NAB
https://amplify.nabshow.com/articles/how-sci-fi-has-achieved-streaming-lift-off/
Science fiction has often needed the giant canvas and big
budgets of cinema to deliver outlandish spectacle but that could be changing as
a new wave of stories open the genre up to the small screen.
It’s not just that production values can now stretch to
world building space operas. Politically, culturally and technology we are at a
point where reaching for the stars is increasingly attainable – and urgent.
The streamers are leading the charge. AppleTV+ has run two
seasons of For All Mankind, dramatizing an alternate history depicting
what would have happened if the Soviet Union succeeded in the first crewed Moon
landing ahead of the US. A third season is in the works.
Amazon’s The Expanse has run five series, with a
sixth and final in the works. It takes place hundred of years in the future
when the solar system has been colonized by humanity.
Raised by Wolves created by Aaron
Guzikowski with a helping hand from Ridley Scott who directed the show’s first
two episodes is about saving mankind. That task is handed to a pair of androids
charged with protecting a colony of human children after Earth is destroyed by
a great war. It has performed well enough for HBO Max to order a second season.
Just debuted on AppleTV+ is Foundation, adapted from
the epoch leaping novels of Isaac Azimov and starring Jared Harris.
It’s taken a while for the golden age of TV to catch up with
telling expansive science fiction drama.
One reason perhaps is that sci-fi stories were perceived to
require lavish budgets in order to sell futuristic space technology and
landscapes that are literally out of this world.
Now new technology and larger streaming budgets mean
production values have taken a quantum leap.
The Mandalorian used location photography as a
background to the action rendered in front of LED screens to create and augment
the Star Wars universe for streaming.
“From a technical perspective, you can do things today you
couldn’t five or 10 years ago,” The Expanse showrunner Naren Shankar told The
Guardian. “And when you uncork that – when you understand that this storytelling is not
just a guy in a rubber suit wiggling tentacles at you – suddenly you can
express things that the genre has done for 50 years, but couldn’t get on
screen.”
The economics of the industry is one reason why sci-fi makes
good business. The future of Star Wars is definitely TV. The slate
outlined by Disney includes no less than ten new TV series including an Obi-Wan
Kenobi spin-off and two animated shows.
Might a galactic saga that takes place over several
centuries succeed in doing for science fiction what Game of Thrones did
for fantasy?
“I wasn’t trying to make the next Game of Thrones,”
says Foundation showrunner David S Goyer tells The Guardian. “But I was trying
to depict an epic, and a story that would unfold over generations. What’s nice
about telling a story over a long period of time is that characters grow and
change – monsters can redeem themselves, and good people fall from grace.”
The hope of finding new life or a new home in the stars
while Earth dies has long been a sci-fi trope that has gained new urgency with
climate change. Since the best science fiction writing is also a critique of
contemporary society these themes can be explored more thoroughly over a ten
hour series or multiple series than a 2 hour feature.
“There are deep concepts in the show,” says Shankar. “It’s
about tribalism, it’s about cycles of history and economics and resource
constraints and colonisation. These are big ideas.”
Moreover, as space is being commercialised and as NASA sets
out on manned (peopled?) missions back to the Moon and to Mars this decade,
interest in space exploration has perhaps never been higher – nor more
tangible.
The producers of The Expanse use real physics to
create drama. According to Shankar, there’s a sequence in the first season
where the ships are turning their engines on and off so you’re shifting from
having weight to weightlessness. Two characters suddenly lose gravity and can’t
get back to where they need to be, and the solution is conservation of
momentum.”
This commitment to accuracy is shared by the team behind For
All Mankind who have an astronaut advising on the show. “He’ll tell us when we come up with ideas
that are against the laws of physics,” explains co-creator Matt Wolpert.
NASA’s mission to Mars could be the dominant world news
story of the late 2020’s with the Agency saying that video is essential to its
technical and scientific success as well as mankind’s ability to experience an
entirely new world.
“Most of our astronauts are very interested in imagery,”
said Kelly O Humphries, News Chief - Johnson Space Station/NASA. He was also
the voice of mission control for more than 50 shuttle missions. “It’s like when
you go on vacation you want to come back and share what you’ve seen. Astronauts
are the same.”
Astronaut training even includes the build of 4K camcorders
from a series of component parts in orbit. “We write procedures for them to
build the rig, mount a lens, put a cage around the body,” explained Humphries.
The live coverage of the Perseverance landing in February
was part of NASA’s PR effort to justify the $2.4 billion it took to build and
launch it. The estimate to land and operate the rover during its prime mission
alone is $300 million.
Space watching via channels like NASA TV is already routine but it’s going to become a cinematic event over the next decade as the number of missions and the ambition of them rockets upwards.
Aside from NASA, ExoMars a Russian and European Space
Agency program plans to land a rover on Mars in 2023. China has plans to
drive a rover on the red planet by 2030; There are also probes due to launch to
Jupiter and Saturn’s moon Titan in the late 2020s and space tourism has lift
off courtesy Bezos, Branson, Musk and Russian agency Roscosmos.
Tom Cruise announced plans to make an actual blockbuster in
orbit on board the ISS, in a film to be funded by NASA.
But ratings will go into stellar overdrive with manned
missions back to the lunar surface and to Mars which should lift off by 2030.
Even if you think it’s all being filmed on a lot in Burbank
these seat-of-the-pants thrill rides will be must-watch moments.
No comments:
Post a Comment