The Sehlat Who Ate Its Tail
- Episode aired Aug 14, 2025
- TV-PG
- 49m
IMDb RATING
8.4/10
1.8K
YOUR RATING
Kirk's first day as captain turns disastrous when a scavenger ship seizes the Enterprise.Kirk's first day as captain turns disastrous when a scavenger ship seizes the Enterprise.Kirk's first day as captain turns disastrous when a scavenger ship seizes the Enterprise.
Joanne Leach
- Ensign Maurer
- (as Jo-Anne Leach)
David GS Jones
- Starfleet Soldier
- (uncredited)
Featured reviews
An episode like this was needed. Not that S3 has been bad, actually the contrary and that's my point. They needed an episode as fantastic as this to really put a spotlight on how absolutely embarrassing it must be for the haters of this show to whine week in and week out. The very first user review on here of this weeks episode was a 3/10 whining about Paul Wesley as Kirk.
Just admit you don't actually watch the show and spare us having to weed through your objective lies and culture war nonsense.
The Sehlat that Ate It's Tail tells the story of Kirk's first big mission in a captain's chair and cleverly gives all his future TOS friends something to do alongside him. Wesley is fantastic in the episode, the special effects and dread level of this weeks alien problem are absolutely top notch. Spock felt the most like Spock he's ever felt in this series. The character work earns every single beat, and everyone has something interesting to do. This episode was so good I'm shocked that it was only the 6th episode. It has "season finale" levels of suspense oozing from every level of its production, and the ending is very Trekkian and has something important to say about the human condition.
If they thought an episode was a better one to end the season than this, I can't wait to see how the rest of the season unfolds. Easily a top episode of SNW.
Just admit you don't actually watch the show and spare us having to weed through your objective lies and culture war nonsense.
The Sehlat that Ate It's Tail tells the story of Kirk's first big mission in a captain's chair and cleverly gives all his future TOS friends something to do alongside him. Wesley is fantastic in the episode, the special effects and dread level of this weeks alien problem are absolutely top notch. Spock felt the most like Spock he's ever felt in this series. The character work earns every single beat, and everyone has something interesting to do. This episode was so good I'm shocked that it was only the 6th episode. It has "season finale" levels of suspense oozing from every level of its production, and the ending is very Trekkian and has something important to say about the human condition.
If they thought an episode was a better one to end the season than this, I can't wait to see how the rest of the season unfolds. Easily a top episode of SNW.
I was super happy to have an episode that really feels like Star Trek. We had an actual adventure! They also managed to still have the Strange New Worlds quirkiness in there too, so I'd vote this episode as one of their best efforts. Fingers crossed that they can hold this course for the remainder of the season. It's been a rocky road, but now I've got some hope.
Great episode with a vibe of Star Trek: The Original Series.
Nice 'learning lesson' for James T. Kirk. Good dynamics between Science Officer Spock, Nurse Chapel, Ensign Uhura, Lieutenant Scott and Commander then Captain Kirk.
Fine foreshadowing of the future teaming up of known legacy characters.
Best episode of this third season.
Nice 'learning lesson' for James T. Kirk. Good dynamics between Science Officer Spock, Nurse Chapel, Ensign Uhura, Lieutenant Scott and Commander then Captain Kirk.
Fine foreshadowing of the future teaming up of known legacy characters.
Best episode of this third season.
For me, this is the best episode since Season 1's A Quality of Mercy, and the only episode of Season 3 I've felt compelled to watch twice. Simply put, this felt like Star Trek - a fun, multilayered adventure with a clever twist and a timely reminder that we're not so different from our enemies.
Interestingly, my two favourite Strange New Worlds episodes so far both feature Kirk, even though I'd much rather the writers focus on Pike, Una, and the crew. I don't mind the slow build of Kirk's world, but it shouldn't come at the expense of Pike and Una, who seem noticeably under-utilised this season.
I'm still not a huge fan of Pelia, but her rummaging through antiques and rewiring the Enterprise had the charm of the quirky, lighthearted moments we used to see in The Next Generation.
The resolution to this week's problem (and the episode's title) was once again a little unsatisfying - it prompted a "wait, what?" and rewind moment just to decipher what had happened. Kirk also went from being lost to suddenly having all the answers in a manner that felt unearned. And what was with the enemy ship's jaws and teeth? Still, these were minor missteps in what was otherwise a great episode.
I imagine writing Strange New Worlds isn't easy, with the constraints of canon, timelines, and the sheer number of prior plots - not to mention the harshness of a vocal minority who, somewhat ironically, seem to keep their phasers permanently set to kill. But when the show remembers its roots - hopeful, character-driven science fiction - it really shines. More of this, and less gimmickry, please.
Interestingly, my two favourite Strange New Worlds episodes so far both feature Kirk, even though I'd much rather the writers focus on Pike, Una, and the crew. I don't mind the slow build of Kirk's world, but it shouldn't come at the expense of Pike and Una, who seem noticeably under-utilised this season.
I'm still not a huge fan of Pelia, but her rummaging through antiques and rewiring the Enterprise had the charm of the quirky, lighthearted moments we used to see in The Next Generation.
The resolution to this week's problem (and the episode's title) was once again a little unsatisfying - it prompted a "wait, what?" and rewind moment just to decipher what had happened. Kirk also went from being lost to suddenly having all the answers in a manner that felt unearned. And what was with the enemy ship's jaws and teeth? Still, these were minor missteps in what was otherwise a great episode.
I imagine writing Strange New Worlds isn't easy, with the constraints of canon, timelines, and the sheer number of prior plots - not to mention the harshness of a vocal minority who, somewhat ironically, seem to keep their phasers permanently set to kill. But when the show remembers its roots - hopeful, character-driven science fiction - it really shines. More of this, and less gimmickry, please.
This week's episode of Strange New Worlds is nothing short of superb. "The Sehlat Who Ate Its Tail" might just be the best script the series has produced so far. The storytelling structure is airtight. Every scene builds naturally into the next, creating a perfectly paced narrative that never drags or feels rushed.
The character development is outstanding, with arcs that feel both deeply personal and integral to the larger plot. By the time the final act arrives, we are invested not just in the stakes but in the people facing them. And then comes the ending. It is an unexpected, relevant, and thought-provoking twist that lingers long after the credits roll.
This is Strange New Worlds firing on all thrusters, and it is an instant classic in the modern Star Trek canon. I absolutely loved this episode.
The character development is outstanding, with arcs that feel both deeply personal and integral to the larger plot. By the time the final act arrives, we are invested not just in the stakes but in the people facing them. And then comes the ending. It is an unexpected, relevant, and thought-provoking twist that lingers long after the credits roll.
This is Strange New Worlds firing on all thrusters, and it is an instant classic in the modern Star Trek canon. I absolutely loved this episode.
Did you know
- TriviaIn the episode, Commander Pelia confirms she is at least 5,000 years old.
- GoofsThere is no such thing as a "low geosynchronous orbit". You can have a geosynchronous orbit with a very low perigee but this would be largely useless in this context and meaningless without knowing what it was lower than.
- Quotes
Pelia: [On the bridge, Pelia is finishing up the wiring on old telephones she pulled from her 1980s memorabilia collection] Ladies, I haven't done this since I was a roadie for the Dead!
Lt. Erica Ortegas: Your species can communicate with dead people?
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 49m
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
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