Chuck and Jake 2.0 don't count?![]()
Although I suspect the OP is referring more to a spy operating in some kind of futuristic, Trek-style world.
Thats what i meant.Although I suspect the OP is referring more to a spy operating in some kind of futuristic, Trek-style world.
Thats what i meant.Although I suspect the OP is referring more to a spy operating in some kind of futuristic, Trek-style world.
I wouldn't turn my nose up at one, but I'd be far more interested in the sf part of the equation than the spy element. For us to understand the spy element at the most basic level (do we root for the spies or not?), we first have to understand the politics of this brand-new world (unless it's actually Star Trek and we're talking Section 31 - even then, most of the audience would require some catching up on things) and that's a lot of explanation right when you're simply trying to get the audience interested and not changing the channel immediately because they're confused and don't understand the rules of the game.
Compare that with adding a cop-show element to the same futuristic world. The default assumption is that the cops represent law & order, and we root for them. That's an element that TOS had, and that RHW's planned space opera series probably will have, just going off the description. It requires a lot less up-front explanation that might be off-putting or confusing in those first crucial weeks, and complications can be worked in later, when the audience is already locked in.
Dark Horse comics, actually just launched a Star Wars comic book spy series. It's called Agent of the Empire. The thing I find most intriguing is the fact that it's actually done from an Imperial perspective, which they don't seem to do very often.Basically Star Wars... with spies!!
Dark Horse comics, actually just launched a Star Wars comic book spy series. It's called Agent of the Empire. The thing I find most intriguing is the fact that it's actually done from an Imperial perspective, which they don't seem to do very often.Basically Star Wars... with spies!!
I've often thought that Poul Anderson's Dominic Flandry stories could've made a good TV series. Flandry was a dashing, womanizing agent of the Imperial Intelligence Corps of the Terran Empire in the 31st century -- kind of James Bond in space, though Flandry was created two years before Bond. I would've liked to see a Flandry series in the '90s with Bruce Campbell in the lead role..)
I always thought that I would like to see Paramount revisit the "Assignment: Earth" series concept. Leap it forward from the 60s to present-day and have it be an almost "Star Trek meets Alias" idea.
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