NEWS HEADLINE DISCUSSIONS

Firefly Contributing To The End Of Buffy?

POSTED BY: NEWSADMIN
UPDATED: Monday, June 3, 2002 11:26
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Wednesday, April 24, 2002 10:20 AM

NEWSADMIN


First Whedon drops the Iron Man movie and now it looks like he is taking a gamble and sacrificing Buffy in bringing Firefly to life and making it a huge success.

An article posted on the Firefly: Ultimate Resource website suggested that Joss's committment to turning Firefly into a successful series for Fox may be contributing to the demise of Whedon's other series, Buffy: The Vampire Slayer.

According to the article, Nicholas Brendon, who plays Xander on the series, was quoted as saying that it would be impossible for Joss Whedon to dedicate himself completely to both Buffy and Firefly.

"But in the end, it will come down to Sarah (Michelle Gellar) and how well Scooby Doo does," said Brendon.

"I have two more years on my contract and the show is still going strong, so maybe Fox could decide to go ahead without Joss," Brendon said.

We'll just have to wait and see what happens this Fall when Firefly hits the airwaves.

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Friday, May 31, 2002 2:17 PM

ZICSOFT


If Buffy needs Whedon's constant attention in order to prosper, I don't hold out much hope for either Buffy or Firefly. Good TV shows require creative input from a lot of different people. Shows where all the ideas come out of one head get stale fast.

But I don't think that's why Buffy's in trouble. Face it, the idea is getting old. It's a show about teenagers fighting evil -- with a cast that has aged into its 20s and 30s! The plot devices ("We'll make you care about her -- then we'll kill her off!") are getting stale.

Worst of all is the Villain Problems. The Bad Guys have always been the best part of Buffy. They're ao damned self-righteous and sure of themselves. The Master, Angelus, Mayor Wilkins, Adam, Glory -- they kept getting better and better.

Select to view spoiler:



But this season, they just ran out of interesing Big Bads. The best they can do is a rogue witch who goes to 12-step groups for "magic addiction" and goes ballistic when her girlfriend is killed. Gimme a break.

(Perhaps if they'd killed off poor Tara earlier and given Dark Willow more time to develop... But let's not play the "if it were my show" game. It's not, and a good thing too.)



My big worry about Firefly is that they won't be up to the all the plotting. A lot more important in SF than in Fantasy. I mean, there were plot holes in the Glory arc you could drive a truck through -- but Glory was such an appealing villain, you just had to let it slide. Won't work in SF, which is *about* details like that.



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Friday, May 31, 2002 2:23 PM

JONWES


Dude, you so need to put the special spoiler tags on a lot of that post! Some of the European people haven't seen the end of season 6 yet.


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Friday, May 31, 2002 2:42 PM

MOJOECA


Though I do think that show has gotten more melodramatic over the years to its detriment, I still enjoy it. Gotta say I don't agree with some of your opinions:
Quote:

Face it, the idea is getting old. It's a show about teenagers fighting evil -- with a cast that has aged into its 20s and 30s!

Well, the show has alway been about *growth*. These characters are no longer teenagers--they're now *in* their 20's. You can accept early- to mid-20's actors (Brendon, Hannigan) playing 17 year-olds, but you can't accept the same actors a couple of years later playing 20 year-olds?
Quote:

The Master, Angelus, Mayor Wilkins, Adam, Glory -- they kept getting better and better.

Adam and Glory better than the Mayor? Sorry, really don't agree. Though I do like Adam (contrary to consensus), I thought Glory was too one-note ("gotta have the key") to sustain over the entire season. I thought her a pale imitation of the Mayor. As for this season's villians... eh, the writers tried something different. The trio and evil Will had their moments, but I hear next year will be a return to form, so...

Also, Espenson said they *were* planning to reveal evil Will in mid-season, but they pushed it back. Probably because everyone called it after season 5, so they had to erase those expectations. Also, the nature of the transformation demanded a quick, explosive arc. If deus ex Will goes bad earlier, it becomes problematic -- difficult to bring her back from it, and also thinking of reasons why she doesn't melt everyone w/ her eyes right off. They used up all those excuses pretty quickly in the final 2.

--- Joe

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Friday, May 31, 2002 4:26 PM

ZICSOFT


Quote:

Originally posted by Jonwes:
Dude, you so need to put the special spoiler tags on a lot of that post! Some of the European people haven't seen the end of season 6 yet.


Right you are. My apologies.


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Friday, May 31, 2002 4:35 PM

NOVAGRASS


Quote:

Originally posted by mojoeca:
Quote:

Face it, the idea is getting old. It's a show about teenagers fighting evil -- with a cast that has aged into its 20s and 30s!

Well, the show has alway been about *growth*. These characters are no longer teenagers--they're now *in* their 20's. You can accept early- to mid-20's actors (Brendon, Hannigan) playing 17 year-olds, but you can't accept the same actors a couple of years later playing 20 year-olds?



Indeed.

The entire series has always been about growth... *always.* From day one, the series was about a woman and her friends' growth into adulthood, changing and maturing through the years.

This season was exclusively about making bad choices and finally becoming full fledged adults. It was the reason Giles left... it was the reason the show became so much more experimental, to reflect the change more appropriately.

--Dylan Palmer, aka NoVaGrAsS--

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Friday, May 31, 2002 4:43 PM

ZICSOFT


Quote:

I thought Glory was too one-note ("gotta have the key") to sustain over the entire season.
Matter of taste, I suppose. I've been told the same thing about Drusilla, that her wonkiness gets boring -- but I can't get enough of her either.

Yeah, Glory is a one-note character. As annother Whedon character would say, that's nessa. All her evilness comes from a simple inability to see beyond her own "issues". All too real!

I didn't mean to imply that Adam was a better villain than Major Wilkins. Actually, I rank the major Big Bads as follows: Glory, Mayor Wilkins, The Gentlemen, Angelus, The Master, Maggie/Adam (two characters, but in a very real sense one villain)..

Yeah, I know, the Gentlemen were only in one episode. But they belong on this list, because they are as interesting as any of the other Big Bads.

The Master sort of deserves to be higher up. But he was in the first, truncated season, and didn't get a chance to develop.


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Friday, May 31, 2002 4:54 PM

SHOE


Its too bad an actually good series may be sacrificed for a show that will tank.


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Friday, May 31, 2002 5:01 PM

ZICSOFT


Quote:

The entire series has always been about growth... *always.* From day one, the series was about a woman and her friends' growth into adulthood, changing and maturing through the years.
True enough. But when people grow and change, they start doing different things with their lives, don't they? They even become different people.

Hmm, now that I think about it, you've put your finger on the one big thing that I really disliked about season 6: no growth. In fact, the three main character rather regressed!

Buffy: she's rebellious and wilful, which was the basis of the tension between her and Giles. But they need to write out Giles, so all of sudden he has too leave because she's "over-dependent".

Willow: they go to all this trouble developing her as a geeky girl with hidden mystical powers. Which was a lot of fun to watch. But they need her to have a breakup with Tara (and I'm guessing they also need for her to lose her powers for season 7), so they decide she's a "magic addict". Hey, 12-step programs for witches! Now that's original!

Xander: the most disappointing of all. My favorite episode is "The Zeppo," which typifies this character's struggle to invent imself. He's come to terms with his weaknesses and built on his strengths. He's counquered his fears and shown his own kind of courage. But they needed him to break up with Anya, so all of a sudden he's afraid of the future. Oh well.



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Friday, May 31, 2002 5:36 PM

MOJOECA


We can argue around in circles on season 6. Some liked it, others didn't. Most would agree it could have been better, but...
Getting back on topic

IMO, Buffy should go out after season 7. And that's becoming increasingly likely. Sarah expressed a desire to leave (exhausted after season 6, she may change her mind in the midst of 7). The storyline (no spoilers) seems to be intended to bring closure. Everyone's contracts run out after next year -- bigger payroll, bigger budget. UPN's paying something like 2.3 mil/per, will they spend more? Whedon's spread kinda thin now: 3 shows, 2 more on the way. Hopefully he won't bow to FOX's greed, and instead go out on a creative high (relative to viewers' tastes, I guess).

--- Joe

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Saturday, June 1, 2002 3:26 PM

ZICSOFT


Quote:

Originally posted by Shoe:
Its too bad an actually good series may be sacrificed for a show that will tank.


How's the rash? I know it's in an embaressing place, but these things happen.


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Saturday, June 1, 2002 4:14 PM

NOVAGRASS


Beware, there are season 6 spoilers in here!


Quote:

Originally posted by Zicsoft:
Quote:

The entire series has always been about growth... *always.* From day one, the series was about a woman and her friends' growth into adulthood, changing and maturing through the years.
True enough. But when people grow and change, they start doing different things with their lives, don't they? They even become different people.

Hmm, now that I think about it, you've put your finger on the one big thing that I really disliked about season 6: no growth. In fact, the three main character rather regressed!

Buffy: she's rebellious and wilful, which was the basis of the tension between her and Giles. But they need to write out Giles, so all of sudden he has too leave because she's "over-dependent".

Willow: they go to all this trouble developing her as a geeky girl with hidden mystical powers. Which was a lot of fun to watch. But they need her to have a breakup with Tara (and I'm guessing they also need for her to lose her powers for season 7), so they decide she's a "magic addict". Hey, 12-step programs for witches! Now that's original!

Xander: the most disappointing of all. My favorite episode is "The Zeppo," which typifies this character's struggle to invent imself. He's come to terms with his weaknesses and built on his strengths. He's counquered his fears and shown his own kind of courage. But they needed him to break up with Anya, so all of a sudden he's afraid of the future. Oh well.





The way I see it, these elements have been developing since season 5, if not before that... let me explain...

Willow's Magic Addiction: There is one scene in season 2 when Willow completes her magical incantation to restore Angel's soul. She gets very juiced when the spell succeeds, and Xander starts to look very worried. He realizes at this point that the magic will change Willow from the girl he grew up with into something entirly different. In season 5, in the episode entitled Listening to Fear, Tara comments on Willow's over-use of magic... saying that they shouldn't do things they could do easily within non-magical convention. There is also, in season 2, the development of magic as an addictive thing, with the explication of Giles' past and his dableings in dark magic. So Willow's story for season 6 isn't sudden at all... it's been growing since season 2. Also, part of Willow's most interesting character growth is her growth out of the geeky high school girl. Magic played a big part of this, and by season 4, she was a mature young woman who had outgrown the geekiness... but was still haunted by it (see Restless, another episode that foreshadows Willow's feelings of insignificance, which is a big reason for her magic troubles.) So, they did not develop her into a geeky girl who has hidden magical powers... they developed her as a girl who outgrows the geeky side of her, with the help of magic, friends, and Tara, but still feels insignificant in the world... like a geeky high school girl.

Xander: I can agree that I didn't enjoy the character this season... but I believe that was the entire point of his story arc. A lot of Xander's character has been centered on a feeling of unimportance... being the only normal guy in the group... which was resolved by season 6's conclusion. Another big part of his character is his immaturity. He is, and always has been, rather immature. His decision to propose to Anya was very rash and sudden... a very immature move, because he knew he was never ready to marry Anya in the first place. His leaving Anya at the alter was the culmination of his immaturity and his not being prepared for such commitment. This was all addressed in Once More With Feeling pretty glaringly. And you know what... Xander *did* grow this season... he saved the world for Christ's sake... he was willing to give up his life because he didn't want to live in a world without Willow. That's some serious growth, right there.

Buffy: Come on! She just came back from the dead... ripped from Nirvana and ultimate contentment. All of her decisions were made because part of her didn't want to be there... part of her wanted to be back in heaven with her mother. She wasn't the same person because of this... but she finally came back from her post-motrem dulldrums. Addressing her relationship with Giles: Over the years, her tension with Giles turned into dependence, especially after Joyce died. Buffy began relying on Giles for money and disipline of Dawn and pretty much everything else. In the real world, kids leave there parents to discover themselves. Since Buffy couldn't leave Sunnydale, Giles had to, or else Buffy would have never made the decisions and mistakes necessary for individual growth into adulthood. The idea that Buffy had only a tense relationship with Giles is sorta ignoring everything that developed between them from seasons 3 on... they had more of a Father/Daughter relationship by the end of season 5 than anything.

Sorry for the rantiness of this post... I'm just kinda tired of people claiming that the character development in season 6 was so sudden and inappropriate just because they didn't *like* what they saw. Everything... every decision and reaction produced this season was done so with every previous development of every one of the characters over 5 years of history... and people who don't recognize that and condem season 6 because they don't understand (or don't want to understand) this baffle me. To say they didn't grow confuses me as well... I mean... I thought they grew more by the end of this season than they had ever in the history of the series. They all realized that they had made very bad decisions that year and by Grave, each one of the characters were influenced by this realization, and began their lives as full-fledged adults. And... spoilers for season 7

Select to view spoiler:


don't expect Will to be off magic next year. Rumor has it, she'll be more powerful than ever... but not in a black magic way.



Maybe I wouldn't be so frustrated if I hadn't heard the same tired arguments over and over and over again... or maybe I'm just too wrapped up in the show

I'm really not that frustrated... but I am confused... Don't think of this as an attack... I'm just trying (key word: trying) to express my opinions civilly.

--Dylan Palmer, aka NoVaGrAsS--

"Blood just kept pouring out of them, you'd slip in it half the time, find out bloodbath is not just a figure of speech."
-Zoe; Firefly, "Serenity" Shooting Script.

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Saturday, June 1, 2002 4:41 PM

SHAMUS


Just so Dylan doesn't feel so lonely...

I actively enjoyed S6. All the characters evolved/devolved organically. The writers moved the story in directions that were unlike anything else on TV.

The one complaint I might have is that the display of Willow's addiction may have been a little more like "text" than subtext. Rack -- although a cool character -- being used to draw a thick black line under the "Dealer" analogue was a little heavy-handed.

Anyway. It seems to me all the folks that are having problems with the various S6 issues are still engaged -- passionately -- with the show.

Tough to see how that could be a bad thing.

Nothings exceeds like excess.

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Saturday, June 1, 2002 4:52 PM

SHUGGIE


Quote:

Originally posted by Zicsoft:
My big worry about Firefly is that they won't be up to the all the plotting. A lot more important in SF than in Fantasy. I mean, there were plot holes in the Glory arc you could drive a truck through -- but Glory was such an appealing villain, you just had to let it slide. Won't work in SF, which is *about* details like that.



Actually I don't believe SF is about the details - but I'm aware that I may be in a minority there.

Maybe that's why I don't watch as much SF as I did when I was 15. Or maybe that's why I avoid those threads on the Buffy NGs that endlessly discuss, or worse try to reconcile, all the plot holes and inconsistencies.

I mean I understand the need for everything to hang together well but it's not so important to me as good characters and interesting stories.

Fiction is always about suspending disbelief. The trick is to make it so interesting and entertaining that we ignore the inconsistencies in the same way we ignore the fact that vampires aren't real or we don't have hundreds of populated planets (yet).

I'm not worried because I know Joss is committed to the Story above all things. make the story good and everything else is secondary. Make the story amazing and people will forgive you almost any logical flaw, inconsistency, plot problem.

Do we hate that a Gypsy Curse with a 'perfect happiness' clause is a really really bad idea, or do we love the fact that it allows us to have Angel turn into Angellus half way through S2?

I know which I choose. Your choice may be different.

Shug

Her lips were saying 'No' but then I looked into her eyes
... and her eyes were saying 'read my lips'
- Niles Crane

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Saturday, June 1, 2002 5:03 PM

NOVAGRASS


Quote:

Originally posted by shamus:
Just so Dylan doesn't feel so lonely...

I actively enjoyed S6. All the characters evolved/devolved organically. The writers moved the story in directions that were unlike anything else on TV.

The one complaint I might have is that the display of Willow's addiction may have been a little more like "text" than subtext. Rack -- although a cool character -- being used to draw a thick black line under the "Dealer" analogue was a little heavy-handed.

Anyway. It seems to me all the folks that are having problems with the various S6 issues are still engaged -- passionately -- with the show.

Tough to see how that could be a bad thing.

Nothings exceeds like excess.



You're so very very kind, Shamus

I think that because it was different than anything on TV is the main reason why so many people were unsatisfied with it... a lot of viewers didn't really get it.

About the Rack thing... I *totally* agree. I think the drug subtext would have really worked if they hadn't been so obvious with it. It was a thin line that could have been *great* if it were on one side or awful if it were on the other. I won't comment on which side I thought it was... but I be you can guess

Quote:

Anyway. It seems to me all the folks that are having problems with the various S6 issues are still engaged -- passionately -- with the show.


Well... except maybe for the Willow/Tara fans... geez... and we think the Dark Angelers are disgruntled! "Hell hath no fury... like a Willow/Tara fan scorned"



--Dylan Palmer, aka NoVaGrAsS--

"Blood just kept pouring out of them, you'd slip in it half the time, find out bloodbath is not just a figure of speech."
-Zoe; Firefly, "Serenity" Shooting Script.

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Saturday, June 1, 2002 6:23 PM

JONWES


As I've said before, I've only become a big Buffy fan since season 6, although I always enjoyed the show when I happened to catch it before now.

Spoiler stuff:

Select to view spoiler:



I'll really miss the Tara/Willow relationship. I was a big fan, and now it's done forever. I'll really miss Amber Benson. However...



I also know one of the first things you need to know about dramatic writing is that if you love your characters, you'll hurt them. They need to be kicked in the butt every once in a while. And the Buffy team is great at doing that. I though the magic addiction thing, while it was a bit heavy-handed sometimes, was a clever plot. It wasn't something you'd see on Dawson's, so it was uniquely Buffy-like. What a great and interesting way to create tension between Willow and Tara in their relationship.


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Saturday, June 1, 2002 6:44 PM

NOVAGRASS


Quote:

Originally posted by Jonwes:
As I've said before, I've only become a big Buffy fan since season 6, although I always enjoyed the show when I happened to catch it before now.

Spoiler stuff:

Select to view spoiler:



I'll really miss the Tara/Willow relationship. I was a big fan, and now it's done forever. I'll really miss Amber Benson. However...



I also know one of the first things you need to know about dramatic writing is that if you love your characters, you'll hurt them. They need to be kicked in the butt every once in a while. And the Buffy team is great at doing that. I though the magic addiction thing, while it was a bit heavy-handed sometimes, was a clever plot. It wasn't something you'd see on Dawson's, so it was uniquely Buffy-like. What a great and interesting way to create tension between Willow and Tara in their relationship.




Select to view spoiler:


I miss Willow/Tara a lot. It was the only gay relationship on network television that was treated with any sort of integrity... and it is the only televised lesbian relationship that wasn't exploited purely for shock value and trendiness. It's sad to see it go, but it was a necessary development.



It's true, though... if every character leads a happy, perfect life, it's simply not interesting.

Select to view spoiler:


Joss has been saying that Tara's death made him physically ill to think about... which is why he knew it was the right thing to do.



The characters need to be given many trials and tribulations in order for them to grow and evolve. Without pain, the characters stagnate and the show dies. It's a sad fact, but it is a fact nonetheless.

--Dylan Palmer, aka NoVaGrAsS--

"Blood just kept pouring out of them, you'd slip in it half the time, find out bloodbath is not just a figure of speech."
-Zoe; Firefly, "Serenity" Shooting Script.

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Sunday, June 2, 2002 5:24 AM

SHURIKAN


The whole Willow addicted to Magic thing was a great idea, IF you replace "magic" with "Power". If you think about it, she was a little highschool "nerdy" girl, with low self esteem etc, and then she could affect demons, save the world, and even make poeple forget what she didn't want them to rememer. It was Power that she was addicted to, not magic. That's what thought all the subtext was leading up to, and on a recap, it would've been so great. I always thought it was a bit of a copout, that it wasn't WILLOW who was bad, it was the Magic that made her do it. Ah well... woulda coulda shoulda, it's been done now
.

Shuri

Tír gan teanga, tír gan anam

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Sunday, June 2, 2002 7:38 AM

JONWES


Select to view spoiler:


But actually, it was the power, not the magic that made her go bad. That was shown in finale. It wasn't so much the fact that she had accessed dark magics, but it was also a power trip for her. She liked having the power - she challenged Buffy's power and seemed to revel in the fact that she could take Buffy on. She had a near orgasmic power overload. I think it was all intertwined.




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Sunday, June 2, 2002 7:45 AM

ZICSOFT


Quote:

I mean I understand the need for everything to hang together well but it's not so important to me as good characters and interesting stories.
Then why bother with SF at all? If all you want is good people and stories, you can get that from any decent TV show.

Actually, I don't think you're in the minority. Judging from the "science fiction" I see, most fans like big fat stories that let them escape from the real world for a few hours, and aren't interested in reading critically. The buy books and watch shows that are full of "technical" details that don't actually make any sense.

That's the main reason I was so encouraged when I heard that Josh Whedon was doing a space opera. It's true that he basically writes fantasy, but he doesn't just make it up as he goes along -- he works hard to maintain the internal logic. (Though he doesn't always suceeed.) And when he does bring in science or technology, he avoids faking it. None of the jargon-spouting pseudo-science that drove me away from Star Trek.

Still, Whedon has a slight tendency to invent complicated backstories that get slightly out of control. There were minor inconsistencies in the Mayor Wilkins arc, and big ones in the Glory arc. I overlooked these problems because there was so much else to like. But that's gonna be harder to do with something Firefly.


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Sunday, June 2, 2002 7:50 AM

SHURIKAN


Reply to Jonwes

I know, but seeing the season as a whole (especially the "Magic Dealer" bit), it seems more "Magic is bad" than "Power can go to your head" Possibly just my perception.

Shuri

Tír gan teanga, tír gan anam

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Sunday, June 2, 2002 8:29 AM

ANGRYPERSON





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Sunday, June 2, 2002 8:33 AM

NOVAGRASS


Quote:

Originally posted by Zicsoft:
Quote:

I mean I understand the need for everything to hang together well but it's not so important to me as good characters and interesting stories.
Then why bother with SF at all? If all you want is good people and stories, you can get that from any decent TV show.

Actually, I don't think you're in the minority. Judging from the "science fiction" I see, most fans like big fat stories that let them escape from the real world for a few hours, and aren't interested in reading critically. The buy books and watch shows that are full of "technical" details that don't actually make any sense.

That's the main reason I was so encouraged when I heard that Josh Whedon was doing a space opera. It's true that he basically writes fantasy, but he doesn't just make it up as he goes along -- he works hard to maintain the internal logic. (Though he doesn't always suceeed.) And when he does bring in science or technology, he avoids faking it. None of the jargon-spouting pseudo-science that drove me away from Star Trek.

Still, Whedon has a slight tendency to invent complicated backstories that get slightly out of control. There were minor inconsistencies in the Mayor Wilkins arc, and big ones in the Glory arc. I overlooked these problems because there was so much else to like. But that's gonna be harder to do with something Firefly.




I tend to agree with both you and Shuggie in this respect...

As Zicsoft said, Joss is the type of visionary that does not just make up the story as he goes. Years in advance, he knows where the characters will be and incoroprates minor details into the earlier seasons that will greatly impact the future of the characters. This bodes extremely well for Firefly, a science fiction series, which often times *do* rely on details to enhance the story. The reason most modern sci-fi shows feel forced and the details don't flow well with the story is because they aren't headed by visionaries like Joss Whedon, or to an extent, Gene Roddenbury.

As Shuggie said, if there are good characters and a good overall story, the minor details shouldn't matter. However, could it not be said that minor details help design a good character? I find that if the minor details of the characters are compelling enough, I can suspend by desbelief to a greater extent... ignoring the minor flaws in the overall story and appreciate it for what it is.

So, I think that to tell a good story with interesting characters, whether it be with fantasy or sci fi or comedy or drama, is to use as many small details as you can to your advantage so that the areas where details seem flawed aren't as important. So, I think that Sci-fi is, at heart, the same as any other genre of story-telling... that it should use minor details of characters and overall story to make up for the flaws of the "technical" details in more intricate plot.

--Dylan Palmer, aka NoVaGrAsS--

"Blood just kept pouring out of them, you'd slip in it half the time, find out bloodbath is not just a figure of speech."
-Zoe; Firefly, "Serenity" Shooting Script.

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Sunday, June 2, 2002 8:46 AM

NOVAGRASS


Quote:

Originally posted by angryperson:
ur show sux a**! f**k firefly!




At lest he was courteous enough to censor his own post!

Thank you, Angryperson!

--Dylan Palmer, aka NoVaGrAsS--

"Blood just kept pouring out of them, you'd slip in it half the time, find out bloodbath is not just a figure of speech."
-Zoe; Firefly, "Serenity" Shooting Script.

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Sunday, June 2, 2002 9:46 AM

SHUGGIE


Quote:

Originally posted by Zicsoft:
Quote:

I mean I understand the need for everything to hang together well but it's not so important to me as good characters and interesting stories.
Then why bother with SF at all? If all you want is good people and stories, you can get that from any decent TV show.



Because there are some stories you can only tell in Space, just as there are some you can only tell in a universe where vampires and demons are real.

If you read what Joss has said about the show it's all about the story and the characters. He wants to tell stories about "the people history stepped on". He's drawing on themes from the American Civil War - but he didn't want to set it in the Civil War. My guess is the main reason it's in space and in the future is so he can create a similar situation but have it look a little different. Of course he'll also be able to do things that are 'magical' (any sufficiently advanced technology blah blah blah).

I understand that there's a such a thing as hard-SF where the Science is the main thing. If that's your thing then fine. My guess is that that's not what Joss is doing.

But I could be wrong

(btw I hate 'techno-babble' too. On the other hand I once read an SF book with 16 straight pages of in-depth quantum mechanics theory - it was not fun)

Shug

Her lips were saying 'No' but then I looked into her eyes
... and her eyes were saying 'read my lips'
- Niles Crane

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Sunday, June 2, 2002 9:57 AM

SHUGGIE


Quote:

Originally posted by NoVaGrAsS:
As Shuggie said, if there are good characters and a good overall story, the minor details shouldn't matter. However, could it not be said that minor details help design a good character? I find that if the minor details of the characters are compelling enough, I can suspend by desbelief to a greater extent... ignoring the minor flaws in the overall story and appreciate it for what it is.



Totally agree. Character inconsistencies are harder to ignore than technical ones.


Shug

Her lips were saying 'No' but then I looked into her eyes
... and her eyes were saying 'read my lips'
- Niles Crane

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Sunday, June 2, 2002 10:33 AM

SHAMUS


Mutters to self: "Man, this is a good thread."

On techno-babble: Bleargh.

On backstory/mythos mismanagement endangering suspension of disbelief: Seconding (or is it thirding ) notion that whatever conflicts the people are presently grappling with take precedence over slavish adherance to canon.

Further muttering to self: "Well, that sounded pretty academic/snooty. Oh, well."

Why SF?: It may come down to blasters being cooler than six-shooters. Or, it might be that a setting in which you can constrain technology down to horses-and-homesteads or up to starships-and-space-stations just provides a richer field of possible stories.

On Civil War and Grand Themes: The quote about FF being about the "people that history stepped on" rather than the movers & shakers is very encouraging. Actually, I'm not coming up with an example in TV SF where the people we are engaged with are not central to some galaxy-spanning operatic dilemma. Red Dwarf, maybe?

I get the impression that MAl & Co -- once burnt -- are doing their best to stay *out* of the big stuff.


Nothings exceeds like excess.

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Sunday, June 2, 2002 1:30 PM

ZICSOFT


Quote:

Originally posted by shamus:
On techno-babble: Bleargh.

Hey! I write techno-babble for a living!

What's really irritating is when an ignorant SF writer hides their ignorance by throwing out lots of words they obviously don't understand. Like the writers on Star Trek with their Quantum Singularities, Star Systems, and planetoids. (These are all real scientific concepts, but you'd never know it from the way ST uses them.)
Quote:


...whatever conflicts the people are presently grappling with take precedence over slavish adherance to canon.


Oh, absolutely. If you have to choose between telling a good story and keeping all the trivia straight, better to tell a good story.

Thing is, in SF, the details often are the story.

Quote:


Actually, I'm not coming up with an example in TV SF where the people we are engaged with are not central to some galaxy-spanning operatic dilemma. Red Dwarf, maybe?


Well, that's the original premise of Star Trek. A bunch of explorers putter around the galaxy, dealing with this crisis and that. But every time Hollywood does an Indepence Day, or some other excessive FX exercise, the Studio and Network suits want to compete, and start pressuring for More Action. Which is how DS9 started out as a fairly thoughtful "Casablanca in Space" and ended up blowing up spaceships by the bushel basket.

No doubt Whedon is fighting the same battle as we speak.


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Sunday, June 2, 2002 4:11 PM

NOVAGRASS


Quote:

Originally posted by Zicsoft:

No doubt Whedon is fighting the same battle as we speak.



The difference is: Joss will never cave under the weight of the networks like Rick Berman did.

--Dylan Palmer, aka NoVaGrAsS--

"Blood just kept pouring out of them, you'd slip in it half the time, find out bloodbath is not just a figure of speech."
-Zoe; Firefly, "Serenity" Shooting Script.

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Sunday, June 2, 2002 4:30 PM

SHAMUS


Quote:

Originally posted by Zicsoft:
What's really irritating is when an ignorant SF writer hides their ignorance by throwing out lots of words they obviously don't understand.



You mean like when Lucas thought 'parsec' was a unit of time?

Quote:


Thing is, in SF, the details often are the story.


Well, I'm not getting this. Unless you are talking about the 'hard' SF that Shug referred to...
Quote:


No doubt Whedon is fighting the same battle as we speak.
Novagrass:
The difference is: Joss will never cave under the weight of the networks like Rick Berman did.


Here's hoping. I'm not sure that I would stop watching FF if they migrated to being movers & shakers, though. If Whedon needs to play that card, to stay in the game, I wouldn't accuse him of "caving."


Nothings exceeds like excess.

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Sunday, June 2, 2002 5:53 PM

MOJOECA


I do hope that these guys stay grunts. Farscape started out like that, then the whole wormhole business got hot and heavy -- which I do love. But Capt Kirk saving the entire universe every movie got tiresome...

When I first heard about Firefly, it kinda sounded like A-Team in space.

--- Joe

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Sunday, June 2, 2002 6:14 PM

MOJOECA


Quote:

mean I understand the need for everything to hang together well but it's not so important to me as good characters and interesting stories.


I second that. Nitpicking is just so...blah.

Given a choice between plotholes and bullsh*t technobabble like we hear on Star Trek (no offense to ST fans), I go for the plot holes if it means more time for charactes, stories.


--- Joe

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Monday, June 3, 2002 5:52 AM

ZICSOFT


Here's an example of how I see the whole issue of details-versus-story. If you haven't seen 24 yet, well too bad. I refuse to use the spoiler tag for this.

Everybody but me seems to think that 24 is great, innovative TV. For the first few episodes I did too. Then they got to part where they explained why -- and I lost interest.

If you're going to steal somebody's press credentials, do you really need to blow up a plane to do it? If you're going to kidnap a secret agent's family, do you really need an elaborate scheme involving flaky teenage thugs and assasins posing as accountants?

What they did was concoct a plot that didn't make any sense. But we're supposed to overlook the holes because it's dramatic. Well, some of us can't.

Now with SF that's even more of a problem, because everything is invented. Naturally you expect the audience to suspend disbelief -- but you can only that that so far. It's not fair to invent a whole world, suck people into it and then discard details whenever they're inconvenient.


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Monday, June 3, 2002 11:13 AM

SHUGGIE


Clearly not all plot holes are created equal.

As you point out it's all about suspension of disbelief. How much can you stretch things before the audience simply refuses to believe.

It depends on where the hole is. Is it slap in the middle of where your story lives or is it off to the side somewhere?

It depends on how big it is.

It depends on who your audience are. Astrophysicists probably have a harder time suspending disbelief in Star Trek than the average fan.

It also depends what it buys you. Sometimes a slight inconsistency will allow a great plot twist or story idea.

Shug

Her lips were saying 'No' but then I looked into her eyes
... and her eyes were saying 'read my lips'
- Niles Crane

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Monday, June 3, 2002 11:26 AM

SHAMUS


Ok, I'm finally getting your point, Zicsoft. SF has to deal with internal consistency issues that don't come up -- as much -- in other fiction.

Whedon/Mutant Enemy have been pretty good about that sort of thing, I think. Although they for the most part threw out the existing vampire mythos "rules", the ones they invented have been honored in the plot.

Well, mostly. I'm still not sure why the Master didn't explode into dust when he took a timber through the chest. Didn't make me tune out, though.

It seems to me that the 24 example highlights a different issue, one of abandoning the notion that everyone -- evil or otherwise -- will take the least action to accomplish their aim. No one, from your example, is going to blowup an airplane they themselves are flying on, parachute into the desert at night, and hook up with a huge downside team, just to get an ID card for your plastic-surgery remade assasin.

Bonk the guy on the head, take the card, dump the body.

Better yet. Just stand off at a good distance and shoot the target. Skip the plastic surgery.

To avoid this kind of over-plotting (not that this has ever been a problem for Joss&Co) it will help to keep the FF folks "grunts" (as Joe puts it ).

Nothings exceeds like excess.

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