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R’uustai — Star Trek: Starfleet Academy’s “300th Night”
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Star Trek: Starfleet Academy
R’uustai — Star Trek: Starfleet Academy’s “300th Night”
By Keith R.A. DeCandido
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Published on March 5, 2026
Credit: Paramount+
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Credit: Paramount+
This episode of Starfleet Academy (and the next one, as this one ends on a cliffhanger leading to next week’s season finale) is exactly the kind of episode I didn’t want to see in a show about the Academy, so imagine my surprise to have completely and unreservedly loved the episode all to pieces. Kudos to scripter (and, full disclosure, friend of your humble reviewer) Kirsten Beyer and director Jonathan Frakes for pulling it off.
Of course, it shouldn’t be a surprise that these two were primarily responsible for creating such a good episode. Frakes has starred as William Riker in six different Trek series and prior to this had directed anywhere between two and eight episodes of six different Trek series over the course of the past 35 years. Before becoming a producer/writer on each of the live-action Trek series that have been produced since 2017 (as well as the Khan audio drama), Beyer was a veteran Trek novelist, with eleven Trek novels to her credit.
The episode has major consequences for the thirty-second-century Federation, and puts our cadets at the heart of having to save everyone’s life—which, on the face of it, is ridiculous. But dammit if “300th Night” doesn’t make it work, because it builds very skillfully on what’s already been established about the characters in general and about Caleb and Ake in particular.
The title comes from it being the end of the semester, the 300th day of classes, and that night is a time of celebration. (The commentary from Stephen Colbert’s digital dean is particularly hilarious.) In addition, the Athena, along with a mess of other ships, is en route to Betazed for the installation of the seat of the Federation government on that world.
One of the celebrations that night is Jay-Den making R’uustai with SAM, Genesis, Darem, and Caleb. (But not Kyle, which is a choice that stands out, and not in a good way.) The R’uustai was established in the TNG episode “The Bonding,” which was the inaugural Trek script by the great Ronald D. Moore. It’s a Klingon ritual by which you bring someone into your family who is not part of it by blood. Jay-Den sees his Academy classmates as his found family, and wants to formalize that.
Everyone participates—though SAM can’t actually drink the chech’tluth (a Klingon drink that was established in TNG’s “Up the Long Ladder”)—except for Caleb, who gets up and leaves the room when the check’tluth is passed on to him. Caleb flashes on his mother before he gets up and leaves the room, and it’s obvious he views becoming part of Jay-Den’s family as a betrayal of the only family he has left: his mother, whom he still hasn’t found.
This is followed by an absolutely magnificent scene between Caleb and SAM. Kerrice Brooks beautifully plays SAM 2.0, as she’s the same person but also completely different. Now that she’s had a childhood added to her history, she finds herself being annoyed by her old self.
She and Caleb discuss the situation with his mother, and how he’s tried every possible encryption to find any messages she might have put out there for him. It takes SAM, with her freshly installed childhood and perfect recall of everything, to remind him that the last time his mother saw him, he was six years old. A precocious six-year-old, but nonetheless, a wee tot. The encryption key might be something simple that would occur to a six-year-old.
So he tries using the moon that they agreed would be “their” moon back in the opening scene of “Kids These Days,” and sure enough, it works—and there are a ton of messages from Anisha Mir going back two years. The good news is, she’s currently on the planet Ukeck. The bad news is that that planet is about to be taken over by the Venari Ral.
The worse news comes from Vance: they now know what Nus Braka was after when he raided the starbase in “Come, Let’s Away”: the Omega-47, a weapon that harnesses the omega particle. Established in Voyager’s “The Omega Directive,” omega particles can do damage to both regular space and subspace, making warp drive impossible. (Obviously the Omega Directive that forbids any research into the omega particle—and obligates Starfleet to prevent any research into it—is no longer in effect, which is fine, as that was a particularly stupid regulation.) The Venari Ral have detonated an Omega-47 in an uninhabited star system to show that they have it. The Federation’s response is to circle the proverbial wagons, sending all their ships to protect various Federation worlds.
(There’s an amusing bit where Ake and Kelrec are looking at the tactical situation, and Kelrec is momentarily confused as to why there are ships in the Eridani system, as he forgot that Ni’Var is part of the Federation now. It’s a nice touch, showing how fast the Federation is expanding and rebuilding after the Burn ended. For her part, the centuries-old Ake is still struggling to remember that Ni’Var isn’t called Vulcan anymore.)
Upon learning of this, Caleb reverses course, as it were. Ukeck is outside the Federation, obviously, and it’s now very dangerous for anyone to venture outside the Federation, especially to a world the Venari Ral has targeted. If he tells Ake that he’s found Anisha on Ukeck, she’ll be duty-bound to report it—or she’ll not report it to help him, and either way, he won’t put her in that position.
So he steals a shuttle. Because that’s what Star Trek characters do.
SAM forces herself aboard, pointing out that she’s the only one who can do the calculations fast enough to get past security. (Nice to finally see the writer of a Trek episode acknowledge that it should be difficult to steal a shuttle…) Genesis and Darem discover what they’re doing because they’ve been tasked with making sure the shuttles are locked down. (Darem is still drunk from the chech’tluth. Khionians don’t have the enzyme to break down alcohol. When Genesis mentions that they also don’t have the enzyme to break down bananas, Darem shouts, “We don’t have a lot of enzymes!” I have to admit to laughing my ass off at that, as George Hawkins delivers it perfectly.)
Caleb and SAM wind up pretty much kidnapping Genesis and Darem for their journey to Ukeck, which Genesis is not happy about, but by the time they arrive—and Darem sobers up—they’re on board with reuniting Caleb with Anisha, because they know that’s what he wants more than anything.
Back on Athena, Jay-Den sees the padd that has all of Caleb’s messages from Anisha, and he and Tarima—who is still psychically linked to Caleb and knows something’s up—quickly figure out what happened and report to Ake.
I love what happens next because we know from the prior eight episodes that Ake takes her caretaking of Caleb very seriously. Showing an impressive knowledge of what franchise he’s in, Vance knows damn well that if he orders Ake to stay put, she won’t, so he doesn’t give her that order. Lura has offloaded the cadets to Betazed, and the only ones still on board are Ake, Reno, and the EMH. The three of them take Athena to Ukeck to effect a rescue. Well, actually, five of them, because Jay-Den and Tarima stow away on board, because of course they do.
Meantime, Caleb’s group have mixed success in their mission. The good news is that Caleb does find his mother. The reunion scene is magnificently played by the always-brilliant Tatiana Maslany and director Frakes. Both Anisha and Caleb are wearing masks over the bottoms of their faces, as well as hoods. So we only see Anisha’s eyes, but that’s more than enough for Maslany to show Anisha going from anger at the person she thinks is stalking her to the slow realization that this is her son—all with just her eyes. Maslany proved on Orphan Black that she is one of the best actors in the history of humanity, and scenes like this serve as additional reminders.
At Caleb’s silent urging, the other cadets don’t identify themselves as Starfleet to Anisha. After she leaves to set up transit for her and Caleb, the other cadets call Caleb on his behavior—they thought he’d be reunited, but then come back to the Academy. Because Caleb is a complete asshole, he doesn’t just say that he’s leaving with his mother, he decides to say incredibly mean things to both Darem and Genesis. He is about to say something mean to SAM as well, but she doesn’t give him a chance, as she hugs him fiercely before he can say anything. Which is so very SAM.
Unfortunately, the Venari Ral were able to detect their transport down, and so the cadets are captured. To their credit, the cadets resist interrogation, despite the fact that Darem is repeatedly punched in the face. Darem’s response is to just smile at the guy punching him, which is exactly the right way to deal with that. Anisha and Caleb also try to rescue the cadets, with Anisha obviously only doing so because these people matter to her son. But eventually, it turns into a fight, during which Anisha is shot.
Athena is forced to go into the atmosphere to get close enough to get a transporter lock through the interference the Venari Ral has put up, which is a beautiful visual. However, a whole mess of Venari Ral ships show up and slap tractor beams on them.
Ake therefore separates the saucer and flies off—which, sadly, leaves the atrium behind. I love this particular strategy because it’s exactly the kind of maneuver that was envisioned way back in 1966 for starships—saucer separation was part of the original series bible—but it wasn’t feasible with the effects tech available at the time. It was an explicit feature of the Enterprise-D in 1987, but the expense of doing the separation with the tech available at that time was sufficiently high that it was only used three times. In 2026, however, the tech can do it with the greatest of ease, and it’s a perfect strategy to use here.
Unfortunately, as we’ve seen with Nus Braka, his plans are a little more complex. He deliberately detonated the one Omega-47 so that the Federation would circle the proverbial wagons. And then a whole bunch of Omega-47 mines show up surrounding Federation space. Braka has, in essence, put a wall around the Federation, and the entirety of Starfleet is trapped behind it.
This is the sort of storyline that would never have worked in the twenty-third or twenty-fourth centuries, but does work in the thirty-second. The Federation of the 2200s and 2300s is big and powerful and sprawling. The Federation of the 3100s is none of those things, and they’re still crawling their way back to being a super-power. The thirty-second-century Federation is small enough and weak enough for this power play by Braka to succeed.
And so Athena—or, rather, Athena’s saucer section—is the only ship that’s outside that wall, staffed only by three Starfleet officers, a half-dozen cadets, and an injured civilian.
This is where they leave us at the end of the episode on a macro scale, which is a rather nasty cliffhanger for the season finale. But the micro-cliffhanger is even more effective. Recall that the last time Anisha saw Ake was in a courtroom where the latter sentenced the former to prison, which separated her from Caleb. The final scene is a masterpiece, with Anisha waking up to see herself on a Starfleet ship, being treated by a Starfleet doctor, and then to be confronted by the person who condemned her twenty years ago. Maslany magnificently plays the combination of panic and anger Anisha is feeling, while Holly Hunter perfectly plays Ake’s tentative approach to this person who she knows she has hurt so badly.
I’m on tenterhooks waiting for next week. How will the confrontation between Anisha and Ake go? How will Athena save the day? Will Discovery make an appearance? (The Omega-47 mines prevent ships from getting through via traditional means, but Discovery has the spore drive, which should be able to bypass that.) And you know we’ll be seeing Paul Giamatti again, and that should mean lots more great scenes between him and Hunter.
Can’t wait…[end-mark]
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