Monday, February 6, 2012

Synergy?

If there was an award for bungling corporate synergy, NBC-Universal (or whatever they call themselves nowadays) would be the clear front-runner today. Over the weekend, Saturday Night Live featured a hilarious send-up of the UK drama series Downton Abbey, which is itself produced by a company that’s owned by NBC-Universal. Not surprisingly, considering that Downton Abbey’s ratings on PBS rival those of many things NBC shows in prime-time, this sketch got a lot of attention. One of the venues for this attention was the web-site of NBC’s Today Show, which also included a video clip of that sketch. Or, at least it did earlier today.

As of this writing, if you attempt to play the clip, you get a message explaining that the clip is no longer available due to a copyright claim by NBC. Yes, that’s right a video that features an excerpt from an NBC show that utilizes footage from another NBC show has now been removed from an NBC-owned web-site due to a copyright claim by NBC. I couldn't tell you what the leading book on the topic of corporate synergy is, but I’m confident that this approach is not in it, except perhaps as a warning.

They Had a Plan

Though the placement of the 21st century edition of Battlestar Galctica (aka BSG) on BBC America still seems a bit silly, I have to admit it got me watching the show again in earnest. Previously, I'd only revisited a handful of episodes, mostly early ones purchased on DVD. Watching it in sequence again, aided and abetted by purchasing the final season so I didn't have to wait for BBC America to get to the final episode, has been a real treat.

Some movies or TV shows are impressive on first viewing but don't hold up to a second look. With BSG, the episodes that impressed the first time around feel just as strong while others that initially felt lackluster now fit better into the overall tapestry of the series. This was especially true of the latter part of the third season, where some of the episodes felt like they were just marking time between key plot developments but on further review laid the groundwork for key events later in the series.

In particular, it was good to give the finale, Daybreak, another look. Despite wrapping up nearly all the key plot-lines in sensible ways, Daybreak somehow didn't feel quite right on first viewing. The balance between the concrete setting and the mystical overtones was off and the end result didn't feel quite satisfying. Three years later, with the series as a whole fresher in mind, the ending now feels like the inevitable culmination of the path the 70-some previous episodes had paved. While there are elements that still seem out of place (including the modern-day epilogue), the mysticism now feels like a sensible complement to the more poetic portrayal of both the flashbacks and the current happenings that bring the key characters individual stories full-circle.

The finale also reaffirms that, as good as Edward James Olmos and the rest of the cast were, the best performance over the course of the series was James Callis as Gaius Baltar. Almost all the key characters changed and grew over the course of the series, but none experienced quite as many twists and turns as Baltar who struggled as much with himself (and his own conflicted nature) as he did with other the characters. Katee Sackhoff as Starbuck came close, though, being one of the more heroic characters from the start she was generally more sympathetic and had more of the other characters sympathetic to her at any given time.

Performances like those and the scripts that provided the blueprint for them are the key reason that Battlestar Galactica is Exhibit A for why the term "science-fiction drama" isn't an oxymoron. Many shows fall into the trap of seeing science-fiction as if it's a method of storytelling in itself rather than just a setting in which to tell stories. By keeping its focus on the people inhabiting the spaceships rather than the spaceships themselves, Ronald D. Moore and the other writers made a strong case for BSG being the best American TV drama of the past decade. I think I'm almost ready to start watching it again.


Obligatory Disclaimer: The Battlestar Galactica logo above is obviously someone else's intellectual property, and anyone who's gotten to this point should be clear that no infringement is intended.

Thursday, February 2, 2012

Who Watches the Guy Who Asked Us About Watching the Watchmen?

For the most part, my reaction to DC Comics' announcement of several prequel series to the iconic story Watchmen is a hearty shrug. It's not that I don't think the comics will be good. In fact, with people like Darwyn Cooke on board, I'm confident it will all be very well done. It's just that it all seems a bit pointless. Since the original series gave us all the back-story we needed for these characters, additional stories seem likely to be either superfluous because they have no connection to the Watchmen mother-ship or obligatory because they're crammed full of references that no one who isn't immersed in the original storyline will appreciate. Either way, I think it will be much more enjoyable to hear what original series co-creator Alan Moore has to say about it, as this could be the slight against him on DC's part that finally pushes him over the edge. I'll be watching.

Obligatory Addendum: Moore's reaction to DC's plans was swift and sure. Indeed, it predated the above posting. When asked for comment by the New York Times, Moore described the move as "completely shameless." He actually said a lot more than that, but that's for another column.