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However, eight years ago, there was an episode of a brilliant anthology series that delivered a must-watch episode for Star Trek fans.
U.S.S. Callister is a Perfect TV Episode for Star Trek Fans

Black Mirror is an anthology series that is similar to The Twilight Zone, but it has more of a focus on the fear of technology. Every episode takes the idea of technological advances and shows the horrific lengths that these advances could result in. This includes dark looks at social media’s impact, the manipulation of reality, the loss of human connection, the use of digital tools for punishment, and people’s tendency to use technology to control others. The Black Mirror Season 4 episode “USS Callister” took more than one of those ideas and created a perfect Star Trek homage.
This episode, released on December 29, 2017, was a feature length, 76-miniute, episode starring Jesse Plemons as Robert Daly, the co-founder of a virtual reality-based multiplayer online game. However, Robert feels he is not recognized for his contributions and doesn’t like how his coworkers treat him. As a result, he creates a new online game and uses the DNA of his co-workers to create characters in the game based on them. The game is a duplicate of Star Trek (called Space Fleet in the episode), with Robert as the ship’s captain and his coworkers as his crew.
However, things start to twist around when he uses the DNA of a newly hired young woman named Nanatte (Cristin Milioti) to bring her into the game, and she convinces the other members of the crew to revolt against the captain. The entire plot is complex, as Robert is somehow able to manipulate the game and force the characters in it to do what he wants, but somehow, they seem to have free will as well, and understand they are based on real people.
What really makes this stand out is that it takes the look and feel of Star Trek, but it then turns things on its head by having the ship’s captain be a dominating and overly demanding, often getting revenge against the characters in the game when he feels disrespected at work. It takes the design of Star Trek, but Robert clearly has no idea what the themes of a show like this are.









