Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Charlie Jade - an Intriguing SF Show

Occasionally, when I have down time (waiting as I am now for comments back on outlines and articles), I'll see what oddness is on the Sci-Fi channel. And today it's a show called Charlie Jade, a series about a detective trapped in a parallel universe. The concept is interesting enough, but the execution is marvelous and quite unlike what you will see in American television -- perhaps because it is a coproduction of Canadian and South African media companies. Largely filmed in South Africa, it has an unselfconscious multiracial casting that is unlike most of what I see in the U.S. There are no "quirky" or specifically "ethnic" characters that become a calculated faux representationalism. On one hand, society collectively pretends that filling the quotas is the same as being unbiased.

At the same time, there is a sense of the other meaning of representationalism, a philosophical approach in which the mind is said to actually perceive representations of objects and not the objects themselves. (In contrast to the Socratic concept of the ideal and human perception of shadows of representations of reality.) I find it interesting that South Africa can appear to have, at least in terms of entertainment, a far more relaxed attitude.

But forget the social musings for a moment. This is also a gorgeously and intelligently filmed series. The angles and approaches to lighting are far different than you find here. For example, in many dramatic series, harshly blown out highlights from powerful overhead lighting, ala The West Wing or the newest Battlestar Galactica, has become de rigeur.

In Charlie Jade, there is an impressive use of color and filming technique. Using two different palettes, one of muted cools and the other of muted warms (not quite as harsh as, but similar to the color cast you get when using tungsten-balanced film outside and daylight-balanced inside), they set up contrasting worlds. The lighting doesn't call as much attention to itself but still underscores the tone of the story telling.

Apparently there was only one season filmed, though a second is written and ready for production. Hopefully someone will fund it -- and maybe some U.S. production companies will pay attention and start thinking differently about how they approach the medium. It's time to shake up the predictable.

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Tuesday, May 27, 2008

Nine Signs That A Science Fiction TV Series Has Been On Too Long

Here are some of the signs I've noticed that a science fiction or fantasy series has been on television too long:
  • The characters have a "been there, done that" attitude, where little to nothing surprises them.

  • Inside jokes become regular fare.

  • You keep wondering what they're going to do to top the last set of calamities and special effects - and so do the writers.

  • They recycle the old aliens that went out of fashion three seasons back.

  • They have a flashback episode, where it's one scene from an older episode after another.

  • You can hear the straining sounds when it comes to deciding whether to run another year or not.

  • An actor previously phased out of the program shows up again under some convoluted explanation.

  • The action figures came, and went, two years ago.

  • Actors appear on the convention circuit.

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Wednesday, March 12, 2008

Happy Belated Birthday, Douglas Adams

I meant to post this yesterday, but, ironically, was tied up with deadlines. How can you not celebrate the birth of a man who said, "I love deadlines. I love the whooshing noise they make as they go by."

Check Wikipedia for a short biography of the author of the Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, the name of which he apparently came up with while flat on his back, drunk in an Austrian field. Although many people are familiar with the book and movie, I think the ultimate form of the piece was the original BBC radio series, which was funny as all get out, although here's a tip of the hat to Alan Rickman's portrayal of Marvin, the miserable robot with a brain the size of a planet.

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