Space: Above and Beyond Review #6: Eyes

Originally aired November 5, 1995

When the Secretary General of the UN (the leader of the Earth) is assassinated by an invitro, the planet falls into turmoil and another leader needs to be elected. It’s up to the 58th to keep the leading two candidates safe aboard the Saratoga as dark forces plot another assassination. But will their target be the ultra right-wing French ambassador Nicholas Chaput (George DelHoyo) or the US ambassador Diane Hayden (Harriet Sansom Harris)?

Nicholas Chaput
Nicholas Chaput

I remember this episode as being a bit dull, and nearly 20 years since I last saw it I still think “Eyes” is dull and the least interesting episode of the series so far. It almost seems as if series creators Glen Morgan and James Wong were trying to insert some The X-Files paranoia and conspiracy theory elements in S:AaB but it doesn’t come off well here.

In “Eyes,” an invitro shoots and kills the Secretary General live on TV which leads to riots planetside and paranoia across the galaxy. After the assassination, the election for the next Secretary General is held at the only safe location there is; high above the planet aboard the USS Saratoga.Which is interesting, but tonally “Eyes” is a different kind of dark than what I’d come to expect in the S:AaB universe.

Here, there are weird loyalty tests given to the only two invitros aboard the Saratoga McQueen and Hawkes, mysterious people literally hidden in the shadows, a big conspiracy about what the Aerotec company knew about the alien Chigs and when they knew it, Manchurian Candidate style assassins, the idea that Chaput might be trying to assassinate Hayden in a power play and so on and so on.

 Ambassador Diane Hayden
Ambassador Diane Hayden

All this does is to shift the focus of the series onto people we’ve never met before, mainly Hayden and Chaput, and off the 58th who become little more than glorified extras here. There’s also a few plot lines that go no where here like the silicates being invited to the Saratoga for peace talks and new members of the 58th who are seemingly only a part of the 58th for this episode never to be seen again.

One thing I did like about “Eyes” is that we got to learn a bit more about McQueen than we have up until this point. We come to see is that his love of the higher cause of the Marine Corps knows no bounds, to the point where even if the Corps is ready to abandon McQueen he won’t abandon the Corps.

But that was about it. Otherwise, though, “Eyes” is one big mess.

Grade: C

Lt. Col. T.C. McQueen takes a loyalty test
Lt. Col. T.C. McQueen takes a loyalty test

Favorite dialog:
Lt. Shane Vansen: “We can fly faster than the speed of light, control weather, create artificial life and nothing ever changes.”

Lt. Nathan West: “I’d rather have the truth than a medal.”

 

Stray Observations:
The war with the Chigs is called a “galactic conflict.”

The names of the replacement 58th members are: Lt. Richard Swirko, Lt. Stone, and Lt. Rick.

The Saratoga is a “space carrier.”

Nathan West’s brother Neil who was in the pilot episode has enlisted in the Marines.

 

Goofs:
Chaput says of the position of Secretary General, “Nine people have ruled the world.” Dictators “rule,” elected officials “governs.”

Space: Above and Beyond Review #5: Ray Butts

Originally aired October 22, 1995

When the mysterious and unpredictable Lt. Col. Raymond Thomas Butts arrives aboard the USS Saratoga with orders to take the 58th on a dangerous mission to a Chig held planet, the only question is who is coming back alive and who won’t be coming back at all?

Ray Butts mysteriously arrives aboard the Saratoga
Ray Butts mysteriously arrives aboard the Saratoga

“Ray Butts” is another strong early episode of S:AaB, so much so that it might be my favorite episode of the series so far. Here, the character of Ray Butts, played by Steve Rankin, arrives aboard the Saratoga with the expressed mission of making the lives of the 58th squad a living hell. First, he challenges the entire team to a fight, which he wins, then he “auditions” them for a dangerous mission via a game of paintball which he tags out the 58th in a matter of minutes.

Butts’ assignment, which only he knows the details of, allows him to pick his own team on this practically suicidal mission only he has the details of.

Which at first doesn’t make much sense. Even if Butts is as well connected as he says he is with headquarters, would he really be able to take the 58th on a top secret mission not even the commanders of the Saratoga know about? It’s later revealed that, spoiler alert, Butts needs the 58th to parachute onto a hostile planet so they can recover and fly out some jets Butts and his last team stashed there sometime in the past.

Another gorgeous CGI shot of the alien planet and its orange sky and weird flora
Another gorgeous CGI shot of the alien planet and its orange sky and weird flora

But Butts real mission is to atone for a mistake he made with that previous team who were ambushed while Butts was away and killed by the Chigs. And Butts has really returned to find and bury his comrades.

Which does make me wonder if that isn’t a cheat in the episode? With Butts being Mr. Mysterious so much in the first half of the episode and we as the audience not totally knowing what’s going to happen to the 58th after they leave with Butts this all adds a whole mess of drama to “Ray Butts.” I suppose if when Butts would’ve first landed, gotten out and said, “I’m here under orders to take the 58th to recover some jets,” that would have made for a lot less interesting an episode.

One thing I noticed in the special effects dept. was that from the ring around the planet Butts and the 58th arrive at to recover the jets to the orange/yellow sky of the planet once they get there this episode has to be visually the best episode of the five I’ve seen so far. Even modern sci-fi series don’t go to the trouble of recoloring the skies of alien planets so to see it done here nearly 20 years ago was awesome.

Shane Vansen confronts Ray Butts
Shane Vansen confronts Ray Butts

“Ray Butts” would also be the second time a song, here Johnny Cash’s “I walk the line” would be used as a sort of character calling card; here for the character of Butts. The first was in the pilot episode with The Ramones “Blitzkrieg Bop” for both the character of Cooper Hawkes and ‘Pags.’ This character calling card as a particular song would be used in later episodes too.

Grade: A

Favorite dialog:
T.C. McQueen
: “Kind of a bummer getting your butt kicked by a dead guy.”

T.C. McQueen: “I will pull every string to get you away from my people and off this bucket and back to the slime pit you crawled out of.”
Ray Butts: “Maybe you can pull every string, but I pull the rope.”

Ray Butts: “Easy as eating pancakes.”

Ray Butts: “I guess Ray Butts has ate his last pancake.”

Another gorgeous CGI shot from "Ray Butts"
Another gorgeous CGI shot from “Ray Butts”

Stray Observations:
Ray Butts service number is “9247158437.”

The planet the mission Ray Butts leads the 58th to is called “Planet 2063-F.” Which to me says they’ve given up creatively naming planets in fictional 2063 SAaB. 😉

The mission they’re on is codenamed “Get Rhythm.”

In the episode after they parachute onto the planet, Nathan West asks Paul Wang who’s looking at the sky, “What are you doing?” Wang responds, “I’m waiting for my testicles. They should be dropping in any second.” This line was censored when the S:AaB episodes originally aired on SCI FI Channel in syndication.

According to the names on the side of their aircraft, four of the five soldiers Butts lost were named:

  • Robert Joseph Grant
  • Joseph Hodges
  • Teddy Sharps
  • Eddie Duncan

Space: Above and Beyond Review #4: Mutiny

Originally aired October 15, 1995

The 58th are on a civilian transport ship en route to the USS Saratoga. They must traverse a particularly inhospitable stretch of space when their ship is hit by a solar flare, or was it really the first blow from a Chig ship in the area? When things go from bad to worse can the crew of humans and invitros work together to save the ship and its cargo of hibernating colonists, or will their differences tear them apart?

Lt. Col. TC McQueen (James Morrison) on the bridge of the MacArthur
Lt. Col. TC McQueen (James Morrison) on the bridge of the MacArthur

“Mutiny” is another of the good early episodes that I think of when I think back to SAaB in the late 1990s. This one plays out like one of those old submarine movies, with most of the action taking place within the limited confines of the ship with a much stronger mostly hidden enemy outside.

Which, by itself, would have made for a great episode. But “Mutiny” adds an extra element to this mix; part of the crew of the civilian ship MacArthur is human and the other are “artificial human” invitros. The humans of the MacArthur are in command while the invitros are assigned the relatively dangerous work in the engine room of maintaining the nuclear reactor that powers the ship.

The hold with the invitros aboard the MacArthur
The hold with the invitros aboard the MacArthur

When the ship is damaged to the extent that the only way to save the MacArthur from doom is to cut power to one of the compartments of frozen colonists it’s a question of killing 400 human colonists or 168 invitros. It’s a tough numbers game and the invitros, who’ve spent a lifetime as third-class citizens, don’t like the idea of any more of their kin being sacrificed and stage a mutiny and take the ship for themselves.

“Mutiny” brings up some very interesting questions about the nature of identity. Do we find our identity in what we’re born with, or the groups that we choose to associate ourselves with later in life? For McQueen the answer is that he is a Marine first and an invitro second. For Hawkes who’s a lot younger than McQueen and more inexperienced with the realities of life, he’s struggling with this question. He finds some brotherhood with the invitro crew of the MacArthur, but he also has a brotherhood with his Marine squad mates as well.

The MacArthur in Blood Ally
The MacArthur in Blood Ally

The only thing I found a bit odd about the whole episode was that it seemed in previous episodes that the invitros had the same rights are regular people. Except here we learn that the invitros frozen on the ship have yet to be born and are assigned to work at a far off plutonium mining facility where the conditions are harsh enough that most would die there before being released from their contracts. They’re almost like slaves here, but I didn’t get the sense in previous episodes this was the case.

I guess I’m confused overall with the nature of the invitros? They’re described as being mix of DNA without a true mother or father and are born at 18 years of age so they lack much of the experience we take for granted. But in “Mutiny” it’s brought up time and time again that there are humans and there are invitros. But aren’t the invitros just humans without parents?

Grade: B+

Stray Observations:
According to McQueen, the official name of the 58th squad is the “58th Air Commando Group.”

The MacArthur takes a shortcut down “Blood Ally” in order to get to the Saratoga as fast as possible.

In the future of SAaB there’s a Detroit Disney Land.

Favorite dialog:
Solomon Monk: “Tell my wife, I don’t mind going–’cept for her…”

Paul Wang: “Is that a question or confession?”

Cooper Hawkes: “Feeling pain’s part of being human.”
T.C. McQueen: “Who said you were human?”

Crewman Ashby: “Did you ever try to do the right thing, only it turns out wrong?”

Hawkes: “I’m sorry.”

Space: Above and Beyond Review #3: The Dark Side of the Sun

Originally aired October 8, 1995

The 58th are assigned to sentry duty at the Icarus mining colony in dark reaches of the Kuiper belt. There mission is to guard a shipment of Helium 3 vital to the war effort. However, at the colony the 58th find a new enemy of robotic humans, the Silicates, who have other plans for the Helium 3.

One of the Silicates with their creepy target eyes
One of the Silicates with their creepy target eyes

I haven’t watched all of Space: Above and Beyond since the late 1990s, and it was always my belief since that the early episodes of the series, barring “The Farthest Man from Home” were better than later ones starting with “The Dark Side of the Sun.” And some 15 odd years later I still really dig this episode.

“Dark Side of the Sun” has a more heavy story for a 90s show. Here, Shane Vansen (Kristen Cloke) spends much of the episode trying to come to terms with the execution/murder of her parents that took place in front of her and her sisters when they were children. Vansen suffers from nightmares where she relives the murders over and over again.

We’ve heard of the slightly Terminator-esque Silicates/AI’s before in the Pilot episode, that they were a subservient class of robots who rebelled and waged a terror campaign against humanity. And we learn a little more with “Dark Side of the Sun,” mostly that a virus that implanted “Take a chance” into their coding sparked the rebellion with them vs us and that they’re compulsive gamblers as well.

Shane Vansen in full bad-@ss mode
Shane Vansen in full bad-@ss mode

Visually, the Icarus mining colony is an interesting place. It seems like some real refinery was shot at night to double as the colony that’s supposed to be some three billion +- miles from the Earth. And this mostly works, even if from time to time a few moths fly into the stage lights. 😉

In “The Dark Side of the Sun,” it’s interesting how Vansen comes to terms with battling the Silicates. First by running away, then by warily confronting them and finally by destroying them when the lives of the rest of the 58th are on the line. But sadly enough, even after Vansen confronts the Silicates at the mining colony and almost single handedly wipes them out, in the end she still finds that the Silicates still haunt her dreams.

Grade: A-

Goofs: This episode exposes a big problem, and of the whole series as I see it, of the notion the the armed forces of Earth would have pilots sometimes be pilots and other times be ground soldiers as part of their regular duties. It just doesn’t make sense. Even today the Marines can “make” a soldier in a matter of months but it literally takes years for them to make fighter pilots. It’s not like they just can trust anyone with multimillion dollar jets.

The 58th at the Icarus Mining Colony
The 58th at the Icarus Mining Colony

I can see how the 58th pulling double duty works in terns of SAaB — it means that there just has to be one group we follow no matter if they’re flying or fighting on the ground — but realistically it doesn’t hold true.

Favorite dialog:
Shane Vansen: “Do you ever feel like there’s something out there, waiting?”
T.C. McQueen: “Feeling like maybe you’re not coming back? Everyone gets that.”
Vansen: “How does ‘everyone’ deal with it?”
McQueen: “They go out and they come back…or they don’t.”

Paul Wang: “If any friendliest find my body, I want my ashes spread over Wrigley Field.”

Space: Above and Beyond Review #2: The Farthest Man from Home

Originally aired October 1, 1995

Army special forces soldiers have rescued a survivor of the doomed Tellus colony giving Lt. Nathan West hope that his girlfriend might still be alive. Disobeying orders, West recklessly flies off to save her. But will his actions threaten his life as well as the lives of the 58th and jeopardize the whole war effort against the Chigs as well?

Nathan West (Morgan Weisser) finds the remnants of the Tellus colony
Nathan West (Morgan Weisser) finds the remnants of the Tellus colony

For the first real episode of Space: Above and Beyond, “The Farthest Man from Home” is not one of the best ones of the series.  It’s an episode with a lot of problems that features the Nathan West character in a poor light. (Though I do wonder if the creators of the show Glen Morgan and James Wong were still trying to figure the characters out and that’s where this odd version of West from?)

Here, West disobeys a direct order not to go search for his girlfriend Kylen when he learns that not everyone was killed when the Telus colony ship was shot down by the Chigs. And when he disobeys, during his rescue mission, West himself is nearly shot down, crash lands and nearly becomes a prisoner himself.

The problem isn’t that West disobeys the order, it’s that he comes off as incredibly annoying when he does it. He essentially takes everything he’s learned in the previous episode, throws it away and goes off on his own. This is something I could have seen the Cooper Hawkes character do, but not Nathan West.

Shane Vansen (Kristen Cloke) and Cooper Hawkes (Rodney Rowland) decide to go after West.
Shane Vansen (Kristen Cloke) and Cooper Hawkes (Rodney Rowland) decide to go after West.

On the Tellus planet, we do get some eerie vistas of the skeletal remains of the crashed colony ship as well as a flag flapping in the breeze that could have only been left by someone that survived the crash. (Up until that point it was assumed there were no survivors.) I also got the feeling with things like the Army special forces soldiers and talk about the Chigs “hitting” Procyon and that the “3rd Wing are getting their asses kicked” that Morgan and Wong were trying to show that the universe of SAaB was much bigger than we’d so far seen.

What I found most interesting about the episode was one of the survivors of the colony, played by a pre-3rd Rock from the Sun French Stewart. He’s a guy who’s survived the crash of a ship from orbit, been alone for months on an alien planet all the while dodging alien patrols out to find him. And he’s gone a more than a little crazy. He’s a lone survivor of a mini-apocalypse, and while he isn’t the last man left alive in the universe, he most certainly is the farthest man from home.

This episode also features the first appearance of the nefarious Aero-Tech corporation that will play a central role in the main conspiracy theory elements of the SAaB story coming later in the series.

Grade: B-

Favorite Quote: Tellus Survivor: “I’m the farthest man from home! Ok!? (Points to the sky) Look there, right there. See? There are twelve billion people, twelve billion lives — and then there me.”

Stray Observations: For the life of me I can’t remember why, but I totally missed this episode when it first aired and didn’t get to see it until years later.