I think about a world to come where the books were found by the golden ones, written in pain, written in awe by a puzzled man who questioned, "What are we here for?" All the strangers came today and it looks as though they're here to stay.

-David Bowie "Oh! You Pretty Things"

Wednesday, September 7, 2011

Firefly


How exactly does one reinvent the Western genre? Through the works of John Wayne and Clint Eastwood, haven't we seen every possible variation on cowboys and Indians, train robberies and defending the innocents against raiders and crooks? We may have seen just that, and all that I can see on the horizon is a series of remakes of these various films. Although 3:10 to Yuma and True Grit were both absolutely fantastic, I have no strong belief that further Western remakes will follow suit.

I think that is where the genius of Firefly lies. Rather than seeing what develops on the undeveloped Western portion of the United States of America, outside of the purview of Washington, New York and Boston, Joss Whedon brings us into space. We get to see what happens on border planets, planets where law is difficult to uphold and where the dominion of the central government is loose. The term "Western" hardly applies, because West is a directional term that doesn't seem to hold well in space. Science fiction or speculative fiction are titles that might hold, but then again, in borderlands nothing really holds for long.

But what value is there in re-inventing or continuing the Western genre? Westerns have traditionally been concerned with basic rights of human beings to freedom, to a place of their own, and the struggle between what is right and wrong regardless of the bullying voice of state, religion and big business. A cowboy speaks not as a partisan or a minion of a particular divinity. People are simple. The greatest values are a horse, some clothing, and some work to help pass the time. In the case of Firefly, however, it's a ship. You can take everything else from the space cowboys of Whedon's epic one-season television program, but you can't take the stars from them.

Is Firefly as good as everyone makes it out to be? It is certainly good enough to join the pantheon of television programs on my blog. It is not my favorite television program, nor even my favorite Joss Whedon television program. There are other shows that I would resurrect before I would resurrect Firefly. But the fact of the matter is that Firefly showed a great deal of promise, and there is reason to believe that with six or seven seasons to tell a story it could have become one of the best shows ever.

1 comment:

  1. Take my love, take my land, take me where I cannot stand, I don't care, I'm still free, you can't take the sky from me!

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