The 100 is a new TV
series that just finished airing (in the UK). It’s a sci-fi set a
century or so after a nuclear war devastated the world, and charts
the efforts of the few people left trying to return because their
space station is beyond saving.
The first people sent
(one hundred) are criminals. Because of the lack of resources all
crimes are capital, but juvenile offenders are incarcerated until
they reach the age of majority, when they get the special birthday
present of a spacewalk without a spacesuit. The 100 are sent to see
whether radiation has died down enough for the Earth to be survived.
I’ve got to admit,
whilst liking the premise, I was going to give up on this roughly a
third of the way in. A fellow from the internet, who had seen the
whole series, suggested I reconsider, so I gave it another shot.
I enjoyed the latter
half more than the first (bit like Supermodels of SHIELD. The 100
have also outlawed ugly women). There’s a nice diarchy situation
going on, with two characters (Clarke and Bellamy) effectively
leading the juvenile criminals. Clarke being more conciliatory and
Bellamy more authoritarian/militaristic, though both have a certain
pragmatism.
Early on, I felt that
the episodes were sometimes not very engaging, and that the main
storyline was taking a while to unfold. Later episodes did a better
job of mingling the central storyline with each individual episode’s
plot [I won’t go into detail for fear of spoilers]. Still room to
improve, but it was entertaining.
The action on the Ark
(the space station, where the parents and other adults still dwell)
was usually interesting as a power struggle took hold as resources
dwindled to almost nothing, and efforts to reach the ground hit a
snag or two.
The finale of the
season worked very well, I thought. Can’t go into detail,
obviously, but it had been built up nicely and left some questions
hanging for the second season.
I still don’t see why
enforced American accents were the order of the day, though. The
protagonist, Eliza Taylor (as Clarke), has a perfect American accent
but what’s wrong with her native Aussie? Did those space fascists
ban non-US accents as well as ugly women?
Pace, in the first
half, could’ve and should’ve been faster.
On the plus side, there
are some genuinely surprising plot twists, perhaps the most notable
coming fairly early on.
I hope the second
season builds on the first and the show continues to improve. I’ll
be watching it.
Thaddeus
No comments:
Post a Comment