Original Blogger tags: Lexx
I have a fondness for science fiction series that are imaginative but not, as a whole, successful. Farscape, I’m talking about you. Even, occasionally, those that start out promising, but which turn into complete failures — failure can occasionally be interesting. At least, it serves as an object lesson for how a story line can go so very far wrong. Andromeda, I’ve got your number. I can deal with very dated CGI — Babylon Five is still generally good and often great. So I happened to come across discounted boxed sets of Lexx, the whole series, at my local Target store. They were dirt cheap. “How bad could it be?” I thought. Well, now I know. At least, I know part of the story.
First off, Lexx is not something I can show my kids — pretty much at all. Season 1 has a surprising amount of very fake gore in it — brains and guts flying everywhere. That didn’t really bother them — I think they got that the brains were made of gelatin — but it was getting to me. Watching characters carved up by rotating blades, repeatedly; watching characters getting their brains removed — that got old. Body horror, body transformation — pretty standard stuff for B grade science fiction, or anything that partakes of the tropes of such, but not actually kid-friendly. So we didn’t continue showing the kids.
Still, I thought it might make more sense to watch them in order, so I watched the second two-hour movie (1:38 without commercials). The second one has full frontal nudity, which startled me a bit. I’m not really opposed to looking at a nubile young woman, per se. There is some imaginative world-building and character creation here, but ultimately it’s just incredibly boring. It’s like the producers shot the material, not having any idea how long the finished product would be; they shot enough scenes to actually power an hour show (forty-plus minutes without commercials), but also shot a bunch of extended padding sequences, “just in case.” And so after a repeated intro that lasts just under four minutes, we get a two-hour show with endless cuts to spinning blades slowly approaching female groins, huge needles slowly approaching male groins, countdown timers counting down, getting stopped, getting started, getting stopped… endless fight scenes, endless scenes of the robot head blathering his love poetry, a ridiculous new character eating fistfuls of brains… et cetera, et cetera, et cetera.
Every time something happens, I’d get my hopes up, thinking that maybe the writing has actually improved, but then it’s time to slow down the show again, because we’ve still got an extra hour and twenty minutes to pad. And it’s all distressingly sexist and grotesquely homophobic. Again, I’d be lying if I said that I didn’t like to look at Eva Habermann in a miniskirt, but given that the actress is actually young enough to be my daughter, and especially given that she has so little interesting to do, and there’s just not much character in her character — it’s — well, “gratuitous” doesn’t even begin to cover it. She’s young, but Brian Downey was old enough to know better. And let’s just say I’m a little disgusted with the choices the show’s producers made. The guest stars in Season 1 are like a who-used-to-be-who of B actors — Tim Curry, Rutger Hauer, Malcom McDowell. There’s material here for a great cult show — but these episodes are mostly just tedious. They’re actually not good enough to be cult classics.
The season consists of four two-hour movies. After watching the first movie, I didn’t quite realize all four season one movies were on one disc, so when I tried to watch some more, I put in the first disc of season two by mistake. I watched the first few episodes of season two — these are shorter. I didn’t notice any actual continuity issues. In other words, nothing significant changes from the pilot movie to the start of season two. There are some imaginative satirical elements. Season 2, episode 3 introduces a planet called “Potatohoe” which is a pretty funny satire of the American “right stuff” tropes. But it’s too little, and it amounts to too little, amidst the tedious general adolescent sex romp. Then we lose Eva Habermann, who was 90% of the reason I even watched the show this far. I’m honestly not sure if I can watch any more.
It doesn’t help that several of the discs skip a lot. It might have something to do with the scratches that were on the discs when I took them out of the packaging, which come from the fact that the discs are all stuck together on a single spindle in the plastic box. And the discs themselves are all unmarked, identifiable only by an ID number, not any kind of label indicating which part of which season they hold — so good luck pulling out the one you want.
I’m told the later seasons have some very imaginative story lines. People say good things about the third season. It seems like the universe has a lot of potential. Is it worth continuing, or am I going to be in old Battlestar Galactica’s second season territory?
UPDATE: I have continued skimming the show. The scripts seem to get somewhat more interesting around season 2, episode 5, called “Lafftrak.” It finally seems to take its darkness seriously enough to do something interesting with it, and not just devolve to pornographic settings. The pacing is still weak, but the shows start to feel as if they have a little bit of forward momentum. Of course, then in the next episode, we’re back to Star Whores and torture pr0n…