chronovore (
chronovore) wrote2005-07-26 12:21 pm
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just now tuned to the global frequency
About a year in internet-time after the rest of the world is bored with the topic, I finally watched the Global Frequency screener/pilot. The first five minutes and last three minutes are completely standard TV cliché moments, from the carnival fire-breather framed mid-shot just as the camera pans past, to a load of awkward exposition setting up the story at the beginning, and the "come work for me" plea to The New Guy as an emotional moment and the subsequent counterbalance of humor based on an established running gag to break the tension up a bit at the end.
On the other hand, everything between those two moments was at least twice as good as regular TV, and could easily have been the next X-Files. It made me want to read the comics; I'll have to see to that.
The ethereal psionics and speed ramping effects were very cool looking. There were a couple misses: it wasn't readily apparent why a the last recruit (the asian woman) was needed to do her thing, and the bit with the target's apartment didn't seem to be resolved; was he a serial killer type, or was he a "good guy"? Who was right, the scientist or the detective?
Much of it was smart, and not overly explained. I appreciated that.
Marginally off-topic: My personal, real life, recent living in the future moment; Chinese girl riding a bike down an Osaka back alley, chatting on speakerphone and staring at her live video chat on the cellphone while weaving through pedestrians.
On the other hand, everything between those two moments was at least twice as good as regular TV, and could easily have been the next X-Files. It made me want to read the comics; I'll have to see to that.
The ethereal psionics and speed ramping effects were very cool looking. There were a couple misses: it wasn't readily apparent why a the last recruit (the asian woman) was needed to do her thing, and the bit with the target's apartment didn't seem to be resolved; was he a serial killer type, or was he a "good guy"? Who was right, the scientist or the detective?
Much of it was smart, and not overly explained. I appreciated that.
Marginally off-topic: My personal, real life, recent living in the future moment; Chinese girl riding a bike down an Osaka back alley, chatting on speakerphone and staring at her live video chat on the cellphone while weaving through pedestrians.
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Explanations otherwise: The last recruit was a really good gymnast, needed because neither the scientist or the cop could do a backflip backwards to hit the power switch from a high bar. I'd say his apartment was moral ambiguity at it's finest - he was a sleeper spy who now loved America but who also still didn't have the spine to off himself when he knew he was overloading, so perhaps they were both right.
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