PNW: Undone
Dec. 26th, 2012 07:10 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
A bit of an oddity this episode. It makes sense of some of the material that has come before, and does some nice work with the characters but, at the end of the day, felt a little disjointed.
The story is very much a game of two halves, with the opening section on the college campus more of what has come before. We're now five episodes into the series and there's a familiarity to watching this particular anomaly team work together. I imagine this was very much deliberate.
Then there is the very rapid tonal shift to the much darker second half. It makes sense of the inclusion of the Samantha character in Fear of Flying. I had thought her sub-plot with Mac was rather half-baked there but it worked as an introduction and build-up for the character here and helped paper-over the fact that she is ultimately intended as a one-episode wonder of a sacrificial dead girlfriend. I really liked the way her death was used to highlight a spectrum of approaches to the pre-historic creatures from Evan's idealistic determination to rescue as many of them as possible, through Dylan's more experienced viewpoint that accentuated the need to destroy proven man-killers, up to Mac's very personal determination to take revenge. In a show that, in its UK incarnation, occasionally struggled at differentiating characters or, more importantly, making their disagreements seem believable, this was very well handled. On the downside, the anomaly team were suddenly considerably less competent than they had hitherto appeared and the hunt through Cross Photonics, in particular, was a mess of which they should have been ashamed.
Oddly though, I'm not sure the serious material fits as well with Primeval:New World as it does in the original Primeval and I can't quite put my finger on why. Of course, it may just be that the shift from the light-hearted first half of the episode to the darker second half made that darker second-half feel out of place. Possibly it's just the "grammar" of US-style TV shows has been heavily signalling Primeval:New World as somehow "fluffier" than its UK equivalent - the rather gorier deaths notwithstanding. I suppose it's also fair to say that, in retrospect, Samantha, as a character, is introduced entirely in order that she can die and really has little else to her. This is in contrast with Ryan, in particular, in the original show who had precisely the same role in the overall story but was given a longer run at the character and, as a result, has been much harder to write off as a stock character sacrificial victim.
Ultimately I think this episode is a failure. The shift in tone is too sudden and there hasn't been quite the necessary build up to it. However, it also highlights a lot of things that Primeval:New World does well and, as failures go, at least it's a fairly decent one and is still I think, a sign of a show on an upward trajectory.
The story is very much a game of two halves, with the opening section on the college campus more of what has come before. We're now five episodes into the series and there's a familiarity to watching this particular anomaly team work together. I imagine this was very much deliberate.
Then there is the very rapid tonal shift to the much darker second half. It makes sense of the inclusion of the Samantha character in Fear of Flying. I had thought her sub-plot with Mac was rather half-baked there but it worked as an introduction and build-up for the character here and helped paper-over the fact that she is ultimately intended as a one-episode wonder of a sacrificial dead girlfriend. I really liked the way her death was used to highlight a spectrum of approaches to the pre-historic creatures from Evan's idealistic determination to rescue as many of them as possible, through Dylan's more experienced viewpoint that accentuated the need to destroy proven man-killers, up to Mac's very personal determination to take revenge. In a show that, in its UK incarnation, occasionally struggled at differentiating characters or, more importantly, making their disagreements seem believable, this was very well handled. On the downside, the anomaly team were suddenly considerably less competent than they had hitherto appeared and the hunt through Cross Photonics, in particular, was a mess of which they should have been ashamed.
Oddly though, I'm not sure the serious material fits as well with Primeval:New World as it does in the original Primeval and I can't quite put my finger on why. Of course, it may just be that the shift from the light-hearted first half of the episode to the darker second half made that darker second-half feel out of place. Possibly it's just the "grammar" of US-style TV shows has been heavily signalling Primeval:New World as somehow "fluffier" than its UK equivalent - the rather gorier deaths notwithstanding. I suppose it's also fair to say that, in retrospect, Samantha, as a character, is introduced entirely in order that she can die and really has little else to her. This is in contrast with Ryan, in particular, in the original show who had precisely the same role in the overall story but was given a longer run at the character and, as a result, has been much harder to write off as a stock character sacrificial victim.
Ultimately I think this episode is a failure. The shift in tone is too sudden and there hasn't been quite the necessary build up to it. However, it also highlights a lot of things that Primeval:New World does well and, as failures go, at least it's a fairly decent one and is still I think, a sign of a show on an upward trajectory.