Dollhouse has had a troubled run and some uneven episodes, but I persist in believing that one day we'll realize what we had here. When you sit down and watch the DVD box sets of seasons one and two, a year or a decade from now, things will fall into place and you'll suddenly realize quite how daring and mind-expanding this show was.
You'll find yourself waking up at three in the morning, your mind stuck on one of the show's candy-coated images of glamorous slavery. You'll be daydreaming at work, fantasizing about being someone else, or having the perfect person love you just the perfect way — and then you'll flash on one of Dollhouse's many episodes about how your fantasies can become a prison for other people who get trapped in them. Other shows offered escapism — Dollhouse gave us a commentary on how escapism can help create prisons for other people.
The show actually showed that these people were sex slaves. One of which was dragged kicking and screaming into it. The things that happen to the actives is meant to been as horrific. It is the complete death of what you are as a human being, while your body is used by people to do whatever they want. Sure they get to leave after five years, but most of them seem to have blackmailed into joining or forced into it.I thought the first two episodes were cheap sexual exploitation and as such I didn't bother continuing. If it's true that the show actually managed to explore the morality of its premise, then that is good news (again, if true). But why wait that long? There's little doubt that the first two episodes preyed heavily on the sexualization of Eliza Dushku as a sex slave as a means to draw in audiences. It was, at best, a juvenile approach.
If the show really grew up afterwards, then kudos to it. But really, given its missteps to begin the series, there's little surprise or remorse for this news.
Geez, it's like people don't even read the continually repeated refrain about how the network tooled the shit out of the first four or so episodes.
Inara had the power of choice each time. Every time. In the first two episodes, at least, of Dollhouse that wasn't the case. Like I said, the premise would have been far more interesting, and mature, had Dushku's character been given the power of choice right from the start. Yes, I know she willingly went into the program. But once that choice was made, she had no other power of choice in how she was being used.Here's a question: If the Dolls are slaves because they are sexually exploited by others, what was Inara?
Inara was at least in control. She chose her clients and was in charge of what happened. The Dolls are sold to any client who passes their screening process, which has been shown to be less than perfect.Here's a question: If the Dolls are slaves because they are sexually exploited by others, what was Inara?
One of the things I found fascinating about it was the rationalization of the people who work there. They give the actives assignments that help people, possibly so they can live with themselves. They know it is wrong, but they avoid thinking about it and it has been hinted at they have little choice in the matter as well.
Inara was at least in control. She chose her clients and was in charge of what happened. The Dolls are sold to any client who passes their screening process, which has been shown to be less than perfect.Here's a question: If the Dolls are slaves because they are sexually exploited by others, what was Inara?
It's like an actor signing on to a long-running TV series. He doesn't know exactly what the episodes are going to be like because the scripts haven't been written yet. However, when he signed the contract, he & the producers did discuss the role and determine generally what would happen to the character and what kind of scenes he would be required to do, like if he had to do his own stunts or if there was any nudity.
Based on what has been seen on the show, both the Actives and the employees get the same treatment if they go out of line, no matter what it is. That Rossum exec hinted that Dewitt would wind up in the Attic if she didn't obey their orders.It's like an actor signing on to a long-running TV series. He doesn't know exactly what the episodes are going to be like because the scripts haven't been written yet. However, when he signed the contract, he & the producers did discuss the role and determine generally what would happen to the character and what kind of scenes he would be required to do, like if he had to do his own stunts or if there was any nudity.
I would suggest there is a lot of truth in this analogy; that the situation of the Actives in the Dollhouse is basically the nightmarish version of what many of us do every day, selling our time to one corporate entity or another, suppressing who we are in order to fit into the narrow, and yes programmed, confines of corporate culture, doing things we probably don't want to do, made into proprietary objects with no other function than to produce what our masters want. One reason I loved the Saunders/Whiskey reveal is because, when you get right down to it, there isn't that much difference between a Dollhouse employee and an Active made to think she's one; free will does not necessarily translate into freedom of action, and working in this environment is not about who has agency, but about degrees of powerlessness.
Fictitiously yours, Trent Roman
It's a fundamental mistake to assume that depicting an attitude in fiction is the same as endorsing it.
Sometimes a story deliberately seems to take one position only to reveal that it's actually satirizing or critiquing that position.
I don't know. While Firefly even brought around non-Whedon fans to liking the series, Dollhouse seems to have been mostly an affair for those who liked Whedon's shows in the past (and even then, more than a few didn't).Totally uninformed people should just stop commententing seeing as how their own biased nature led them to stop watching the evolution of Dollhouse. The great morality that it challenges you to think about. This show will find a larger audience on DVD in the years ahead. Mark my words.
I don't know. While Firefly even brought around non-Whedon fans to liking the series, Dollhouse seems to have been mostly an affair for those who liked Whedon's shows in the past (and even then, more than a few didn't).
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