I don't own a t.v. The old vestiges of my mother's lectures of the mysterious evils of t.v rotting the brain left a somewhat irrational stamp on me. Most of the t.v. series that I am familiar with were recommended to me through word of mouth by friends and tailored to fit my interests and personality. So my introduction to the NBC series V was a random Hulu search and no expectation whatsoever of what the show was about or what it was going to be like. V starts with the usual haunting intro music and a montage of images of different characters at a specific moment in time, 6:30 am to be precise. There is a descent of what appears to be a huge spacecraft over 29 major cities of the world. The viewer is then introduced, along with the unsuspecting characters of the show to the Visitors, supposedly friendly aliens that come in peace. The masses are quickly swooned with the beautiful V's and their charisma and charm. They are decidedly human, except more beautiful and with toned physiques. The V's have the power to cure common human disease and seduce human youth to join their ranks. The arrival of the Visitors swell the churches with people and seem to unite humans everywhere in their zeal for these savvy extra-terrestrials. The tension, at least in the first episode, comes from the main character FBI agent Erica Evans and a small group of dissidents who begin to smell foul play. This quickly leads to a meeting of these doubters and the realization that the V's have long infiltrated business, government, and religious institutions and their arrival of earth is actually the last stage in a take over of the world. The suspense of the show is in the seeming anonymity of the aliens and the paranoia that comes in not knowing what kind of being is sitting next to you on the train or in a bar. The climax in the pilot unravels with a coming out of the V's, and the audience learns that the supposed good guys ( Erica Evans partner) are really reptilian skinned conspirators and that there is at least on V who is out to save humanity.
The show feels like a typical NBC show, beautiful people in expensive clothes battling the forces of good and evil in heels and Gucci suits. Although it is interesting to add the occasional hidden identity or seemingly untraceable murder, the plot is as predictable as the Cubs losing. We all know, that even though the somewhat zealous and naive humans are in it deep, they are going to conquer those aliens, with various romances and broken families mended along the way. The moral was the most interesting part for me, not the spectacular and tacky effects or mediocre acting. The moral of the pilot is that devotion is the most dangerous tool as it breeds blindness and then you have aliens trying to eat you. It is a somewhat scathing critique of people accepting whatever they are told without questioning the source. Although the viewer gets to scorn at the stupid googly eyed people who are about to become lunch meat and identify with the sophisticated elite that knows better and resists the V's, it is more interesting to think about what side of the divide of people you would fit into if your life were a 47 minute episode on tv in which sexy aliens were trying to seduce you. I can't say for certain that I wouldn't buy a V fanny pack and just go with it, those Gucci heels are fierce even if they are attached to a totalitarian space lizard.
Tuesday, November 17, 2009
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I love your honest and witty tone here. Your writing always come off sounding smart and introspective and I like that, Ms. Kalinowski, I like that.
ReplyDeleteThis is a great review but please split up the paragraphs next time. This murdered my eyes. Anyway, I like this review because you described the main idea and moral of the show which I didn't see in some other reviews. There wasn't too much summary in this review and you made smart observations. And the last line is really awesome. Totalitarian Space Lizard sounds like the name of a punk band.
ReplyDeleteI think I have to use a word Nichole used to describe this piece... it is very witty. I really enjoyed your true feelings about the show, and how you were able to break it down bit by bit. I think it works as a very good "watch at your own risk" informational review.
ReplyDeleteVery good writing. After reading your review this show reminds me of an older movie I saw. I can't think of the name but it starred Rowdy Rowdy Piper(an old wrestler), just like the show, aliens infiltrated society and it was up to humans to stop them.
ReplyDeleteVery good review! I thought you critiqued it well without making anyone avoid it or not want to watch it.
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