Personally, I find I should really edit my posts. Or is it just the anithistamines kicking in?
Borgminister---More and more the choice in television is between high concept or soap. Give me high concept, please.
I'll probably make myself watch the first couple episode to give Braga a chance. Of course, that depends on what other TV shows are on!
I'm intrigued. Never thought I'd say that about a Braga show, but you know...
I won't watch it and I hope it tanks. Braga can go fly a kite.
No, I'm actually not that stupid. I read the article. But I distinctly saw BRANNON BRAGA.All of you apparently missed the part that Braga won't be the head writer on this show. He's one of its executive producers, but will be continuing to work on 24 while others take the lead on Flash Forward. So it's not "a Braga show." It's just a show that Braga is involved with as one of multiple executives.
Looks like Brent Spinner will have new series![]()
maybe as a jobless scientist who with his flash of the future, gets ideas to make things that shouldn't be in the present yet.
Just to nitpick, as cowriter of the pilot script, there's a sense in which it's "Braga's" show. Especially if Goyer is one of those producers who insists on getting a writing credit (for the money and the prestige, such as it is---some people do foolishly insist that the primary creator is the writer!) and the real creative force is Braga.
But it's already obvious that this bbs will hate the series, sight unseen. When the show debuts, posters will quickly seize on one of the old standard libels against Braga and that's be it. They did it to Threshold, which was instantly dubbed as repetitive. Which it wasn't.
It's really weird how fans on a bbs cast the producers and directors into hero/villain categories with no logical reason at all. You'd think Goyer would get some credit with this bbs for the new Batman, after all.
And with Braga, I'm sorry but there's just his track record. Threshold followed the exact same pattern as the first two seasons of Enterprise and the majority of Voyager. The series continuity is very fast and loose and the emphasis is on the "episode of the week" conceit rather than on a larger story.
The problem is, for better or for worse, modern SciFi fans don't like the CSI/L&O type of serialized storytelling where everything remains the same except for stunning cliffhangers and cast changes (byebye Kes, Hello Seven).
That's why I find it interesting that he'll be somehow involved in 24, which just in form and structure is the very anti-thesis of how modern Star Trek worked.
Nor am I sure that people didn't understand that the aliens were supposed to be slowly but surely winning. I rather think that was another cause for distaste. SF shows can say the bad guys are winning, but actually showing it, episode after episode, is something else. Unlike many shows, Threshold did not have a large audience tuning in for episode one, disliking what they saw and never coming back. For whatever reason, people never sampled Threshold in large numbers. Since it was a fairly serialized show, latecomers were probably turned away.
As for Braga on 24---he has tendencies toward cliche and sophomoric "dark and gritty." He also has a sense of humor, as well as a genuine interest in playing with ideas, which has helped him overcome that to a degree. But 24 sounds perfectly suited to bring out his real flaws.
I was watching it at the time, and remember very clearly how the series progressed:So far as Threshold goes, who knows if most around really thought the show was episodic or just repeated a stock criticism?
That sounds a lot more "standard" than "subversive," but I would have been up for it. But they shouldn't have given a misleading impression for one millisecond, not if they wanted to survive.In fact, there was a subversive quality to the series format -- they started out looking like another standard weekly TV series with the status quo being largely maintained and the aliens held in check and the secret kept from the public, but that was just to set us up for the twist that the invasion would keep getting worse and worse and the aliens would essentially succeed in taking over the world, to the point that by the third season the protagonists would've been more like a resistance underground than anything else.
No, it is inherently better. Serialization allows deeper thematic development and character growth. The best examples of this are on HBO and Showtime, where serialization is the norm. Now it's creeping into basic cable, which is starting to compete with the big boys. Of the Best Drama Nominees for the Emmys this year, at least four are strongly serialized: Mad Men, Damages, Lost, Dexter (dunno about the other two, I don't watch). Mad Men is going to win (tho I'd perfer Lost or Dexter) and if the show weren't serialized, the quality that people are recognizing in it would be impossible.Serialization isn't smarter or better, it's just fashionable.
It's a good example of why serialization is no panacea, that's for sure! Boring cardboard villains and the continuing annoying illogic of the bullshit "Temporal Cold War" will suck regardless of the format.Season 3 of Enterprise was serialized. I thought it was a distinct drop in quality for that reason.
Lastly, on directors getting the credit---I was being polite. The primary creators of movies are the scriptwriters, followed by producers, cinematographers, editors, maybe designers and composers. In the immortal words quoted by Gore Vidal, "The director is the brother-in-law."
Actually I think Threshold played to Braga's strengths, because he was good at the eerie high-concept stuff, stories of darkness and paranoia, and stories that bent reality or challenged perceptions of it. I think he really could've thrived there if it had lasted.
No, it is inherently better. Serialization allows deeper thematic development and character growth. The best examples of this are on HBO and Showtime, where serialization is the norm. Now it's creeping into basic cable, which is starting to compete with the big boys. Of the Best Drama Nominees for the Emmys this year, at least four are strongly serialized: Mad Men, Damages, Lost, Dexter (dunno about the other two, I don't watch). Mad Men is going to win (tho I'd perfer Lost or Dexter) and if the show weren't serialized, the quality that people are recognizing in it would be impossible.
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