Thanks for the info, guys. What set me to wondering was I saw the RQG:
RIVER
She understands. She doesn't comprehend.
And for some reason it made me feel like a stunned Joss was saying those words in response to Firefly's cancellation.
Fred ,'Smile Time'
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.
Thanks for the info, guys. What set me to wondering was I saw the RQG:
RIVER
She understands. She doesn't comprehend.
And for some reason it made me feel like a stunned Joss was saying those words in response to Firefly's cancellation.
BWAH HA HA HA reading the shooting script - I don't even remember this exchange (I obviously need to see OiS again!!):
JAYNE
Wha -- are you-are you sayin' she's a witch?
WASH
Yes, Jayne. She's a witch. She has had congress with the beast.
JAYNE
She's in Congress?
WASH
How did your brain even learn human speech? I'm just so curious.
Here is the Firefly part of this Orson Scott Card review column:
It only lasted one year on Fox, but Firefly was, in my opinion, the best space-opera sci-fi series ever on television, and you can get the whole season now on DVD.
I was stunned by the stupidity of the bad reviews this series got. I suppose if you think television should be Desperate Housewives or Felicity or some other thing that passes for "edgy," Firefly won't look good to you.
But the writing is witty, just a little tongue-in-cheek, and keenly aware of what good science fiction is supposed to be.
Though I could make a good case for Firefly being the best western on television since Maverick.
It's fun even as it's tense, and it's smart all the time. So smart that some reviewers have no clue what they're seeing.
The actors are wonderful, though a couple of characters can be annoying, especially at first (couldn't Jewel Staite have occasionally stopped smiling idiotically during the early episodes?).
Adam Baldwin, whose career began in the great high school movie My Bodyguard back in 1980, finally has the role of his career.
Gina Torres, a survivor of the Matrix sequels, is boldly credible as soldier-of-fortune Zoe; Morena Baccarin is luminous as the "companion" (i.e., really expensive prostitute) Inara Serra; and Alan Tudyk, a hit in A Knight's Tale, is equally charming as the pilot, Wash.
Delightful as Ron Glass was on Barney Miller and The New Odd Couple, I think he's got his best role here as the enigmatic preacher. While Sean Maher has recovered from the debacle of the remake of Brian's Song to play a truly complicated (and really cute, my wife tells me) character.
And Nathan Fillion rises out of nowhere -- small forgettable parts where he was little more than a pretty face -- to show that he has the strength to carry a tv series.
They're making a movie called Serenity, to be released next September, and the whole cast will appear in it. Count on it getting bad reviews; go anyway. And prepare for it by buying or renting the Firefly DVDs.
The actors are wonderful, though a couple of characters can be annoying, especially at first (couldn't Jewel Staite have occasionally stopped smiling idiotically during the early episodes?).
Jewel was not thrilled with this and said so over at fff.net
People who are unhappy and mean often mistake happiness for stupidity.
So the world isn't really as full of stupid people as I think it is?
No, I'm thinking you're about right, because it took me way too many reads to parse that. Oy. It was like a little logic problem. Aging sucks.
Adam Baldwin, whose career began in the great high school movie My Bodyguard back in 1980
Nice to see someone actually remembers this film; when I mention it to RL people, they all say, "Oh, that thing with Kevin Costner and Whitney Houston?" Hell, no!
Still lots of stupid people. Although I may be unhappy and mean, too.
couldn't Jewel Staite have occasionally stopped smiling idiotically during the early episodes?
He must have not been watching when she was all shot and dying, huh?
Oh well, not the only thing Orson Scott Card and I disagree about.