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Starfleet Academy welcomes Brit Marling, the creative force behind a 15-year-old sci-fi film
Summary
Actress Brit Marling provides the computer voice on Star Trek: Starfleet Academy and earlier co-wrote and starred in the 2011 film Another Earth, which screened at Sundance and won the Alfred P. Sloan Prize.
Content
Brit Marling is credited as the computer voice on the new Star Trek: Starfleet Academy series, a casting choice that has prompted attention to her earlier work. She co-wrote and starred in the 2011 indie film Another Earth, a project that helped raise her profile. Another Earth centers on a duplicate Earth appearing in the sky and follows Marling's character, Rhoda Williams, after a fatal car crash. The film screened at the Sundance Film Festival and won the Alfred P. Sloan Prize.
Key points:
- Brit Marling provides the computer voice on Star Trek: Starfleet Academy as reported in the article.
- Another Earth (2011) was co-written by Brit Marling and director Mike Cahill and is cited as a formative project in her career.
- In Another Earth, a duplicate Earth appears, and Marling plays Rhoda Williams, who is involved in a drunk-driving crash that kills a mother and child.
- The film includes William Mapother among its cast and follows Rhoda as she seeks a path forward, including applying for a mission to the twin Earth and developing a relationship with the bereaved father.
- Another Earth screened at Sundance, won the Alfred P. Sloan Prize, and appeared on several year-end lists according to the article.
Summary:
Brit Marling's work on Another Earth is described as a key early success that led to further writing and acting projects such as Sound of My Voice and the Netflix series The OA. Her role as the computer voice on Star Trek: Starfleet Academy connects that indie background with a long-running franchise and, as noted in the article, may introduce her to a broader audience.
