Some have said that we’re coming out of a golden age of television that started with The Sopranos, continued with shows like Breaking Bad and Game of Thrones, and perhaps continues with Yellowstone. These are examples of “Prestige Television,” long form storytelling that is as artistic and nuanced as any Academy Award Winning film.
They’re also examples of shows that have never appealed to me.
Sure, I watched the first season of Game of Thrones, but I didn’t like it. I have been watching Sylvester Stallone’s Tulsa King, which is a contender for the title (sorry, Rocky joke). Still, when I’m looking for entertainment I tend to avoid antiheroes and dark storylines. The artistic merit of everything I’ve mentioned is inarguable. So I’d never suggest that the shows don’t have any value. I just don’t have the acquired taste.
Prestige shows tend to focus on the negative side of humanity.
Me? I like shows featuring heroic characters. And from recent interviews, I think producer and showrunner Dean Devlin feels the same way. Actually, I know he does. Recently, while talking to Sonny Bunch, Devlin said that while he enjoys watching the heavier programs TV has to offer, he doesn’t want to make them. Looking at his resume, with things like Leverage, The Librarians, and Almost Paradise, backs that up. And as far as I can tell, he’s one of the few people in the industry who keeps his politics to himself.
Sure Leverage: Redemption is a little social justice-y, but if you can get past that it’s still fun.
So I was very interested to give his new show, The Ark, a look. New episodes air Wednesdays on Syfy and land on Peacock the next day. I’ll be honest, the previews didn’t look promising. It’s set aboard a spaceship, and the CGI looks hokey even by early 2000’s syndicated TV standards. Yet that’s not the only reason why it’s still getting called a throwback. Like the serieses that still lingered up until about twenty years ago, The Ark is hopeful.
Don’t we need a little more of that right now?
The show opens with the crew ripped from their stasis pods a year before their scheduled arrival on a new home planet. Something hit the ship, killing all the senior members of the crew and leaving the survivors with two weeks’ worth of food and water. Someone has to take charge, someone has to ration the supplies, someone else has to keep the life support going. And of course, a few people have to be selfish jerks.
They all have to work together to survive.
Except for the stowaway who gets murdered. His surviving days are over.
Yeah, it’s nothing we haven’t seen a million times before and probably seen done better. Even the characters are stereotypes. The geeky girl has glasses and talks too much. The hot blonde is selfish. A Scottish guy complains a lot about technical things we don’t need to understand. And I don’t care. Because I like familiarity, I know these actors (though entirely unknown to me) can bring something unique to their characters, and because there’s precious little hope on TV right now.
I also trust Devlin to tell a good story.
Early reviews say that The Ark doesn’t nail its tone until the fourth episode. I’ll at least give it that long to really hook me. But as long as it doesn’t stray too far from showing humanity in a good light, I’ll support it and hope the mood takes. Our culture needs reminding (now, more than ever in my lifetime) that we can work together with people of different backgrounds and viewpoints to build a better life. For everyone.
Maybe we need the other stories too.
At the moment, we need to push the needle in the other direction.