Well, I can recognize the pretty. I may be an impatient consumer of the new millinieum, but I'm not dead.
I just didn't have the devotion and determination to wait for the show to ping something in me. I thought it was just me at first, but my dad -- who started me on my path toward sci-fi, horror, etc. fandom as a wee youth and, watched or watches Buffy, Angel, Alias and Stargate, among other shows -- also couldn't get into it.
I'm like this about a lot of things people tell me are acquired tastes, actually. Coffee, tea, assorted foods, etc. If I can't appreciate it and enjoy it the first time, I might give it another shot, and if it still doesn't work for me, why keep putting myself through that?
I'm probably the poster child for why the show didn't get a chance to catch on, actually. I've missed a few episodes of Lost, but that I get. Plane go boom, leftover people try to survive. I missed the first couple episodes of Firefly, and it just didn't work for me.
I'm currently downloading the first episode of
Lost,
so in 48 minutes or so, I'll be able to tell you whether I get it or not. But
Firefly
I got like nothing before or since. Magic, I suppose.
I've never seen
Lost,
and I've never seen the
Firefly
dvd's. I liked
Firefly
and I would have kept on watching it, but I didn't fall in love with it. I enjoyed it. But the only reason I sat through "The Train Job" to the end was because of Joss and Tim. I was also really looking forward to a second season, since those have consistently been my favorites, easily, of the other ME productions. So I had that to entice me to keep watching as well. But I don't really feel the loss of the
Firefly
dvd's in my life, and I probably won't mind waiting until Amazon decides to sell those for $14.99, too.
Jars, make sure you see the second hour. The first one is more setup. The second is the one-two punch.
I should have been more clear in my statement. I've never met someone
who watched the episodes in order,
who didn't at least like it a lot. Now, I'm sure that there are some people out there, unknown to me, who wouldn't like
Firefly
under any circumstances. It sounds like some of them are on this board. But I also note that most of the people who chimed in here to say that they didn't like it, hadn't seen it from the beginning.
I like
Lost
a lot, but was just intrigued at the pilot. I wasn't really hooked for a few episodes. Fury and Dominic Monaghan kept me watching until then.
I've never met someone who watched the episodes in order, who didn't at least like it a lot.
I have to admit, it took me seeing them in order (as you say) on DVD before I got the love. Train Job was meh, and I watched sort of sporadically after that ... and then, at the end, the pilot blew me away (I loved it), and I cursed that it wasn't shown first, because then I would've been intrigued.
Ah well. Yay for DVDs.
It took me a while to get into it. The western twang really got on my nerves in the beginning. The ONLY reason I kept watching was that I trusted Joss. I would not have continued watching otherwise.
Had more discussion with the co-worker. He thinks Jayne should have been kicked out of an airlock, likes the tension between the captain and the hooker (don't scream "She's not a hooker!" in the office parking lot. trust me), and thinks that Zoe might be in some sort of denial about the trauma of Serenity.
Had more discussion with the co-worker. He thinks Jayne should have been kicked out of an airlock, likes the tension between the captain and the hooker (don't scream "She's not a hooker!" in the office parking lot. trust me), and thinks that Zoe might be in some sort of denial about the trauma of Serenity.
so, ummm, is he still alive?
If he still has the same opinion after War Stories, I may have to cut off his ear.