• 5 months ago
Sam Richardson, Omari Hardwick, Kacey Rohl, Olatunde Osunsanmi (Director), Alex Kurtzman (EP) step into our video studio at San Diego Comic Con 2024.

Presented by Google TV

Category

People
Transcript
00:00The movie is a lot of things. It's action, drama, comedy. It's equal parts all of that.
00:09So it's not just up to Quasi to be funny. Everybody's funny in it.
00:15And everybody's serious. The stakes are there for everybody.
00:19So it really is a whole piece, if that makes sense.
00:26But I won't say that. I won't crack some jokes, as I do.
00:30Hi, and welcome to the Variety Studio.
00:37I'm here with the team from Star Trek Section 31. Welcome, everybody.
00:42I think just to start out, if somebody, maybe Toonday, would like to sort of explain what Section 31 is.
00:51Section 31 takes place, Section 31 follows our special ops team of Starfleet
01:04as they navigate and do the things that Starfleet doesn't or can't do.
01:11And it is the first television movie that Star Trek has put together.
01:16Alex, how did that come together?
01:18Well, it was a long journey because it started as a television show.
01:21And then, you know, then the pandemic hit and then things changed.
01:25And then Michelle won an Oscar and then things changed.
01:28And, you know, it was this sort of incredible thing to see because through all the different iterations of it,
01:35Michelle was completely committed to doing it, even after.
01:38In fact, when she won the Oscar, she sort of doubled down on it.
01:41And we ended up being able to move forward in the window of time that we had.
01:45But it's been amazing.
01:46And, like, we're just finishing cutting the movie right now, and it's really, really fun.
01:51You're, of course, speaking of Michelle Yeoh.
01:53For the actors, first of all, I guess, what was it like to work with Michelle Yeoh?
01:58Oh, fantastic.
02:00She's Michelle Yeoh.
02:02You say Michelle, we say?
02:05We say Yeoh.
02:07But, no, she's such a brilliant performer, acting, stunts, everything, you know.
02:20And she brings so much to everything, especially this.
02:23It was amazing to work with and learn from her in making this.
02:28Definitely galvanizes the team.
02:30Yes.
02:31So if I may, I'd love to ask the actors to sort of talk us through
02:36just a little bit about their characters and who they're playing.
02:39And we'll start with Omari.
02:41Thank you, Adam.
02:42So I play Alak, Sahar.
02:46And Alak, to the point that our dear director made, he is the overseer, if you will,
02:52of this rogue motley crew where we take, for lack of a better word,
02:57where we take misfits, we take outcasts.
03:00And I mean that in the greatest way, in the most complimentary way,
03:05but who all are very precise at what they do.
03:08There's a signature to everybody's role.
03:13Alak expects that.
03:14He expects a lot from himself.
03:17And there might be some history in terms of Alak understanding Michelle's character
03:23and her walk and her journey.
03:25I guess he is the conduit between his group and then Michelle
03:31and her character, Philippa Georgiou.
03:34And then the new recruit to my team is played by our beloved Casey.
03:42So Casey, at Variety we broke who your character is,
03:46which I will say that for a few fellow staff members at Variety
03:51who were not as big into Star Trek,
03:53you explained to them why it was such a big deal that you're playing Rachel Garrett.
03:56So obviously you're playing Rachel Garrett, a younger version than the character we saw.
04:01But I'll let you take the reins.
04:04I mean, if you want to do it.
04:07Yeah, I'm playing Rachel Garrett.
04:10And, yeah, she was seen in TNG, played by the wonderful Tricia O'Neill.
04:15And she's part of Section 31 to sort of make sure that these cats
04:21don't get too outside the lines.
04:25You know, I'm a bit of a stickler for the rules.
04:28Maybe they loosen me up, I don't know.
04:30Who knows?
04:31Yeah.
04:32We'll have to watch to find out.
04:33Yeah.
04:36And Sam, what can you tell me about your character?
04:38I play a character named Quasi.
04:41Can I say what Quasi is?
04:43Why not?
04:44Okay, yeah.
04:45So the first Cameloid and the only other iteration of a Cameloid
04:48is played by Iman in Star Trek VI.
04:51The Cameloids have the ability to shapeshift
04:53and they can kind of become any one or anything.
04:56Sounds like five characters on a call sheet.
04:58You know what I mean?
04:59Which I am typically, but this time it's different.
05:02But, yeah, Quasi.
05:04And he's a fun character to play.
05:07I really enjoyed it.
05:08So what was your relationship with Star Trek
05:10before you got involved with this movie?
05:14We were little kids running around,
05:16and definitely for me and I would imagine Sam.
05:19This is the irony.
05:21Sam and I come from what would be considered
05:23in our great U.S. of A chocolate cities, right?
05:27He's from Detroit, I'm from Atlanta.
05:29I guess you could count Chicago and D.C.
05:33as also chocolate cities, would you say, to me, Alex?
05:38I would imagine.
05:39So it was really interesting to have Star Trek
05:41as a young black American.
05:44Because you didn't only have an opportunity
05:49to see heroes while we were wearing underoos
05:52trying to be whatever respective hero we looked up to.
05:55You also had an opportunity to see an amalgamation of races.
06:00And that just was so sweet and kind to the eye
06:06when you're a young kid sometimes feeling like an outcast.
06:10And so for me, I can't speak for Sam,
06:12but I can enough to say that it gave us,
06:15especially entering this industry,
06:17it gave us sort of a lighthouse, if you will,
06:20as to the direction that we could go,
06:22even if told we can't go that direction when we were young.
06:25Star Trek and Roddenberry and his team,
06:27and now it's transferred over to,
06:29after J.J. Abrams, it came over to an Alex Kurtzman.
06:33Obviously sitting at the seat that he now sits in,
06:36and then Tundi being brought in as Alex brought him in.
06:39We're just keeping that narrative going.
06:41So for me as a young kid,
06:43obviously Casey would have a different experience with it,
06:46but from my perspective and point of view,
06:48wow, how tasty was it to be able to see images of yourself
06:52mixed in with folks that made the likes of music and concerts
06:57and what Barry Gordy did, speaking of Detroit.
07:00You know, Barry Gordy did a great job of having
07:02one person to the left and the person to the right
07:05that they would not be next to
07:07if it weren't for Marvin Gaye or The Supremes on stage performing.
07:11So it has its place in time
07:14because it is the longest-running franchise,
07:16but man, it's also the sweetest in terms of
07:19where we think we should be or where we should be
07:22in terms of as people next to each other.
07:24That's really beautiful.
07:26I watched the show.
07:31And I grew up without a TV.
07:33You did?
07:34Yeah.
07:35So when you signed on and you were cast as Rachel Garrett,
07:38what was your sort of education process
07:40to understand who the character was?
07:42Yeah, I mean, for the first chunk of the audition process,
07:46I didn't know who she was.
07:48It was a different name, obviously.
07:50And then in sort of my final, like, gauntlet callback,
07:57I learned who she was, which informed a lot,
08:01and then I just dove headlong into learning about it.
08:06And, yeah, I don't know.
08:08Have you been sort of, like, absorbing other Star Trek?
08:12Oh, yeah.
08:13Oh, I've been bathing in it.
08:15Yeah, it's been great.
08:16I'm on board.
08:17I'm, like, all about it now.
08:19I'm converted.
08:20And, Sam, you did watch Star Trek.
08:22Oh, I truly lifelong Trekker.
08:26Trekker.
08:27Trekker.
08:28My whole, like, I started watching,
08:31my dad and I would watch TOS, the original series, together,
08:34and then myself, I would watch Next Generation.
08:37So I've seen every episode of Next Generation
08:39maybe, like, at least five times, you know.
08:42Growing up wanting to be Geordi LaForge,
08:44you know, you put the hair clips up over your eyes
08:47and, you know, you're an engineer on the ship.
08:52So to get to be part of Star Trek now
08:55is so surreal and wild to me.
09:00I saw LeVar Burton at the Peabody Awards
09:06when we were all there,
09:07and he came up to me from behind and said,
09:09my longtime coming, and I almost bust out crying.
09:13I saw it.
09:14I, like, it was truly wild to me.
09:19So I'm a kid in a candy shop
09:21who's got a bunch of money to buy candy.
09:25And congratulations on the Peabody Award.
09:28Alex, what was that whole experience like to have,
09:32I mean, you had, there were all kinds of people
09:34from all different stripes of Star Trek
09:36that were there for that.
09:37That was the most amazing part, actually,
09:39was that you looked around,
09:41you saw somebody from almost every cast,
09:43and you just feel the weight of the legacy, you know,
09:47and the connection between everybody.
09:49It was kind of amazing.
09:50You know, what Sam was just talking about,
09:53I watched it happen,
09:54and it was a really profound,
09:55I mean, as profound as it was,
09:57it was the most profound for Sam,
09:59I think the feeling of, you know,
10:02seeing multiple generations of actors coming together
10:05for their own unique reasons,
10:07connecting over what it means to be in this franchise.
10:11I hate the word franchise.
10:13It feels like we all work at McDonald's.
10:14I'm not going to use that word.
10:16It's family, right?
10:18Family, it's family.
10:19And it was, it's just a beautiful,
10:21it was a beautiful experience.
10:22Obviously, like, I mean, you know,
10:24whenever people say, oh, it was humbling,
10:26I always feel like, oh, that's a scripted word.
10:28But it really was humbling,
10:29because we were sitting there with people
10:30who were risking their lives every week to tell stories.
10:34And that was really profound,
10:36because we don't do that.
10:38We don't do that.
10:39And to be in that company for us was amazing,
10:42because I think that Star Trek has just had
10:45such an impact on so many people for so long.
10:48And I think we all felt it that night.
10:51Sunde, you and I talked about the impact
10:53that Star Trek had on you,
10:54and how Geordi was also a really meaningful character for you.
10:57I'm wondering, as you stepped into the,
10:59you've directed a lot of episodes of Star Trek,
11:01but as you stepped into the process of making a feature,
11:05how did you want to sort of make it feel like Star Trek,
11:08but also, like, the shows that you've been directing,
11:11but then expand the scope to make it feel like a film?
11:14Yeah, it's an excellent question, Adam.
11:16I mean, yeah, we've done a lot of discovery.
11:19I've done a lot of discovery.
11:20And I had a lot of discussions with Alex
11:23about what makes 31 a little bit different.
11:27You know, we've talked about it, you know,
11:29being the flip side of Trek, in a way, but still Trek.
11:32You know, and introducing all these different types
11:35of characters that we don't normally get to see in Trek,
11:38and really getting to enjoy them doing things
11:42in different colors of the rainbow
11:44than we would ordinarily see in Star Trek.
11:47And, you know, I grew up watching Star Trek
11:50in Orange County, and, you know,
11:53looking at Geordi up on screen
11:55was a very profound impact on me.
11:57And then I got to meet him for the first time
11:59at the Peabody's as well, you know.
12:01And it was just really great to give him a hug
12:03and tell him how I felt about him
12:05and the impact it had on my life, you know.
12:07And so, you know, we have a bunch of different types of people,
12:10characters in Section 31.
12:12So I hope each of those characters
12:14has a profound impact on that kid or that adult
12:17that gets to see them and enjoy them in this movie.
12:20We'll see, brother.
12:22So, you know, I was on the set,
12:24so I have a little bit of an appreciation
12:27for how different Section 31 is.
12:30But for the actors, as far as how does Section 31
12:34sort of stand apart in the vast galaxy of Star Trek?
12:40Maybe we can use that word.
12:43I feel like typically Star Trek,
12:46and like anytime you're on a ship,
12:48there's protocols, you know what I mean?
12:50It's naval, you know.
12:53So, you know what I mean?
12:55But Sections 31 exists outside of that construct.
12:59So it's very ragtag, very loose,
13:03very sort of just get the thing done
13:05however they need to get it done,
13:07which is a very different, you know...
13:12Take on it.
13:13Take on sort of the Star Trek world.
13:16But ironically, to Sam's point,
13:18and I imagine that Tundi and Alex,
13:23you know, one of the things they wanted us most to pull off was,
13:26but there is a necessity to remain of some level of formality.
13:32If that, well, yeah.
13:35Casey's point is they inserted me, Omari.
13:39Correct.
13:40So as she policed this rogue version of policing agent and agency,
13:45particularly with Sam's character,
13:47because, and it was so well written,
13:50I don't know who wrote this.
13:51It might have been, maybe Alex wrote this specific part.
13:54No, Craig Sweeney.
13:55Craig Sweeney.
13:56No, but I mean this specific part I'm about to refer to.
13:59When I say I found Sam's character,
14:03I just simply say I found Sam's character,
14:05and I allude to why he's so great at what he does.
14:08But in reality, as much as we can be rogue, to Sam's point,
14:12as much as we can be like loosey-goosey,
14:14just try to figure it out,
14:15but still while maintaining the structure of the galaxies,
14:19all the galaxies, plural,
14:21the reality is I find section 31 to stand out most
14:24because there's still that marriage,
14:26the hybrid of sorts of the formality that we grew up watching,
14:29and yet they still have this dirty sort of edgy take on it.
14:32And then a sense of humor is allowed.
14:34So that was just amazing for us,
14:37in particular before we really got going.
14:40There were scenes that we shot, and I thought it was a great job.
14:43I guess Tooney wanted it shot this way,
14:45where we got to love and know each other sort of early.
14:49And it was a scene that was nothing but fun.
14:52Everybody got to show the individuality of their characters.
14:55In all of the Star Trek iterations, worlds,
15:00if you want to be inclusive in this family,
15:02if that's the word Alex wants to use,
15:04there is a formality and a structure that is not boring,
15:08but it absolutely is of mechanical structured nature.
15:12We're a bit different.
15:14We're kind of really going there,
15:16but yet we still at the same time have to be a bit structured.
15:19So I found as a Loxahar,
15:21that was interesting for me to figure that out in the beginning.
15:24Am I super structured? Can I be funny?
15:26So I really went to Tooney and said,
15:28Bro, you got to beat me up. Don't just direct me.
15:30Help me figure this out.
15:32And he beat me up properly.
15:34The comedy is also a really important thing too, I think,
15:37because that was something that seemed to be very much a part of the show.
15:42And I'm looking at Sam,
15:44because it seems like at least some of that fell to you.
15:47Was that your experience of it?
15:50I think definitely Quasi is a character
15:56that you can put comedy through, you know what I mean?
15:59And I think I'm an experienced comedian.
16:02You are?
16:03I just heard this outside.
16:05I was like, oh, I thought I was doing drama this whole time.
16:09I cry every scene.
16:11Things that hurt, bro.
16:13But, you know, the movie is a lot of things.
16:21It's action, drama, comedy.
16:24It's equal parts all of that.
16:27So it's not just up to Quasi to be funny.
16:31Everybody's funny in it, and everybody's serious,
16:34and the stakes are there for everybody.
16:37So it really is a whole piece, if that makes sense.
16:43But, you know, I won't say that.
16:45I won't crack some jokes, as I do.
16:47You also have to wear those contacts.
16:50Yeah, I wear contacts this whole time.
16:53Announcement.
16:55You heard it here, folks.
16:58Because, like, with those contacts,
17:00you can't wear them for, like, such a long time.
17:04I couldn't wear regular contacts when I was wearing those
17:07because your eyes get so dried out,
17:10and, like, you don't want, like, any sort of infection.
17:12So I wasn't able to wear my contacts between scenes,
17:14so I'm, like, there with no glasses.
17:16So I was like, you know what, if I want to do this,
17:19I'm going to need to alter my eyes.
17:22He was bumping into everybody.
17:23Exactly.
17:24And now I'm just, like, swinging and punching people
17:26because I'm scared.
17:28I can't see anything.
17:29How'd I get there?
17:30I don't know.
17:31Contacts.
17:33So two more questions for you.
17:35First, what is your absolute top, no other exceptions,
17:39favorite episode of Star Trek?
17:41Measure of a Man.
17:43That's a good one.
17:44Yeah.
17:45Oh, it's my favorite.
17:46It's where a science officer from another ship
17:50comes to take Data.
17:51Yeah.
17:52Because the question is, is he a property of Starfleet
17:55or is he a member of Starfleet?
17:57And Picard is arguing in favor of Data
18:02and playing truly devil's advocate is Riker,
18:08who has to argue against Data being autonomous, you know.
18:13And, like, it's a really brilliant episode
18:15that I really love.
18:16It's my favorite episode of Star Trek.
18:17Dune Day.
18:18So, yeah, I'm blanking on the title of my episode,
18:20but it's when we met the Progenitors.
18:22When we met, what was it?
18:24Next Gen, yeah.
18:25Yeah, Next Gen, yeah.
18:26The Chase.
18:27I do remember that one.
18:28That's called The Chase.
18:29The Chase, yes.
18:30And it was directed, ironically, by Jonathan Frakes.
18:33And that episode had a profound impact on me
18:37when I was watching it as a kid just thinking,
18:40oh, my gosh, you know, what is out there, you know?
18:44And now you're here directing us?
18:46And now I'm here directing you guys, you know,
18:48in Star Trek, which is, you know, always a pinch moment.
18:53The Inner Light.
18:54The Inner Light, yeah.
18:55It's just a beautiful, like, it represents
18:58one of my favorite parts of Star Trek,
19:00which is, I mean, it's the last temptation of Picard,
19:03you know, and so the idea of an alternate life
19:06and, you know, who you are,
19:08having to examine who you are
19:09and the choices that you've made and why
19:12and what other lives you could have lived.
19:14I just think it's beautiful.
19:16You know, the ending is beautiful.
19:19It is, yeah.
19:21So the last question is the question
19:23that we've been asking everybody who's coming in here,
19:25which is what is your, what is on your watch list?
19:29What are you watching right now?
19:32I'm waiting for Old Man to return.
19:34Oh, yeah.
19:35I'm a big Jeff Bezos fan.
19:36So good, so good.
19:37And I like the first one, right?
19:40You know, I feel like I'm in, I think,
19:42I think Alex Kurtzman has a good taste.
19:46You know, but Old Man was a great, right?
19:48So good.
19:49Really good.
19:50Jeff Bridges is always just so excellent.
19:54Watching a few things.
19:55Watching Shogun.
19:57Yeah, that's great.
19:58Amazing.
19:59The Bear, Boys.
20:03RuPaul's Drag Race All-Stars just ended.
20:06Very good.
20:07So, yeah, that's all that makes up Sam.
20:10You know what I mean?
20:11Yeah.
20:12That's me in a nutshell.
20:14I just finished Presumed Innocent.
20:15Oh, my God, I just started it.
20:17Yes.
20:18Don't tell me what happened.
20:19I'm not going to tell you anything.
20:20I loved it.
20:21Episode 5 just came out.
20:22It's done.
20:23I think it finished, yeah.
20:24Oh, yeah, oh, oh, oh.
20:25This past Wednesday episode.
20:27Yeah, it certainly did.
20:28That's another one I've been on, too.
20:29Yeah, but I loved it, and I love Ruth Nega so much,
20:32so that was an easy watch for me.
20:34Difficult watch, but fun.
20:37Tunde, how about you?
20:38You know, I've been watching Slow House.
20:40Slow Horses.
20:41Slow Horses.
20:42Yeah, and, yeah, just found that and burned right through it,
20:46and I just, what an incredible world they've created, you know.
20:51I'm almost done with Season 3 of The Bear
20:54and just watched the episode where Natalie and her mother,
21:00where Natalie gives birth, and it is,
21:03like, it reminded me of why television is so amazing.
21:07To be able to just do two,
21:09sometimes just have two characters in a room
21:12in a super fraught situation
21:13where they have a lot to work out with each other
21:15is the most wonderful kind of drama.
21:17For all the special effects and everything we do,
21:19there's sort of nothing more elementally beautiful
21:21than that kind of story,
21:22and it reminded me, actually,
21:24that I want to tell more stories like that on Trek
21:26because we don't often do that.
21:27We don't usually put people in a box like that,
21:30and when it works, man, it's so great.
21:33They did long takes on that, too.
21:35They did, like, two takes or something.
21:37They did, and they just let the actors go.
21:39Yeah.
21:40There was, like, very little cutting, you know.
21:42It was beautiful.
21:43Yeah, Tony, let us go, man.
21:44Delicious.
21:45Delicious.
21:46Go.
21:47I believe there was a lot of improv going on.
21:49Oh, yeah, there was.
21:50There was.
21:51There was.
21:54I got to fly a spaceship.
21:55Yeah.
21:56And I caught you.
21:57That's right.
21:58One of the things I think that's so fun, by the way, Adam,
22:00about, like, you know,
22:01sort of where 31 fits into the spectrum of Trek
22:04is that, you know, Trek in its DNA
22:07plays around with all different kinds of genres, right?
22:10That's the model that TOS set,
22:12and the idea of doing spy-fi, you know,
22:14the idea of doing a spy show
22:16in the context of Star Trek is really fun.
22:19I also think that what we loved
22:21about the approach to this particular thing
22:25is that all of the characters,
22:27even Garrett, in a way,
22:29you know, even though Garrett is the person
22:32who can put on a uniform,
22:33everybody else is the character
22:35that wouldn't ever be able to put on a uniform
22:37in a regular starship
22:38but would want to accomplish all the same things
22:41that a regular Starfleet officer would want to accomplish.
22:43They just want to do it in a very different way, right?
22:45And in some ways, the idea of the show is,
22:47of the movie is,
22:50Starfleet can do its job
22:52in the sort of black and white of right and wrong
22:55because Section 31 only exists in the gray area
22:58and allows Starfleet to live that way.
23:00So the idea that, you know,
23:02you're in a complicated world
23:04and you need complicated people
23:05to do the complicated job
23:07that may not fall into the traditional
23:09yes or no of Starfleet
23:10is a really interesting idea.
23:13Well, guys, thank you so much for coming in
23:15and have a great Comic-Con.

Recommended