Despite the fact that JJ's film is nowhere near the kind of film I'd like to see. Prometheus and ST09 are two distinctly different animals.I was hoping the success of the recent Abrams Star Trek film would revive interest in the subgenre. I'm still waiting for it to happen...
Is it Time to Travel away from Dystopian Science Fiction? (Also Time Travel = Bad) --- article at Giant Freakin Robot
I don't agree completely with the article I linked dogging Dystopian Science Fiction (and Time Travel) but it does raise some good points.
Mainly, the general tone of Film and TV SciFi has gotten rather dark (w/ notable exceptions Eureka, Warehouse13 and, somewhat, Alphas)
I love AGOT, WalkingDead, BSG as much as the next geek, but sometimes I feel like we're stuck in the same tonal universe...
...As comic books were post Watchmen and Frank Miller's DarkKnight. Very Dark. Which probably explains the appeal of Avengers a bit.
Avengers lives in a brighter universe than DarkKnight or even Transformers. And that's a good thing.
So I do think genre TV is due for an injection of some of the @KurtBusiek & @neilhimself optimism that helped comicbooks turn up the lights
And for me this especially applies to Space Opera. If Defender can be the AstroCity to BSG's Watchmen, I'd be very, very happy. /endspew
I was hoping the success of the recent Abrams Star Trek film would revive interest in the subgenre. I'm still waiting for it to happen...
I would definitely call Ringworld space adventure. It is set in space and the characters have to travel through space to get to the ringworld. There are also other stories set in Niven's Ringworld universe.Could you call Ringworld a space opera?
The great thing about True Blood is that it is so lowbrow-- but it's lowbrow done well. It's like an EC Comic with a continuing cast. Same thing with their Tales From The Crypt show. I don't watch most of the other pay cable shows, but I think that's also true of some others, like Spartacus.HBO or Showtime or even Starz could do a great space opera. The problem is, would they think of the genre as being too associated with free TV, too low brow, too much for kids?
The Walking Dead is dark in the sense of being horror, but it's not Dark & Gritty in the sense of the pop culture trope. Dark & Gritty is all about making fanbois and fangrrls feel like tough guys with the faux cynicism, the wallowing in corruption and the Beavis & Butthead moments like the doctor blowing cigarette smoke up a pregnant woman's nose. The Walking Dead is too grown up to be Dark & Gritty.The Walking Dead is what I call dark - something thatI can't even watch in the 10pm timeslot because then I'm so wired, can't get to sleep!(I save it and watch it the next day.)
HBO or Showtime or even Starz could do a great space opera. The problem is, would they think of the genre as being too associated with free TV, too low brow, too much for kids?
Starz would be the least snooty. HBO or Showtime might go for some well known literary name. Could you call Ringworld a space opera? Probably not, but I'd be happy for something set in space. It doesn't need to have the usual trappings - set in a spaceship, quasi-military premise, planets of the week.
Premium cable hasn't shown much interest in space based shows, but they have shown some interest in sci fi, like: a paranoid body-snatcher series; an FDA agent who gets visions after eating human flesh; an adaptation of a Stephen King novel about a town trapped under a dome; and some kind of dystopian future saga by Trent Reznor. No real common thread there, other than being creepy and dark.
I was hoping the success of the recent Abrams Star Trek film would revive interest in the subgenre. I'm still waiting for it to happen...
There are space-based movies coming out - doesn't seem to be any less than I can ever recall, or more.
TV is an entirely different thing. What happens in movies doesn't necessarily impact TV and vice versa. Otherwise, the multiplexes would be full of police procedurals and "reality movies" (which I guess means, documentaries, though most reality TV is far too fake to be called documentaries.)
As for the issue of darkness, I'm sure it will continue to reign supreme on cable, and the "infection" of broadcast could turn out to be effective enough that it will take over there, too, to the extent the FCC permits.
But not all cable channels have the same philosophy. Syfy is doing well going lighter than, say, AMC or FX. They'll probably stick with that. My hunch is that there's an unserved appetite out there for space opera that isn't nuBSG-style dark, and that RHW is on the right path. I just hope we ever get to see the show.
Just read the article - they're really paving over some serious differences by casting both Falling Skies and The Walking Dead as "dark." Falling Skies is much lighter and more optimistic. The way it's handled sometimes makes it hard to take the show seriously. If they went any lighter, they'd destroy the show's credibility. And Terra Nova made me feel like I was watching a kid's show.
The Walking Dead is what I call dark - something thatI can't even watch in the 10pm timeslot because then I'm so wired, can't get to sleep!(I save it and watch it the next day.)
Low brow? They do horror shows on cable and that's the most low brow you can get in my book. They prob do them cause they are cheaper to produce.
RAMA
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