There are two words that pop into my head whenever I think of Seth MacFarlane’s current space dramedy, The Orville. Ridiculously. Frustrating. It’s not Star Trek, but it is. It’s like The Orville is a Star Trek fan production that managed to sneak its way onto prime-time television.
And with MacFarlane at the helm, you would think it’d be chockful of low-brow humour, particularly as it’s been billed as a comedy for the FOX network.
It’s not though, except when it is.
With crass productions like The Family Guy & Ted, I had expected The Orville to be of the same ilk. Something that I really don’t have time for.
Except now I’m eagerly waiting to see episode four, and I’m being all kinds of impatient about it.
I honestly don’t know what to make of the show, but it’s doing something right, because I can’t wait for more.
[Warning: Minor spoilers below.]
Don’t be mislead, the trademark crass is totally there. I’m impressed that the show managed to get away with fully displaying a rough sketch of male alien genitalia, in the third episode, About a Girl. I mean, the Maya the Bee children’s cartoon on Netflix absolutely did it better. That doesn’t change the fact that I saw more of the alien Yaphit, than I would normally be comfortable with.
Here’s what’s frustratingly ridiculous:
What will keep me coming back for more:
Lieutenant John Marr (human), “White dude can go into Compton, as long as the black guy says, ‘It’s cool.'”
Chief Security Officer Alara Kitan (alien),”I’ve no idea what that means, but yes.”
~ The Orville Episode 2, Command Performance
In The Orville, race and gender are key issues in all three episodes that have so far aired. Every episode is seemingly a social commentary on current issues we’re facing today, with brief moments of distraction from a shiny, sleek spaceship, that warps oh so prettily.
Occasionally, their social message is nuanced, largely though they’re smacking their audience upside the head with mama’s biggest frying pan to get their point across. Which might be exactly what today’s audience needs.
I think I’m liking the idea of a Star Trek-esque universe that isn’t perfectly structured; where humans don’t have their shit together. It’s gritty. It’s a spacefaring adventure that is neither utopic nor dystopic in nature, it just is.
That said, the first episode was such a disaster, I’m thankful that I live by a rule that says to wait out a show for at least three episodes before deciding whether I’ll stick around or not. It was bad. The acting was bad. The writing, bad. Direction, okay, but not great. The only thing to save it was the graphics, but even then you’re likely distracted by the obvious attempts to green screen outer space.
Interesting FAQs
In all, way to go MacFarlane, for bringing back a familiar space drama television show that geeks have been missing for over a decade. A couple weeks before Star Trek: Discovery is meant to air even.
Have you seen The Orville yet? What are your thoughts on this new show?
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I almost feel like, how can they do this show and not get sued for copying Trek? Not offended, just... curious as to how that flies.
I would have passed this by. I'm not the biggest Seth MacFarlane fan. Thanks for the recommendation. I'll have to give this a go.
Seriously give this show a few episodes before you yay/nay it. The first ep seriously sucks, but each ep after seems to get better and better (saying this with only three episodes aired so far, lol.)
I'm wondering if a lot of what they've copied is aspects of set design/language that Star Trek couldn't trademark anyway? Jay and I kept asking each other, 'How are they able to do that??' throughout though.
Interesting. I hadn't even heard of this one.
That is crazy that it's SO Star Trek! You'd think they'd put a bit more of a spin on the look of it!
I think this is MacFarlane's homage to Star Trek, he seems to LOVE this universe quite a bit! And I absolutely cannot blame him for that. ;)
LOL! That looks like a great show! i don't have cable, only Netflix, so I hope it gets picked up on Netflix so I can watch it!!
I'm loving it and I don't really care for Seth MacFarlane anywhere else. It's true enough to Star Trek and not so low brow that I want to change the channel.