Published Apr 7, 2026, 12:01 PM EDT
John Orquiola is a New & Classic TV Editor, Senior Writer, and Interviewer with a special focus on Star Trek. John has over 5,000 published articles at SR, and he has interviewed the biggest names in Star Trek on the red carpet and VIP events, among other beloved shows, movies, and franchises.
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J.J. Abrams' Star Trek movies are prequels set in an alternate reality, but, weirdly, Star Trek (2009) was also the last movie that moved the timeline forward. All three of Abrams' Star Trek cinematic blockbusters are set in the 23rd century Kelvin Timeline, which wouldn't exist without future events in Star Trek's Prime Timeline.
Star Trek's alternate movie reality is dubbed the 'Kelvin Timeline' because it was sparked by the destruction of the USS Kelvin and the death of Lieutenant George Kirk (Chris Hemsworth), the father of Captain James T. Kirk (Chris Pine). The USS Kelvin met its doom at the hands of Nero (Eric Bana), a Romulan time-traveler from the 24th century.
Star Trek (2009)'s main story takes place in 2258 of the Kelvin timeline, but J.J. Abrams' reboot jumps across multiple points throughout. Nero destroyed the USS Kelvin in 2233 at the same time Jim Kirk was born. Star Trek (2009) then follows Kirk and Spock's (Zachary Quinto) stories from when they were children to when Jim enlisted in Starfleet in 2255, then flashes forward to 2258.
Yet all of this can only happen because of the events of the Star Trek Prime Timeline's 24th century.
J.J. Abrams’ Star Trek 2009 Prequel Is Also Set The Farthest In The Prime Timeline
Everything in Star Trek (2009) and the very creation of the Kelvin Timeline itself is because of the supernova that destroyed Romulus in 2387. Ambassador Spock (Leonard Nimoy) failed in his attempt to use red matter to stop the Romulan sun from going supernova. Both Spock and Nero's starship, the Narada, were pulled into the past, but Nero blowing up the USS Kelvin in 2233 created a new timeline and reality.
As seen in Star Trek (2009), Spock emerged from the time vortex 25 years after Nero, in 2358. Nero captured Spock and banished him to the frozen world of Delta Vega so he could watch Nero destroy Vulcan. Spock then met James T. Kirk and Scotty (Simon Pegg) on Delta Vega.
Star Trek (2009) basing the Kelvin timeline's creation on the Romulan supernova was one of the film's biggest surprises, and it was the first time Star Trek had moved into the 2380s. 2002's Star Trek: Nemesis was set in 2379, which was the farthest point in the 24th century depicted prior to Star Trek (2009).
Star Trek (2009) revealed that Ambassador Spock was still on Romulus, which was also the first update to the legendary Vulcan since he appeared in Star Trek: The Next Generation's "Unification" two-parter in 1991. "Unification" took place in 2368, so Star Trek (2009) picks up Ambassador Spock's story 19 years later in 2387.
Star Trek Into Darkness and Star Trek Beyond did not include time travel or further visits to the Prime Timeline. Rather, both sequels moved the story of the Kelvin Timeline's Starship Enterprise into 2259 and 2263, respectively.
The most recent Star Trek movie, Star Trek: Section 31, also didn't move the Prime Timeline forward, as that streaming film took place in 2324, 40 years before Star Trek: The Next Generation.
When Will The Next Star Trek Movie Be Set In The Timeline?
Paramount Skydance has promised to make more Star Trek movies, with a new film announced in November 2025. Rather than make Star Trek 4, Jonathan Goldstein and John Francis Daley came aboard to develop a new Star Trek movie that will reportedly not be linked to any prior Star Trek movie or TV show.
Related
The Complete Star Trek Timeline Explained
Star Trek's timeline spans a thousand years of Starfleet and the United Federation of Planets, with alternate realities and time travel galore.
There are a few options for a new Star Trek movie to not tie into previous incarnations. The new Star Trek movie could be set in a century currently unexplored, such as the late 25th to the 31st centuries. Star Trek's many TV series haven't delved into the events of that roughly 600 years of time.
Alternatively, the new Star Trek movie could take a page from J.J. Abrams and create another alternate reality. Or the new Star Trek can simply be set in an existing timeline but completely ignore all the characters of the various Star Trek TV shows and movies, perhaps by taking place in a region of space far from the United Federation of Planets.
Distance from any prior Star Trek means not being set in Star Trek: Enterprise's 22nd century, Star Trek: The Original Series and Strange New Worlds' 23rd century, the 24th century of Star Trek: The Next Generation, Deep Space Nine, and Voyager, which was furthered by Star Trek: Lower Decks and Star Trek: Prodigy, the early 25th century of Star Trek: Picard, and the late 32nd century of Star Trek: Discovery and Star Trek: Starfleet Academy.
Star Trek's first six movies were set in the 23rd century, from the 2270s to 2293. Star Trek: The Next Generation's four films spanned 8 years, from 2371 to 2379. Where the next Star Trek movie will explore next, only Paramount Skydance knows, but it might be wise to boldly go into a completely new era and push Star Trek's movie timeline forward.
Created by Gene Roddenberry
First Episode Air Date September 8, 1966


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