Showing posts with label torchwood. Show all posts
Showing posts with label torchwood. Show all posts

22.9.11

Torchwood: Miracle Day - A Retrospective


Now, in case anyone wants the events of the past two and a half months dredged up from the memory hole they're bound to be tossed into, here are all of the things about Torchwood: Miracle Day that the show presented as important, but wound up meaning nothing.

1 - Oswald Danes, rapist and murderer

So much of the program was devoted to the travails of this freed murderer that one would be forgiven for thinking that he had some role to play in the proceedings. None of it mattered, though. Not his becoming a media darling, not him telling people that they were 'Angels' - no, despite the fact that each of his words were supposedly being crafted to create a specific effect, we never did find out what it was, or see any evidence that he was being successful.

2 - Remember when they murdered Sarah Palin?

15.9.11

Stupid Things About Torchwood: Week 10

Well thank god it's finally over. Not that the show could go out without insulting its audience for one last hour. So, let's take a look at Torchwood's last gleaming.

- This is Torchwood's idea of a mystery: The world becomes immortal, Jack becomes mortal - all logic would suggest that Jack must somehow be the cause of this, and the entire audience therefore predicts this result. So, how do Davies and his writing staff attempt to misdirect us from this? They have Jack state over and over again that 'he's not responsible' for the miracle, and that there's 'nothing special about his blood'. He has no reason to believe this, an no one investigates it (as they should), the writers just hoped the audience would believe Jack (though they had no reason to), so that they could be surprised when it turns out that Jack was responsible, and that there was something special about his blood, after all. No one was surprised.

8.9.11

Stupid Things About Torchwood: Week 9


Really? It's almost over? Oh, thank god.

Okay, so, stupid things this week...

What's that? Two months have passed? Isn't it a little late in the show for this kind of narrative device? You know, it's only here, nine weeks in, that it becomes clear that this show has been lacking a ticking clock for its entire running time. Given the nature of the threat, it always seemed like the team had all the time in the world to deal with it. Jumping forward sixty days just drives that point home.

1.9.11

Stupid Things About Torchwood: Week 8

You know what? Screw this show. Seriously.

1 - We didn't have to watch last week's episode.

Literally every salient plot point from episode 7 is both described and flashed-back-to. The boyfriend, the torture, the cabal of evil businessmen, everything that happened last week is recapped this week. Is this a show designed for people with head injuries?

2 - Also, you could have skipped the six episodes before that one.

I'm sure if you're reading this site you've heard of 'show, don't tell', so I don't have to go into the rule, let's just address the obscene violation of the principle on display this week.

After seven weeks of literally nothing of import happening, Lieutenant Kira shows up and explains the entire plot to the main cast. Why aren't they just distributing scripts to the audience at this point?

3 - Remember how nothing makes sense on this show? Yup, that's still happening.

- If Rex was planning on luring the CIA into a trap, why didn't he mention it to anyone?
- Did Jack seriously just carelessly murder his 105-year-old boyfriend?
- Could you not cry for just one episode, Esther?
- Nice to see that CIA prisoners aren't searched at all when put into custody.
- Is Gwen leaving the show? Thank god.
- If you weren't bad guys, why did you kidnap a family when you could have just phoned Jack at any moment and got a better result?
- Why go to the trouble of arresting your names from history if only one person knows them? Why not just kill that one person?
- What was Rex's plan again? Hope that nonsense just kind of worked out for him?
- Well-paid prostitutes apparently make a habit out of taunting and insulting their 'johns', and are offended by the offer of a free dinner and some pleasant conversation.
- It seems that CIA field agents are really easy to surprise, and don't find it at all suspicious when mysterious, threatening-looking men in suits appear to talk
- Conversely, those self-same mysterious men think it's a good idea to murder CIA field agents, rather than simply leaving, even though killing the agent will just bring MORE attention to them.
- Seriously, Esther, stop crying.
- Not only is there a 'list' you can be put on to ask the government to murder you, but women who've been put in asylums because they've become a danger to themselves and their children are completely able to put both themselves and their children (the ones who've been taken into state custody to protect them from their mothers) on that 'list'. While in a mental institution and without free access to the outside world.
- Christ, there's not a single thing about this show that isn't terrible. It isn't even worth collecting art for.

25.8.11

Stupid Things About Torchwood: Week 7


Just three more of these left. Thank god.

1 - Gwen Cooper: Coward, Villain.



When we left Gwen, she'd just discovered that, due to her own incompetence, her family had been grabbed by the evil conspiracy responsible for the Miracle. She's asked to bring Jack to the villains, which she immediately does. That's right - Gwen is faced with having to choose between betraying Jack and putting the whole world at risk, or putting her family at risk and working with Jack to get her family back another way. Her immediate reaction? "Screw the whole world, I'm looking out for me!"

So if you were looking to associate that behaviour with a certain archetype, would it be the hero, or the villain?

18.8.11

Stupid Things About Torchwood: Week 6


I've reached a point where I can't imagine how Torchwood became this bad. Did no one see this happening, what must have been a slow-motion, months-long train wreck and feel compelled to intervene? How is that possible?

Just four unbelievably bad things this week, since I doubt I could take thinking about any more.

1 - Two wasted weeks.

That's how long we've been dealing with the completely unimportant concentration camp storyline. Sure, the show's not over yet, and I can't say definitively that burning people isn't part of the aliens' master plot, but even if it is, these two weeks have been wasted. Why? Because the team was looking to expose something that WASN'T A SECRET.

The team went looking around a concentration camp, checking to see if something evil was going on - here's a hint: it's a concentration camp. So yes. Last week built up to the discovery of the crematoriums, and this entire week is spent with them trying to get away from the camp after the doctor is murdered. In the end, they escape and reveal that the camp director murdered that doctor.

But that's the only secret thing they reveal. The government had every intention of revealing the crematoriums - why wouldn't they? Two days ago the governments of the world had every non-responsive person legally classified as dead. The only next logical step would be to do something with the bodies. Does the team think they were going to be hidden away from the public, and all the people who came looking to see their relatives would be taken in by lame excuses?



The government's spokesperson insists that they have nothing to be ashamed of except for that murder, which was the lone act of a crazy person - and he's not wrong.

Two weeks out of a ten-week miniseries and all the team accomplished was to get one of their own peopel killed.

2 - That's not how economics work.

Ernie Hudson, playing a higher-up at the evil drug company, announces that the people behind the scheme aren't involved with Phicorp, they're just manipulating the world's economic systems. What about the drugs, then? Ernie explains that five years ago production would have been increased based on market share projections, and then the drugs would have been shipped and warehoused over a course of years, nothing suspicious about that, right?

Somehow, Jack is placated by this explanation, despite the fact that Ernie's theories in no way jibe with the actual things we've seen on the show.

This wasn't a case of a company projecting that their marketshare was going to be larger five years in the future. This was a company stockpiling billions of tabs of an experimental, may-never-be-approved-by-the-FDA drug in secret underground warehouses in the middle of major cities, so that they would be in a position to distribute them super-fast when the 'Miracle' happened.

Someone, somewhere up the line ordered it, and Ernie should be able to find out who that was - or is this simply a case of the writers wishing that they'd written the third episode differently all those weeks ago, and now pretending that they did?

3 - Apparently Esther has forgotten that she's wanted for treason.

Or at least the writers have, anyhow. Upon fleeing the camp, during one of the frequent crying jags, she announces the reason for her being so distraught - she can't believe that she's been compromised by given the people at the concentration camp her real name!

Um... remind me, why did you give them your real name again?

I know I discussed this last week, so I won't stress it too much here, but seriously, the show seems to have forgotten that Esther and Rex are wanted for treason.

4 - I hate you, Gwen Cooper.

Now, in point form, I'm going to track all of the ways Gwen Cooper has put herself and her family at risk this past day.

- Made our with her husband in an airport after flying in under a pseudonym, demonstrating her need to be undercover.
- Talked loudly about who she was in a government/corporate camp, even though both of those groups were out to get her.
- Didn't warn her husband not to get a job at the concentration camp under his own name.
- Didn't insist that her husband, mother, and baby go back into hiding the way they were at the beginning of the show BEFORE anything dangerous was after them.
- Wanders around a concentration camp with no credentials/reason to be there, assuming that no one will stop her. And no one does.
- Has her husband break her father out of a concentration camp with literally NO PLAN for what he's supposed to do next. Were they just supposed to go home?
- She sticks around to blow up some natural gas tanks, in the hopes of delaying the crematoriums for up to 48 hours - and public takes credit for the act, ensuring that she'll be publicly branded a terrorist.

"Call for 'International Terrorist' - Is there an international terrorist in the airport?"


- Answers a courtesy phone call in LAX under her own name. Not the name she's flying under, her real name.
- Has the gall to be shocked when all of these actions lead to her family being kidnapped and threatened.

This is the main/audience identification character for the show, and she seemingly has an IQ somewhat south of a Chia Pet.

Remeber that scene in Lethal Weapon 2, when after they're attacked by a dozen South African commandos and a helicopter Martin Riggs takes his date home as if it's just another night out, and they wind up grabbed by the bad guys? This is a thousand times worse than that.

This episode doesn't even have Lethal Weapon's excuse, namely that the action sequence was a reshoot designed to get a little more gunfire into the movie, and in the original cut, when he takes the South African woman home, he doesn't know that there's anyone after them.

Torchwood, by comparison, has, on a week-by-week basis, built stupidity upon a foundation of nonsense, until we're presented with a towering monument to some of the worst writing in recent memory.

11.8.11

Stupid Things About Torchwood: Week 5


This week Torchwood continued its race to the bottom with such a high quantity of utter nonsense but I'm forced to cut this preamble short just to be able to fit all of it in this post.

1 - Are they wanted criminals, or aren't they?

After ridiculous introductory sequence in which Gwen and Rhys meet in an airport and have a jolly old time joking about how she had to fly under an assumed name, (what with the Phicor Corporation and many of their government associates wanting her dead) Gwen travels to the concentration camp where her father is being held, identifies him by name, and then yells to everyone within earshot that she is his daughter.

Now, were you part of an evil conspiracy with far-reaching, nearly limitless powers, and you needed very desperately to find someone, wouldn't keeping an eye on their next of kin be a good idea? Yet in the hours after Gwen shows up trying to spring her father from the concentration camp, absolutely no one shows up looking for her. Because the conspirators are just as bad at their jobs as Torchwood is, apparently.

4.8.11

Stupid Things About Torchwood: Week 4

1 - You're in the CIA!

The episode opens with Esther, a CIA analyst who's currently on the run from her own government, swinging by her sister's house.  This isn't one of those secret sisters who she left off her job application, like in The Firm, no, this is her one living relative, and if you were an evil government agency trying to find her, this is the one place you'd go.



Which is exactly what happens. Later in the episode someone will yell at her for being so stupid as to make this mistake - but yelling isn't enough. There's literally no way someone could both have her job and be stupid enough to do something like this. Just two episodes ago she was conning her way out of the CIA building and changing identities, and now she's publicly visiting the only place on earth where people will be looking for? Inexcusable.

28.7.11

Stupid Things About Torchwood: Week 3

1 - You'd be surprised how little security some people have...

And by some people, I mean higher-ups at the CIA. Specifically Wayne Knight.

Say you're Wayne Knight, and you know that you're conspiring with evil forces in an especially convoluted bid to conquer/destroy the world. More on that later. You also know that there are four people out there - all members of various secret services, mind you - who are trying to stop the takeover, and you're the only person they know to a certainty is involved in the scheme. Possessing all of this knowledge, when you hear that a television downstairs has been mysteriously turned on in the middle of the night - what would you do?


Walk down and check it out on your own, completely unarmed? If that was your answer, you're a bad enough writer to be responsible for Torchwood: Miracle Day!



So, what was the clever method that Mekhi Pfeifer used to break into his house undetected? Oh, he didn't. He set off a house alarm, and only has a few minutes before the trained CIA killers get-


Oh, it's just a single cop car. Responding to a break in at a senior CIA officer's house. Where the house alarm lets the cops know someone is inside, but the actual people inside the house are left to twist in the wind.

21.7.11

Stupid Things From Torchwood: Week 2

Wow, did it not get any better this week. Apart from the sloppy writing, the insulting overexplanations, and the general stupidity of the characters, there's the incredibly slow pace at which the whole thing is unfolding. It seems that if Russel Davies should never be allowed to tell a continuous story of longer than five parts. And even Children of Earth ran a little long towards the end.

1-



Captain Jack spends this entire week on a plane. This is a swashbuckling hero who dances across space and time, and the American audiences being introduced to him over two weeks. In the first week, he did essentially nothing. This week, he did literally nothing, as he spent the whole time convulsing in the throes of Arsenic poisoning.



14.7.11

Stupid Things From Episode 1 of Torchwood: Miracle Day

1:



This is a Child Molester/Murderer played by Bill Pullman. He's so reprehensibly evil that even anti-death penalty activists don't show up to protest his execution. After the execution fails because the laws of death no longer apply, he announces that he'd like to be let out of prison, since the sentence was carried out.

What's stupid about this? The governor lets him go. Yup. Lets him walk right out of the prison. Why on earth would that happen? Pullman threatens to sue for wrongful imprisonment!

Gasp! Can it be? Would someone actually sue the government over imprisonment? Well they'd better cave right away, for fear of being brought to American court!

Here's a fun fact that Russel Davies might not be aware of - at any given moment there are literally tens of thousands of pending lawsuits by prisoners protesting the conditions or fact of their imprisonment. Lawsuits aren't expensive to file, and people in prison have quite a bit of free time on their hands.

Does Pullman have a case? Maybe - but probably not. The Governor of a state has the unilateral privilege to convert anyone's death sentence to a sentence of life imprisonment. It's as simple as signing a single declaration. “Oh, so human beings can't die any more? Well, then I'm sentencing you to spend forever in prison.”

Naturally Pullman would have his lawyers sue (I've got to wonder how good a lawyer this character, who's essentially Freddy Kruger, could get, though), but getting a court date could take months or even years - also there's a worldwide crisis going on at the moment, which could put all court dates back indefinitely. Also, how sympathetic is a jury really going to be? Members of the potential jury pool gathered outside his prison to celebrate his impending death - are they going to jump at the chance to let him out?

This is a country where various states have laws limiting the amount of money that you can receive in a lawsuit if you were falsely convicted of a crime. Yup - the government puts you in jail for something you didn't do, and then one day, miraculously, you're proven completely innocent. According to your state, the maximum compensation you can receive for that horrifying ordeal? 25K a year.

That's someone who's factually innocent. What kind of a monetary award is a confessed child molester and brutal murderer going to get?