In Collection
#218
Seen It:
Yes
1: Season of Death
2: Suns and Lovers
3: Self Inflicted Wounds (1): Could'a, Would'a, Should'a
4: Self Inflicted Wounds(2): Wait for the Wheel
5: ...Different Destinations
6: Eat Me
7: Thanks for Sharing
8: Green Eyed Monster
9: Losing Time
10: Relativity
11: Incubator
12: Meltdown
13: Scratch 'n Sniff
14: Infinite Possibilities (1): Daedalus Demands
15: Infinite Possibilities (2): Icarus Abides
16: Revenging Angel
17: The Choice
18: Fractures
19: I-Yensch, You-Yensch
20: Into the Lion's Den (1): Lambs to the Slaughter
21: Into the Lion's Den (2): Wolf in Sheep's Clothing
22: Dog with Two Bones
Science Fiction, Fantasy
Great Britain / English
Ben Browder |
John Crichton |
Claudia Black |
Aeryn Sun |
Virginia Hey |
Pa'u Zotoh Zhaan |
Anthony Simcoe |
Ka D'Argo |
Gigi Edgley |
Chiana |
Paul Goddard |
Stark |
Director |
Tony Tilse; Geoff Bennett (II); Andrew Prowse; Ian Watson (II) |
Writer |
David Kemper; Richard Manning |
It's clear from the opening episodes of its third season that
Farscape has developed into a grown-up show. There's a new self-confidence and maturity here that's entirely welcome after the often wildly erratic tone of the second season. The production design and high-quality effects remain true to the show's original quirky style, although both the look and the more adult-themed scripts have become progressively darker. It's also clear that anyone who has not followed
Farscape extremely closely from the very first episode of Season One will be utterly baffled by the convoluted plotting and complex character interactions. This is not the best place to begin your interstellar journey.
All the principal actors know their characters inside and out by now, and delight in showing off their many weaknesses and flaws. Refreshingly, the crew of Moya are a squabbling, bickering, selfish bunch most of the time, who somehow and against expectations manage to pull together (just) at the crucial moment. The writing has matured, too, remaining as witty as ever but equally unafraid to push both genre and censorship boundaries as villains bloodily torture their victims (usually Crichton) and the main characters become more and more obsessed with their sex lives (or lack thereof). Farscape is a whole galaxy away from the clean, cosy world of Star Trek.
On the DVD: with a number of key personnel changes on the horizon, these first five episodes are evidence that Farscape knows where it's going even as it delights in keeping the audience guessing. Will Aeryn survive? If so, at what cost to her crewmates? What will D'Argo do when he discovers that Chiana and his son are having an affair? Can Zhaan really be dying? Just who is Neeyala? And can Crichton keep one step ahead of S&M fetishist Scorpius, various Skarrans and sundry other bloodthirsty aliens all intent upon getting into his mind, sometimes literally?
Aware that no one is going to be able to start Season Three without knowing a lot of background, sensibly the main extra is a 45-minute "Farscape Undressed" documentary, hosted by Ben Browder and Claudia Black, which introduces all the key characters and themes of the show and sets up the backstory for the new season. There are "Info Pods" on Aeryn (with interview) and Zhaan, an interview with new series composer Guy Gross, some text trivia pieces, plus a gallery. There's also a bonus sampler disc of the pilot episode, though if you really want to keep up you'd better start but not stop there. --Mark Walker
Series |
Farscape |
Distributor |
Contender Entertainment Group |
Barcode |
5030305810115 |
Region |
Region 2 |
Release Date |
18/03/2002 |
Nr of Disks/Tapes |
2 |
|
|