Sitcoms Online - Main Page / Message Boards - Main Page / News Blog / Photo Galleries / DVD Reviews / Buy TV Shows on DVD and Blu-ray

View Today's Active Threads (No Chit Chat/Chit Chat Only) / View New Posts (No Chit Chat/Chit Chat Only) / Mark All Boards Read / Chit Chat Board


Sitcoms Online Message Boards - Forums  

Go Back   Sitcoms Online Message Boards - Forums > Classic Dramas/Dramedies > 2000s Dramas/Dramedies > Andromeda
Register Community View Today's Active Threads (No CC/CC Only) Search Photo Galleries Calendar FAQ

Notices

SitcomsOnline.com News Blog Headlines Facebook X/Twitter Bluesky Threads Instagram YouTube RSS

FX's Adults Gets Prequel Episode; Remembering Anne Schedeen of ALF and Ronnie Schell of Gomer Pyle, U.S.M.C.
Sitcom Stars on Talk Shows; This Week in Sitcoms (Week of June 15, 2026)
SitcomsOnline Digest: Tim Allen Still Wants Home Improvement Reboot; SpongeBob SquarePants Renewed
HBO's Life, Larry and the Pursuit of Unhappiness Details; Netflix's Little House on the Prairie Trailer
Prime Video's Elle Premieres July 1; FX's The Shards Launches August 5
Apple TV Trailer for Trying; Camp Snoopy Details
Ride or Die Trailer for Prime Video; Scooby-Doo Image Released for Netflix Live-Action Series


New on DVD and Blu-ray

Happy's Place - Season One (Blu-ray) Two and a Half Men - The Complete Series (Blu-ray) Abbott Elementary - The Complete Fourth Season (DVD) I Love Lucy - The Complete Series - 75th Anniversary Edition (DVD) The Office - The Complete Series - Superfan Extended Episodes (Blu-ray)

11/04/25 - Happy's Place - Season One (Blu-ray) (DVD)
11/11/25 - Rick and Morty - Season 8 (Blu-ray) (DVD)
11/11/25 - SpongeBob SquarePants - The Complete Fifteenth Season (DVD)
11/11/25 - Two and a Half Men - The Complete Series (Blu-ray)
12/02/25 - Tom and Jerry - The Golden Era Anthology (1940-1958) (Blu-ray) (DVD)
12/16/25 - Lippy the Lion and Hardy Har Har - The Complete Series (Blu-ray)
12/16/25 - Wally Gator - The Complete Series (Blu-ray)
01/20/26 - The Woody Woodpecker and Friends Golden Age Collection (Blu-ray)
01/27/26 - The New Fred and Barney Show - The Complete Series (Blu-ray)
02/11/26 - Tom and Jerry - The Complete CinemaScope Collection (Blu-ray)
03/24/26 - Looney Tunes Collector's Vault - Volume 2 (Blu-ray)
04/11/26 - Abbott Elementary - The Complete Fourth Season (DVD)
04/21/26 - Famous Studios Champion Collection (Blu-ray) (DVD)
05/19/26 - I Love Lucy - The Complete Series - 75th Anniversary Edition (DVD)
05/19/26 - Looney Tunes Cartoons - The Complete Series (Blu-ray) (DVD)
07/14/26 - The Office - The Complete Series - Superfan Extended Episodes (Blu-ray)
07/28/26 - I Love Lucy - The Complete Series - 75th Anniversary Edition (Blu-ray)

More Recent and Upcoming TV DVD and Blu-ray Releases / TV Shows on DVD, Blu-ray and Prime Video / DVD Reviews Archive


Search Sitcoms Online:



Donate

Please make a donation if you can help with Sitcoms Online's web hosting costs. Thanks for your support!

We receive a small commission on all DVDs, Blu-rays, CDs, Books, and any other items ordered through our Amazon.com links as an associate. Thanks for using our links for your online shopping!

Reply
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Old 11-11-2025, 01:10 AM   #1
TMC
Member
Forum Idol
 
Join Date: Jan 09, 2001
Posts: 125,074
Default Gene Roddenberry's Andromeda: A Few Reflections

https://raritania.blogspot.com/2025/...omeda-few.html

Quote:
The small-screen space opera Andromeda (2000-2005) went off the air two decades ago. In spite of having a run longer than most of its similarly syndicated contemporaries (it made it all the way to its fifth season) it does not seem to have left much of an impression pop culturally--rather less so than, for example, Xena: Warrior Princess. Still, it had some notable aspects, not least its association with Star Trek creator Gene Roddenberry (like the earlier Earth: Final Conflict--or rather, Gene Roddenberry's Earth Final Conflict--Andromeda was marketed as Gene Roddenberry's Andromeda), one with some basis in that the show did clearly rework some of his old ideas. (Those who have ever happened upon the old Gene Roddenberry-scripted and produced sci-fi TV movie Genesis II know that Andromeda's was not the first Dylan Hunt who, due to his having been placed in "suspended animation" in a situation in which things did not go according to plan, found himself two centuries removed from his time in a post-apocalyptic future where he had to contend with a genetically altered warrior race intent on conquest.)

Of course, if the show did have a real connection with Roddenberry its actual representativeness of his work seems questionable, certainly if one compares this show produced after his passing with what we saw of his work when he was alive, not least the space opera with which he made his name, Star Trek and perhaps especially Star Trek: The Next Generation. If looking at Star Trek many dismissively refer to long-outworn clichés about "space Westerns" the reality is that the show's place in science fiction and pop cultural history is a matter of its marriage of space operatic adventure with the Wells-Stapledon tradition of socially critical, utopian, science fiction--its United Federation of Planets a "scientific World State" on an interstellar scale. (Indeed, this has much to do with the dismissal--the cruel-souled zealots of pessimism who have appointed themselves the tastemakers of the era despising its rationalism, humane values and progressive vision.)

By contrast in Andromeda, the "Commonwealth" of which Dylan Hunt is always speaking, and which his fighting to restore is the premise of the series, seems rather a different creation from the Federation. Apart from having the disadvantage of having collapsed and as a result civilization succumbed to a new Dark Age, with all its less happy narrative implications (functioning societies don't fall apart like that), it does not seem to have stood for anything very particular--all as the Commonwealth's whiff of intergalactic monarchism and feudalism bespeaks the prevalence of space opera's penchant for high-tech barbarism rather than any Wellsian vision. So does the Commonwealth's resurrection by an old soldier on the basis of power-sharing by a last-days-of-the-Roman-Republic-style triumvirate--with the impression the more marked when one contrasts this with not just Star Trek but Genesis II. (That work may have had a post-apocalyptic context, but one can see in the scientific PAX endeavoring to "build back better" a civilization something like the members of Wells' Air and Sea Control in The Shape of Things to Come, with it relevant that its hero was an engineer rather than a military man like Hunt—by comparison with whom Hunt gives the impression of a barbarian chieftain with a little more vision than his contemporaries endeavoring to restore the romanticized glories of a Rome that, certainly seen from the bottom up, was not so glorious. )

I cannot say whether the show's creators and runners deliberately turned their backs on Roddenberry's thinking in favor of something less unfashionable in an increasingly cynical and nihilistic era--the arguments over the show's direction as commonly reported having been different from that in nature. (The emphasis in the show's press was on the battle between Robert Hewitt Wolfe's desire to have the show play out a long story arc over support from other producers for a more episodic narrative accessible to casual viewers, and--to go by producer and star Kevin Sorbo's remarks--a lighter, escapist, "good guys vs. bad guys" bim, boof, pow approach.) Still, however it happened, the divergence from Roddenberry's ideas seems inarguable--all as, unsurprisingly given the behind-the-camera conflicts and changes, whatever thinking they embraced as an alternative never seemed so sharp, so polished, as what we got in Star Trek (and still less, its incarnation as The Next Generation). Indeed, especially as the series progressed there was a haziness about it all, the episodes tending to feel half-made, and even dream-like, not least due to an abundance of hints that never went anywhere (just what is a "Paradine?"), and how what should have been big events never seemed to have any proper weight. (Thus did the episodes tell us that Hunt restored the Commonwealth--in surprisingly short order--but never really made us feel that the characters were operating in the service of a reestablished civilization, all as, of course, the fifth season was one big sideways shift from any main line of the story, straight into a junkyard like so much '80s-era post-apocalyptic B-movie fare, after which the series did not so much advance toward a resolution as slap on an ending and stop.) In short, if you were making J.J. Abrams' often opaque, "mystery box"-packed Lost even more muddled by making it as a space opera with intergalactic sprawl, genuine alien species' and cosmic stakes by way of a cheaper, more chaotic, sloppier, production process, this is what you would get. (A messier Lost--IN SPACE!) In the end the result was a show that, whatever the intentions that may have lain in back of it or the potentials it contained, is better remembered for its oddities, failings and smaller and more superficial pleasures than its narrative successes or its intellectual heft, and even by "cult" rather than mainstream standards has only a fairly slight following today.
TMC is online now   Reply With Quote
Reply



Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump


All times are GMT -4. The time now is 08:46 PM.


Although the administrators and moderators of the Sitcoms Online Message Boards will attempt to keep all objectionable messages off this forum, it is impossible for us to review all messages. All messages express the views of the author, and neither the owners of the Sitcoms Online Message Boards, nor vBulletin Solutions Inc. (developers of vBulletin) will be held responsible for the content of any message. The owners of the Sitcoms Online Message Boards reserve the right to remove, edit, move or close any thread for any reason.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2026, vBulletin Solutions Inc.