Season 1, Episode 11
You might be wondering why, after reviewing the pilot and
then giving up, and then dropping in on the fifth episode and being similarly disappointed, I would consider dropping in on Terra Nova for a third time. The answer is simple: I don’t have
anything else tonight. But really, I’ve been watching the show as it’s been
airing, because even as the show a disappointment, it also held potential…okay,
it’s really just because I’m a masochist. But embracing mythology helps to
boost a show’s quality more often than not, so I will be covering tonight’s
episode as well as next week’s 2-hour finale in order to discuss where I think
the show went wrong and whether it lived up to any of the potential we saw back
in the pilot.
So strap in and put on your snark helmets, boys and
girls, because things are about to get….middling.
If you ask me, the biggest disappointment with Terra Nova was that there was probably
only about 5 hours of so of worthwhile material within the first season, and
I’m taking the still-to-be-aired finale into that assessment. I’ve said before
that I feel as if TN has been
mass-marketed to death, and there’s nothing that the masses like more than
procedural format. It allows people to watch TV shows without having to worry about
catching every episode. It requires less thinking from the viewers, which it
great because hey, most viewers prefer a passive viewing experience to one that
requires you to think.
Yes, you’re right. That’s a very cynical way to look at
the television industry, but it’s also one that I’ve found to be true among my
family and friends. And even if it wasn’t, does it really matter? Network
executives certainly believe it’s true, and it’s their cynical interpretation
(which, in the only time we will agree on anything ever, lines up exactly with
mine) that gives us shows like TN,
shows in which the least objectionable is what happens, in which plot is kept
to a bare minimum, and tropes and
clichés are preferred over nuanced storytelling.
It didn’t have to be this way. A show about people sent
to live in the time of the dinosaurs, with a benign dictator for a leader, at
war with a rebellious sect of defectors, and a mysterious shadowy organization
that seeks to control this new civilization for its own nefarious purposes? It
would be nigh impossible to fuck that up, and yet somehow the has.
That ‘somehow’ of course is that the show relies on
stories that had nothing to do with this premise. No, the only real way to describe
the show is a combination between and family drama and a procedural. The
problem is, none of those elements are particularly good. The family is a set
of over-used tropes – a rocky marriage, a sullen teenager, a genius middle child,
and an adorable moppet – and even those are rarely deployed, thus zapping the ‘drama’
portion out of this show. The procedural stories, meanwhile, just felt like half-baked
leftovers from the Star Trek: Enterprise
writer’s room. These were the bases for the show’s early episodes, and while nothing
there was horrendously bad, it was completely uninspired and boring, and sometimes
that an even worse fate for a show.
And with these two elements eating up some much of the
show’s running time, the serialized elements – those that actually could have
been interesting – became underserved, to the point that they felt as middling
as everything else on the show. Let’s take the “Terra Nova spy” plot, for instance.
While this could have been a story that built to a surprising twist and revealed
the paranoia of the society along the way, instead we had to settle for show
going with the most illogical choice – Skye. From a logistical standpoint, I
guess it makes sense – Skye was the least used character up to that point, and being
in the main cast meant that they had to give Allison Miller something to do – but that’s also what
makes it so nonsensical stupid. There was no build to the reveal; it just sort
of happened, and without any context, it wasn’t able to invoked the reaction
that I’m sure the writers were hoping for.
In fact, lack of build is what sinks just about everything
one of the serialized elements. While we’ve been told since the pilot that
Taylor and his son Lucas have been on the outs for years, it was something that
we we’re just supposed to take as fact, and without knowing why Lucas has felt
the need to rebel against his father in such an extreme fashion. And now that
we’ve found out that it’s because Lucas blame Taylor for his mother’s death,
that just makes him seem incredibly pissy and petulant, considering that he’s
attempting a coup as retaliation.
Similarly, why is there a shadowy organization that wants
to take over Terra Nova, and do they have plan in case of the inevitable backlash
from the legitimate government when their crony Taylor is overthrown? The show
has given some general reasoning behind this – greed – much like Skye becoming a
spy because the Sixers can fix her mother, it’s an overly easy answer supplies in
order to move the story forward. At least Boylan, who was a traitor but not The
Spy, is smarmy and immoral enough that his doing business with the Sixers makes
sense. Sure, it’s another simple explanation, but it’s one that fits the
character and doesn’t feel shoehorned in.
And it’s to that end that I don’t particularly care about
the supposed invasion that we’ll see next week. The stakes haven’t been
properly raised, I have no idea who the major players are, and there’s no
telling what the invasion will mean for anybody. It’s an even that’s happening because
the show feels like it should, not because it’s evolved organically out of the
story.
And then there was Maddy’s plot, which is the perfect embodiment
of everything that’s wrong with the “family” side of the show’s equation. These
plots are kept purposely small-scale, so they register as nothing more that
cute filler, and even that cute aspect is up for debate. Again, there’s nothing
inherently wrong with this – filler plots can be useful way to give cast members
screen time when they can’t be worked into the A-plot, and they can be used to
tell us something new about the characters – but the show fails at this as
well. The show just lets these stories coast on out supposed goodwill, and there
meant to be entirely disposable.
And a blown core? Really? There’s absolutely no tension
in that, and much like everything before it, it just sort of ends without any
real resolution, but just Maddy giving the wheel to Boylan, and him trying to
get back into Jim’s good graces. Yeah, because at this point in time, that’s something
the show needs to be exploring.
Next Week: The
two-hour finale. The bad people invade, and I just shake my head.
Quotes and Other
Thoughts:
And say, whatever happened to Josh’s girlfriend? I mean,
it’s not that I care, but it’s yet
another example of the show dropping the ball on supposedly important plot
points.
I’m pretty sure I heard Taylor say “fraking” at one
point. Stop taking other shows down with you, Terra Nova.
Lucas describes his relationship with his father as “a
Shakespearian relationship that borders on Greek tragedy.” It looks like
somebody didn’t pass English class.
No comments:
Post a Comment