Wednesday, June 8, 2011
TV

Falling Skies

Falling Skies has a big, fun premise— it just needs big, fun characters.

Daniel Walters
Somehow, motorcycles always rule the post-apocalyptic landscape.
Somehow, motorcycles always rule the post-apocalyptic landscape.
Somehow, motorcycles always rule the post-apocalyptic landscape.

Falling Skies, a new TNT series about a resistance group fighting against alien invaders, is closer, thankfully, to AMC’s Walking Dead than to V.

Here, the aliens — black six-legged xenomorphs and big metal two-legged mech-robots — have already invaded, and the military and major cities have already fallen. The aliens — “skitters,” the puny earthlings call them — have captured scores of children, and have implanted mind-control devices in their spines. As in Walking Dead, survival — not Independence Day-heroism — is the priority.

Dumping viewers in the middle of a long-underway conflict has its advantages: It sets up the conflict and stakes immediately, with no prologue needed. But that choice also results in a lot of “Don’t-you-understand-he’smy-son!?” dialogue, and all that expositional dumping weighs down the first few episodes.

Falling Skies, which premieres next week, fulfills the flashy necessities of serialized televisions: plot twists, cliffhangers, and regular peril. But as in Walking Dead, the characters — the ones that makes us care about the twists, cliffhangers, and peril — are mostly dull.

The main character, Tom (Noah Wyle, ER) has a son and the sort of beard that college students get during a European backpacking trip, but no other interesting traits. Pediatrician Anne Glass is played with a typical Moon Bloodgood (Daybreak) performance: beautiful-bland.

The only truly interesting regular is the acidic anti-hero survivalist John Pope (The 4400.) He chews the scenery, loudly, while the other actors, mistakenly, try to be subtle.

Showrunner Joss Whedon, of Firefly and Buffy the Vampire Slayer, always understood one key thing about science fiction: With all its laser-firing and disbelief-suspending, sci-fi is inherently distancing — tending to draw focus toward action scenes, plot and conceptual brainstorms, and away from dialogue and characters.

So you’ve got to compensate with more interesting dialogue and bigger characters: If you must give us aliens, zombies, or orcs, give us characters to match. Give us the insecure schemer Benjamin Linus on Lost. Give us the twitchy genius Walter Bishop on Fringe. Give us Darth Vader.

The plot twists, occasional directorial poetry, and suspense about what’s next can propel Falling Skies for a while. But without more inherently interesting characters, Falling Skies will inevitably follow Flash Forward, V, and The Event down the wormhole of failed and forgettable serialized sci-fi.

(TNT, Sundays, 9 pm)


TIVO-WORTHY

The Glee Project
The distinction between Glee (the television show) and Glee (the commercial juggernaut) has never been clear. The narrative choices and musical numbers always seemed picked more for iTunes sales than for, well, making a decent TV show. Now showrunner Ryan Murphy has gone a step further, using an American Idol competition to determine a new recurring guest star. (Oxygen, Sundays, 9 pm)

Childrens Hospital
At one time, you probably scoffed at Cartoon Network for running live-action comedies, accusing them of diluting their cartoony vision. Ah, but shows like Eagleheart and Childrens Hospital, existing in an alternate universe of constant silliness, were even more cartoonish than the cartoons. In Season Three, Childrens Hospital continues zanily spoofing Grey’s Anatomy. (Adult Swim, Thursdays, midnight)

Pretty Little Liars
In just three words, its title sums up every CW show. But Pretty Little Liars — essentially, Gossip Girl with murder — airs on ABC Family. In its second season, the girls still haven’t figured out who killed their best friend. (ABC Family, Tuesdays, 8 pm)

Also in Remote Possibilities

The River

River creator Oren Peli compares his horror formula to getting a cavity filled.

Blair Tellers |
Wednesday, February 15,2012
TV

Alcatraz

I’m just as lost as the prisoners in this new J.J. Abrams history mystery.

Lisa Fairbanks-Rossi |
Wednesday, February 8,2012
TV

House of Lies

A show about the people screwing the people who are screwing the rest of us.

Luke Baumgarten |
Wednesday, February 1,2012
TV

Portlandia

Portlandia goes where no sketch comedy has gone before.

Daniel Walters |
Wednesday, January 25,2012
TV

Napoleon Dynamite

Fine, buy why now?

Blair Tellers |
Wednesday, January 18,2012

Also By Daniel Walters

Spokane: Google Me

Spokane joins the competition to persuade Google to build hyper-speed Internet connections

Daniel Walters |
Wednesday, March 24,2010

Put to the People

A campaign to put gun reform on the ballot in Washington; plus, an anti-discrimination ordinance in Coeur d’Alene

Jacob Jones, Heidi Groover, Daniel Walters |
Tuesday, April 30,2013

Clipboards for Hire

That guy in front of Walmart asking you to sign a Washington state petition? He probably isn't even from Washington.

Daniel Walters |
Wednesday, June 16,2010

Money and Minnick

What Walt Minnick, Idaho's politician-turned-lobbyist, hates about politics and lobbying.

Daniel Walters |
Wednesday, April 11,2012

Free Fall

How the safety net for the homeless in Spokane is being destroyed.

Daniel Walters |
Wednesday, June 22,2011


 
 
Close
Close
Close