In November 2009, released the highly anticipated remake / remodel of V, the classic space series of lizards that caused a furor in the 80, then 2 seasons we can say that any past was better.
The initial idea was to bring the issue of further invasion, the viewer fliparÃa when he discovered that the invasion has been underway for 50 years and there are plenty of sleeper agents circulating in the Earth. Throughout the first season we see as a small resistance group, not all support their leader Visitors Anna (Morena Bacarin with a horrible look), and ultimately the emergence of alien beings that affects humanity basically spreads her legs to them (and that hostilities have not begun).
After a good and promising first season as the writers we throw it all away to include some of the most childish arguments that have been seen in science fiction in a long time: the struggle of Visitors against human emotions part of his plan is based on extracting the human soul to all people on Earth.
Each episode is a repeat of the scheme: Anna presents its new offering / softie veiled threat and resistance should stop but not before have a moral debate as simple and empty. This setback
not raised nor the presence of Jane Badler (the mythical Dianna) and Marc Singer (the fucking Mike Donovan) in a very controversial roles that contribute to the series has a precipitate and well-deserved end.
Behind this is Scott Peters, who clearly tried to repeat the success of the Battlestar Galactica remake and copy a few years ago led by Ron D. Moore has been a recent television classic, but not the same work in a generalist channel like ABC where you have to be extremely careful with language, sex, religion, etc. and where the budget for effects special has been revealed as very poor for these times. In short, you might V in more capable hands of others in a pay channel like HBO, FX, Showtime and the like have been those who wanted fans: unleavened wafers as complexes of any kind.
original series may have been simplistic, he lacked the means or shipping miniseries to a season of 20 episodes (the last ever filmed) will negatively affect but this remake does that those are stale television adventures as a true heroic attempt to do something bold and ambitious in a difficult time.
I hope the next release of The Battle of Los Angeles and the new series produced by Spielberg Falling Skies left in the flag of invasions higher than this failed remake of a classic it will take to recover of his side.
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