Star Trek: Strange New Worlds Season 5 Gets An Exciting Filming Annoucement
Star Trek: Strange New Worlds season 3 was delayed for two years due to 2023's combined WGA and SAG-AFTRA strikes. Star Trek: Strange New Worlds season 3's finale premieres Thursday, September 11 on Paramount+.
On her Instagram (@jjhcanning), director Jordan Canning announced that she is directing Star Trek: Strange New Worlds season 5, episode 2. Canning shared a photo of her director's placard with the caption, "Back in the (space) sadddle."
Star Trek: Strange New Worlds & Director Jordan Canning Will Return For Seasons 4 & 5
Star Trek: Strange New Worlds has two more seasons on the way on Paramount+. Strange New Worlds was renewed for a 10-episode season 4 during season 3's production in 2024. Star Trek: Strange New Worlds received a 6-episode season 5 order after negotiations between co-showrunners Akiva Goldsman and Henry Alonso Myers and Paramount+.
Jordan Canning joined Star Trek: Strange New Worlds' talented bench of directors with season 2, episode 5, "Charades." The Canadian filmmaker helmed two episodes of Strange New Worlds season 3; episode 2, "Wedding Bell Blues," and episode 8, "Four-and-a-Half Vulcans." Jordan also directed Star Trek: Strange New Worlds season 4, episode 5.
Our Take On Star Trek: Strange New Worlds' Fifth & Final Season
Star Trek: Strange New Worlds is nearing the end of its "five-year mission" on Paramount+. Executive producers and co-showrunners Akiva Goldsman and Henry Alonso Myers plan to take Strange New Worlds to the cusp of Star Trek: The Original Series with Captain James T. Kirk (Paul Wesley) taking command of the USS Enterprise from Captain Christopher Pike (Anson Mount).
If Goldsman and Myers get their wish, Star Trek: Strange New Worlds would spawn a spinoff dubbed Star Trek: Year One, telling new stories about James T. Kirk and Mr. Spock's (Ethan Peck) first voyages commanding the Starship Enterprise. However, this is merely an idea that Strange New Worlds' executive producers plan to pitch to Paramount Skydance.
The Walking Dead: Daryl Dixon Season 3, Episode 1 Review: Stephen Merchant Is The Standout Of A Solid If Unspectacular Season Premiere

Now that they’ve left France, this series is starting to feel like National Lampoon’s European Vacation with zombies. In this episode alone, their sightseeing trip takes them to two more European nations. After Daryl Dixon season 2 ended with Daryl and Carol making their way through a hallucinogen-infested Channel Tunnel, season 3 picks up with their arrival in a mostly deserted England.
As a Brit, I got a real kick out of seeing the Walking Dead-ified version of my homeland. My hat goes off to the VFX and production design teams for creating such a fully realized vision of post-apocalyptic London on a TV budget. They threw in a lot of inventive little visual flourishes, too: a zombie trapped in a red telephone box; a quarantine zone with “SOD OFF!” spray-painted on the wall; Tower Bridge permanently stuck in the “up” position. Big Ben proves to be a handy tool to draw hordes of the undead away.
Guest Star Stephen Merchant Makes This An Episode To Remember
Merchant Gives A Great Turn As The Omega Englishman
Seeing Stephen Merchant in a Walking Dead show wasn’t on my bingo card for this year, but he makes the episode. Merchant’s Julian Chamberlain believes he’s the only survivor left in the UK; “the last Englishman in England,” as he puts it. He was perfect casting for this role. As seen in Hello Ladies, The Outlaws, and his own standup, Merchant plays awkwardness really well. Since Julian hasn’t seen another human being in years, his social skills have gotten a bit rusty, so this role demands awkwardness. But Merchant also shows off his surprising dramatic abilities when Julian talks about his regrets, his self-doubts, and his unimaginable loneliness.
Of course, it’s Norman Reedus and Melissa McBride’s show, and their on-screen chemistry is as strong as ever. I appreciated that Jason Richman and David Zabel didn’t overwrite the episode. In a lot of recent TV shows, from The Last of Us to Dune: Prophecy, the writers have felt the need to spell out every little emotional turn in on-the-nose, plain-as-day dialogue. But not everything needs to be said out loud, especially between two people who know each other as well as Daryl and Carol. Richman and Zabel leave plenty of room for unspoken moments between Reedus and McBride.
Daryl Dixon Season 3's Plotting Feels A Bit Rushed
The Premiere Episode Can't Wait To Get To Spain
In the space of just one episode, this premiere races through enough material for a whole season set in England to get to the story in Spain.
In the space of just one episode, this premiere races through enough material for a whole season set in England to get to the story in Spain. It would’ve been a much neater transition if they’d set up the journey to Spain at the end of season 2 or set the Spain storyline in England. But cinematically, the Spanish setting is a treat. Once they arrive in Spain and the sun comes up, the visuals are gorgeous — it looks like a post-apocalyptic spaghetti western.
The Walking Dead: Daryl Dixon airs new episodes on AMC every Sunday.
Overall, the third season of The Walking Dead: Daryl Dixon has gotten off to a solid start. The overgrown Spanish countryside, full of zombies and unhinged cultists, is a fascinating new setting for these characters to explore. Daryl and Carol have an endlessly watchable dynamic, and the final scene of the episode — in which Daryl sees those bad dudes riding through again, returns to his camp, and finds that Carol is missing — is a strong enough hook to have me excited about where it’ll go next week.