Yeah, I loved the slow building of the relationships over the first season. Crichton and D'Argo is still one of my favorite TV bromances.
They got to a good place by the end of S1.
[yt]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mkn2_ShSvO4[/yt]
Yeah, I loved the slow building of the relationships over the first season. Crichton and D'Argo is still one of my favorite TV bromances.
The way it ends though is rather impressive too, in my opinion.Yeah, I loved the slow building of the relationships over the first season. Crichton and D'Argo is still one of my favorite TV bromances.
Back to farscape. Season 2, episode 3. Taking the stone.
Nothing else in SF approaches the growing romance between John and Aeryn. It was beautifully and believably done. I like that the main characters had differences befitting their backgrounds. I always felt that some Trek characters were too human-like. For instance, B'Elanna Torres on Voyager seemed like just a cranky human with little of her Klingon half's attributes.
That said, I'm open to things rekindling my interest.
Nothing else in SF approaches the growing romance between John and Aeryn. It was beautifully and believably done. I like that the main characters had differences befitting their backgrounds. I always felt that some Trek characters were too human-like. For instance, B'Elanna Torres on Voyager seemed like just a cranky human with little of her Klingon half's attributes.
Farscape had a smaller cast than most Trek shows, though what made John and Aeryn work more than anything was the chemistry Ben and Claudia had. Because their characters...didn't have a lot in common to lead to a relationship aside from them both looking human.
Even then the show had some difficulty justifying why the crew stayed together.
For the life of me I always wondered why they bothered keeping Rygel around. Or Jool. Or Chiana or Noranti.
Nothing else in SF approaches the growing romance between John and Aeryn. It was beautifully and believably done. I like that the main characters had differences befitting their backgrounds. I always felt that some Trek characters were too human-like. For instance, B'Elanna Torres on Voyager seemed like just a cranky human with little of her Klingon half's attributes.
Farscape had a smaller cast than most Trek shows, though what made John and Aeryn work more than anything was the chemistry Ben and Claudia had. Because their characters...didn't have a lot in common to lead to a relationship aside from them both looking human.
Even then the show had some difficulty justifying why the crew stayed together.
For the life of me I always wondered why they bothered keeping Rygel around. Or Jool. Or Chiana or Noranti.
They were all outcasts from their respective homes, except for John who was a stranger in a strange land (and hunted by Crais for a time). Better to stick together for common defense than to take off on their own. None of them can go home again and they have a leviathan to provide a place to live and for defense.
Season 4 lost me with
The "return to earth" trilogy. Season 1's A Human Reaction is my most hated Farscape episode, and I didn't enjoy Crichton actually returning to Earth any better than I did his fake return. I got to Part 2 of the trilogy (Kansas) and just shut it off part way through.
I just couldn't keep going after that. Still, I enjoyed Season 1 and 3 a lot, and I don't regret watching what I did. I do wish I'd been able to see the ending, but it probably would just have ticked me off, so maybe its better that I stopped when I did.
I never really thought of the people who lived on Moya as the kind of "crew" where people were contributing things. I thought of them more as just a group of people who were thrown together through events not entirely under their control.Farscape had a smaller cast than most Trek shows, though what made John and Aeryn work more than anything was the chemistry Ben and Claudia had. Because their characters...didn't have a lot in common to lead to a relationship aside from them both looking human.
Even then the show had some difficulty justifying why the crew stayed together.
For the life of me I always wondered why they bothered keeping Rygel around. Or Jool. Or Chiana or Noranti.
They were all outcasts from their respective homes, except for John who was a stranger in a strange land (and hunted by Crais for a time). Better to stick together for common defense than to take off on their own. None of them can go home again and they have a leviathan to provide a place to live and for defense.
But what did Rygel or Jool or Noranti contribute to the crew? They caused more trouble than anything else.
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