CINEMATOGRAPHY/SPECIAL EFFECTS
Firefly
-- Went in new and daring directions with zooms, off-center shots, and lens flares
-- Flawless computer graphics
-- New and beautiful stuff every episode, very few shots reused
Babylon 5
-- Went in new and daring directions by using computer graphics exclusively
-- Looks a little fuzzy at points
-- Reused a lot of footage
Seriously. What are people's objections to the writing? I open my thread to debate.
Seriously. What are people's objections to the writing? I open my thread to debate.
One of my favorite visual moments was when Reynolds got into a bar fight and was tossed out the saloon window. Instead of the expected shattering of glass, we see the flicker of a hologram. Funny and cute and a bit self-deprecating. Part of the style, very entertaining. But if I think about it for too long I get pissed- why the fuck do space settlers make everything in the style of the old west? Ugh.
This one is personal taste / preference thing. To some people (doubtless Mal and Zoe among them) Tracy's death is more painful because it was so unnecessary, and therefore actually more poignant.Tracy's death was robbed of any poignance (despite a great musical score), because he died due to stupidity on his and Mal's part.
Other episodes suffered from some twisted logic,
Those two lines, taken together, are actually funny.I wouldn't give Firefly the status of shows like Babylon 5 or Farscape.
There's nothing to stop them. There is nothing to stop the general population of any town from attacking any local bordello.I fail to see what will prevent the villians from "Heart of Gold" from trying to kill the whores again.
Here you're getting into the psychology underlieing such things as Stockholm Syndrome. We would have to find someone who has a stronger background in that area to tell us whether the actions depicted in that episode would be likely.Or the whole Reaver bit in "Bushwhacked"
Who knows? But it's hardly unprecedented. Geishas in feudal Japan had a respectability and stature much closer to Firefly Companions than to present day American hookers/streetwalkers/whores. The question "Why not?" seems equally valid to me.I wonder about things like the Companions. How did they gain such stature?
Undoubtedly, you could argue that is more of the sloopy phrasing that you alluded to, but ......We learn that some planets won't even let you dock there if you don't have a Companion on board yet we never saw one, and we were never given much explanation of why or how things came to be that way.
My problem isn't the style, it's trying to figure out why a bar in the middle of nowhere would bother with holographic windows, as opposed to simpler technology. The same thing with the holographic pool table in "Shindig". Why?
For example, I did look back at the series and say, “Okay, Mal being thrown through the holographic bar window is maybe a little jokey for the movie.” It’s a good shorthand for the series but I think for a movie you have to work through the logic just a hair more
What Firefly might have become if it continued, I don't know. But I do know that the best ep of Firefly I saw wasn't nearly as good as an average ep of B5. And, there is absolutely no comparison between the writing. B5 wins hands down. But then, I DO prefer epic...
If I were to compare Firefly to something in the B5 universe, I think Crusade would be a more fitting comparison, since both are unfulfilled, and had rather slow starts...
Okay, maybe I am borderline obsessive by this point -- but I hasten to add that I am not alone in my insanity. Some friends of mine (the ones who introduced me to Babylon 5 and have seen just about every sci-fi show TV has ever produced) feel that Firefly is the best science fiction ever on television.
Personally, I am surprised that fans of Sci Fi find the mix of space and cowboy as hard to accept as many have.
Many of the people who have posted in this thread need to get laid more or SOMETHING
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