A little TV whinging

Have you been watching the Torchwood series Miracle Day? 10 x hour-long episodes comprising a single epic story, made as a joint US/UK production and shown on both sides of the Atlantic. For a writer like ex-Doctor Who top-bod, Russell T Davies, it's an incredible opportunity. What couldn't you do with a canvas like that to express yourself upon? More than that, he's been able to rope in writers like Jane Espenson (of Buffy and BSG fame) and assemble a cast with quite a few impressive names in it. If successful, it could open the way to lots of UK-originated shows making it to the US and perhaps some of their talent working here. Lots of possibilities; lots of opportunities. Or course none of that is likely to happen, given that the whole thing is rubbish.
(Only read on if you've seen the first nine of the ten episodes as there are big, blatant spoilers.)
It's nicely shot and acceptably acted (with a few flat spots and occasional howlers). But to what extent does the story we're being told make the blindest bit of sense? Or even obey its own rules?
Take, for example, episode 9. Half the episode revolves around keeping Gwen's persistently-vegetative dad safe from SWAT teams. Is there any reason to think her father will recover? Well, if there is, they haven't shared it with the viewers. From what we can tell, he's still breathing (because of the miracle) but in all other ways he's dead and gone. If there's a reason to think otherwise - and thus a reason for the viewer to care about him - we need to be told - which we haven't been. So why is it important to 'save' him? Granted, the authorities would burn him if they got hold of him, but that's what they used to do with dead bodies which weren't breathing, so now that corpses continue to respire is there anything wrong with cremating them once higher brain functions have ceased? The scandal is that borderline cases are being burnt as well, but that's not what Gwen is devoting her time to. (Except she did blow up a building a while back - did she kill the workers inside? was the camp instantly replaced? where did she get the bomb and the motorbike from?)
We're told that resources are scarce, the social fabric is coming apart and there are shortages of everything. But that hasn't affected the Category One Police. They still have the manpower, equipment and resources to mount raids on any home even suspected of harbouring a peacefully-respiring comatose OAP. Why? What's the urgency? Couldn't those police be tackling the decline of law and order throughout the land? It's not obvious why rounding up Gwen's dad gets the same sort of attention as international terrorism - except that the Needs of Drama require armed police to keep bursting in. In a saner world, Gwen's dad seems to be on a par with a house-plant when it comes to his impact on society which surely means the SWAT teams could be deployed elsewhere.
Then there's the business of Jack's blood. Esther (for some reason I still can't remember her name, despite having spent nine hours in her company) has latched onto the fact that Jack's blood might be important to... something... somehow. Jack assures her it's not, but that doesn't bother whatsername (dammit, Esther). Jack is shot; he's injured and bleeding, and his life is in danger, so what does Esther do? She starts draining his blood and storing it in a fridge in cool-looking blood-bags. Why? Well, the obvious answer is that she knows it's going to prove vital in episode 10. But what reason does her character give? She sort of doesn't, from what I can tell.
Similarly why is evil paedophile Oswald tagging along on a Torchwood/CIA mission to Shanghai? They don't trust him, they don't like him and they don't need him; so why smuggle him into China on a secret mission? Well, apparently Gwen had 'no choice' but to bring him. Because otherwise Owen would have killed him. And we wouldn't want that because... Actually, why wouldn't we want that? He's been sentenced to death and Gwen was actively trying to kill him until Owen intervened. To recap: Oswald comes to Gwen's house, Gwen tries to kill him, Owen says "Let me kill him instead", then Oswald says "Take me to Shanghai or Owen will kill me" and Gwen - and the team - capitulate. Why? Well, again, the reason is clearly because they need him there for episode 10, but that's not the same thing as the Characters Making Any Sense. At All.
In fact the most damning thing I read about this series - and it was from a review which was semi-positive - was that you could just jump in at episode 7 and skip the previous six hours. Of course that was before we found out that most of episode 7 didn't matter either. It was enjoyable to watch: all about that nice boy Angelo and his affair with Jack. It was a good story, up until Angelo knifed Jack in mid-snog and then allowed him to be chained up and hacked to death for weeks. After that point I felt as though Jack should probably have cooled somewhat towards Angelo, but apparently we were supposed to feel that Jack had actually let Angelo down. In fact, given how peripheral Angelo apparently is to what happens thereafter, the point of the entire Angelo two-parter simply boiled down to telling us that three families knew that Jack was immortal and they'd collected some of his blood. Angelo appears to have been irrelevant.
And given that, I'm still mystified as to why Gwen's family were kidnapped by Olivia Colasanto. It seems that she just wanted to talk. And I'm hazy about how her people hacked into the alien contact lenses - or even knew of their existence. Maybe I need to watch those episodes again (shudder!). But it did give us an opportunity to see that Gwen would sell out Jack with no questions asked in order to save her family. We might have expected that she'd enlist Jack's help in order to rescue her family, but that didn't even seem to occur to her. And we already know that Jack is a scheming liar who will - on occasion - make bargains with the devil. Maybe that whole kidnapping and betrayal episode was just about making sure we didn't get too invested in the survival of our 'heroes'. Which would be the same reason why Rex is unpleasant about 70% of the time.
And finally, I'm still trying to work out the wisdom of giving so much screen time to two characters, Jilly Kitzinger and Oswald Danes, who remain enigmas to us. It's difficult to follow unpleasant characters for two whole months without knowing Why The Hell We Should Care. So far they're both irrelevant (unless Oswald's TV speech really was pivotal - though I didn't quite understand how or why). We have one episode left in which to find out why we've been dutifully paying them any attention since some time back in July. Will they retrospectively become interesting/absorbing?
In fact is there anyone out there who thinks that the final instalment is going to reveal that it all makes brilliant and blinding sense, when all the jigsaw pieces will fall into place, and with hindsight the hours of not-very-much-happening followed by exciting-action-for-confusing-reasons will be revealed as tightly-plotted dramatic gold?
And equally, is there anyone who feels that, given a healthy budget and ten hours of transatlantic primetime television to fill, they couldn't have done better?
Comments: 3
I'm pretty sure you could have given an 8 year old child a pencil, told him to write his own doctor who episode about people who stop dying and he'd have come up with a better plot. Probably with some more realistic characters too. I don't know why I keep watching torchwood, it had a TERRIBLE first season (one of the worst programs I've brought myself to watch), mediocre second season, okay-ish 'special' and then this travesty.
All the american actors look like they'd rather be somewhere else, the whole thing seems a bit too glossy, the plot continuously makes no sense. It suffers badly from a surfeit of characters who we don't/can't care about, who have little to no backstory to make us care, little relevance to what plot there is and act in implausible, character-breaking ways from week to week.
I agree that you could have joined in episode 7 and not missed much, the whole series so far has been dragged out horribly. I thought the flashback episode with Angelo was going to be where it started to get interesting and lead somewhere, and it started to produce a little neat piece of backstory and was generally better quality than what had come before, with some (shock!) character moments in it. But then it was all swept under the carpet in the following episode.
I never rated Russel Davies as a writer, some of his episodes on 'who' were amongst the weakest the show had. But he usually has a good core of an idea, a neat sci-fi concept. Here, he does it again, there are several interesting ideas that could have been taken in any number of directions. I thought adding some good writers (particularly espensen, who has a really good pedigree on genre stuff, her battlestar galactica work is really good) might help flesh out some of Russel's problems. But the show hasn't done that, struggling to make a character drama (with terrible characterisation) out of an interesting sci-fi concept that could have been properly explored in any number of ways over 10 hours.
What I fear, more than the potential the big-budget, cross atlantic tv series not taking off is it being another nail in the coffin of interesting sci-fi/fantasy TV, which seems to be struggling once again (barring 'who', of course). I read somewhere that this is the first 'fall' season of US TV without a 'spaceship' drama since 1985. They are replacing them with these sci-fi event series, but I don't have much confidence in anyone to pull this off any more. Maybe russel davies should start watching some old twilight zone episodes to understand how to biuld a show around a sci-fi conceit, rather than build it up around the paper-thin characters.
Posted by: Pete R on September 12, 2011 11:14 AM
Pete, just reading the second edition of The Writer's Tale with all the extra sections. Horrified to read that they had started filming Children of Earth and RTD still hadn't written the finale (=ep5) because he didn't know how it ended. It explains sooo much.
Posted by: Rob on September 12, 2011 03:08 PM
Rob, my ghoulfiend and I sat down to watch the first episode of Miracle Day, having never watched Torchwood before, and were horrified at how poor it was.
It seemed really low budget, with bad, hammy acting. Gewn was a strong character, but that was it: everything and everyone else fell flat.
Glad it's not just us as I was starting to think we'd missed something: a lot of people rave about this show.
That all said, horses for courses... :)
Posted by: WayneSimmons on September 14, 2011 12:59 PM