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TV Review: The Ark Episode 4 - "We Weren't Supposed to Be Here"
February 24, 2023
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Apologies for two reviews of the same show in one week, but last Friday I slacked off and today I can’t wait to tell you how good The Ark has gotten. We were told from early reviews that the show finally hits its stride in episode four, and while I was really impressed with last week’s, “We Weren’t Supposed to Be Here” is the episode that has officially made me a fan.

Hopefully it will have that effect on other people too.

Last week the survivors finally managed to harvest some water from a passing comet and show some concern for one another, as well as get the engines going. They’re back on track. Food is still short and there’s a murderer on board, and two weeks ago Brice nearly lost his hand when he touched some space goo, so now it’s time to deal with all of that. Thanks to a video Lane found hidden in a cubby hole, it looks like Garnet had motive to commit the murder.

First plot thread, engaged.

Lane is ready to throw Garnet under the bus, if not right out the airlock, but is forced to wait for an official judgment. So chief of security Strickland takes Garnet into custody and interrogates her, getting us some much needed backstory. Meanwhile, the affable Brice pulls Angus away from his plants to investigate the goo. Put that on the back burner for now, because here’s where the show starts to reveal the writers’ method.

It’s all about multiple layers.

Three problems are set up, and as soon as one is resolved another appears. Two are usually resolved in a single episode, allowing the third to linger for awhile. I really appreciate the flow of the stories and nothing so far has been given short shrift. Now that I really care about the characters I can be fully invested in following along, and there’s also tremendous comfort in knowing I can trust the show to snip them off in a timely manner. The single story problem this time is that the everyone starts hallucinating, and if they don’t figure out why and how to stop it soon, everyone will die.

Second plot thread, engaged.

The first sign that something is off actually feels like the writers have betrayed us. It fooled me. Maybe I don’t trust the writers as much as I thought. I won’t spoil it further, but it was very well done. The second sign is a little more annoying. Strickland thinks he hears his daughter crying and his husband comforting her. The character’s homosexuality comes out of nowhere, despite a weak attempt at retconning, so it seems like an afterthought contrived to appease some group. To add insult to injury, when we see the husband he looks like a fat, English butler. 

Engineer Ava also imagines her lost lover, Harris, which wouldn’t bother me if the casting department hadn’t settled on an actor who looks like her brother. 

Such quibbles aside, the episode is mostly solid entertainment. The hallucination explanation and solution is resolved a little too neatly, sure, but no worse than some problems in Star Trek reruns. It suits the tone of the series and leaves us smiling. The quick resolution allows us to move onto the next thread, the space goo, which promises to be more complex and engaging. 

I can hardly wait. 

We also get some hope that some of the tropiest characters will see some real growth if the series is allowed to continue into multiple seasons. Will The Ark get that chance? I’m not holding my breath. But by the fourth episode it’s already found better footing than many shows don’t stumble onto until their fourth season. 

 

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Leo and Brittany have arrived on Saturn, but not in the way they'd hoped. Captured by a pagan cult, they don't have time to stop the unthinkable from happening. But they'll try anyway.

Content warning: language and sexual situations.

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Star Wars is dead and the more apathy you show the faster it will be allowed to rest in peace.

Instead of griping about what Disney has done, why don't you listen to my space adventure story? He Who Rides on the Clouds is supernatural noir that spans space and time. When children on Mars go missing, Alexis Leonard and his ex-wife Brittany go looking. Their search leads them to a pagan temple and an ancient religion.

If you'd like to buy the story and read ahead, it's available in the Fall 2020 issue of Cirsova, available here: https://amzn.to/3yRRywY

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Yesterday two trailers were released for upcoming superhero projects. First, we had Marvel's Ironheart, which Disney has been sitting on for years at this point. Apparently it follows Riri Williams (Dominique Thorne), a young black woman at MIT who is (was?) intended to take over for Tony Stark as Ironwhathaveyou. If you haven't seen the trailer yet, take a look.

I stopped paying too much attention to the MCU a long time ago, but apparently Riri was introduced in Wakanda Forever, and her fans have been clamoring for a standalone show ever since (/sarcasm). Watching the trailer, I can't help but notice how many times we're told she's smart and capable. Any suggestion that she can't do something is shot down immediately. We're supposed to believe that The System is against is her because she's poor, I guess, and doesn't have Tony Stark's advantages.

Remember Tony Stark? Sure, he was rich. But he was also a self-absorbed man-child who found himself in a cave in Afghanistan who had to engineer his own escape with scrap parts. Tony Stark, who had to learn about self-sacrifice and the consequences of his actions. Robert Downey Jr. make us like the guy, with his easy charm, even though we wanted to see him grow up. There was room for a character arc. No offence to Dominique, but she doesn't have the charm, and her character clearly has nowhere to go.

A few hours later, Warner Bros./DC released the trailer for James Gunn's Superman, the latest reboot of the iconic superhero. We've been waiting for a good Superman for a long time. Something to reunite the fans, the casually interested, and possibly the entire country. And to be honest, I don't think this is gonna do it. Take a look.

Before I go any further, I want to spin my theory on the interview scene, which is a little different from what I'm hearing from most anyone else. Notice how David Corenswet pitches his voice really high when he says, "Sure!" At this point in the movie, I don't think Lois (Rachel Brasnahan) knows that Clark is Superman, and thinks he's just playacting. But when Clark drops his voice, he's showing his cards a little bit. Then, when he completely loses his cool, he's just acting how Lois thinks Superman would respond. In context (the scene is reportedly ten minutes long!), it might be interesting. Out of context, in a trailer, it's a stupid decision.

Throughout the entire trailer we see Superman smacked around, knocked out, screaming out in self-defense, and made fun of for having a dog. There are some super-heroics, to be sure, but they're mitigated by the overwhelming amount of thrashing he takes. Unlike Riri, I guess he's got some room for growth. But it doesn't inspire me to see the movie. Some are defending this approach, suggesting that someone with such a clear cut understanding of right and wrong would be frustrated and confused by our complex, political climate. And I agree. But his moral compass and grace towards an unfair world should have been set before leaving Smallville and going out into the world.

So on the one hand, we've got a flawless female character. And on the other, we've got an immature Superman. Neither character is attractive, warts and all. Neither character is relatable or inspiring in the ways the filmmakers intended, as presented. Maybe the show and movie will be good. But someone else will have to let me know. Because right now, I'm not inspired to see either one.

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What Do We Want? Familiar Originality! When Do We Want It? Now!

There is an ongoing debate over what movie audiences really want. On the one hand, there are those who bemoan the upcoming slate of films that are nothing but sequels and prequels. “People want original movies!” they say, and use the spectacular failure of recent comic book movies as proof. But when an original movie like the recent Black Bag doesn’t make a dent at the box office and is quietly shuffled onto streaming, the other side can say, “No they don’t.”

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I say, both!

The average viewer likes familiarity. That’s why every night on TV millions of people watch the latest episode of their favorite procedural. Every episode is the same. Has been for years. Doesn’t matter if you’re watching Bones, House M.D., or NCIS, at the end of the day, the story beats are invariably the same. The characters fill the same archetypes. 

Even if you aren’t a student of scriptwriting, you know the flow.

Engaging with a story is sometimes like singing a song. Sometimes you want to sit back and listen to a master perform, but other times you want to join in. And if the tune is simple and familiar, you can learn new words that much more easily. If the melody is complex, with tempo and key changes, it demands attention. That’s when you just sit back and appreciate someone else’s artistry. 

More often than not, we’re drawn to the familiar. 

We go to the movies to be entertained more than we go to be challenged.

But Hollywood seems determined to challenge us. They challenge our ideas of who are familiar are. They challenge our core beliefs about right and wrong. When they do make something that isn’t from a well established intellectual property, they challenge us to accept an unfamiliar actor, who likely isn’t attractive or charming. Why should we want to get to know this person and the character he or she is playing?

We don’t. 

Mass appeal isn’t difficult. Our mainstream entertainment providers are making it difficult, probably in large part because they don’t know or understand what we want. And unless they do, people just like us will move to replace them. 

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Book Review - The Revenant and the Cult - Book Two: The Terror in the Wychwood

In the forward to The Revenant and the Cult - Book Two: The Terror in the Wychwood, author Herman P. Hunter mentions that his influences are J.R.R. Tolkien, Robert E. Howard, C.S. Lewis, and H.P. Lovecraft. While it may seem odd to intersperse deeply religious writers with those antagonistic to the idea of a benevolent God, from a writer’s perspective it makes sense.

For a fantasy writer, particularly one of faith, they are essential.

It’s also worth remembering that all four men were producing their greatest works around the same time on opposite sides of the Atlantic. Theirs was the golden age of worldbuilding, and it’s practically impossible for today’s writer of the fantastic not be influenced by their work, consciously or through osmosis. But to fully appreciate modern genre fiction, it’s to our advantage to drink deeply from their bibliographies.

Because genre fiction doesn’t always mean science fiction and fantasy.

As I noted in my review of The Revenant and the Cult - Book One: The Missing Spy, that story draws heavily from western tropes. Howard, always one to blaze his own trails, also dabbled in Lovecraft’s mythos, but before taking his own life seemed to be moving into writing cowboy stories. He was a Texan, after all. Unlike many authors, he was never satisfied staying in category for too long. 

With his series, Hunter is doing something similar, but different.

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Two words: Moonlight Hunters.

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Christian and otherwise, alike.

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