Pilot Ace
Spoiler code that as Lord Garth hasn't gotten to there yet.
^ Second episode, actually, although IIRC,there was an implication in the second season premiere that Da'an had in fact ordered the death of Kate Boone: Da'an was denouncing Zo'or for killing Boone, telling him he had no right to do so, and Zo'or responds by saying that his comments are ironic, considering it was he who ordered the death of Boone's wife. I don't know if Zo'or is just misinformed or if he is actually speaking the truth, but it does seem to contradict Sandoval's statement in the second episode that he acted on his own in orchestrating Kate's death, doing what he thought was in the best interest of the Taelons. Meh, whatever... maybe this was just a sign of worse things to come on this show.
I just watched "Truth" (Episode 1.02). Good episode. Loved the Taelon interactions that framed the story.
Why the Hell did Sandoval confess to Boone? There's bound to be tension between these two characters throughout the season. Did Sandoval just want to put a quick end to Boone's hunt?
I'm glad the Taelons weren't responsible, and I like that Boone turned around suspicion about them since humans themselves aren't trustworthy. It's not often in a Roddenberry series that humans are shown in a negative light.
I think Sandoval confessed because (at least in his mind) he believes that Boone is the same as him, an implant who will not experience the remorse of the loss of his wife and will actually understand the incident from his own CVI induced logic.
I thought that was freakin' brilliant writing! Now Boone has to deal with a HUGE emotional baggage. He has to deal with:
1. The fact that his wife is dead
2. The fact that he knows who killed her.
3. The fact that he understands that the killer didn't do it out of malice, but out of misled good intentions.
4. The fact that he has to pretend he knows nothing of these emotions, and has to keep up the schrade that he is the same as Sandoval.
I can't believe such a great show was ruined so quickly. If they had only kept the same level of writing (and kept the same cast) that show would have blown almost ALL sci-fi series out of the water. It would probably be considered a timeless classic now.
S2: Horrid, I saw the first 2 episodes and didn't bother anymore.
S3-S4: I have no idea. I would occasionally catch the odd episode here and there. It seemed to have become a more down to earth political show by then. (Really the only reason I watched is because I liked that hot little vixen Street, and Rene herself wasn't bad on the eyes either). I however, have no clue what was S3 and S4, I never really cared either.
This explains Andromeda, also done by Tribune. Here was a Roddenberry concept, with a DS9 alumnus heading the show, and those two things alone should've guaranateed something I'd become a fan of. It never happened and within four months I couldn't watch any more.
Earth: Final Conflict started three years before Andromeda. Shouldn't Majel Barrett have had enough time to have learned her lesson and done Earth with someone else?
^ The thing is that EFC didn't go off the rails as quickly as Andromeda did. Despite the changes, the story was still focused on the same sort of things. It really wasn't until season 5 when the show got a complete revamp (no pun intended).
That, and I have the sneaking suspicion that Barrett didn't really pay that much attention with the show beyond the first year or so, leaving everything in the hands of David Kirschner.
Also, by the time Andromeda was starting up, first-run syndication was beginning to die. There probably were not that many options left beyond Tribune and Alliance/Atlantis (though, I am not sure if AA had any part with Andromeda).
(I got into DROM well before the show premiered, through the advance promotional material online, particularly the "AllSystems University" site that laid out the history, species, politics, etc. of this elaborate world they'd created. If it had been done in prose form, it could've stood up there with acclaimed SF universes like Uplift and Known Space and the Culture, it was so rich and well-developed. Instead it got made on a shoestring budget for TV and just couldn't live up to its potential.)
Actually I think it went off the rails much more quickly. At least DROM kept its developer and its original creative thrust for a year and a half. That's three times longer than E:FC got. And I wouldn't say E:FC's second season was focused on much of anything.
I have the impression that she got somewhat frustrated with her inability to keep the show on the track that she thought Gene Roddenberry would've wanted, and she ended up choosing to distance herself from what it had become (note that her guest appearances as Dr. Belman ended after a while). Maybe with DROM she was hoping what happened with E:FC was a one-time thing. See above about not giving up on your business relationships too easily.[/quote][/quote]That, and I have the sneaking suspicion that Barrett didn't really pay that much attention with the show beyond the first year or so, leaving everything in the hands of David Kirschner.
I have to disagree. While the show did change showrunners and gears to a more action-oriented production, it didn't wildly change the premise. While they were trying to regroup at the beginning of season 2, I felt they regained their sense of purpose by the middle of the season and the back half was really enjoyable.
With Andromeda, by the end of the second season, they jettisoned their original premise to replace it with a Star Trek clone. Only to do it again for each subsequent season.
In an interview with TV Guide, Barrett mentioned how she found other projects laying around when she found the script for Battleground Earth (the inital title of EFC before it was changed to avoid confusion with the then-movie Battlefield Earth, based on the novel) and hoped for them to be made into shows. I wouldn't be surprised if there was some sort of development deal in place if EFC was successful enough, Tribune would fund others.
That was Tribune Entertainment for you. They were obsessed with the bottom line above all, and particularly the short-term bottom line. They kept micromanaging their shows and replacing cast members and staff members with cheaper ones because they followed a strategy of keeping costs as low as possible to maximize profit in the short term, rather than one of making enough investment in the property to let it really earn a loyal audience and pay off with bigger profits in the long term.
Virtually no Tribune shows kept their developers/initial showrunners for very long. Robert Hewitt Wolfe was fired from Andromeda after a year and a half. Steve Feke was dumped from BeastMaster: The Series after one season, though he made some contributions to the second. But Richard C. Okie's tenure was the shortest I'm aware of. He was let go after half a season. And you can tell; although the first season overall is the strongest, it begins to show changes pretty much right after "Sandoval's Run." Particularly, Zo'or (a character created by the new showrunner) suddenly becomes a much more prominent character. Which is the beginning of the show's dumbing down, because unlike the fascinatingly ambiguous Taelons embodied by Da'an (who could be either protagonist or antagonist in different circumstances because his worldview was simply so alien), Zo'or was more of a straight baddie from the beginning (though not nearly as much of a moustache-twirler as he later became).
{snip}
They were pretty shallow stuff. Another thing about Tribune is that they didn't want highbrow, thought-provoking science fiction, they wanted lowbrow action-adventure, because that sold well overseas. The simpler the concepts, the easier to translate, I guess. Majel Roddenberry really made the wrong choice partnering with them. Her goals, to produce sophisticated, intelligent, plausible speculative fiction, were completely different from Tribune's.
So there wasn't a lot of substance to those seasons, in story or character. They got pretty formulaic. Pretty much the only character growth that Liam and Renee underwent in those seasons was to become progressively blonder.
This.The first season was great. Then, in season 2, the lead was fired and the show was deliberately dumbed down. It never recovered from there, though I'm told that season 4 was a slight improvement over seasons 2 and 3. I never saw it. I had stopped watching by then. I did see a lot of season 5 though and consider it the show's ultimate low point. The show was retooled once again, the second lead had been fired and the entire cast with one exception had already moved on by then.
Some people (wrongly I think) blame Kevin Sorbo or some other people for the Andromeda debacle. But I think it was the company policy as a whole.
Actually I feel that Andromeda Season 5 is less bad than most of S3-4. At the very least, it was more consistent. In S3, Andromeda was basically two different shows. The episodes written by original-staff veterans Zack Stentz & Ashley Edward Miller (whose subsequent credits include Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles, Fringe, and the upcoming Thor feature film) were still as close to the original conception of DROM as they could be, an intelligent hard-SF series continuing many of the threads of the first season and a half, while those written by other staffers were something completely different, a lowbrow space fantasy with no clear focus. There was a startling lack of consistency between them. As for S4, Zack & Ash were gone (aside from a couple of freelance returns) and the show was still pretty much a mess overall. I wasn't even watching regularly anymore.
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