After two episodes Dean Devlin’s The Ark is still sitting at an abysmal 3.6/10 on IMDb. This week’s episode, “Like It Touched the Sun” has eeked out a mild 6.6/10, which isn’t exactly a win. But hopefully it means things are moving in the right direction. Because while everyone else is raving over the videogame adaptation The Last of Us on HBO Max, the idea of watching that just sounds like work.
To be fair, I sometimes feel the same way about playing videogames.
What makes The Ark unique isn’t just its positive outlook, but also that it’s an original idea. Sure it’s Battlestar Galactica and Lost In Space, but it’s not based on a preestablished intellectual property. That’s a rare thing in entertainment, and should inspire more artists to break away from fan fiction and make new things. Unfortunately, that also means there’s a tremendous amount of heavy lifting for Devlin and company.
The show is half baked.
Right now they’re leaning pretty heavily on tropes and stereotypical characters. Nerdy girl Alicia is supposed to be endearing, but there’s a copy/paste quality to her dialog that’s more often grating. The hot, social media star Cat is supposed to be like Angela on Bones, a sexy wise-woman, and putting an Instagram influencer on an isolated spaceship is a great idea. She’s not quite fully formed yet, but out of all the characters she has the most potential. At least the plot pretty much writes itself based on the concept.
Remember those early seasons of Star Trek: The Next Generation?
The first two seasons are painful. And these days shows don’t get that much time to find their way, so I’m not holding out too much hope for The Ark. However, because it’s original and doesn’t carry the baggage of expectations, it does have one advantage. Gene Roddenberry famously demanded that TNG writers not write villains. To his mind, humanity should have progressed beyond petty squabbles by the 23rd century. It led to some creative storytelling, but you can feel the constraints.
We want Khan! We want evil Klingons! The Borg turned out to be irresistible!
But The Ark doesn’t have that issue. So far the drama has come from the fight to survive on a broken ship with limited supplies. There’s no villain yet, and the interpersonal conflict feels completely organic. Put a bunch of stressed, hungry, sleep-deprived people together and sparks will fly. Add in a murder mystery and a flashback or two to seed some distrust, and you’ve got all the drama you need.
No bad guy required.
Episode two has some lighthearted moments, some designed to tug at our heartstrings, and a pretty good fight. It’s exactly the formula I would expect from the mind behind Leverage, and it almost (almost!) works here. Am I invested in the characters and story? No, not at all, not yet. But I eagerly await new episodes.
Why?
I’m watching The Ark for the joy in observing its construction. It doesn’t matter to me that it’s flawed, I simply appreciate the chance to look over the writers' shoulders. I hope the show succeeds and is around for many years, so that people who want old fashioned entertainment have something to enjoy. But as for me, it's all about the messy, awkward, sometimes satisfying, storytelling process.