I don't care if it is an orgy of death, there's still such a thing as a napkin.

Willow ,'Lies My Parents Told Me'


Firefly 4: Also, we can kill you with our brains  

Discussion of the Mutant Enemy series, Firefly, the ensuing movie Serenity, and other projects in that universe. Like the other show threads, anything broadcast in the US is fine; spoilers are verboten and will be deleted if found.


Dana - May 31, 2005 9:29:03 am PDT #2689 of 10001
I'm terrifically busy with my ennui.

Okay. So all I need now is for tickets to actually go on sale. And for none of the other 4 million people in the city to care.

t waits expectantly


Kiba Rika - May 31, 2005 9:53:24 am PDT #2690 of 10001
I may have to seize the cat.

And shoes are The Most Important Thing.

I am among the least girly of women and yet still believe this.


Volans - May 31, 2005 10:24:04 am PDT #2691 of 10001
move out and draw fire

Where's the next screening?


Jon B. - May 31, 2005 10:26:09 am PDT #2692 of 10001
A turkey in every toilet -- only in America!

Betsy HP "Firefly 4: Also, we can kill you with our brains" May 27, 2005 2:05:45 pm PDT


Zenkitty - May 31, 2005 11:25:25 am PDT #2693 of 10001
Every now and then, I think I might actually be a little odd.

I may try for the Philly one. I'm getting impatient.


Typo Boy - May 31, 2005 7:11:00 pm PDT #2694 of 10001
Calli: My people have a saying. A man who trusts can never be betrayed, only mistaken.Avon: Life expectancy among your people must be extremely short.

Don't see why Miles can' t count as Sci-fi. If you want to count it as romance too fine - but I don't know that there any rule one genre automatically trumps the other. Also, I would say that the Warrior Apprentice (the first written, though not the first in chronology) was definitely more Sci-fi than Romance. Unless you think concern with human relationships is non-science fictiony - in which case we got beef. :-)


Volans - May 31, 2005 7:45:29 pm PDT #2695 of 10001
move out and draw fire

Unless you think concern with human relationships is non-science fictiony - in which case we got beef.

No, no beef here. Like I said, I waver, and I think some of the books are more sci-fi and others are more romance. The stories that focus mostly on wedding plans and what people are wearing are the ones that ping romance to me, so it's not even the discussion of relationships that slides the books around the genre chart. A couple of the later books have no SF whatsoever, other than oh yeah, there's space travel.

And I guess I'm using "romance" in the old way, to mean a stirring tale of derring-do. I don't mean to say that these books are Harlequin-style romances; those are in another place on the genre chart.

But hey, I don't think Star Wars is science fiction, and Firefly is neatly at the intersection of Good SF and Western and Romance.

(Ha! Back on topic!)


Typo Boy - May 31, 2005 8:06:49 pm PDT #2696 of 10001
Calli: My people have a saying. A man who trusts can never be betrayed, only mistaken.Avon: Life expectancy among your people must be extremely short.

Ah - I half agree that star wars is not science fiction. That is it was not GOOD science fiction. What I think it did was revive the worst cliches science fiction was starting to move beyond - had moved beyond in books, and was beginning to move beyond in movies, and brought them all back - without irony, without playing with the tropes - just said Gee aren't swordfights on starships, and space feudalism plain old neat? And gee can't we have aliens and robots stand in for racial minorities?

Whereas Firefly did not just do a gimicky merger of science fiction and western. (They were always a natural combination - Captain Kirk was essentially a space cowboy.) It played with the ideas - used them to create a convincing universe populated with real characters. And, as is natural in a real universe with real characters ideas mattered, because real poeple (as opposed to cardboard characters) have ideas bigger than "listen to your heart Luke". And seeing convincingly real people interact in a convinciningly real setting gives the audience more important thigns to enjoy thinking about than the nature of microchordians.

Sorry - but one of the reasons I loved Firefly was that (to me) it was the anti-star wars. George Lucas, putting out the first Star Was when he did, will always be to me the guy who brought the bottle of Glenlivet to the AA meeting.


Am-Chau Yarkona - May 31, 2005 10:19:48 pm PDT #2697 of 10001
I bop to Wittgenstein. -- Nutty

(Ahem. Fan of both Firefly and Star Wars speaking here: yes, AOTC was undefendable, and TPM nearly so, but the original triology was a major achievement and (IMHO) ROTS is a movie worth watching. It has flaws, indeed, but it's also got some good stuff-- the political messages are a little obvious, perhaps, and there may be a point at which it's sexist; but there's lots to admire the world-building, and for me it's a fantastic story. Not to mention having a rather attractive Obi-Wan, which has no bearing on its sci-fi status but makes it very watchable. But then, offically I don't like sci-fi (science for itself doesn't interest me) so if you want to call Star Wars fantasy, I'm happy with that. And if Firefly makes both of us happy, even better.)


Volans - Jun 01, 2005 2:02:37 am PDT #2698 of 10001
move out and draw fire

Sorry - but one of the reasons I loved Firefly was that (to me) it was the anti-star wars.

Whyfore sorry? I agree with your points, and although that's not on my Top 10 reasons I love Firefly list, you don't need to apologize to me that it's on yours! I can totally see that point.

More discussion, though:

I still don't buy Star Wars as sci-fi, even bad sci-fi. It may have revived the pulp tropes, but those were pretty much not sci-fi by that point either. I think Star Wars is partially a Western and partially a Fantasy story.

Firefly is not really a Western, per se. It sits at the intersection of SF and Western because it's using Western tropes, both in the "look" and in some of the plots, because Westerns have good adventure plots and speak to a colonial frontier society. Firefly comments on the Western trappings, though, and as you say, Star Wars didn't comment, it just was, irony-free. I was a huge SW fan, and I'm a huge Firefly fan, and they are different.

Here's another way of looking at it, maybe..."science" fiction needs to utilize something about science, and extend it into what-if, as a key component of the story/conflict. What if there were aliens is not enough - that's gonna be either fantasy or bad sci-fi. What if there was a species almost exactly like us, except they'd evolved without gender being inherent; instead they select a gender for mating? How would that work when interacting with us? Or what if military technology develops to the point that soldiers can direct remote troops from computers in safe territory? Or what if a person's identity can be stored in a computer?

Throwing spaceships into a story just isn't enough. I'm looking at Star Wars, or other feudalism-in-space stories. None of the story questions in Star Wars come from science questions. They are fantasy (What if people had psychic powers, like telekinesis and clairvoyance? What if a young boy goes on a quest to save a damsel in distress and becomes a heroic knight) with a sense of Westerns (What if there are Indiansaliens? And he has a trusty steedspaceship? And he's from a frontier ranch?).

Firefly can claim a sci-fi lineage, not because there are spaceships (although that helps), but because it takes science ideas, extends them, and asks story questions: What if humans develop space travel, and planetary terraforming capabilities? And what if for some reason they can't return to Earth after colonization is started? What if goverments/corporations could surgically alter people's brains to make them different than normal people? And what if you have this new kind of society, all flung out over space? What could happen to people mentally? Culturally?

I'm not differentiating between good and bad and mediocre sci-fi right now either, although I agree that Firefly is good sci-fi because it is authentic and human, and deals with things that real people do.