Showing posts with label fantasy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fantasy. Show all posts

Monday, July 11, 2011

Sci-Fi TV Shows

There has been no greater escape offered to the viewing public than Sci-fi TV shows. These shows have always been great entertainment offering chance to look at our world by learning about other worlds that might exist. The wonderful draw of these fantasy genre shows is the opportunity to ask What if. We are relieved of the burdens of our world like time, gravity, dimension, and physics. We are allowed to explore worlds totally different from our own in order to seek a universal truth. A truth that is also unbound by those very attributes of our planet that we get to leave behind.



Sci-Fi TV shows, like most other TV shows, got their start in radio and then transferred to the new medium of television. The new theater of TV gave the science fiction writer new dimensions to work with and added another level to the stories they were able to tell. The stories were able to have a grander scale and be able to weave more intricate plots since the audience could be shown signposts for new locations, times, or characters. Sound effects were no longer the only narrative cues available. Characters could be better and more elaborately drawn allowing for expanded casts and more intricate plots and subplots.



The Twilight Zone is the classic example of the early Sci-FI TV shows. It remained episodic in format like its radio predecessors giving the audience a couple vignettes each time. Occasionally, the episodes were on a common theme and allowed the narrator to educate the public on the meaning of the stories. We were led to certain conclusions and assumptions by mankind that may not apply to the rest of the universe. Further, it was implied that those assumptions or actions shouldnt be applied here. The genre allowed the show to preach a bit about humanity without directly attacking anyone here.



Star Trek is another classic example of what Sci-Fi TV shows could do culturally. The crew of the Enterprise has become culturally iconic for entire generations. At the time, the show was cutting edge in terms of special effects and launched careers for several actors. The worlds explored on the show were more elaborate than those that came before, but the moral was always the same: this could be us; do we want it to be? The point was always to question what it means to be human and decide if that is the best we can be or is there something more.



Star Trek-The Next Generation was a spinoff of sorts during a time when TV was going very retro. The show came years after the original ended and brought with it even better special effects and far better acting. Like all improvements in this genre, it allowed for more intricate plots and more dazzling worlds to explore. This show was different, however. The difference came in the fact that many of the scripts had an internal focus on the characters interactions aboard the ship and not always so much on their interaction with the outside worlds. It became more pure drama.

About the Author

Discover hundreds of television's finest sci-fi series by visiting Rick's Sci-Fi TV Shows Page or talk about your favorite sci-fi series at Rick's Sci-Fi Forum.

Smallville TV Show

The Smallville TV show was one of the first TV shows that married the innocent times of the comic book heros hay day with the sleek high production value and mature story lines of today. The show explores the teen life of Superman and how his personal character developed during his formative years. The show remains true to the innocent nature of the original Clark Kent, but lets us see the awkward growing up process of the main character. This brought the show a great deal of appeal across several demographics. Older viewers could connect with the show because it answered questions they had long wanted answered: what was Superman like growing up? The Smallville TV show also drew in new audiences with its young cast and plot lines that younger viewers could relate to. Both genders were drawn to the show because of the story, but females were especially drawn to the show because of the love story angle with Clark and Lois and others. The handsome hunk playing Clark didnt hurt the female demographic either. With production costs very high for any TV show, there is a risk of trying to reach too many demographics at once, and end up reaching no one. The strong villain character is Lex Luther made for a compellingstory line that could sustain the dramatic tension. The key was the writing of the Luther character as vulnerable and sympathetic as villains go giving him an allure that more purely evil and static villain characters have been stuck with in the past.



The Smallville TV show has not been the only Superman show. The original Superman show of the 50swas a truer version as far as the comic book series that spawned it is concerned. The plots were radio based and the characters were stock and static as was common in those early days of television. The shows tended to follow traditional radio plot lines which were simple and one dimensional so the listening audience could follow them. Only later did TV writer begin to expand story lines that took better advantage of what their new medium could offer. Another predecessor to the Smallville TV show was Lois and Clark starring Dean and Hatcher. This show focused almost exclusively on the love story of the two main characters. At first, this was the charm of the show because it was a new way to look at a well known character and the woman we all knew he loved, even if he or she didnt. Unfortunately, this narrow plot focus was also the demise of the show. The love thwarting action could only support the dramatic tension for so long. Eventually, they had to either get married or break up. You couldnt keep stringing the audience along season after season. The Smallville TV show learned from that mistake and built a plot and cast that could sustain the dramatic tension for several seasons. It allowed for the growth of the characters as well the growth of its audience.

About the Author

Discover more facts and trivia by visiting Rick's Smallville TV Show Page or talk about the show with others at Rick's Smallville Forum.