By
my estimation, Sy Fy’s epic new TV series Defiance is one of the best things
to happen to science fiction television in the last several years.
We’ve
had a rash of mediocre remakes (V, The Prisoner), mysteries that went,
precisely, nowhere (Flash Forward, Alcatraz) and time travel stories/alternate
universes that not only failed to convince…but failed to make sense on even a
rudimentary level (Terra Nova).
Developed
by Rockne S. O’Bannon (the creator of SeaQuest DSV and Farscape),
the impressive Defiance features a strong cast of characters, motion picture
quality production values, an intricate but compelling narrative, and even the
embedded social commentary we’ve come to associate with the genre on TV.
The
naysayers -- and there have been quite a few so far -- may note that
Defiance is but a Western rehash translated to a futuristic setting.
Yet undeniably the Western remains America’s core mythology, and also served as the inspiration for Star
Trek, which creator Gene Roddenberry playfully termed “Wagon Train to
the Stars.”
The
important point to consider, however, is that Defiance concerns the
present more than either the storied past, or its fictional future. Like all the best science fiction programs in
history, Defiance is set in another time and place, but concerns, very
much, the issues and ideas of today.
In
broad-strokes, Defiance dramatizes a story about immigration, and of unlike groups of people learning to live
side-by-side with those may not share their religion, belief system, or even basic
biology. In a setting like that, what
people hold in common becomes more important than what separates them.
Defiance’s
narrative --
though set in a chaotic and disordered
world -- is optimistic in the very spirit and tradition of the original Star
Trek because it reminds the viewer that everyone doesn’t have to be exactly
the same to get along, and that no one demographic has the monopoly on humanity…or
righteousness.
Defiance is set in the mid-21st
century, after Earth has accidentally been terra-formed by refugees from
another star system. These refugees are
known collectively as “Votans” (apparently for their doomed star system…), but individually
as the Castithans, the Irathients, the Indogene, the Liberata, the Sensoth, the
Gulanee, and the Volge.
These
aliens had at first hoped to find Earth uninhabited, but when they arrived at
our world and registered our presence, began to negotiate for the right to
settle here. What followed was
assassination, war, “Arkfall,” catastrophe and the accidental reshaping of
Earth itself.
Now,
decades later, human beings and aliens attempt to erect a new world in the town
of Defiance, a metropolis built over the ruins of St. Louis. The town is run by an inexperienced but
compassionate Mayor, Amanda Rosewater (Julie Benz), and the first episode
installs a war veteran and scavenger, Joshua Nolan (Grant Bowler) as the city’s
chief law man. His adopted daughter is
Irisa (Stephanie Leonidas), an impulsive adolescent alien called an Irathient.
Defiance’s pilot episode sets-up the
series premise, with Mayor Rosewater and Sheriff Nolan defending the town from
an onslaught of Volge warriors.
Meanwhile, the audience is also acquainted with Romeo and Juliet-styled
intrigues. It is not the Capulets and Montagues
who argue and maneuver for dominance here, however, but a Castithan family and
a human one. The two families are
brought together by the next generation’s love, but still cling, in some way,
to hate and suspicion.
.
I’ve
read some reviewers who profess confusion regarding the details of Defiance,
but frankly, I wonder how confusing a Western can really be at this
juncture. Defiance is actually a pretty
straight-forward (though intelligent) “frontier town” story, one where diverse
people must work together against outside threats, and succeed in building a
new community on the ruins of the old.
Though
the episodes are indeed filled with inventive tech like “stasis nets” and “charge-blades,”
it’s all mere window-dressing for the central motif which, as I wrote above,
concerns immigration and diversity…and getting along with those who appear different,
or live differently.
Without
getting directly into politics, it is clear that the year 2012 revealed
something important about America, and the sort of country it hopes to be in
the future. We have seen the left and right
come together -- with some stubborn hold-outs,
naturally -- to affirm the humanity and equality of homosexual citizens,
and also those in the immigrant community who are here illegally, but who hope
to find a path to citizenship. There are
growing pains to be certain, but on these two issues bigotry and fear are apparently
losing, and human rights are winning.
Of
course, some folks still view these aforementioned demographic groups as
frightening ones that somehow threaten “traditional” values by their ways and
mere presence. Yet the arc of American
history has always involved the
assimilation of new immigrant groups and the recognition of individuals
formerly disenfranchised.
In
a very real and profound sense, this is the key conceit of Defiance: the notion that
people of various stripes all love their children, all deserve the same dignity
we enjoy, all want to succeed, and all wish to be secure. The strange aliens of this fictional frontier
town, with their (to us…) bizarre faiths, rituals, and even “alien” bodily
functions, stand-in for the demographics I’ve named dropped above. The series set-up reminds me of a great line
from Space:
1999 (1975 – 1977) in 1976: “We’re
all aliens, until we get to know one another.”
Defiance
is about
that process of getting to know one another, with all the mistakes, false
starts and conflicts one might expect.
Delightfully,
Defiance
reveals these aliens to be fully human in their complexity. The various aliens are multi-dimensional, and
portrayed sometimes as cranky and self-righteous as well as loving and
compassionate. They can be violent and
irrational…just like us “humans,” and that’s the point. We’re all in the same boat, and that condition
makes us natural allies, not enemies.
So
when outside invaders like the Volge threaten the safety of the town, thee “aliens”
take up arms right alongside the humans to defend the town. We all
want to protect our homes, right?
That’s something we can all agree on.
Light
on moralizing but strong on sub-text, and heavy on action, Defiance feels like a breath of
fresh air because the characters all speak with intelligence and humor, and
because the series projects this timely and necessary vision that differences among
us don’t make us weak, they make us stronger.
Defiance’s pilot episode features the
aforementioned Volge march on the imperiled city, and I’ll be direct about the
production values: I’ve never seen so sustained an action set-piece -- of such
superior special effects -- featured on television before. One need only remember the blurry dinosaur
movements of Terra Nova to see what a quantum leap forward in effects Defiance
represents.
I
would feel more comfortable, frankly, if Defiance were airing on HBO or
Showtime -- like Game of Thrones, for instance -- where it might be granted
better odds for survival. Sy Fy (formerly The Sci Fi Channel) doesn’t have a
great track record for supporting original science fiction television, so I
hope Defiance
“defies” that programming trend and gets a nice, long, healthy run. This is a story and set of characters worth
following for at least five years, assuming that the quality of subsequent
episodes lives up to the worthy premise.
John,
ReplyDeleteI couldn't agree with you more. I received the first 3 episodes of the series about a month before the pilot aired. I was really looking forward to this series as it has been a while since Syfy actually aired a true science fiction series. After watching the pilot, I immediately watched the next two episodes and was extremely pleased with the episodes.
I don't need to repeat what you've already said as I mentioned, I agree 100 percent. It's intrigue, politics and social commentary are very interesting and thought provoking at the same time.
the special effects are impressive for the network and you are correct about that fight sequence..it was fantastic.
What I am hearing there is a deal for at least another season. Hopefully they will give this show time to grow and let people find it and love it as much as we do.
I too have read many reviews that already dismiss the series, one even called it a Firefly rip off which I totally disagree with.
Kudos to Syfy for getting this one right!
Has it been explained whether the combined military forces of Earth used the thousands of nuclear warheads on the terra-forming aliens before or after negotiations fell apart. I thought that it might be both the terra-forming and a nuclear war that left billions of the human race dead plus the surface of the Earth altered.
ReplyDeleteSGB
This sounds like a good one. I'll keep my eyes open for it to show up on Netflix or Hulu.
ReplyDelete