I found it watchable, and not as bad as most of the reviews quoted on Wikipedia suggested. It's not delightful, but I thought it was executed competently. And Amy Manson is kinda hot, and Hermione Norris isn't bad either. I guess I'll stick around for now.
The premise has some big credibility problems -- the show is set in 2040 and they colonized the planet ten years earlier, and the travel time from Earth is five years (sayeth the Wiki), so we're supposed to believe humanity develops interstellar capability within the next 14 years? Even as Earth simultaneously degenerates to the point of global nuclear cataclysm between unspecified powers? The whole thing feels like something out of a
Twilight Zone episode. But maybe it could work if treated as an alternate history.
I was actually a bit surprised he got killed at the end, since I thought they were setting him up as a main character, but I guess Bamber does have commitments to Law and Order UK which take priority.
Ironic that BBC America made a point of doing this ad calling themselves "the Bamber Broadcasting Corporation," touting the fact that they're simultaneously showing three series with Jamie Bamber in them (since they've just begun
Battlestar Galactica reruns, despite it not being a British show), and then 20 minutes later, Bamber's character on this show gets killed.
The storyline about the orbiting starship was just as cliched. Everyone on board is rowdy to the point of being uncontrollable until president dude gives them an inspirational speech which makes them act civil again.
Huh? That never happened. The transporter captain said that there was a rush for the evacuation pods, that people weren't behaving with dignity, and the president's farewell statement to the captain was that
he, the captain, had shown nothing but dignity throughout. The captain thanked him and then the transmission cut out for the last time. There was never the slightest indication that the president's words directed solely at the captain were heard by the rest of the passengers or that it had any effect on their behavior.