Yeah, it was produced by Paramount. The local station that played it scheduled it on Saturdays right before TNG.Ummm...
Was WOTW even produced by Paramount?
If it had been, yeah, it would have been interesting.
The aliens being revealed as not being from Mars...LAME. Look, we know that Mars was uninhabited, shit, we knew that in 1953, but stick to the premise.
The black, handicapped, computer nerd was like the love child of 80's cliches.
For that matter, the aliens aren't even necessarily from Mars in Wells' novel. There's a passage that suggests that Mars is merely a staging area for their attack on Earth.Actually, aside from the opening montage, there is no actual evidence in the movie proper that the aliens came from Mars. The extent of it is one guy wondering where the "meteors" were coming from and another guy saying "Mars is close right now." Pure guesswork.
War of the Worlds was a Paramount production, yes.Ummm...
Was WOTW even produced by Paramount?
If it had been, yeah, it would have been interesting.
Yeah, that was annoying. Too many genre shows insist on the tiresome conceit that they're "actually" in our world, so that everything alien or supernatural has to be a deep, dark secret. In this case, it was a particularly poor choice. It would've been far more interesting to embrace the alternate history, to portray a world still bearing the physical, political, and psychological scars of a global alien invasion 35 years before. It shouldn't have been "You expect me to believe there are aliens?" but "I refuse to believe the aliens have come back."
I'm curious about Scarlet Traces, but the idea of the Martian war machines being reverse-engineered goes all the way back to Garrett P. Serviss' Edison's Conquest of Mars, where Thomas Edison figures out how the Martian technology works and uses it to build a fleet of spaceships so humanity can go and conquer Mars. Which they do.Have you read the comic book Scarlet Traces? The British Empire retro-engineers the technology after the War of the Worlds... The same team also did a War of the Worlds comic as a prequel to their series.
My problem in S1 was, it seemed like the writers over-empowered the aliens. There was no weakness or flaw they could not overcome, no advantage the heroes had they could not only negate, but turn 1000% against them. Now, that sounds a lot like robust villains providing the needed conflict and challenge for our heroes, or in other words, duh.
But watching it, as far as I can recall, it seemed like there was no way in hell the heroes could ever, ever put a verifiable block to anything the aliens were doing. Yet I knew that at some point, they would almost have to, and given the edge the aliens seemed to have, I wondered how such a setback could seem anything but weak and forced. That, and the amnesia, forced me away from something I wanted to watch.
Years later, on top of its other flaws, the infamous S5 of Earth Final Conflict seemed to repeat the 'infinite-advantage-invaders' mistake (IMO) and sure enough, when they got knocked back, it looked as contrived as I always thought it would.
^But is that really a mistake? Isn't it a hallmark of the horror genre that the monsters are ultimately unstoppable? How many times did Dracula, Frankenstein's Monster, the Mummy, Jason Voorhees, or Freddy Kruger come back from the dead? That's kind of what makes it horror -- the hopelessness, the very real possibility that the heroes will lose. And make no mistake, WOTW: The Series was definitely defining itself as a horror series in the first season.
One could also cite Threshold. While it was on, a lot of viewers complained that the aliens were too powerful, that it would be unbelievable for the heroes to be able to hold them at bay and stop the spread of the mutating signal. But that was the whole point -- the intent was that as the series went on, the heroes would fail to stop the aliens from gaining a foothold and eventually conquering the world, and that the situation would get worse every season -- from trying to prevent an alien invasion to fighting off an invasion in progress to mounting a resistance after the invasion had succeeded.
I wouldn't have put it that way, but yes, there were a number of shows in the late '80s and early '90s that featured African-American paraplegic scientists -- Norton Drake here, Miles Hawkins in M.A.N.T.I.S., Julian Wilkes in Viper.The black, handicapped, computer nerd was like the love child of 80's cliches.
Professor Token, aka "Wheels".
And this was a few years before NYPD Blue came along with its supposedly unprecedented-for-commercial-TV levels of nudity and sexual content.
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