TV Review: The Downward Spiral of Helix
Helix was a show that
could only be called “much anticipated”.
The latest offering by Battlestar
Galactica rebooter Ron Moore, this was the latest genre show from Syfy to
premiere. Considering that Syfy has had
a solid run of new dramatic series in recent years, at least in terms of
getting them off the ground, there was a lot of hope that this would be the
next Galactica. Even if, by many accounts, the premise of the
show sounded like a mixture of The Thing
meets The Andromeda Strain.
In a way, it was exactly like Galactica; at least, a lot like the
third season of Galactica, which
started off with a promising bang, and then descended into ever-more-ridiculous
interpersonal relationships and reveals that left the audience stretching their
heads. There’s even a game-changing
season finale, though I suspect that this will end up getting a much better
follow-through in Helix’s second
season.
I’m hard pressed to summarize what the first
season of Helix was even about, but I’ll
give it a go. A corporation called
Ilaria, run by a council of immortals, has decided that it is necessary to
eliminate the vast majority of the mortal human race. The reasons aren’t entirely clear, but to
that effect, Ilaria commissioned the creation of a supervirus (Narvik), one
that humans would be all but defenseless to combat. Narvik would be constructed to allow “activated”
immortals to be immune to the virus, of course.
Narvik-A is your typical deadly virus, while Narvik-B turns people into
semi-intelligent pseudo-zombies called “vectors”.
Ilaria also wanted a cure to Narvik, which
was a bit harder to develop. The idea is
that Ilaria can release Narvik into the human population, wait until enough
people have died, and then make the cure available. Of course, not only would this allow Ilaria
to effective control the entire world, it would also make the remaining mortals
dependent on Ilaria for survival.
Clearly there is more to it than that, or at least, there is a hint of
such.
All of this comes to light when Dr. Alan
Farragut of the CDC is called in to investigate an apparent outbreak. Why?
Because his brother, Peter, was working with Dr. Hatake, the head of
Arctic Biosystems, and became infected along with a lot of other people. Soon enough, everyone turns out to be related
in some crazy way, most notably Julia Walker, who was once raised at the
facility in a secret room and carries the latency for immortality, which her
father (Dr. Hatake) activates when she becomes infected.
It’s as crazy and haphazard as it sounds, and
that’s only scratching the surface.
Hatake spends the entire season keeping secrets, even when he’s
obviously lying through his teeth, and when questioned about his methods and
choices, simply tosses out lines like, “If you only knew!”. The biggest problem with the first season of Helix is that it never feels like the
writers even knew what story they wanted to tell!
There seemed to be one purpose for this first
season: tell the backstory of Ilaria’s plan with the Narvik virus, introduce
the creepy “vectors”, and set up Alan as the only one to stop Ilaria from
destroying the world. Much of which, it
seems, is going to happen in the “real world”, not the corridors and labs of
Arctic Biosystems. Having the action
take place at Arctic Biosystems was just a convenient way to set the stage for
the real story and deliver exposition, it appears.
Which is all well and good, except for that
little problem that the inter-connections between the characters, not to
mention the out-of-nowhere reveals of immortals trying to control the planet,
are delivered with all the subtlety of Sci-Fi Saturday camp. Even worse, by the end of the season, it’s
all but obvious that the “outbreak” was intentional, which doesn’t make the
slightest bit of sense. Hatake had the
knowledge and resources to create the Narvik virus and had been working on the
project for decades, and Alan’s team figures it out within the space of less
than two weeks. It defies reason.
My only guess is that we’re supposed to
believe that Hatake and Peter wanted Alan and Julia to get the cure or be “activated”,
and thus set up the scenario in which Alan could be the one to develop the
cure. The “outbreak” would have been the
smokescreen to keep Ilaria out of the picture until the cure was in hand and
Hatake could destroy the virus and keep the cure for save-keeping. Which is all fine, but did not in any way
actually require an outbreak and the deaths of dozens of people! In fact, without the outbreak, the moment
Alan’s team arrived, Hatake and Peter could have whisked them off to a meeting
room, explained the situation, and dispensed with the ridiculousness in the
first place! (Or just imagine any number
of more reasonable scenarios than the insanity that actually transpired.)
The campy impression of the series is only
heightened by the occasional scene that is clearly set on a stage, where the
shading of the green-screened elements doesn’t even come close to matching the
lighting on the actors. Some of the
scenes are so bad that one is actually impressed at the abilities of the cast;
they do everything possible to sell scenery that rivals 80s Doctor Who!
Perhaps the most perplexing thing about Helix is that it earned a second season. That’s not necessarily a knock on those who enjoyed the show; personally, I’m hoping that the radical shift in focus that the season finale presented is going to give the writers a reason to focus on their strengths. Rather, Helix wasn’t exactly a blockbuster, and while it’s still early enough that Syfy isn’t carrying the cost of the production, it definitely looks like the show is straining to stay within budget. The bulk of the season hovered around 1.3 million viewers. By comparison, Alphas averaged almost 1.8 million viewers in its first season, and barely earned its second season before cancellation. Helix is going to need a lot of help to survive past the next 13 episodes.
- Season finale offers some potential
- Reasonably good cast
- The plot doesn’t make much sense
- How is everyone related to each other?
- Character motivations are all over the map
pkjr92
CONCURRING OPINION