leadership right now, I can easily imagine that decision being reversed in the future. So this isnā€™t so much of a goodbye as a farewell for now.

Lower Decksā€™ fifth season picks up not long after the fourth left off, with Tendi still repaying her debt to the Orions. I donā€™t think itā€™s a spoiler to suggest the status-quo reasserts itself soon after given, you know, all the other times this has happened. The crew of the Cerritos is then thrust into the usual sort of high-minded, lowbrow yet full of heart hijinks that weā€™ve come to expect. Naturally, Iā€™m sworn to secrecy, but the fifth episode ā€” where its title alone is a big spoiler ā€” is a highlight.

Iā€™ve seen the first five episodes of the season and as with any sitcom, there are a few misses in between the hits. One episode in particular is trying to reach for an old-school Frasier plotline, but it falls flat given the thinness of the characters in question. Thankfully, Lower Decks is able to carry a weak show on the back of its central castā€™s charm. Sadly, as it tries to give everyone a grace note, some characters youā€™d expect would get more focus are instead shunted to the periphery.

You can feel Lower Decks straining against its own premise, too. A show about people on the lowest rung of the ladder canā€™t get too high. As a corrective, both Mariner and Boimler use this year as an opportunity to mature and grow. I wonā€™t spoil the most glorious running gag of the season, but their growth comes in very different ways. If thereā€™s a downside, itā€™s that the show still relies too much on energy-sapping action sequences to resolve its episodes.

But thatā€™s a minor gripe for a show that grew from the would-be class clown of the Trek world to the most joyful interpretation of its ethos. Iā€™ve always loved how, when the chips are down, Lower Decks delights in the bits plenty of newer Treks would rather ignore. The show is, and has been, a delight to watch and something for the rest of the franchise to aspire toward.

L-R, Jerry OĆ¢€™Connell as Jack Ransom and Jack Quaid as Boimler in season 5 of Lower Decks streaming on Paramount+, 2024. Photo Credit: Paramount+L-R, Jerry OĆ¢€™Connell as Jack Ransom and Jack Quaid as Boimler in season 5 of Lower Decks streaming on Paramount+, 2024. Photo Credit: Paramount+

Paramount+

Iā€™ve been looking for a way to describe Lower Decksā€™ target audience for years, but only now has it hit me. Itā€™s a show written by, and for, the people who grew up watching Star Trek in the VHS era. Creator Mike McMahan is just four years older than me, barely a teenager when The Next Generation went off-air. So while heā€™d have encountered Deep Space Nine and Voyager as first-run, everything else would have been discovered through re-runs and tapes.

You can almost track that timeline of discovery as Lower Decks broadened its range of hat-tips each year it ran. Of course we got a parody of the first two Trek films in the first season ā€” both were ever-present on Saturday afternoon TV when I was a kid ā€” but itā€™s not until the third that we get a nod to First Contact. As Enterprise ran out of gas, you can feel McMahan and coā€™s delving into the behind-the-scenes lore and convention gossip about those later series.

If youā€™ve seen the series five trailer, youā€™ll spot the gag about Harry Kimā€™s promotion, something the character never got on Voyager. If youā€™re fluent with Trekā€™s behind-the-scenes drama youā€™ll know the handful of reasons why, and why itā€™s funny to nod toward that now. But thatā€™s not the only subtle gag that points a sharpened elbow into the ribs of major figures from the series creative team. Iā€™m sure if you donā€™t spot them all, Reddit will have assembled a master list half an hour after each episode lands on Paramount+.

L-R , Eugene Cordero as Rutherford and Tawny Newsome as Beckett Mariner in season 5 of Lower Decks streaming on Paramount+, 2024. Photo Credit: Paramount+L-R , Eugene Cordero as Rutherford and Tawny Newsome as Beckett Mariner in season 5 of Lower Decks streaming on Paramount+, 2024. Photo Credit: Paramount+

Paramount+

I wonā€™t indulge in theorizing as to why a popular and successful show like Lower Decks is ending (itā€™s money, itā€™s always money). But, as weā€™ve seen countless times before, itā€™s not as if itā€™s hard to revive a successful animated show when wiser heads prevail. Hell, even McMahan told TrekMovie heā€™s prepared for that, and even has some spin-off ideas in the works. But for now, letā€™s raise a toast to Lower Decks, the animated sitcom that became the cornerstone of modern Star Trek.

The first two episodes of Star Trek: Lower Decks season five will arrive on Paramount+, Thursday, October 24, with an additional episode landing each week for the successive eight weeks. The series and season finale will air on December 19.