I feel you

 

From: scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com [mailto:scifino...@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf 
Of Bosco Bosco
Sent: Wednesday, January 27, 2010 11:51 AM
To: scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com
Subject: Re: [scifinoir2] 5 Reasons Caprica Is The Season's Most Promising New 
SF Series

 







BSG ending was unforgivable. I'm boycotting this on prinicple alone.

B

--- On Wed, 1/27/10, Tracey de Morsella <tdli...@multiculturaladvantage.com> 
wrote:


From: Tracey de Morsella <tdli...@multiculturaladvantage.com>
Subject: [scifinoir2] 5 Reasons Caprica Is The Season's Most Promising New SF 
Series
To: scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com, "'Cinq'" <cinque3...@verizon.net>, "'glenn'" 
<ggs...@yahoo.com>
Date: Wednesday, January 27, 2010, 3:11 AM

  


What do you think.  I’m still smarting from BSG and a little put off that this 
is an original story that was blended into BSG to piggyback off of its success. 
 But I do like it


5 Reasons Caprica Is The Season's Most Promising New SF 
<http://io9.com/5456805/5-reasons-caprica-is-the-seasons-most-promising-new-sf-series>
  Series


This Friday brings the first episode of Battlestar Galactica spinoff Caprica, a 
noir-scifi drama set on the planet Caprica 58 years before the cylons nuke it 
into oblivion. Based on the pilot, we think this series could become a classic.

Of course there are many reasons Caprica might fail, not the least of which 
would be poor audience ratings. Many fans of BSG are still smarting from that 
series' disappointing conclusion, and are predicting that Caprica might take an 
abrupt nosedive into lameness. But the current facts are these: Caprica is a 
completely different series, and based on what we've seen so far, it is the 
coolest new SF show on the air. Here are five reasons why.

1. Intriguing, thoughtful worldbuilding
As I wrote a couple of weeks ago 
<http://io9.com/5439879/caprica-is-very-different-from-battlestar-galactica-+-and-thats-good>
 , the worldbuilding that went into creating Caprica City and the culture of 
Caprica is simply superb. We're introduced to a culture where paganism is 
mainstream and sexual mores are extremely liberal, but immigrants still suffer 
discrimination and monotheists are outcasts. Unlike most SF shows, where 
worldbuilding is often something like "everything is the same except the 
technology is better," Caprica challenges us to imagine a society radically 
different from our own. Also, the concept design of the city - which was shown 
off to great effect in the broadcast version of the pilot - is breathtaking. 
The futuristic technology isn't bad either.

2. A "birth of AI" story that feels original
A lot of contemporary science fiction, from the Terminator franchise to Star 
Trek: The Next Generation, deals with what happens when we finally create AI. 
Will it rise up and destroy us ala Skynet or will it nerdily attempt to fit 
into human society ala Data? We've seen dozens of vengeful bots and dorky AIs, 
but a virtual religious zealot computer genius teen trapped inside the body of 
a killing machine made by her manipulative zillionaire father? Not only is the 
premise fresh, but so are a lot of the emotional and ethical issues it stirs up.

3. The Adama family
Rarely has a family unit in science fiction been as interesting as the Adamas 
seem to be in Caprica. Trapped between two cultures, straddling the line 
between criminality and respectability, Joseph Adama is a character who has 
problems I want to know more about. Plus his brother Sam, a smalltime gangster 
with a heart of gold, is another guy I want to know better. I'm sold on the 
idea of gangsters on another planet.

4. Excellent acting
With Essai Morales and Eric Stolz as our leads Joseph Adama and Daniel 
Graystone, it goes without saying that the acting in this show is going to 
rock. (There was also a lot of terrific acting in BSG, so Caprica maintains the 
quality of this aspect of the franchise.) Sasha Roiz as Sam Adama is already 
terrific, as is Magda Apanowicz as Zoe Graystone's friend Lacy. Alessandra 
Torresani is probably the weakest link as Zoe - she's a little one-note - but 
she could improve over time. Given that this show hinges on personal drama as 
well as epic SF storytelling, it's crucial that the leads be able to show us 
subtle emotion and conflict - and damn, they are delivering. In the pilot, 
Stolz does a perfect job embodying a guy who is incredibly manipulative while 
also being sincere.

5. Drama that depends on science fictional plot points, but isn't completely 
focused on them
I already suggested that drama is one of this show's strong points. One of the 
ways Caprica has already become a standout this season is that it manages to 
give us human drama of the sort we might expect on The Wire, while also never 
losing sight of the fact that its plot arc is centered on something basically 
science fictional. This is a series about how two new technologies - the 
holoband and the cylon - come together to create artificial life. And much of 
the human drama hinges on these technologies as well. In other words, this is 
fiction fueled by drama and science, which is a rare and awesome thing.

Who knows where the show will wind up, but for these reasons alone I think it's 
worth tuning in Friday for the first episode.

 

Send an email to Annalee Newitz, the author of this post, at anna...@io9. com. 

 









Reply via email to