Speculative fiction I have been watching.
My favourite speculative fiction show at the moment is a
toss-up between Eureka and Misfits. I always seem to make time
to sit down on Tuesday nights and watch Eureka on Foxtel, and after watching
the last episode of the first series of Misfits,
I immediately downloaded the first episode of the second series.
Eureka
Eureka, if you
have not watched it yet, is set in a top secret town devoted to science and
geeks. Each week someone’s science experiment seems to have unforeseen
consequences, or the scientist involved decides he wants to be noticed. The
main character is an unscientific sheriff who is more into intuition than
science in preventing these experiments becoming disasters. It is very
tongue-in-cheek and real pop-corn stuff, but I am addicted to its light-hearted
exploration of way-out-there science ideas.
Misfits
Misfits is more
fantasy than science fiction. It’s a British show where five twenty-somethings
are doing community service for various misdemeanours. One day a shower of
small and seemingly harmless meteors lands in the river beside the community
centre they are working in. As a result, they all develop semi-super powers
that accentuate some element of their personality. For example, one guy who
doesn’t fit in and is ignored by others, can turn himself invisible. Another
who is a track athlete can travel into the future and influence it. In the
hands of an American writer these characters would immediately become crime
fighters taking on evil super dudes, but not in this award winning show. If you
have an isomething, you can download the BBC app and, last time I checked,
watch the first episode for free.
The Fades
I really enjoyed the six part horror mini-series The Fades which was recently shown on
ABC2. The spirits of the dead can no longer ascend to wherever they are meant
to go, so they hang around on earth. No one can see them except for a group of
special human angels, and a teenager. The dead spirits discover that if they
eat human flesh they can return to human form, something the angels and
teenager try to stop.
Doctor Who
I have been disappointed with Doctor Who ever since
Russell T. Davis stopped producing and writing much of it. Since he left they
seemed to have dumbed it down for kids, where the thing that really struck me
when it was remade, was that it a lot more adult than the original series. But
maybe I have just seen too much of it.
I think one of the major problems, besides its lack of suspense these days, is the Doctor can’t die, so at the end of each episode you know the doctor will save the world/planet. In the X-Files they often did not get or even stop the baddy, not in Doctor Who. In The Walking Dead just about any of the main characters could die, without any fanfare, during an episode, not in Doctor Who. Eureka has a lot more suspense than Doctor Who. In Misfits they might accidentally kill their supervisor. Nothing surprising seems to happen anymore in Doctor Who. The last episode of Doctor Who I really enjoyed was the first one of the current interrupted series with the Dalek who thought he was human. It was more slowly played, had a bit of suspense, and surprised me by allowing me to empathise with a killing machine.
Defiance
And then there is the really bad. A new series has
started on Foxtel called Defiance. It is set on the Earth after a war in which
the planet was terraformed by aliens. Eventually the surviving humans and
multiple alien races called a truce, and live in an uneasy peace.
The main character (Aussie Grant Bowler) is a scavenger
of resources. About ten minutes into the pilot episode I thought this guy is
going to drive into town like Clint Eastwood, and be asked to save it, which he
will decline and leave, but then decide to come back and save them. And WTF?,
that is exactly what happened. It is just a western with aliens instead of
Indians, Star Wars on Earth. Each week we will have a story about a
scramble for power between the town and various baddies, with the man with the
biggest gun and/or American righteousness winning. Whoopee. Right-wing crap.
You are better off watching Hell on Wheels if you
want to watch a western series, or Game of Thrones if you want to be
engrossed in the politics of power.
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