Wednesday, June 27, 2007

Firefly: I like it. She likes it. What went wrong?

While browsing about in one of the ubiquitous box stores, I noticed that Firefly: The Complete Series was being sold for a nickel shy of $20. “The Complete Series” sounds rather grand, but really we're talking about a total of 14 episodes since Fox TV canned the show after a single season of mediocre ratings. Still, twenty bucks is what some people charge for a single CD, so this looked like a value I shouldn't pass up.

In concept Firefly is as pure a Space Opera as you can get: a group of misfit smugglers pilot an old ship on the fringes of the galaxy, trying to avoid run-ins with the law. It's even got six shooters and horses, which should qualify it for a whole new genre: the Space Horse Opera. And I'll be hog-tied and warp-fried if the whole durn hash doesn't work.

I need to point out here that this concept doesn't just work for me (a soft touch for this sort of thing); it works spectacularly for my wife, who mostly regards my fondness for all things Trek with a raised eyebrow. Unlike the recent generations of Trek, where the method was to establish the new franchise with three seasons of creaky scripts and bad acting, Firefly begins with a bang, quite literally, and it never lets up. The central character appears to be fighting guerrilla warfare on behalf of some holy cause. Things go badly for his team, however, and he is forced to surrender. The story begins there, and picks up six years later when he's become an outlaw.

The show's intelligence (here's a good time to credit creator Joss Whedon) is in its leisurely unveiling of significant details. We know our hero is now apostate and grotesquely disillusioned, but only over the course of the season do we get any idea why that is or what's really taken place to get him there. He is, of course, struggling to figure out which values he still holds dear and which he can do without. Meanwhile, he is surrounded by a crew of strong characters, half of whom are strong women (no small appeal to viewers like my wife).

Firefly also doesn't skimp on humour, some of it of the shoot-and-throw-the-corpse-over-the-gunwales variety that you get in Spaghetti Westerns. And there a few winks thrown toward the concept's absurdities. But for all the fruitiness of the gig, it works excellently because the visual signifiers — six shooters, cowboy talk and character stock pulled straight from Gunsmoke — work as a shorthand that emotionally pulls the viewer in to the concept's trickier conceits: a slow and morally ambiguous struggle against an enormously corrupt corporation that values technology, material gain and corporate power, and doesn't hesitate to exploit the weaker members and discontents of its own society.

Despite the fact that Firefly in its entirety works better than all but a meagre handful of the (egad!) 726 episodes of Trek, it seems to have died quite typically from a spectacular case of network neglect. I should also say that my affair with Firefly started off on the wrong foot: a year ago I rented Serenity, the movie that followed hot on the heels of the series' cancellation. I couldn't finish it. It was like beginning a mystery with the last chapter. It's wrong, and it just doesn't work.

It also highlighted a peculiarity of sci-fi television — the fetish for perfectly coiffed hair. What is it about Space Opera (and as with everything else about the genre, Battlestar Galactica pretty much sets the standard in this department, too) that requires its heroes to look like they've just left the stylist's chair? Especially for a concept like Firefly, I'd think there might be some leeway in the hairstyle department. Make it more like Deadwood In Space, perhaps.

Anyhow, the hair is just one small nit to pick, and it's foolish of me to complain when the leads are all so easy on the eyes. Firefly is television at its best, and my wife and I are now among the slowly growing legion of fans who would dearly love to see its resurrection.

8 comments:

Cowtown Pattie said...

How did we miss this one?

Can we get Deadwood revived while we are resurrecting the..heh heh...the dead?

(Comment should be viewed while listening to who else - The Dead.)

DarkoV said...

Wonder what's the thinking behind the series title.
This????
"Female Photuris fireflies are known for mimicking the mating flashes of other fireflies for the sole purpose of predation. Target males are attracted to what appears to be a suitable mate, and are then eaten. For this reason the Photuris female is sometimes referred to as "femme fatale"." (From here)

Or This...
"Fireflies do not bite, do not have pincers, do not carry disease and in fact are quite harmless. They cannot even fly fast. They have a life span of two months. (from here)
"

Whisky Prajer said...

CP - when La-La land seems intent on resurrecting everything from Sargeant Bilko to My Mother The Car, you'd think it could invest a little money on more recently deceased properties that continue to gain viewers with every passing year.

DV - if you're suggesting that the naming of the show contributed to its own demise, I quite agree with you. Neither Firefly nor Serenity have the sort of dramatic snap that Buffy The Vampire Slayer does.

Anonymous said...

Welcome to the club. Hee hee.

Doncha love the one where the Capn' is sitting there naked on a rock in the middle of a desert, and intones, "That could've gone better."

Btw, my wife is ambivalent on Trek, too, but she loved Firefly. Interesting.

Joel Swagman said...

This is one of the many shows I missed because of being in Japan. When I was back home this summer though an old friend insisted I watch the first episode with him (he also had the complete set). Sorry to say I never found time to follow up on the rest of the show, but I certainly agree it started with a bang! I'm a Trek fan myself, but the writers of STar Trek could learn a thing from this beginning

Whisky Prajer said...

Y-man - yeah, I'm happily eating crow on this issue. As for Star Trek, when I originally tore the plastic off the DVDs I subjected Beth to all the great episodes ("City On The Edge Of Forever," etc.) and she was duly impressed. Unfortunately, the best episodes are few and far between, and then you're watching the goofier stuff - she with one eyebrow raised, of course.

JS - if you can find this set in Japan, you should definitely give it a spin. I'd be curious to hear your fiance's take on them.

Scott said...

But I'm curious -- did you like 'Serenity' more or less after watching the TV series?

I'm *still* blue over its box-office failure...

Whisky Prajer said...

Haven't yet given Serenity the second viewing. It's on the to-do list, right after we've given a few of your discs a spin. ; )