WARNING: This review
contains extreme spoilers for Andromeda's series premiere, "Under
the Night." If you haven't yet seen the episode and do not want to be spoiled,
SET ASIDE THIS REVIEW UNTIL LATER. You have been warned.
The starship Andromeda Ascendant
is lured into a battle trap at the outset of a deadly war. After evacuating
his ship's survivors, Captain Dylan Hunt attempts an escape maneuver that
inadvertently freezes him and his ship in time for over 300 years, at which
time a salvage crew intends to harvest the Andromeda and its components
for profit.
IN BRIEF
Some iffy execution in places,
but it works as a premise-setter and moves along swiftly. Good, not great;
series shows promise.
(originally aired the
week of October 2, 2000)
Written by Robert
Hewitt Wolfe
Directed by Allan Kroeker
| Harmless In-Joke or Writerly Conceit? |
| "I'm telling you, the guy is huge. He's like some kind of Greek god orsomething." -- Harper on Captain Dylan Hunt |
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REGULAR CAST
Kevin Sorbo - Captain Dylan
Hunt
Lisa Ryder - Beka Valentine
Keith
Hamilton Cobb - Tyr Anasazi
Brent Stait - Rev Bem
Laura
Bertram - Trance Gemini
Gordon Michael Woolvett
- Seamus Harper
Lexa
Doig - Andromeda
GUEST STARS
Steve Bacic - Gaheris Rhade
John Tench - Gerentex
Steve Bacic is a familiar
face to genre television fans, having appeared recently on episodes of
Stargate
SG-1, First
Wave and Earth:
Final Conflict.
RATING (OUT OF 4)
***
WHAT HAPPENED
Answering a distress call
from a distant star system, Captain Dylan Hunt (Kevin Sorbo) of the Systems
Commonwealth High Guard starship Andromeda
Ascendant arrives to evacuate a colony threatened by a rogue black
hole. The distress call turns out to be a trap set by the Nietzscheans,
who have been planning a massive surprise war effort against the Commonwealth
for years. Hunt's ship is ambushed. Facing a grim situation, Hunt orders
his ship's evacuation and attempts to use the black hole's gravity to aid
in an escape. The risky maneuver combined with the gravity effects of the
black hole leave him suspended in time for 300 years. What does one do
when the world as he knew it has disappeared?
~
ANALYSIS
This sets the stage for the
first half of the two-part premiere for Gene Roddenberry's Andromeda,
the latest TV show based on Roddenberry
notes, developed by Deep
Space Nine alum Robert
Hewitt Wolfe. My general impression for "Under the Night" is that it's
good, not great, reveals that this series has potential, but that such
potential must be exploited to find success. As it is only half a story,
I find I don't yet have a mission statement to evaluate; we won't get that
until part two. In the meantime, we get some decent action scenes and we're
effectively introduced to an assortment of characters. The story serves
as a good backdrop for establishing the series' initial elements, although
the plot itself does not exactly provide great strides in originality.
The episode opens with a
big battle and some nifty special effects. I'm particularly impressed with
the bold, artistic design of the Andromeda itself, which has a fresh
look that sets it apart from recent Star Trek starship incarnations.
The battle and subsequent war arises from the discontent the Nietzschean
society holds for the Commonwealth High Guard.
Aside from the good special
effects during the battle, the episode's opening setup scenes are probably
its most uncertain. There's not enough about them that seems fresh, and
the introduction of the Andromeda in its first fly-by lacks the awe it
deserves -- especially given how cool this ship really looks. There are
also some problems with a couple key characters in the early scenes. I
for one found Hunt's pilot -- supposedly a sentient
alien bug -- to be painfully unconvincing; this type of alien costume
design has been dated for the better part of two decades, maybe more.
The other, bigger problem
here involves Hunt's traitorous first officer, a Nietzschean named Gaheris
Rhade (Steve Bacic). Bacic's acting choices imply a cold dispassion apparently
common for Nietzscheans, but the performance leaves much to be desired.
There's a key scene of exposition set on the Andromeda bridge that doesn't
work at all. It features lines of dialog sandwiched between firing weapons
and finally a speech by Rhade that is so woodenly delivered that I was
shaking my head in disappointment. (And sorry, but exposition in between
flying bullets should be reserved solely for Riggs and Murtaugh in the
Lethal
Weapon pictures.) Nietzscheans may be cold, self-proclaimed superior
people who are genetically engineered, but Rhade is simply an unconvincing
muddle of random tones. The ensuing hand-to-hand fight scene works better,
mostly because it's set eerily against the backdrop of time literally grinding
to a halt. (The series' weapon of choice, used here and elsewhere, is known
as a "force-lance,"
a retractable multi-purpose staff that can fire projectiles as well as
perform the various duties of a Mag-Lite.)
What we learn from Rhade's
tirade is that the Nietzscheans have become fed up with the Commonwealth's
constant compromises with alien aggressors; the last straw for the Nietzscheans
was the Commonwealth's peaceful resolution with the Magog, an apparently
nefarious race who "eat other sentient beings" and "reproduce by rape."
Kevin Sorbo after the
rain
Three hundred years after
Rhade is killed in this struggle and Hunt is frozen in time, enter the
starship Eureka Maru, which is engaged in a salvage operation to pull the
Andromeda Ascendant from the clutches of the black hole's gravity forces.
It's here where Wolfe's sense for characters begins to take hold. The ship
is captained by the competent and forceful Beka Valentine (Lisa Ryder),
who has charge of a small crew-for-hire. They are all employed by scheming
opportunist Gerentex (John Tench), a nasty guy from a race called theNightsiders.
Valentine's
crew is a fairly interesting set of personalities, of which the story
gives us a nice little sampling. The resident techie/pilot is Seamus Harper,
played by Gordon Michael Woolvett with a convincing and sarcastic madcap
exuberance. Harper gets some decent one-liners (including the obligatory
Hercules
in-joke) and plenty of contemporary riffs on lines including "Let's kick
some ass!", "We rule!", and "I am a god!" (It's reassuring to see Generation
X is still alive and kicking several millennia from now.) I like the way
typical dialog rules imposed by Trek have been relaxed.
There's also Trance
Gemini (Laura Bertram), the purple girl with a tail.
We don't learn much about her, other than that she's a bit naive and ditzy;
at one point she has to be reminded to put her space helmet on before opening
an airlock.
Perhaps the most interesting
of the bunch so far is pithy Rev Bem (Brent Stait), a Magog with a social
conscience. The fact that he's a Magog gives the character a useful dose
of guilty baggage; he wants to make amends for the suffering his people
-- himself included -- have inflicted on others. Like the other characters,
we don't learn much about his past yet, but the door has been opened a
crack and I think I can see something of substance behind it.
Despite the brief character
insights, the story moves along at a pretty fast clip: The goal is this
crew's attempt to remove the Andromeda from the clutches of the black hole
so Gerentex can sell it for a huge profit. Once the Andromeda is extricated,
however, Hunt returns to normal time and realizes the severity of his situation.
The crew of the Eureka Maru
boards Andromeda, but Hunt is not planning to let them simply take his
ship, not even after Harper explains to him that the Commonwealth lost
the war against the Nietzscheans and has been gone for 300 years. The fact
that the Commonwealth has fallen is obviously a major point this series
will be playing. It was huge (it "spanned three galaxies" and had "over
a million member planets"), so even if much of it dissolved one would think
there are still traces or even large segments of it to be found. (The question
of how the Nietzscheans alone could bring down an organization with a million
planets is a bit puzzling to me, but we'll take it at face value for now.)
For the moment, Captain Hunt's
only ally is the ship herself. The story utilizes the concept of a ship
with its own sentient intelligence. It's aware, and it has its own personality.
It speaks to Hunt in the form of a holographic image (Lexa
Doig), which even comes preprogrammed with an outfit featuring a low
neckline. (The only remaining question: If Andromeda is sentient, does
she have the choice of what to wear to work?) Hunt has a rapport with Andromeda
that goes beyond the rapport any Star Trek captain would have with their
ship. The ship here is an individual, which of course is a potentially
compelling story point.
Since Hunt does not intend
to give up his ship quietly, Gerentex brings out the Big Dudes With Big
Guns [TM] -- mercenaries he brought along just in case of such a confrontation.
The head mercenary is a very big Nietzschean named Tyr
Anasazi (Keith
Hamilton Cobb), whose sole action in "Under the Night" is to walk in
looking very menacing while holding a large firearm so we can be sent into
cliffhanger mode -- nothing more, nothing less. For what it sets out to
do, I suppose it's effective.
Given the setup sans resolution,
I don't have much to say about "Under the Night" in terms of riveting themes.
Not until part two, anyway. This first episode of Andromeda is primarily
a plot-based adventure with a good glimpse at some personalities. As far
as production goes, it looks like a good deal was done with less
money. There are of course rough edges, and Andromeda doesn't
have quite the polish that larger-budget sci-fi shows like DS9 or
Voyager
had coming out of the gates. But the technique (some of the uneasy performances
notwithstanding) is solid. I particularly liked the gritty, more claustrophobic
production design on the Eureka
Maru, and the pervasive use of hand-held
cameras whenever we were there. All the characters here are closer
to ground level than Trek characters, which is a nice change of pace. I
especially appreciate that Valentine sees her crew members more as equals
than as subordinates.
Is "Under the Night" a great
launch for Andromeda? No. But it gets the job done, and in the end
it gets its hooks in. It's entertaining, and I'm interested. Not bad for
a pilot.
TUNE IN NEXT WEEK
With intruders on his ship,
will Hunt have to play "Die Hard"?
Copyright 2000 Jamahl Epsicokhan.
All rights reserved.
Unauthorized reproduction or distribution of this article is prohibited.
It's here, it's a bit rough
around the edges, but it gets the job done. Jammer
says it's "good, but not great." How
do you feel about Andromeda?