Tiffany Vogt

Posts Tagged ‘FlashForward’

Review of ‘FlashForward’ – Black Swan

In * TV Watchtower, FlashForward on October 19, 2009 at 11:43 pm

Lulled into a false sense of security

This episode was by far the most surprising to date.  It lulled you into thinking this was the same thing we had begun to expect over the course of the last few episodes, and then out of the blue, it delivered a blow not seen coming.  It was not even a death-blow.  It was just a major shocker.  The “black swan” was not Ned (Keir O’Donnell), the guy who thought he was going to turn into an African American; the “black swan” was Lloyd Simcoe (Jack Davenport).  I guess it is true when they say the best way to hide something is to hide it in plain sight.  For I never once suspected that Lloyd had anything to do with the blackout.  Thus, seeing the final scene of the episode where he takes the call from Simon (Dominic Monaghan) was a surprise.  The hair on the back of my neck and arms rose as I heard Simon tell him, “Talking to me is one of those little inconveniences you’re going to have to put up with now that we’re responsible for the single greatest disaster in human history.”

As continuity goes, it was cool to see Alda Hertzog (Rachel Roberts) again — the blonde terrorist that Mark Benford (Joseph Fiennes) and Demetri Noh (John Cho) had been chasing at the time of the blackout.  She fooled them by cryptically telling Demetri that his time was running out and then sending them on a wild-goose chase.  (Side-note:  There’s a lot of bird references in this show with crows, black swans and now geese.)  As riveting as the interrogation scenes were, it was rather mind-numbing to watch them actually go to Indio to the restaurant and chase a petty drug dealer.  However, Alda, for all her resistance to answering their questions, was actually a fount of information.  Alda was the one that ultimately gave us two significant clues.  The first was about the “black swan” theory.  She explained that a black swan is something so out of the ordinary that it is used to describe events beyond the realm of the ordinary.  The second clue she provided was regarding the Sufi parable about an old man and a young boy with a candle and the old man asks the boy where the light comes from –  and the young boy blows out the candle and tells the old man, “if you tell me where the light went, I will tell you where it came from.”  The black-out and the reveal that Lloyd Simcoe was involved with it were the “black swan moments.”  As for the significance of the Sufi parable, perhaps that was to illustrate that it does not matter how the black-out occurred and that they needed to focus on the why it happened. For Alda told Mark, “you’re ignoring the most profound question:  why?”  It is not “who” or “how” that really matter, but the question of “why.”  Like with the boy and the candle, the disappearing light is not the point.  The point is that it happened.  Thus, accept it and address the more pertinent question.

With so many cryptic clues slowly being unveiled, it is clear that the visions everyone experienced during the black-out are stressing them out to their breaking points.  Even Demetri said, “all I can hear is the clock-ticking everyday.”  And with everyone so preoccupied, surely they cannot be doing their jobs effectively.   Thus, it creates a window of opportunity for criminal activity to go uncheck or unnoticed simply because everyone is so distracted.  Maybe that was the point of the black-out.  Like a magician’s trick, while everyone’s attention is focused elsewhere, they can get away with anything.  The black-out is a long-term distraction.  For, as Mark told Demetri, “we can use what we saw to stop what we saw.  We can solve your murder before it happens.”  By effectively taking Demetri and Mark’s attention off of their other investigative work, the diversion is complete.

What Worked

Before learning he was the bad-guy, it was adorable watching Lloyd read Dylan (Ryan Wynott) his favorite book, “The Magician’s Handbook” and acting out all the characters in order to connect with Dylan.

As for the hospital patient, Ned, who had Addison’s disease, it was funny to see how as much as Olivia (Soyna Walger) wanted to ignore all the signs that were revealed in Ned’s flashforward, like her efforts to send Dylan to the PT Department, it kept boomeranging back to her.  Also interesting was Ned’s analysis that, “all that worrying kept me from being the me I am supposed to be.”  It was like watching a self-fulfilling prophecy.

Another fascinating reveal was finding out that Nicole (Peyton List), the awol baby-sitter, knew Aaron (Brian F. O’Byrne) and it was based on his recommendation she got the job with the Benfords.  Adding another layer to her story was learning that in Nicole’s flashforward she saw herself being drowned by an unknown assailant.  That was just bizarre – for her to witness her own death.  Just as horrific was her revelation that she saw, “someone drowning me and I felt like I deserved it.”  What on earth does that poor girl do to deserve such a fate, let alone feel that needed to atone for whatever she would do in the future that justified being murdered?!  It is mind-bending.

What Didn’t Work

It was ludicrous that the priest that Nicole went to see for guidance kept a box of live crickets in his desk drawer and turned her away after giving her a t-shirt  The world feels a bit off-kilter with that kind of behavior.

Giving Credit Where Credit Is Due

‘Black Swan’ was written by Lisa Zerling and Scott M. Gimple and directed by Michael Rymer. ‘FlashForward’ stars Joseph Fiennes, Sonya Walger, John Cho, Gabrielle Union, Courtney B. Vance, Gina Torres, Jack Davenport, Brian F. O’Byrne, Peyton List, Christine Woods, Zachary Knighton, Dominic Monaghan, Ryan Wynott. ‘FlashForward’ airs Thursdays at 8 p.m. on ABC.

 

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Review of ‘FlashForward’ – 137 Sekunden

In * TV Watchtower, FlashForward on October 12, 2009 at 4:24 pm

Do the ends ever justify the means?

When ABC first debuted the new television series “FlashForward” three weeks ago, the world sat riveted in front of their TV sets.  It was an adrenaline rush that left the audience breathless for more.  Based on the book of the same name by Canadian science fiction writer Robert J. Sawyer, “FlashForward,” the series began with the calamitous events that occurred on a seemingly normal day when the entire planet came to a stand-still. For 2 minutes and 17 seconds, every living human-being blacked-out and fell to the ground. It was a world-wide disaster as airplanes fell out of the sky, cars collided, and a multitude of horrific events occurred because there was no one conscious. But “FlashForward” is not merely a disaster show. It is about what happened during those mysterious 2 minutes and 17 seconds. For everyone was not simply unconscious, they were given a glimpse of their future. They were able to see exactly where they would be in 6 months – what they were doing and who they were doing it with. The real story is about whether each will see their vision of the future come true. For some, that is horrifying and for others, it is everything they have prayed and hoped for.

Initially, the central characters are a FBI agent, Mark Benford (Joseph Fiennes), his partner, Demetri Noh (John Cho), his boss, Stan Wedeck (Courtney B. Vance), and Mark’s wife, Olivia Benford (Sonya Walger, better known as Penny from “Lost”). They are the characters that we are first introduced to and whose flashbacks we experience. It is also Benford who first clued in that there may be a conspiracy afoot as his flashback revealed to him that he was investigating the flashforward event in relation to something called the Mosaic Collective. For his partner, Demetri, he had a more alarming realization:  he did not experience a flashforward vision which led him to believe that he may not be alive in six months. Then for Benford’s wife, Olivia, her vision was perhaps the most disturbing of all as she saw herself having a romantic liaison with another man – a man she had not even met yet. For all of these individuals, their visions have not brought them peace and comfort in what lies ahead. To the contrary, they will do everything they can to prevent their visions from coming true.

However, for some, their visions brought them hope and peace. Benford’s AA sponsor, Aaron Stark (Brian F. O’Bryne) saw a vision of his daughter alive, who he thought he had buried after a war-related tragedy. One of Benford and Demetri’s co-workers, Agent Janis Hawk (Christine Woods) saw a vision of herself pregnant and she does not yet even have a boyfriend. And for Olivia’s co-worker, Dr. Bryce Varley (Zachary Knighton) he had nearly committed suicide right before the flashforward event, and he saw a vision of his life where he was happy and alive. For these individuals, they are very much looking forward to the futures they beheld. So whether the visions are a blessing or a curse remains to be seen.

In the subsequent weeks, we have seen pieces of each person’s visions come true.  Mark is able to track down some of the individuals whose names were on the bulletin board he saw in his vision.  Demetri has received independent confirmation from an unknown intelligence source that he will be murdered a month before the flashforward event date.  And Olivia has met the man she saw in her vision — Lloyd Siemco (Jack Davenport) — much to her dismay.

But, while many things appear to corroborate the veracity of the visions, other events seem to undermine the likelihood of all the visions coming true.  For one, Mark’s daughter gave him the friendship bracelet he saw in his vision, which he promptly burnt.  Another event that had shaken the faith in the flashforward visions was Aaron Stark had his daughter’s body exhumed and the tests verified it was her body in the grave.  Thus, crushing his hope that his daughter is indeed alive somewhere in Afghanistan.  And Demetri’s finace saw a vision of him waiting for her on a Hawaiian beach on their wedding day.  This would suggest that not all the visions are destined to come true.

Thus, while the ultimate question is:  are the flashforwards indeed a vision of the future, it then begs the question: if it is the future, is that future fixed in stone, or can it be changed?  Agent Wedeck insightfully observed, “All of us are making decisions on what will happen — not what could happen.  It makes us do things we would not ordinarily do. . . You think knowing the future would make us less concerned about it.  But just the opposite has happened.  The future is what all of us are living for now. It’s what we’re living by.”

Just because they have seen the future, does it make it true?  Are they each prophets or are they biased based on what they would want to see?

This week’s episode focused on a crafty former-Nazi war criminal who claimed to know why the black-out lasted only 2 minutes and 17 seconds (or 137 sekunden as it is known in German) — and he would only reveal the meaning behind it to Agent Mark Benford.  In a morale quandary, Mark had to decide if the ends justified the means by granting a full pardon in exchange for the information the old man had.  After verifying part of the old man’s vision, the pardon was granted.  Only to find out that their worst fears were realized:  they had indeed been conned.  The only thing the old man saw besides being released from prison was a “murder” of crows outside his prison cell window when he awoke from the black-out.  And it was this vital piece of information that he used to barter his way out of prison.  It was a crushing blow to realize how the old man had used them.

But perhaps the old man was not so crazy after all.  His one clue about the dead crows was something that Mark decided to follow up on and much to his surprise, it had happened before.  In 1991, in Somali, there was a report of an incident where everyone lost consciousness simultaneously and coincidentally, there were thousands of dead crows.  And as Mark thoughtfully remarked, “We have been so worried that the black-out may happen again, we forgot to ask ourselves:  what if it happened before?”

Indeed, if someone does have the ability to control the mass black-outs, it is intriguing to think what have they been doing with that ability before now?

What Worked

Perhaps one of the most deftly interwoven pieces of humor in this past episode was the scene where Zoe, Demetri’s finace, is aboard a virtually empty airplane across the aisle from an ashen-faced gentleman.  When she asks him why he is flying, he replied that all the airline CEO’s were flying that day to prove to the public that it was safe.  The fact that he asks for a stiff drink mere seconds later spoke volumes about how safe he felt about flying that day!

What Didn’t Work

After dangling the carrot of Suspect Zero and D. Gibbons in front of us, it would be nice to actually have a face to put to these mysterious figures.  A mystery drama is never more compelling when evil reveals itself.  It is time for the unveiling of the arch enemy — the show is limping without a nemesis.

Giving Credit Where Credit Is Due

‘137 Sekunden’ was written by David S. Goyer and Marc Guggenheim and directed by Michael Rymer. ‘FlashForward’ stars Joseph Fiennes, Sonya Walger, John Cho, Gabrielle Union, Courtney B. Vance, Gina Torres, Jack Davenport, Brian F. O’Byrne, Peyton List, Christine Woods and Zachary Knighton. ‘FlashForward’ airs Thursdays at 8 p.m. on ABC.

 

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Discovering the new TV series “FlashForward”

In * TV Watchtower, FlashForward on September 22, 2009 at 9:58 pm

Having had the unique opportunity to attend a sneak-peek screening of ABC’s new television series FlashForward, I can say without a doubt that it is utterly riveting. From the first moment it is an adrenaline rush of calamitous events that occur on a seemingly normal day when the entire planet comes to a stand-still. For 2 minutes and 17 seconds, every living human-being blacks-out and falls to the ground. This is disastrous for those driving cars, flying planes, operating machinery, surfing along the coast, or who are in the middle of a critical surgery. When they awake, the world has literally fallen apart. But it is not merely a disaster show. It is about what happened during those mysterious 2 minutes and 17 seconds. For everyone was not simply unconscious, they were given a glimpse of their future. They were able to see exactly where they would be in 6 months – what they were doing and who they were doing it with. The real story is about whether each will see their vision of the future come true. For some, that is horrifying and for others, it is everything they have prayed and hoped for.

Initially, the central characters are a FBI agent, Mark Benford (Joseph Fiennes), his partner, Demetri Noh (John Cho), his boss, Stan Wedeck (Courtney B. Vance), and his wife, Olivia Benford (Sonya Walger, better known as Penny from Lost). They are the characters that we are first introduced to and whose flashbacks we experience. It is also Benford who first clues in that there may be a conspiracy afoot as his flashback revealed to him that he was investigating the flashforward event in relation to something called the Mosaic Collective. For his partner, Demetri, he has a more alarming realization, he did not experience a flashforward vision which leads him to believe that he may not be alive in six months. Then for Benford’s wife, Olivia, her vision was perhaps the most disturbing of all as she saw herself having a romantic liaison with another man – a man she has not even met yet. For all of these individuals, their visions have not brought them peace and comfort in what lies ahead. To the contrary, they will do everything they can to prevent their visions from coming true.

However, for a small handful of supporting characters, their visions brought them hope and peace. Benford’s AA sponsor saw a vision of his daughter alive, who he thought he had buried after a war-related tragedy. One of Benford and Demetri’s unit saw a vision of herself pregnant and she does not yet even have a boyfriend. And for Olivia’s co-worker, he had nearly committed suicide right before the flashforward event, and he saw a vision of his life where he was happy and alive. For these individuals, they are very much looking forward to the futures they beheld. So whether the visions are a blessing or a curse remains to be seen.

Rounding out the cast are: Lloyd Simcoe (Jack Davenport), Bryce Varley (Zachary Knighton), Nicole (Peyton List), Simon (Dominic Monaghan, also from Lost), Aaron Stark (Brían F. O’Byrne), Zoey (Gabrielle Union), Janis Hawk (Christine Woods), Vlad Petrov (Adam Tsekhman); and making special appearances as recurring characters are Seth MacFarlane (creator/writer of The Family Guy) and Alex Kingston (best known for her role on ER and recently seen as River Song in Doctor Who).

Finally, for those looking to expand on the Easter-egg laden experience of FlashForward, David S. Goyer announced the debut of Red Panda Resources, an internet fan-driven forum he has sponsored for the series.

Watch for FlashForward which debuts on Thursday, September 24, 2009, at 8:00 p.m. Eastern on ABC. (The pilot was written and directed by David S. Goyer – known as the man who relaunched the successful Batman franchise. Also executive producing are Brannon Braga, Jessika Borsiczky Goyer, Vince Gerardis, and Ralph Vicinanza. FlashForward is based on the 1999 Prix Aurora Award-winning book FlashForward by Canadian science fiction writer Robert J. Sawyer.)

Related article:

http://nicegirlstv.com/2009/09/24/flashforward-flashes-on-our-screens/

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