A scene from Helix, now airing on the SyFy Channel |
For the television audience, January sometimes brings some belated Christmas presents. TV's mid-season is no longer the place where networks dump the shows not quite good enough for September, and cable networks never really much cared about the old schedules anyway. This past week, two new science fiction dramas premiered: Intelligence (CBS/CTV) and Helix (Syfy). Both shows boast some familiar faces in front of and behind the camera, but whereas the former feels uninspired and derivative, the latter shows some real promise in its early episodes.
Meghan Ory, Josh Holloway and Marg Helgenberger, in Intelligence |
To be sure, Josh Holloway remains as charming as ever, but there is little about the character he's playing that is compelling. The writing and dialogue is straight-ahead and unsubtle (though characters seem to do far more punching than speaking anyway), and even the show's particular spin on its conceit – the superspy with the computer in his brain – doesn't really fly. It's implied that the technology is a game changer, which makes Vaughn as much the hunted as he is the hunter. (The Chinese, or at least some version of them, seem destined to be our team's main adversaries.) But so far it isn't clear what precisely cyber-Vaughn can do in the field that a Bluetooth headset, a satellite uplink, and a couple of techies in Portal 2 t-shirts couldn't do just as well given a few extra minutes. In the end, however, not making any sense isn't the deal breaker it used to be (see: Sleepy Hollow). Intelligence's real crime is far more unforgivable: it simply isn't very much fun.
Billy Campbell as Dr. Alan Farragut, and Hiroyuki Sanada as Dr. Hiroshi Hatake, in Helix |
However 2014 still brings some good news for television's science fiction fans, and it comes from a most unexpected source: the SyFy Channel. After a long drought (beginning when the channel cancelled Eureka back in 2011 because of budgetary concerns) where it seemed as if original science fiction programming was the last thing one would find on its formerly-eponymous channel, SyFy has added another compelling speculative drama to its rolls with the 2-hour premiere of the viral outbreak thriller Helix this past Friday. With Helix, last year's Defiance and the Canadian-produced Continuum airing its third season in March, SyFy may once again become a genuine destination for viewers seeking out complex and intelligent science fiction television.
Created by newcomer Cameron Porsandeh and co-executive produced by Ron Moore (marking his first real return to TV since the end of Battlestar Galactica in 2009), Helix stars Billy Campbell (The Killing, Killing Lincoln) as Dr. Alan Farragut, the lead CDC scientist called to investigate a mysterious and very deadly virus that has infected an isolated Arctic outpost. Further complicating the story: not only is Alan's brother Peter (played with bug-eyed menace by the incomparable Neil Napier, Bullet in the Face) the sole surviving victim of the initial outbreak, Farragut's team also includes his estranged ex-wife Julia (Kyra Zagorsky). Soon after arrival, the CDC field officers quickly suspect that this was no accidental outbreak and that little is what it appears to be in this privately-owned research facility – which has researchers from almost 3 dozen different countries and operates outside of all national and international regulation – and that tracking down the truth will be as difficult, and as dangerous, as finding a cure. With its inhospitable, almost lunar landscape, and set almost exclusively inside this futuristic outpost, Helix has the tight, claustrophobic tone of a deep space drama. It shares the intensity of the many post-apocalyptic shows that have emerged since Galactica went off the air, but it does so without that often perky problem of having to actually end the world. It borrows knowingly from Outbreak, 28 Days Later (anger-prone rhesus monkeys and all), the original Alien movies, and John Carpenter's The Thing, but with its unique pacing and tone Helix rarely feels derivative of its source material.
Zyra Zagorsky as Dr. Julia Walker in Helix |
In the end, however, it will be the show's pacing that likely will most impress you. At first the story seemed, to this viewer at least, almost self-indulgently slow moving. But by the end of the first hour the intensity ramps up considerably, especially as the show's structural conceit is revealed: every one-hour episode will take place over a single day ("Day 1," "Day 2", "Day 3" etc.), which means that by the end of its 13-episode first season, fewer than two weeks will have passed. The overall effect of this is that the action within every episode feels simultaneously compressed and telescoped, a temporal claustrophobic feeling to parallel the physical one.
The inescapably melodramatic circumstances (as their own lives are literally at stake every minute) are moreover regularly undercut by the one explicitly playful feature of the production: the soundtrack. The tone is set with the show's opening scene: an inappropriately peppy rendition of "Do You Know the Way To San Jose?" plays on tinny speakers echoing around the bunker-like laboratory as we make our way among the recently dead and dying. The dark humour of this juxtaposition is repeated at the beginning of every episode with a brief, jaunty opening theme that accompanies Helix's intertitle. (The only other example I can recall of popular music being used to such successfully ironic effect would be Breaking Bad.)
I watched the first three hours of Helix in a single sitting, and found myself eagerly looking forward to seeing more. You can watch the third episode of Helix this coming Friday at 9PM on SyFy. I'm confident that you will find it similarly .... infectious.
– 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.
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