• Welcome! The TrekBBS is the number one place to chat about Star Trek with like-minded fans.
    If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

FlashForward: "Course Correction" 5/6/10 - Grading & Discussion

Grading

  • Excellent

    Votes: 1 11.1%
  • Above average

    Votes: 4 44.4%
  • Average

    Votes: 3 33.3%
  • Below average

    Votes: 1 11.1%
  • Poor

    Votes: 0 0.0%

  • Total voters
    9

Aragorn

Fleet Admiral
Admiral
flashforward20100505030.jpg


Simon turns to a reluctant Mark for help finding his missing sister Annabelle. Meanwhile, Demetri and Agent Banks join forces in the hunt for a killer but learn that escaping a flashforward destiny may not be as easy as they thought. Nicole learns where Bryce's flashforward love Keiko is to be found, but is reluctant to tell him given her own feelings. And the FBI finally learn who Suspect Zero is.
 
Sounds like a really good ep, unfortunately I most likely won't be around for the commentary tonight, due to a number of circumstances this week. Will post comments after watching the tape later on.
 
Is is me or iis this show tuning into the Final Destination movies! Can't escape death, everything has a balance. LOL
 
Feh. Looks like they've given up on a rational framework for their metaphysics; resorting to anthropomorphizing the universe is generally a sign of desperation.

Fictitiously yours, Trent Roman
 
Well, it's no different from characters in other "destiny" shows being the incarnation of Gods or whatever and blathering on about fate and stuff like that. Here it's just fate acting through people's own actions and interpretation of events.

It's basically the same thing, only less lazy.

I still don't like Olivia and Lloyd. Olivia's been such a cold bitch to Mark, and now cheating on him all while he's trying to SAVE THE WORLD.

And Lloyd doesn't care in the least, simply because he felt happy with her in the possible future. The worst part is, because Davenport is playing Lloyd as such a nice fellow hardly anyone feels upset at him over this. It IS mostly Olivia's fault though.

And nice going Simon, if you'd waited than Mark would've found her AND they'd still have the QED. I can be more forgiving seeing how competent the bad guys have been so far that he wouldn't have faith in the FBI anymore. And he's accepted that he's going to be hunted down and likely dead soon.

Bryce and Nicole, well their story isn't connected to anything bigger but they are nice people with good chemistry so I'm okay with it.
 
And nice going Simon, if you'd waited than Mark would've found her AND they'd still have the QED.

I'm pretty sure they left her there for Mark to find because Simon had stolen the QED for them.

Fictitiously yours, Trent Roman
 
Really? It seems like he was in the room for the exchange and it just recently happened. They'd had to have her in that spot ready to be found BEFORE Simon gave them the ring, the way it was set up. These people seem the type to not release anything or anyone until after they have what they want.

I'm surprised Simon never considered that they'd just keep her and say "Thanks for the free ring, you sentimental fool!", but in his place he probably was too emotional to be like that.
 
Once the series ruled out an Appointment in Samara approach, which they took from the novel, the ambiguity of a glimpse of Not-the-future but which still gave valid information about the Future-Product-of-Free-Will necessarily gets played out. And it gets played out in a prolonged form, with ample time for chewing over the inconsistencies, with minute dramatization magnifying every logical flaw. What Sawyer got away with in a novel, which is at best closer to a miniseries so far as commitment of time goes, just doesn't work so well in a full season of television.

That said, the mystery plot is developing quite a narrative momentum. It feels coherent, although the ultimate motives are yet obscure. But all the action is plainly driven by Frost wanting to get out and Campos not really wanting to get in. Frost was clever enough that his efforts could not be wholly contained. Campos was too key a scientist to the whole project to be omitted, hence such self exposing efforts as kidnapping Annabelle. The point of taking Campos to Detroit was apparently to frame him, keeping him from relying upon the authorities.

I'm not quite sure what metaphysics means. But free will does not mean the power to determine the future. It means the power to make the choices you want. Again, voting is an excellent analogy. You have free will to vote for whomever you wish, but not to determine who is actually elected.

The analogy holds in another way: Ignorance acts against free will. If a candidate has made secret plans but refuses to reveal them, colluding with other candidates to keep them secret, the free will of the voter means nothing. The show could have been about how glimpses of the future pierced the veil of ignorance and in truth expanded free will. Instead, the television show, like the novel, confused the ability to succeed in imposing outcomes with free will. When the novel and show made the flashforward about some other future, the veil of ignorance was draped before our eyes again.

I think they may have had some idea about the illusion of hope in solely determining your future as somehow being necessary to the human personality. If so, they've approached the theme without the clarity to integrate it into the story.

And since the story is a mystery whose final interest is still to be determined, the episode is at best average.

PS The schematic representation of the blackout event sure looked like the intersection of two waves was responsible. Did anyone see where perhaps the second wave was centered? It looked to me like the Indian Ocean somewhere.
 
Last edited:
If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Sign up / Register


Back
Top