WARNING: SPOILERS BELOW!!!
SOURCE: SciFi Dimensions
"The Train Job"
Starring Nathan Fillion & Gina Torres
Directed by Joss Whedon
Written by Joss Whedon
FOX TV Original Airdate:
8PM EST, September 20, 2002
Review by John C. Snider Ó 2002
Five hundred years in the future, humanity is just recovering from a bloody civil war. The planets of the Alliance have defeated the Independents, effectively gathering all the inhabited worlds under one governmental umbrella.
Captain Mal Reynolds (Nathan Fillion) and his first mate Zoe (Gina Torres) were, unfortunately, on the losing side of the conflict. Not quite outlaws, they now operate on the fringes of Alliance space, commanding a small "Firefly" transport ship called Serenity. Mal will take on just about any job - legal, illegal or ambiguous - to get by.
Mal and Zoe have accumulated a loose community of crew and passengers, including Zoe's husband Wash (Adam Tudyk); ship's mechanic Kaylee (Jewel Staite); an itinerant preacher named Book (Ron Glass); a "Companion" (sort of a high-class legal call girl) named Inara (Morena Baccarin) who uses her own shuttlecraft to entertain clients; Simon (Sean Maher), a physician who has freed his emotionally-fractured sister River (Summer Glau) from some sort of Alliance laboratory; and Jayne (Adam Baldwin), a hard-bitten mercenary.
In the premiere episode "The Train Job", Mal is hired by a nasty crimelord named Nishka (sp?) to steal an undisclosed cargo off an Alliance train (a high-tech antigravity train, no less) on a remote planet. Once on the job, Mal and Zoe discover they are stealing much-needed drugs which help the settlers stay healthy in the alien planet's partially hostile environment. Ultimately, Mal decides he can't live with the suffering the heist will cause, and offers to give Nishka's money back and call it even. Obviously, this doesn't sit well with the syndicate, who vow revenge against Mal.
An Inauspicious Beginning for a Great Idea
Firefly is without doubt the most-anticipated sci-fi premiere of this season, and with good reason. Fans are hoping that Joss Whedon can bring the same pizzazz to space Westerns that he brought to teen-horror with Buffy and Angel.
The basic premise of Firefly takes its cue from the post-Civil War years of the American West. In the late 1860's, many Confederate soldiers, smarting from their defeat at the hands of the Union, headed out West where their pride suffered less and their prospects were greatly improved.
Unfortunately, "The Train Job" offers little more than an introduction to the cast of characters. Firefly is a space Western, and there's nothing wrong with that. The original Star Trek was a Western (Roddenberry pitched it as Wagon Train to the Stars). The first half of Star Wars is a Western. But Firefly takes the "Western" half a little too literally. In the tepid hour-long premiere episode, Firefly dishes up a uninspiring standard barroom brawl, a train robbery (granted, it's a fancy train) and a shoot-'em-up. As if that weren't enough, every aspect of the production screams "It's a Western!" The costumes look Western, the sets look Western, the guns look Western - heck, even the soundtrack is Western, with its scrawling fiddle and plunking guitar! Okay, the big hardware looks pretty cool, including a space station Serenity visits - and, of course, Serenity herself.
Still, Firefly is a great idea that has an excellent chance of rising above this inauspicious beginning. The characters are good (Whedon's specialty), and there's plenty of hinted-at background that could be explored in future episodes. Many a classic franchise started out slow and a bit weak (Babylon 5 comes to mind), but if fans show their support and the FOX brass give it a chance to build up a head of steam, it's a fair bet Joss Whedon will deliver another high-quality, character-oriented drama that won't insult fandom's intelligence.
Firefly airs Fridays at 8PM on FOX.