Re: No Ordinary Family: "No Ordinary Marriage" - Oct. 5 - Grade & Disc
Well, Sylar's power was the ability to absorb others' powers. Technically, his telekinetic ability was taken from the first of his victims. And there have been countless telekinetics in fiction before Sylar came along, notably Jean Grey, Stephen King's Carrie, and the Jedi Knights.
Similarly, there have been telepaths in fiction long before this "Sookie" character. Need I even mention Charles Xavier?
And yes, the powers are ones we've seen before, but what of it? The Incredibles all had derivative powers, but it was still a good movie. There are only so many superpowers in the world, so naturally they get used over and over. What matters is the storytelling and the characterization.
It made me wonder if maybe the character was intended as regular/recurring in the pilot but the decision was made after the pilot to write her out -- maybe because the network didn't like the character, maybe because the actress got another gig, maybe because the producers decided on a new story direction that couldn't work with her around. It's common for some things to change after a pilot.
Saw this episode but didn't see the premiere. I thought it was fun but a tad derivative. The big bad has Sylar's power, the girl has Sookie's power, the dad is basically Mr. Incredible.
Well, Sylar's power was the ability to absorb others' powers. Technically, his telekinetic ability was taken from the first of his victims. And there have been countless telekinetics in fiction before Sylar came along, notably Jean Grey, Stephen King's Carrie, and the Jedi Knights.
Similarly, there have been telepaths in fiction long before this "Sookie" character. Need I even mention Charles Xavier?
And yes, the powers are ones we've seen before, but what of it? The Incredibles all had derivative powers, but it was still a good movie. There are only so many superpowers in the world, so naturally they get used over and over. What matters is the storytelling and the characterization.
That seems like way too much set-up for a character who was going to die in the second episode - if she's really dead, that looks clumsy, if she isn't then it's a cheap cliffhanger.
It made me wonder if maybe the character was intended as regular/recurring in the pilot but the decision was made after the pilot to write her out -- maybe because the network didn't like the character, maybe because the actress got another gig, maybe because the producers decided on a new story direction that couldn't work with her around. It's common for some things to change after a pilot.