No space based shows? Dr Who takes place in space fairly often..
RAMA
And note, please, that I wasn't the one who said this.To the major studios, at least, quality means nothing and money means everything. That's why we have nuTrek.![]()
And such irony. A film I have no respect for makes loads of money while another I quite liked is scorned unfairly.It doesn't matter how well it does, because John Carter will cancel it out.I am stoked for the forthcoming Prometheus somewhat prequel in the Alien franchise launched in 1979. I not only hope it's damned good, I also hold the faintest hope that if such it might spark renewed interest in space adventure in film and television. I think there's still a sizeable audience for it and it's the Hollywood dead heads that need to be convinced.![]()
Part of the problem with space based dramas IMO is they're expensive to make and have been enormous failures when tried over the past decade. ABC was the last major TV network to take a chance on the genre with the series, Defying Gravity - which IIRC was a ratings disaster for the network and pulled even before airing the final already filmed episodes.
Part of the problem with space based dramas IMO is they're expensive to make and have been enormous failures when tried over the past decade. ABC was the last major TV network to take a chance on the genre with the series, Defying Gravity - which IIRC was a ratings disaster for the network and pulled even before airing the final already filmed episodes.
Agreed.Dramas on tv are a financial problem, but look at the money studios throw away on utter crap in movies...there's no way anyone can tell me they can't develop better scripts based on classic material.
ABC was the last major TV network to take a chance on the genre with the series, Defying Gravity - which IIRC was a ratings disaster for the network
I seem to recall some show called Warstar Atlantica or something like that... what was it's name....?
Sure, not a major TV network but I don't think it's considered an "enormous failure" by any means.
Oh god, and just when I'd forgotten that show even existed.
Was there ever any reason the ratings for Galactica kept getting lower after the first season finale? I've seen the charts the ratings started off great and then when down exponentially after that point.
If only a new space show could get made and manage to hold on to it's viewers for a long time then we'd really have something.
You know I look at some of the animated shows from the '90s I liked (the animated Batman and Superman) as well as Futurama and Star Wars: The Clone Wars and if well done I could also get behind a really well done animated series.
You know I look at some of the animated shows from the '90s I liked (the animated Batman and Superman) as well as Futurama and Star Wars: The Clone Wars and if well done I could also get behind a really well done animated series.
Event Horizon/Pandorum type, maybe not.I'm a bit weary of Promethius though. I really don't want another Event Horizon or Pandorum Sci-fi/horror hybrid title though.
Was there ever any reason the ratings for Galactica kept getting lower after the first season finale? I've seen the charts the ratings started off great and then when down exponentially after that point.
Never saw it (my knowledge of V basically begins and ends with the original miniseries), but yes, that is also a show. Given as you say it got cancelled - as opposed to Stargate's over-a-decade of continuous TV life - it kind of argues for cable, though.While not technically a "space adventure," the series "V" I'd imagine also falls for TV executives into the same overall catagory as sci-fi and it was cancelled as well because of poor ratings.
Ah, but what were the DVD sales like? One of the things about a lot of the critically highly regarded cable hits is more than a few of them have performed far better in end-of-year DVD sales then when actually on their first run on TV. Box sets really help the cause of any serialized TV, and BSG was definitely that.
The problem with relying on DVD sales is that the home video market in the US fell apart a few years ago and continues to incrementally decline each year.
Streaming has exploded in use (at least domestically; I'm not sure how it's doing internationally). It's likely the biggest contributor to the decline of the home video market next to the economic crisis (although there are other factors).
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