A common characteristic of current science fiction shows seems to be that they take place in our present day: the Stargate franchise, Lost, Fringe, V, Heroes, Torchwood and so on. And while at least Doctor Who takes us to the future occasionally, the Doctor and most of his Companians still hail from our time and many episodes take place "now".
We had an entire different picture five, ten, or fifteen years ago: TNG, DS9, Voyager, Enterprise, Babylon 5, Andromeda, Firefly, Space Above and Beyond, Earth 2, seaQuest, Dark Angel, even Earth: Final Conflict. The only recent "non-present day" series that comes to mind is the new Battlestar Galactica (which took place in our distant past instead of the future, but still...).
And what was the most recent TV show that was "permanently" set in the future? Could it be Star Trek: Enterprise?
So, what happened? Some theories (or at least that's what studio execs could be thinking):
1) Setting a show in the present day provides us with a setting and characters which are familiar to us and therefore ordinary viewers are able to identify with the premise more easily.
2) Our technology has evolved to a level that you can set a science fiction show in the present day without causing much disbelief. That's also why William Gibson "abandoned the future" and started to write novels set in the present.
3) And ultimately, setting a science fiction show in the present reduces production costs.
Are there currently any projects on the horizon which take us into the future again? Or have we have to wait until CBS decides to produce a Trek series set in the Abramsverse?
I guess the nuBSGverse will provide us with the closest thing to a "future" show again: While it also takes place in the distant past, the world of "Caprica" very much resembles a near-future Earth, maybe around 20 years from now or so (judging from the pilot movie).
We had an entire different picture five, ten, or fifteen years ago: TNG, DS9, Voyager, Enterprise, Babylon 5, Andromeda, Firefly, Space Above and Beyond, Earth 2, seaQuest, Dark Angel, even Earth: Final Conflict. The only recent "non-present day" series that comes to mind is the new Battlestar Galactica (which took place in our distant past instead of the future, but still...).
And what was the most recent TV show that was "permanently" set in the future? Could it be Star Trek: Enterprise?
So, what happened? Some theories (or at least that's what studio execs could be thinking):
1) Setting a show in the present day provides us with a setting and characters which are familiar to us and therefore ordinary viewers are able to identify with the premise more easily.
2) Our technology has evolved to a level that you can set a science fiction show in the present day without causing much disbelief. That's also why William Gibson "abandoned the future" and started to write novels set in the present.
3) And ultimately, setting a science fiction show in the present reduces production costs.
Are there currently any projects on the horizon which take us into the future again? Or have we have to wait until CBS decides to produce a Trek series set in the Abramsverse?
I guess the nuBSGverse will provide us with the closest thing to a "future" show again: While it also takes place in the distant past, the world of "Caprica" very much resembles a near-future Earth, maybe around 20 years from now or so (judging from the pilot movie).