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Showdown on Sci Fi

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Tin Man
BY DANIEL CARLSON | 503-243-2122

[December 12th, 2007]

Tin Man has got to be the weirdest thing I’ve seen on the Sci-Fi Channel in a while, and not merely because it’s a mildly disturbed reimagining of The Wizard of Oz as filtered through the mind of someone not quite sane. No, it’s evident from the decent effects and semi-respectable cast—Zooey Deschanel, that guy from Boomtown , the chick who maybe did 90210 —that Sci-Fi put some actual money and effort into Tin Man , and wants it to be good. And good, by definition, is something the Sci-Fi Channel can never really be.

Case in point: Within days of Tin Man ’s premiere, Sci-Fi also bowed Eye of the Beast , a giant squid movie unironically starring James Van Der Beek; meanwhile, Dec. 15 brings the premiere of Showdown at Area 51 , about two aliens who wind up fighting each other, presumably at or near Area 51. These are bad movies, but that’s what Sci-Fi is known for: repurposing genre reruns like The X-Files and every incarnation of Star Trek , and churning out some terrible original movies that could not possibly appeal to any remotely self-respecting viewer.

That’s also what makes the reimagined Battlestar Galactica so amazing: It’s a good show, and it’s on the Sci-Fi Channel. That alone is enough to raise eyebrows. It’s as if WE were to conjure up a solid, gritty cop drama, or if TBN suddenly mattered. Sci-Fi puts out the vibe of being cheesy and OK about it, which would make everything fine if they just resigned themselves to vintage reruns and bad originals. But the network is apparently determined to do more than that, and I can’t quite decide how I feel about that.













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OK, I can: I think it will end badly.

It’s not that science-fiction programming necessarily must be lousy. At its best, the genre takes a back seat to the quality of the storytelling and the craft that goes into the characters, which is why Battlestar Galactica is so good. But it’s also why the rest of Sci-Fi’s original programming is pretty damn stupid. Sci-Fi isn’t just a place that accepts crappy shows; it creates them at a startling pace.

Maybe the best example of this was The Lost Room , a fun and deeply flawed miniseries that aired on Sci-Fi a year or so ago. The Lost Room was great at being what it was: a very nerdy miniseries with no greater aspiration than to be cheesy and melodramatic. That’s what Sci-Fi is built on, and the unconscious vibe is of low quality but high schlock, and of good times cheaply had.

Which brings me back, sort of, to Tin Man . It’s not terribly good, but it is above average, and that makes it an anomaly for Sci-Fi. (And, I guess, for sci-fi.) I was worried for a while that the miniseries indicated a turnaround for the network, which would now begin to do its best to create better programming all around and act all respectable. After all, sister network USA went from showing Silk Stalkings and American Gladiators reruns to creating better shows like Monk and Psych . But Tin Man was also peppered with ads for Sci-Fi’s other shows and movies, including the unavoidable Eye of the Beast . The commercials were thoroughly dumb, but oddly reassuring.

SEE IT: Showdown at Area 51 airs on the Sci-Fi Channel at 9 pm Saturday, Dec. 15.

 

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gunter  writes on Dec 12th, 2007 4:28pm

I actually liked Tin Man - though I kinda found the monkey breasts to be disturbing.

FrothyWalrus  writes on Dec 13th, 2007 8:49am

Can anyone tell me why it was actually titled "Tin Man?" The movie wasn't built around him at all. It seemed like Sci-Fi was stretching just to be different.

invah  writes on Dec 13th, 2007 11:02am

As someone who DETESTS "The Wizard of Oz", I was shocked that I actually liked "Tin Man".

qpdx  writes on Dec 14th, 2007 4:21pm

Galatica really is one of the best sci-fi tv shows ever. I appreciate cheesiness occasionally but if the SFC is trying to live up to this flagship show I'm all for it. And kinda bummed we only get one more season. A show this good should have a 5 or 6 year run at least...

Brad Grenz  writes on Dec 14th, 2007 8:14pm

I think they called it Tin Man because Neal McDonough (the guy from Boomtown/Band of Brothers) was clearly the best thing the show had going for it.

Liet Kynes  writes on Dec 17th, 2007 1:45pm

Interesting to see so many subjective opinions stated as fact--a la "everybody knows that..." Personally, I think Galactica is 'deeply flawed' in both incarnations, and I really enjoyed Lost Room. Also, as bad as Silk Stalkings and American Gladiator were, I feel that their replacements are equally lame--Monk is a one-joke travesty and Psych should never have been aired--dumb jokes in the tradition of the most mind-numbing network sitcoms. These are just opinions, of course, but they're shaped by years of reading the genre-both classic & contemporary-and watching Hollywood, and TV repeatedly fail to understand how to make it work on film--with the rare exception in both formats. The tastes of the author of this article seem to have been shaped by bad television.

"...but it is above average, and that makes it an anomaly for Sci-Fi. (And, I guess, for sci-fi.)" WHAT?!? Do you actually read books?!? I'm guessing not, but there's a highly acclaimed series of novels beginning with "Dune," the best cinematic version of which (in my opinion) was created by the Sci-Fi Channel. The sequel was nearly as good.

All in all, you really don't seem to know much about science-fiction, except for what you see on TV--unfortunate.

Cody  writes on Dec 18th, 2007 5:55pm

"...or if TBN suddenly mattered."

HA! Sorry, I had to laugh out loud at this. I grew up so close to TBN's home of Trinity City (formerly *sniff* Twitty City outside of Hendersonville, TN) that I could get TBN on the TV in my bedroom without even plugging the antenna into it. Just the wall outlet. Must be all that gold paint they use.

OK, sorry, not at all related to your post, Dan, but I always love sharing that.

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