Kristen Bell, the once and future star of Veronica Mars |
One topic that television fans never tire of – and I count myself among them – are favourite shows cancelled too soon. My own list is long, and grows with every passing year. A couple of years ago I wrote about five such shows, and I could add many more: Terriers, Awake, Party Down, Better off Ted, How to Make it in America, or the criminally underappreciated Knights of Prosperity. The reason why it’s fun to talk up the shows that never make it out of their second seasons (or even sometimes their first) is that they were cancelled at the top of their game. They had no time to stumble or even hint at their weak spots. Two standard-bearers of the brilliant-but-cancelled genre – Judd Apatow’s Freaks and Geeks and Joss Whedon’s Firefly – were barely given the chance get their bearings before their respective networks pulled their plugs.
But the thunderous success of Rob Thomas’ recent Kickstarter campaign to raise funds for a proposed Veronica Mars movie has shifted my thoughts to a darker, less congenial question: what about those beloved series that lived too long, the ones whose sublime early seasons begin to decay under the weight of their own continuity?
As a committed/obsessive recommender, I relish exceptional shows that you can pass on without apology or conditions: The Wire, Breaking Bad, and (though I am selective about who I recommend it to) the BBC’s 2005 reboot of Doctor Who are at the top of the list. And Justified (with its fourth season about to come to a close) promises to join them. But as an inveterate TV pusher my nightmares are about the shows that I want to share, but can only really kvell about the early seasons: “You should definitely watch Battlestar Galactica… well at least the miniseries and first season, though the world won’t end if you drop off before Season 3,” “Yeah, Heroes is great! You mean Season 1, right?” or “How I Met Your Mother really did have an remarkable four seasons, didn’t it?” All of us who love TV want to share the particular pleasure of great storytelling with our friends, without condemning them to the hours (and, in the case of shows still lingering on the air, years) of mediocrity, without inadvertently committing people we care about to shows that we ourselves might continue to watch into their 7th or 8th seasons – either out of a misplaced sense of obligation, or because of a dispassionate (borderline obsessive) curiosity. There is, after all, a particular kind of pain that comes from watching a beloved television series go even slightly wrong…
Veronica Mars writer/creator Rob Thomas |
Fast-forward five years, when half a decade of
rumours about a feature film spinoff came to a head last Wednesday, as the
show’s creator Rob Thomas put up a Kickstarter page to raise interest (and more
importantly funds) for the project. Offering everything from copies of the
shooting script, to Kristen Bell’s voice on as an outgoing voicemail message,
to a (very) small speaking part in the film itself, the campaign quickly broke
Kickstarter records for film projects, reaching its $2 million goal in less
than 10 hours. At last count – with three weeks left – Thomas has collected
more than $3.7 million from almost 60,000 Veronica Mars fans. A lot of
e-ink has been spilled in the past week on whether or not Thomas has broken
Kickstarter or whether crowdfunding a studio-backed project will hasten the end
of Hollywood’s
decades-old business model. But most people writing about the project are, for
lack of a more dignified word, completely psyched. The short video of Rob Thomas
and Mars stars Kristen Bell, Enrico Colantoni, Jason Dohring,
and Ryan Hansen is delightful – intimate, self-aware, and both respectful of
and coyly mocking of their audience – and for longtime Veronica Mars
fans like myself, the very idea of returning to the world of Neptune,
California, even for only 120 minutes, is enough to quicken the heart.
But as
the excitement over the initial announcement has ebbed, I’m left with a simple
fact that I hadn’t initially considered: I didn’t really like Veronica
Mars’ third season. Don’t get me wrong: the first two seasons are still
among my favourite seasons of television ever, right up there with S1 of Friday
Night Lights, S4 of The Wire, and S2 of Breaking Bad. But
it was precisely on these terms that its third season disappointed. Encouraged
by the network to make the series more ‘accessible’ (read: less confusing for
the casual viewer), the third season told shorter, more self-contained stories.
By the end of the third season, I was actually relieved when it
was announced that the show would not be returning for a fourth.
It is precisely what made Veronica Mars such a
revelation in its first two seasons that might be untranslatable to film. Yes,
most of the same talent, on- and off-screen, are slated to return. (The movie’s
very recently created IMDB page has pre-emptively listed every character and
actor to ever appear in the series as part of the cast.) It’s not only my past
experience of TV shows making the transition to the big screen somewhat
nerve-wracking (for every South Park: Bigger, Longer & Uncut, there
seems to be at least three Sex and the City 2s): my experience of its
third season has left me reluctantly ambivalent about the proposed film.
The
reboot phenomenon is one thing: a new franchise, with new internal continuity, and
reframed narratively for what is truly a different genre. The big screen after all isn’t
just a question how a story is consumed, but also how it is structured. Joss Whedon, who cut his teeth in film narrative, succeeded (in my eyes) with Serenity
(2005) by telling a story that was an extension of the story he began telling on
television in Firefly, and in two hours offered audiences a universe which was both a continuation and a re-configuration of what came before.
Television, as an expressive medium if not as a business model, has a singular luxury that feature films do not: television can give a story the length of time its requires. Ten-episode stories, or sixty-episode stories, there is room and flexibility to tell them all. The expectation that a show will run for years is very much North American: British television has long accepted that different stories require different amounts of time, and different segmentation. On Channel 4 this winter, Utopia created an entire world in six hours, and should it not come back next year, I will more than satisfied. It will not have been an abortive experience. No promises were made, and Utopia won’t have been “cancelled” should a second series never make an appearance. The model of Sherlock (3 feature-length stories per ‘season’) works perfectly for the BBC’s Holmes show, while on this side of the pond the extremely entertaining Elementary has been doing wonders with a 22-episode frame, slowly building characters and relationships which feel perfectly organic to the world they inhabit. American broadcast television still tends to quantify success in terms of longevity – so much so that when the show recently bowed out in its seventh season, headlines typically read “30 Rock Cancelled!”. Of course, television is a business, and networks (cable or broadcast) are building brands along with telling stories. It is certainly understandable – if not always justifiable – that they want to keep a series around until the wheels fall off. But whatever the pragmatic realities of television as corporate product, we should start asking: is it true that television shows only die involuntary deaths? Why should a story go on forever?
No story, well told, can or should.
Kristen Bell and Jason Dohring in Veronica Mars |
Television, as an expressive medium if not as a business model, has a singular luxury that feature films do not: television can give a story the length of time its requires. Ten-episode stories, or sixty-episode stories, there is room and flexibility to tell them all. The expectation that a show will run for years is very much North American: British television has long accepted that different stories require different amounts of time, and different segmentation. On Channel 4 this winter, Utopia created an entire world in six hours, and should it not come back next year, I will more than satisfied. It will not have been an abortive experience. No promises were made, and Utopia won’t have been “cancelled” should a second series never make an appearance. The model of Sherlock (3 feature-length stories per ‘season’) works perfectly for the BBC’s Holmes show, while on this side of the pond the extremely entertaining Elementary has been doing wonders with a 22-episode frame, slowly building characters and relationships which feel perfectly organic to the world they inhabit. American broadcast television still tends to quantify success in terms of longevity – so much so that when the show recently bowed out in its seventh season, headlines typically read “30 Rock Cancelled!”. Of course, television is a business, and networks (cable or broadcast) are building brands along with telling stories. It is certainly understandable – if not always justifiable – that they want to keep a series around until the wheels fall off. But whatever the pragmatic realities of television as corporate product, we should start asking: is it true that television shows only die involuntary deaths? Why should a story go on forever?
No story, well told, can or should.
Okay, I don’t actually know how the script
for now-perhaps-inevitable Veronica Mars movie will go (though for just
$10 US you can preorder one today!), and there’s an argument to be made that
the noir elements of the Veronica Mars universe were always ideally
suited for the big screen. (For some reason, I want send Rob Thomas DVDs of Kiss
Kiss Bang Bang and Grosse Pointe Blank right now.) All said, I can’t
deny that I’m rather thrilled that Rob Thomas and the gang are coming together again,
and perhaps the fact that the new project will be a sincere labour of love for
all involved (from the fans up to the cast and crew) will be enough to keep any
corporate forces from working against it. But there’s still a significant part
of me which would prefer that the film didn’t happen, that same part of me
that (rather guiltily) still kind of wishes the series had been cancelled
after its two perfect seasons.
All seasons of Veronica Mars are
available on DVD. Watch it. You don’t have to bother with the last season though.
– Mark Clamen is a writer, critic, film programmer and lifelong
television enthusiast. He lives in Toronto, where he often lectures on
television, film, and popular culture.
(By the way, I've been wearing this Veronica Mars t-shirt since my very first post.)
(By the way, I've been wearing this Veronica Mars t-shirt since my very first post.)
There is no such thing as a TV show that gets cancelled too soon.
ReplyDeleteIn the entire history of television there was only one TV show that was actually good and mostly worth watching for more than 1.5 seasons sequentially. And even THAT show ran one season too long, arguably.
You can guess which one.