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06-28-2011, 05:48 PM | #1 | |
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Falling Skies: Mmm, Frothy Invasions
So first off, a mea culpa: I was wrong to judge this show solely based on it being a Noah Wyle show on TNT. In my defense, the last one of those was "Noah Wyle Fights Some Books 2: Overdue This" which was pretty terrible.
But after actually watching the last three episodes, the show's not bad. Sure, it wears all of its many influences on its sleeve, but its a perfectly solid, uncomplicated take on a post-apocalyptic alien invasion. If I had to boil it down, it's like non-self-serious Walking Dead plotting infused with minor Battlestar Galactica character interactions (mostly in the military v. civilian stuff and the survivor guilt atmosphere), and is probably the best frothy fluff you could ask for while recovering from the end of Game of Thrones while waiting for Breaking Bad to get back on air. Anyone have any good theories for the show so far? The best one I've heard is that the skitters are actually a sort of drone force for the as of yet unseen leader aliens residing in the towers, with the bipedal mechs being designed to resemble the leaders.
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Last edited by Lumenskir; 06-28-2011 at 07:07 PM. |
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06-28-2011, 06:01 PM | #2 |
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I thought the mechs were designed to compensate brainwashed humans. Granted I only watched the first episode before rage-quitting. The show seems like it could be alright but I just really don't like the characters. Except for Noah Wyle. Couldn't they just have given him a Librarian tv series?
If there weren't any other shows like this on tv I would like it a lot more than I do but I guess I've just been spoiled by The Walking Dead. Last edited by The Sevenshot Kid; 06-28-2011 at 06:04 PM. |
06-28-2011, 06:27 PM | #3 | |
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What do you mean by 'compensate'?
And so far, I'd say I'm liking this show a lot more than Walking Dead...well, the average of Walking Dead. WD's pilot was amazing, but every episode after was pretty draggy and felt a little like the AMC brand was giving it the ability to brag about how fragrant its farts were without actually deserving it (See also: The Killing). For me, Falling Skies seems be perfectly aware of its inherent campiness and is consistently clearing the decent but not amazing bar it has set for itself.
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06-28-2011, 06:33 PM | #4 |
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It might have been better word choice for me to use accommodate.
I'll have to take your word for it. Maybe tomorrow I'll catch up but the moment I quit the show was when that one kid was complaining about his birthday party being skipped. It seemed totally unrealistic and it dragged me out of the show. |
06-28-2011, 07:12 PM | #5 | ||
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However, as a light show that can tell a continuing story with episodes that are individually interesting, as well as stabs at creating overarching mysteries, it's not bad and is in fact enjoyable.
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06-28-2011, 08:30 PM | #6 | |
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If you're looking for how do people respond to the first wave of alien attacks then go watch Independence Day. This show is all about living with the alien occupation. The major cities have all fallen months ago and everyone has accepted that their lives are now about running and hiding to survive. The writing is absolutely spot on for that. |
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06-28-2011, 08:34 PM | #7 | |
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06-28-2011, 08:36 PM | #8 | ||
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Oh yeah, I totally forgot to mention that whoever had the idea to represent the initial alien contact solely through children's drawings and voiceover is a genius. Children of Earth is still the best example of sci-fi creepy child use, but line drawings and simplistic descriptions of your world going to hell are so much more effective than some sort of cheapo CGI-and-clip-show alternative.
And it's fun to pick up the little set design easter eggs in the scenery that hint at what the newspapers and other life detritus of the world was like during the invasion. I especially liked the "49 Days Since Last Contact" sign on the school board. Quote:
Again, is it entirely reasonable for the kid to be so adamant? Probably not. Is it summer show on TNT reasonable? Absolutely. Is it such a benchmark of the show that you have to accept it to enjoy every other aspect of it? Nope.
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06-28-2011, 08:40 PM | #9 | |
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06-28-2011, 09:19 PM | #10 | |
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2) Seriously overestimates the ability of a child to both think ahead and understand complex things. Hell at that kids age you're lucky if they understand death and you expect that he's going to understand what it means to be harnessed. I mean the kid probably has horrible nightmares and stuff but he's still going to act more or less like a normal kid. 3) Completely ignores the fact that the civilians have been attempting to return the kids to some sort of stable school like existence. Thereby effectively passivisating a lot of the worrying. Combined with the fact that the doctor is obviously attempting psychiatric treatment of the children and therefore helping them cope further and it becomes abundantly clear that the kid's reaction was perfectly reasonable. 4) Falls into exactly the same trap you fell into originally. People that don't interact with kids on a regular basis and don't understand how kids think making assumptions based on how they think and assuming these apply to children. Kids think much differently than adults and as we age we tend to forget that. 5) Finally, assumes that we here and now have any idea about how anyone at all, even ourselves, would react under those circumstances. Saying anything at all about how you would react to an alien invasion 6 months on let alone a child is dubious at best. There is simply no way to really know without subjecting lots of different people of lots of different personality types and ages to that stress. Anything else is speculation at best and the speculation as it occurs in the story is slightly more consistent with the back story, the current events, i.e. the treatment of the doctor, and the general resilience of children. If you don't like it then fine you don't like it. As long as you're willing to admit you don't like it because you don't like it instead of trying to justify not liking it for completely nonsensical reasons. |
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