Here we are again, another Friday and another review of The Ark, the Syfy series that keeps getting better. The first few episodes were rough, not that I cared. Dean Devlin wanted to make a show that was positive and uplifting, and given that such things are in short supply right now, I was cautiously optimistic that it would come together. Last night I watched the fifth episode, “One Step Forward, Two Steps Back.”
Ironic, because last week I said something very similar about the format.
To review, The Ark is about a group of scientists and engineers on their way to a new planet after Earth became uninhabitable. They were supposed to be in cryosleep until two weeks before their arrival, but something happened to wake them and all the officers were killed. Now they’re years away from everything and everyone, on a damaged spaceship, with every reason to distrust each other. With no locations outside of The Ark so far, the show could get dull fast.
Every episode is a bottle episode.
The writers are smart to keep the plot arcs short and shallow. Every week we’ve got a new problem to solve, one or two old ones that get resolved, and one or two new problems for coming episodes. Last week we learned Garnet’s big secret, and “One Step Forward” starts with the metaphorical fallout. Fortunately, the petty political wrangling doesn’t last long. Besides, we’ve got bigger issues when a radiation leak kicks off a literal fallout. As always, the solution is painfully simple and I don’t mind one bit.
I’m just along for the ride, even if it’s a kiddie ride.
At the end of the first episode there was a murder. That’s been the longest running mystery, so now it’s time to solve it. But of course, that opens the door to a new mystery (can you say, space cult?). The writers also take the opportunity to shift focus to the backstory of another character, which will play out over the coming weeks. We want to trust all the survivors, but we have questions, and here we’re reminded that not everyone is trustworthy.
Of course, there’s a risk in moving too fast.
The main cast is pretty small, and not everyone can or should have a shadowy backstory. I suspect that they’ll have to bring in some new characters soon, and I just hope that they handle it better than other shows (LOST, ahem, cough-cough). I also wonder how long they’ll be able to depend on ship problems for the weekly dilemma. After a certain point, even I’m going to have trouble suspending my disbelief that they’ve made it this far.
Soon, we’ll find out if The Ark actually has a destination or if it’s just going forward with no target in mind.