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Tag: heroes

April 28, 2009

Heroes Ending and Beginning

Greg Grunberg and Adrian Pasdar
Two heroes, changed forever?
Image by ewen and donabel via Flickr

 Spoilers!

Heroes ended another volume yesterday, closing a chapter in which our intrepid people with amazing powers became fugitives, struggled with their pasts, and came full circle to a point that makes a Company even more powerful than ever before.

There’s a lot of criticism that has been leveled at this season’s Heroes, from stale characterization to bad writing, to contrived storylines, but to be honest, the season overall did its job in exploring how the “normal” world might deal with people with extraordinary abilities. The story seemed to falter at times and in some respects left a lot to be desired (the whole “Rebel” storyline deserved much more than to have some kid behind it), but you can’t really complain with where things seemed to end up.

Here’s some things this season of Heroes actually did right, to counteract all those negative Nancies out there:

  • Peter and Hiro were “nerfed” - I’ve never had it sit well with me that taking other people’s powers and time manipulation had the potential to be the most dangerous in terms of trying to keep things within story without making it ridiculous. Unlike Sylar and Claire, whose unstable mind and lack of real physical threat respectively keep their powers in check, Peter and Hiro lacked any real drawback. By making Peter only able to absorb one power at once and making sure Hiro’s time travel has some potentially fatal consequences, the writers made sure that simply saying “why couldn’t they just do x” was as small a possibility as could be given.
  • Nathan achieved a role - Nathan’s character never really went anywhere on the series as far as I could tell. With an artifically given flight ability he wasn’t “sexy” enough power-wise to really explore anything, leaving his character as a politician as the remaining saving grace (and we all know how most geeks feel about politics). If the intent was to make him a sad, tragic character this season, this did it, and you absolutely had to kill him to seal the deal. Dying without any real chance to win against Sylar was unfortunate, but totally in line with closing the book on him as a person, but the way the season ended, there’s so much more potential to explore the character and its impact. It’s too bad he has to be dead in order for it to happen.
  • HRG got “real” - The problem with creating a character with some morally grey loyalties like everyone’s favorite Horn-Rimmed Glasses-wearing ex-agent is that you’re always waiting for the other shoe to drop. Noah Bennett hadn’t had that happen until this season, when the baggage of his “normal” family was finally shed. The scenes which eventually lead to the deterioration of his marriage leave the door open for some emotionally jarring future episodes while freeing him up to pursue the grey area he’s always wanted to live in.
  • Sylar’s mental roller coaster - As I said before, the thing that keeps Sylar’s immense powers in check is the troubled past and events in his life that screw with his mental mojo. This season, though it focused on it a bit too much, explored that in detail, from daddy issues, to mommy issues, to identity issues, and finally, a curious pass at Claire that exposed a loneliness issue that has yet to be dealt with. I’m glad the writers finally settled in on Sylar being “evil” – I hated having a possible hero turn happen last season vis-a-vis Elle, and the show needs an anchor in the Villain column that sadly has not been filled very well with anyone else besides Sylar. The only issue now is that I think Sylar still possesses too many powers – in fact, more than the writers know what to do with – and hope that despite his current situation masquerading/thinking he is Nathan Petrelli, that something will be done about it.

I look forward to “Redemption”, the next volume in the series. It’s an interesting title and I wonder what things we might be seeing to typefy that. Until then, here’s to another season of Heroes.

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September 23, 2008

An OP Review: Heroes and Villains

So as any good geek knows, Heroes returned to TV with a brand new season yesterday,a nd we here at OP are here with our JOhnny-come-lately review right after all those other blogs stole the thunder. But not to worry – we’ll try to add something to the pile of flowers and accolades already heaped upon it.

Note that these reviews contain spoilers. If you don’t want to know, or were under a rock and didn’t know abotu the new episode, don’t read! If you do spoil yourself on accident, though, at least you can act like you’re a hero with precognitive powers.

First off, let’s hit on 5 things about the Heroes premiere:

-Nathan’s shooter is none other than….his brother Peter Petrelli, or at least, a Peter from the future. He hopes to change the horrible future to come, but ends up doing a bunch of things that might make it much worse.

-One of these things is inadvertently letting Sylar finally getting to Claire, and taking her power. But a revelation that Claire couldn’t be killed even if Sylar wanted to do it leaves Claire with new conflicts.

-Mohinder discovers a way to awaken powers in others and uses himself as the first test subject. He gains Spider-man like agility and strength, but the side effects could make it not worth it.

-Tracy Strauss, who looks a lot like Niki Sanders, is a top aide for New York’s governor (played by Babylon 5′s Bruce Boxleitner). But unlike Niki, she’s got a chilly personality – in more ways than one.

-Sylar frees a dozen villains who were locked away by the Company with the inadvertent help of an angry Elle, whose father was murdered by the former watchmaker. The Company’s top person is none other than Angela Petrelli, who drops the bombshell that Sylar is her estranged son and the brother of Nathan and Peter Petrelli.

Well, to say the least, this was interesting. New threads were started all over the place, from Tracy (possibly Niki) having to find out her life is possibly not as simple as a campaign, to Mohinder gaining powers but at a possibly great cost, to Hiro and Ando possibly creating a rift between them, to future Peter wreaking havoc no matter where he goes while the present Peter is stuck in the body of one of the worst of the villains. Sure, we’ve still got the problem with some of the more “overpowered” powers and dealing with those (like Claire being practically immortal), but at the very least, the inclusion of actual villains into the storyline might make things just a little bit difficult.

Sylar isn’t the only one who could be conisdered evil (and from the previews, it seems he has a new allegiance that could prove intriguing to say the least), but the truly psychopathic natur eof people with powers who have had to be incarcerated is going to only cause chaos in a world that is largely unaware of people who can do things like fly, throw fire, and read minds.

Overall, we’re alooking at the start of a lot of itneresting changes for allt he Heroes, and it can only get better form here.

August 25, 2008

The Last Hero – Live on TV

If there’s anything that geeks have had to suffer through on a consistent basis, it probably is ridicule. Whether it’s about being too un-athletic to play sports, or being buried in their little gadgets to the point of being stuffed inside a locker, the geeks have sometimes never had it easy in the formative years. Heck, even when they reach the age that they get out of school, it’s not that much better.

Thankfully, we geeks have the wonderful world of TV and imagination to retreat into. Here at OP, we are all about giving people a boost – even if it’s one that only lives in the realm of fantasy and could never, ever come true no matter how many fanfics you write.

NBC’s “Heroes” gives us the last best hope for all geeks in the form of Masi Oka’s Hiro Nakamura. Obsessed with sci-fi, comics, and superheroes, the aptly phonetic “Hiro” shows us that even someone who is better at putting his head in the clouds instead of in reality has a chance. Sure, the fact that he’s able to stop, bend, and otherwise treat time like a toy just might be a big factor in Hiro’s success. And yes, maybe having the father he had (Star Trek actor George Takei) might have just been a little bit more than a simple coincidence. But that hasn’t stopped Hiro from becoming the darling of all the pencil-pushing, otherwise dull geek community.

The character of Hiro, more socially lame and far from a legend, is a paradigm where the traditional action hero, overmuscled and inexplicably possessing some kind of martial arts training which both kills and looks good at the same time, is thrown aside. Never mind that the fact that Hiro’s journey seems a little contrived even for TV and that he somehow gets to be in the right place at the right time even without his powers. And let’s just conveniently forget the fact that Hiro’s time traveling seems just a tad btit “overpowered” even for a show about superpowers.

Nope, everyone will be glued to the TV this September as Heroes’ new season starts, hoping to get some kind of sliver of meaning to their socially awkward lives as they watch a geek do something that no geek will probably ever do (at least in our lifetimes, or until the next evolution, whichever comes first). I know I’ll be watching while simultaneously scrunching my face into a raisin to try to turn back time a minute or so.

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