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Introduction
Did you see which way the bandwagon went? Not only am I unfashionably late to the Firefly party (by seven years), I’m also approaching it ass-backwards, having seen the Serenity spin-off movie first. It was the sci-fi movie to watch in the year of Star Wars Episode III, but even then I left it till I found it for a couple of pounds in a bargain bucket. I was, and still am a sci-fi nut, but that has been tempered of late by bitter experience. I used to lap up space opera, take in every show irregardless of quality, and have spent many a happy hour indulging in Buck Rogers, Battlestar Galactica, and of course the granddaddy of them all, Star Trek. I also loved the modern iterations, with shows like Stargate and Farscape, and Babylon 5 regularly circled in red in the TV guide. But somewhere along the way, my enthusiasm for these shows began to wane, the writers began to hit that wall of diminishing returns, and with shows like Voyager and Enterprise, Andromeda and even nu-BSG, I’ve long felt that this is one genre that needs to be put out its misery.

However, apparently there is a new Star Trek movie coming out this year, and I have to admit, I am feeling the teeniest bit excited about it. I’m in the mood once more for a little space opera in my TV diet, and after several years of dithering, I’ve taken advantage of a bargain and nabbed the Firefly boxset. “It’s completely different from the usual sci-fi,” they said, “It’s the best bits from Star Wars, the bits with Han Solo,” they said and “It’s sort of like Cowboy Bebop”, they said, and quite understandably for those reasons, it’s been on my to watch list for years. Also, coming from the creative intellect of Joss Whedon, the man who gave us Buffy and Angel, it should have that trademark wit and dark outlook. The movie was pretty fine as well, so I have high hopes for the series that inspired it. I am finally in the mood again to watch a little TV Space Opera. Don’t disappoint me Firefly.

Malcolm ‘Mal’ Reynolds was a sergeant on the side of the Independent Worlds during the last war against the Alliance of Central Worlds. He wound up leading a brave last stand during the final battle of the war, before his own side threw in the towel and hung him out to dry. Now he’s the embittered captain of the transport ship Serenity, following a somewhat dubious career with fellow veteran Zoë Washburne. Her husband ‘Wash’ is the ship’s pilot, the engineer is a rosy-cheeked optimist named Kaylee, and Jayne provides muscle, cynicism and aggravation. There’s an ambassador of sorts on the ship, a ‘Companion’ named Inara, and early on in their adventures a priest, Shepherd Book, as well as fugitive siblings Simon and River Tam join them. Their mission is to keep their heads above water, taking jobs both legal and illegal, trying to stay one step ahead of the dictatorial Alliance, while avoiding the cannibalistic Reavers that roam the outer reaches of known space. The complete series of fourteen episodes is presented across four discs.

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Disc 1

1. Serenity
Scavenging from a wreck is risky enough, but it’s downright suicidal when it’s an Alliance wreck, and the salvage is traceable contraband. Running low on fuel and money, and having lost the first buyer who got spooked at the Alliance brand on the salvage, Mal needs to find another buyer and take on some passengers to make a quick buck. Mal’s not too fond of religion, but the preacher Shepherd Book comes bearing strawberries. The upright and manicured Doctor Simon Tam practically screams Alliance, but what’s he keeping in the box? At least Lawrence Dobson seems like a normal enough, fare-paying passenger. Now the problem is, how to sell the contraband without the passengers becoming any the wiser? It’s not easy when there’s a mole on board.

The commentary on this episode features Executive Producer Joss Whedon, and Nathan Fillion, who played Mal Reynolds. This is recorded after the show was cancelled, but sour grapes are remarkably absent (probably because it was prior to the movie), although there is some mention of the hoops the network demanded be jumped through. It’s a light, entertaining track that’s well worth a listen.

2. The Train Job
It’s Unification Day, a day that Mal usually spends in a bar, picking a fight with fans of the Alliance. They also find a new job before the barroom brawl, one that leads the Firefly Class ship to Adelai Niska, a wholly unpleasant man who wants a certain something stolen from a moving train. Mal’s policy of not asking any questions is going to come back to bite him.

Another commentary already! This time Tim Minear joins Joss Whedon, and they explain how this episode became the second pilot, when Serenity was rejected, and how it was written over a frantic weekend. That’s the network for you.

3. Bushwhacked
A friendly ballgame is interrupted by a proximity alarm. The Serenity has encountered a derelict, lost in space. Exploring the ship, the crew find a Marie Celeste scenario, with food still uneaten on the tables, and the ship’s power simply allowed to run down. The ship looks to be completely abandoned, but when they find the sole survivor cowering in a crawlspace, Mal knows exactly what happened to the ship.

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Disc 2

4. Shindig
The Serenity heads back to Persephone, with the crew looking for some R&R, while Mal looks for some more work. R&R for Inara means more work as a companion, accompanying aristocrat Atherton Wing to a high-class ball. It’s something that puts Mal’s nose out of joint before they even land. He has to go to the same ball to meet Warwick Harrow, a man in need of some discreet offworld transportation, but seeing Inara treated like property gets his blood up. The thing about the upper classes though is that they don’t have barroom brawls; they have duels.

There is a commentary on this episode from writer Jane Espenson, actress Morena Baccarin (Inara), and costume designer Shawna Trpcic. It isn’t as accessible or entertaining as a Whedon track, but it makes up for it in terms of information overload.

5. Safe
Mal has a shipload of cattle to sell, but their destination isn’t the friendliest of planets. Their customers aren’t exactly the most legal of tradesmen, while the hills are populated with superstitious folk who have a habit of kidnapping visitors. So it is that River and Simon are snatched from the town, while the Serenity crew get caught in the middle of a gunfight between the ranchers and the lawmen. When Shepherd Book is shot, and their doctor absent, Mal may just have to abandon the siblings to their fate in order to save the preacher.

6. Our Mrs. Reynolds
When the crew of the Serenity help out a somewhat quaint community with an outlaw problem, they’re happy to partake of the celebration that ensues. Mal isn’t expecting to get a wife from the deal though. But they do indeed have a stowaway on Serenity, the grateful townspeople have gifted Mal with Saffron, and Saffron is happy enough to have a husband who doesn’t smell of livestock. It’s cause for great amusement on the ship, but Mal isn’t seeing the funny side. Besides, Saffron has a whole different punchline in mind.

7. Jaynestown
Their next stopping off point is a planet whose chief export is mud. They also have a strict no guns policy, which makes Jayne nervous. Actually he’s more nervous than he should be, as when he was last here, he made quite an indelible impression, one he doesn’t want to be reminded of. While Inara visits with the Governor’s son, in order to ‘initiate’ him, Mal and the others try to quietly pick up some contraband. That discretion lasts until they see the grand statue dedicated to Jayne in the town square.

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Disc 3

8. Out of Gas
There’s been an explosion on Serenity, the propulsion is offline and life-support is down. The ship is adrift in a rarely frequented backwater of space, and the crew have abandoned ship in the two shuttles. All except Mal Reynolds, who currently lies, slowly bleeding to death in the cargo bay. It’s the sort of situation that could move a man to reminiscing.

Executive producer Tim Minear, and director David Solomon come together to talk about this episode. It’s a more technical commentary, looking at the making of, all the way from the script to the final edit.

9. Ariel
Simon Tam comes up with a get rich quick scheme when they visit one of the core worlds. Alliance hospitals, as well as being guarded fortresses also have a major stock of drugs on hand, drugs that will fetch a pretty price on the open market. The Doctor has the plan worked out to the finest detail, and it has the added benefit of allowing him access to technology that will tell him what the Alliance did to his sister. It’s foolproof, only he hasn’t counted on the fool that is Jayne.

10. War Stories
It turns out that Adelai Niska (The Train Job) can hold a grudge. He seizes his chance when Serenity wanders into his web trying to sell some of those expensive drugs they liberated previously. Uncharacteristically, Wash and Zoë are having a rough moment in their marriage, which is why the easy-going Wash accompanies Mal to the planet for the deal, which is when the two of them get nabbed by Niska’s men, and taken back to his space station to experience the dubious delights of his torture chamber.

Nathan Fillion (Mal), and Alan Tudyk (Wash) get together to comment on the episode, and it’s a nice scene specific commentary, with plenty of amusing anecdotes, and wry quips about being tortured.

11. Trash
When the episode begins with Mal, stranded, naked, in the middle of a desert, it poses a couple of questions. The story began earlier, when Mal’s ‘wife’ Saffron showed up again. Before he had the chance to shoot her, she offered him the deal of a lifetime, a nice juicy, lucrative bit of theft. Questions answered then.

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Disc 4

12. The Message
Stopping off at a post office to catch up on their mail, Jayne is delighted to receive a parcel from his mother. Zoë and Mal on the other hand get a corpse in a box. Tracey was a fellow veteran of the war, now he’s asking for Mal and Zoë to take him on his final journey home. But there’s a shady lawman that needs the corpse…

The commentary from Alan Tudyk (Wash), and Jewel Staite (Kaylee) is a little more gappy with its scene-specificness, but there is something of interest here, especially worth noting is that this was the last episode to be made.

13. Heart Of Gold
A whore is pregnant, and a rich firebrand man of the people wants an heir, which means that a whorehouse needs protecting. It’s Mal and the crew of Serenity to the rescue, which puts a smile on Jayne’s face at least, even if it causes friction between Inara and Mal.

14. Objects In Space
River’s acting weird, well weirder than normal, and it’s resulting in tensions among the crew. It’s the perfect moment for an intruder to take advantage, even out there in the middle of nowhere. Jubal Early is a bounty hunter with a penchant for deep thought, a fondness for his own voice, a delight in casual cruelty, and he’s just snuck on board looking to collect on the Tam siblings.

Joss Whedon comments on this episode, and in a departure from the earlier, jovial commentaries, this is where he focuses on this episode, and what it meant to him, as well as the process of putting it all together.

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Picture
The 1.78:1 anamorphic transfer is pleasant enough. The image is clear and sharp, and at the upper end of television quality of the period. The only thing that niggles is a tendency for grain in darker or murkier moments, but by and large there’s nothing to complain about. Firefly delivers good sci-fi on a television budget, although it must have helped not having to prostheticise a bunch of aliens, or vampires. The future society draws on a wide variety of styles, both current and historic, so while the Western milieu is most prevalent, you’ll also find plenty of Asian influence (the Alliance is a one of American and Chinese cultures), and historical periods like the Baroque are invoked. There are a wide variety of planets, and plenty of cultures to play with, and it all looks lush and vivid on screen. The cinematography is excellent as well, with a page taken from the Star Wars ethos of lived-in technology for the good guys, and clean lines and modern tech for the villains. The lighting and set design is always moody and evocative, and each episode is a visual delight.

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Sound
In an ideal world this would have been a 5.1 show, but we at least get a DD 2.0 English Surround track, with optional HOH subtitles. There’s enough of a surround presence to elevate it beyond the usual television broadcast, and action and music is suitably vibrant. Music plays a fair part in the stories, and a wide variety of styles are apparent, again marrying with the diversity of cultures and stories that take place. My set had a brief audio dropout 36 seconds into episode 5, Safe.

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Comments on this Item

ChangesPosted by Si Wooldridge on 2-4-2009 00:07

Ooh, a new convert...

ChangesPosted by Reviewer News on 2-4-2009 12:49

Most depressing cancellation of a TV series ever. Sad

ChangesPosted by Sue Davies on 9-4-2009 12:52

you sho is late there pardner but welcome all the same...rumours of a new Buffy movie..Buffy the Mom Kicks Butt, possible title

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