
I loved Firefly, it was one of the most interesting shows to come out for years, a cool mixture of the old west, morality plays and space ships.
Serenity, as I’m sure most people are aware, is the movie version of the TV show. I’m reluctant to call it a follow-up or continuation, as it’s more of a remix of some of the themes that came before. So knowledge of the TV show doesn’t really help when watching the film, in fact it might even be a hindrance.
The movie runs along at a nice pace, though it lacks any of the sense of serenity or calm that the Firefly had, which was its most endearing quality. So no quite moments around the dinner table or a sense of the bonding between the crew in this iteration of the saga, instead we get a gung-ho crew facing impossible odds.
So, to recap, the crew of the spaceship Serenity is led by Mal, a war veteran from the losing side. His crew includes a female teenager version of Neo, River, whose psychic abilities are interesting and whose Matrix inspired combat skills are as tedious as they are in every other knock-off action movie in recent years. Also aboard is the utterly under used married couple of Zoe and Wash (which is even more unpleasant given a throwaway tragedy for no real reason at the climax of the film), the ever funny grunt-thug Jayne, River’s brother Simon, and the charming engineer Kaylee (who gets the funniest line in the film). Oh, and there's Inara, who gets a bit of plot at the start and vanishes and Shepard Book, who gets shot so we feel bad.
They are harbouring River from the Alliance who send an ‘operative’ to recover her before she can reveal their darkest secrets.
The ethics behind the tale are straight out of a western, with the faceless forces of ‘civilization’ attempting to crush the last hold-outs of individuality, and on top of that there is the ever present threat of the savages on the border. To be honest it doesn’t quite work, sure the bad guys are nasty and the good guys believe in something more honourable but the gulf between them doesn’t seem big enough.
Perhaps the laconic performance of the secret agent sent against the heroes is a bit to laid back, perhaps his ideals are too well drawn, even sympathetically, to really hate him. Perhaps the harsh side of the captain is too raw and tough, perhaps it’s too easy to imagine that he really would have children in the past. Whatever the reason the film fails at what it seems to want to be, there just isn’t any opera in this space.
Though this is probably deliberate, Joss Whedon is a writer of some talent, his best moments in Buffy had a real emotional punch, and he may be doing his best to tell the tale he wants against a background of financing that wanted a new Star Wars.
Nowhere is this more obvious in the finale of the film where we only see glimpses of the moments that George Lucas would have wanked over for hours. From Buffy-lite confrontations between River and the Reavers, to the battle space and the crunching fight between the two adversaries, all is on screen for moments but never in a prolonged scene.
It all gives the sense of a conflict, a feeling of peril, without the needless bogging down of the story into simple action fare, or the huge expense of long winded SFX shots. Perhaps it was a financial decision, perhaps it wasn’t. I’d like to believe Whedon had the intelligence to structure the scenes deliberately, creating a sense of the future that seems surprisingly layered and real in the scenes of conflict.
Overall it’s a great film, that constantly suggests it could have been something better, something superb if there hadn’t the need to try and be something stupider and simpler than it deserves.
Serenity, as I’m sure most people are aware, is the movie version of the TV show. I’m reluctant to call it a follow-up or continuation, as it’s more of a remix of some of the themes that came before. So knowledge of the TV show doesn’t really help when watching the film, in fact it might even be a hindrance.
The movie runs along at a nice pace, though it lacks any of the sense of serenity or calm that the Firefly had, which was its most endearing quality. So no quite moments around the dinner table or a sense of the bonding between the crew in this iteration of the saga, instead we get a gung-ho crew facing impossible odds.
So, to recap, the crew of the spaceship Serenity is led by Mal, a war veteran from the losing side. His crew includes a female teenager version of Neo, River, whose psychic abilities are interesting and whose Matrix inspired combat skills are as tedious as they are in every other knock-off action movie in recent years. Also aboard is the utterly under used married couple of Zoe and Wash (which is even more unpleasant given a throwaway tragedy for no real reason at the climax of the film), the ever funny grunt-thug Jayne, River’s brother Simon, and the charming engineer Kaylee (who gets the funniest line in the film). Oh, and there's Inara, who gets a bit of plot at the start and vanishes and Shepard Book, who gets shot so we feel bad.
They are harbouring River from the Alliance who send an ‘operative’ to recover her before she can reveal their darkest secrets.
The ethics behind the tale are straight out of a western, with the faceless forces of ‘civilization’ attempting to crush the last hold-outs of individuality, and on top of that there is the ever present threat of the savages on the border. To be honest it doesn’t quite work, sure the bad guys are nasty and the good guys believe in something more honourable but the gulf between them doesn’t seem big enough.
Perhaps the laconic performance of the secret agent sent against the heroes is a bit to laid back, perhaps his ideals are too well drawn, even sympathetically, to really hate him. Perhaps the harsh side of the captain is too raw and tough, perhaps it’s too easy to imagine that he really would have children in the past. Whatever the reason the film fails at what it seems to want to be, there just isn’t any opera in this space.
Though this is probably deliberate, Joss Whedon is a writer of some talent, his best moments in Buffy had a real emotional punch, and he may be doing his best to tell the tale he wants against a background of financing that wanted a new Star Wars.
Nowhere is this more obvious in the finale of the film where we only see glimpses of the moments that George Lucas would have wanked over for hours. From Buffy-lite confrontations between River and the Reavers, to the battle space and the crunching fight between the two adversaries, all is on screen for moments but never in a prolonged scene.
It all gives the sense of a conflict, a feeling of peril, without the needless bogging down of the story into simple action fare, or the huge expense of long winded SFX shots. Perhaps it was a financial decision, perhaps it wasn’t. I’d like to believe Whedon had the intelligence to structure the scenes deliberately, creating a sense of the future that seems surprisingly layered and real in the scenes of conflict.
Overall it’s a great film, that constantly suggests it could have been something better, something superb if there hadn’t the need to try and be something stupider and simpler than it deserves.

