Above: Serenity Right to Left: Jayne, River, Simon, Mal, Inara, Zoe, Wash, Kaylee, Book |
After Joss Whedon passed Buffy
the Vampire Slayer off to Marti Nixon, he started working on a series that
would be famous for getting canceled in 14 episodes. Within three years, Firefly would gain such a gigantic
following that the cast returned to film Serenity,
a movie intended to give the series some closure. There have also been tie-in
novels and comic books and was found to be “The World’s Best Space Sci-Fi Ever”
according to a 2005 poll New Scientist Magazine. In 2009, it was a winner of
the first annual Hulu awards in the category “Shows We’d Bring Back,” and in
2012, Entertainment Weekly listed it
at #11 in the “25 Best Cult TV Shows from the past 25 years.”
The series, set in 2517, is a space western that follows the
crew of the Firefly-class spaceship, Serenity
as they make their way on the outskirts of society. Earth is referred to
“Earth-that-was” and it is established in the film that before the series
began, Earth was unable to support the growing population and humanity
emigrated to a new star system.
After a failed war for independence, Mal Reynolds (Nathan
Fillion) and Zoe Washburn (Gina Torres) attempt to live on Serenity beyond control of the government, known as The Alliance.
Their crew consists of the pilot and Zoe’s husband, Hoban “Wash” Washburn (Alan
Tudyk), the Companion Inara Serra (Morena Baccarin), the mercenary Jayne Cobb
(Adam Baldwin), and the mechanic Kaywinnet Lee “Kaylee” Frye (Jewel Staite).
During the first episode, they take aboard the fugitives Simon Tam (Sean Maher)
and his sister River (Summer Glau) and Shepherd Derrial Book (Ron Glass). The
outlying areas of space are also inhabited by the cannibalistic Reavers, savage
and animalistic nomadic humans.
Before the start of the series, Simon broke River out of a
government institution where was experimented on, developing schizophrenia and
telepathy.
Favorite episode: Our
Mrs. Reynolds.
In the film, an Alliance agent, The Operative (Chiwetel
Ejiofor), is charged with finding and killing River. Meanwhile, the crew of Serenity are robbing a bank on a planet
that is attacked by the Reavers. They escape, but Simon decides to leave with
River at the next port.
When they get there, River attacks the patrons of a bar with
flawless martial arts, but Simon is able to stop her with a safe word. The two
come back to Serenity and Mal learns
from Mr. Universe (David Krumholtz) that she was being fed subliminal messaging
by a commercial, noting that she whispered “Miranda” before attacking.
The crew hides out on the mining colony of Haven, which Bok
calls home. Mal gets a call from Inara, who offers him work. He meets her and
is confronted by the Operative. He and Inara are able to escape and the crew
eventually discovers that Miranda is a remote uninhabitable planet located
beyond Reaver territory. They head back to Haven and discover the Operative has
killed everyone, including Book. They decide to go to Miranda, where they find
cities with mummified corpses and discover a recording that explains that the
Reavers were created by the Alliance.
Mal goes to see Mr. Universe, but expects a trap and lures a
fleet of Reaver ships to Mr. Universe’s planet where the Operative is waiting.
In the battle, The Operative’s ship is destroyed, but jettisons an escape pod. Serenity crash lands and Wash is killed
by the pursuing Reavers. Mr. Universe is dead, but Mal learns of a backup
transmitter.
The crew makes a stand aginst the Reavers so Mal can send
the message. Zoe, Kaylee, and Simon are wounded and River retrieves his medical
bag before closing the blast doors between them.
Mal is able to incapacitate the Operative and forces him to
watch the recording. He returns and finds that River has taken care of all the
Reavers. As Alliance troops rush in, the Operative recognizes his defeat and
orders them to treat the wounded.
The film ends as the Operative vows to try and clear the
crew’s names, Inara returns to the crew, Simon and Kaylee consummate a
relationship, and River becomes the new copilot.
I included the series along with the film because one cannot
be spoken of without the other. The
story arc of River and the character arc of Mal that are begun in Firefly come to their complete and whole
fruition in Serenity.
Had Firefly and Serenity not been written and run by
Whedon, the series would not have just been taken off the air, but it would
have faded into complete obscurity, known only in archives as a series that
tried to be a grand space adventure with bland characters. On the other hand,
Whedon made the series into a look at what would happen if space travel were a
normal occurrence and how the average Joe were just trying to make his way in
that universe. Firefly was a perfect
example of a Type B series, where the episodes revolve around just what’s going
on in their lives at the time, but still experiences continuity because that’s
how life works.
These characters were completely believable and realistic
too. They’re written in a way that shows that everyone has a reason for what
they do. And they have reason for those reasons. They might not be good reasons, but that’s how people are.
Take Jayne.
Out of Gas shows
that he was just a hired gun meant to track down Mal and joined him that the
money was better. And he’s constantly after more money, such as when he tries
to collect the reward for Simon and River in Ariel. But the pilot shows him turning a considerable sum when
asked to turn on Mal and when Mal almost spaces him in Ariel for doing what he did in that episode, he asks him to make up
a reason instead of the actual reason. These pieces show just what kind of
person Jayne is: a loyal mercenary. He had no real ties to the other
mercenaries hired to take down Mal and had no qualms about turning on them. But
now, he’s part of a crew that watches each other’s backs. He may be quite
verbal not liking them, but he’s not
going to turn on them, no matter what he says about money not being enough. What
about Simon and River though? He tries to turn them in for a reward, but when
Mal makes it clear that they are part of the crew, he doesn’t want them to know
what he did. He immediately considers them a part of the crew as well. He also
genuinely loves his biological family, sending money home for his ill brother.
And that’s just one character. If I were to do this for
every character, this review would never end. (Granted, the paragraphs for River’s
feet and Serenity would be a little
shorter.)
However, I did mention Mal’s character arc. It’s interesting,
makes sense and, once again, is believable. After the Battle of Serenity Valley,
Mal lost belief in anything and throughout the series, he really does struggle
to find something, or anything to believe in. There are small, little things,
like how he believes in doing the right thing despite it later coming back to
bite him, like in The Train Job and War Stories. But it’s thanks to The
Operative and Simon’s undying brotherly love for River that by the end of Serenity he finds not one, but two
things to believe in: personal liberty, as seen in how he is willing to
sacrifice himself for it, and love (not a romantic type of love, but a sort of agape unconditional love) as seen in the
final conversation with River at the end of Serenity.
Like I said, the arc makes sense and is believable because war does affect
people in many different ways and personal growth is often a very slow process.
That process is also why River doesn’t become the highly
competent weapon she was programed to be until Serenity hits. At the start of the series, she’s highly disturbed
and schizophrenic. While she does display some signs of telepathy in War Stories and Objects in Space, she doesn’t truly become what she is until the
film. This is also believable because the effects and signs of mental tampering
aren’t always immediately evident and can take quite a long time to develop. If
she went from a complete blathering mess in the pilot to someone fully capable
of reading minds, using any weapon, and taking anybody out by Bushwhacked, it would be cool, yes, but it wouldn’t be realistic.
The telepathy does start to come into play in Safe, but by then, it’s completely established that something’s amiss
and it’s only the first steps of the arc moving forward. The viewer and River have only some idea of what’s
going on and the other characters are confused. War Stories furthers this, she uses the gun without looking perfectly,
and again, she doesn’t completely understand what’s going on, and everyone else
is confused. After everyone completely realizes she’s telepathic, she’s taken
on that run in the beginning of Serenity,
but it’s still not completely established about everything she’s capable of
until the film is over.
While Firefly didn’t
go on long enough for there to be any serious problems, Serenity did have one minor thing that bugged me. The Reavers get
clear screen time. I have no problem with the film establishing their true
backstory. Everything had a beginning. And using the darkness to obscure them
while their swarming is perfect. My gripe is with the beginning of the film.
Everything is fine with the obscure angles and not really seeing their faces,
but after it’s all said and done, one pops up and you get a very clear shot of
what a Reaver fully looks like before Mal shoots it. After Bushwhacked displayed the aftermath of an attack, giving one a full
on shot just ruins the shroud of mystery. It might have been better had it not
been Reavers at the beginning of the film. Having them at the end also furthers
just how powerful River is. Again, thanks to Bushwhacked, we get an idea of what they do. And River took an
entire swarm down by herself. That part is done well, since the Reavers aren’t
in clear or perfectly lighted shots.
I’ve probably missed a lot of things about what made Firefly and Serenity great. There’s just too much to write about and plenty of
other and better writers have made their mark on what’s so great about this
series. It’s greatly enjoyable and did have an effect on me as an author and what
makes great characters.
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