Posts Tagged ‘V – The Complete Series’

Stream V – The Complete Series Online

Thursday, December 17th, 2009
Stream V - The Complete Series Online. Stream V – The Complete Series Online.

Movie Title: V – The Complete Series
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In 1985, I didn’t have a VCR. I loved “V” in 1983 and enjoyed “V The Final Battle” in 1984. I was really blissful to hear that the struggles of Mike Donovan and the rest of the resistance were coming succor as a series. At the time I worked at a local grocery store and, as fate would have it, I was usually scheduled when V the series was on. As a result I only caught a few episodes here and there when I had a day off. It was not as respectable as the two mini series but I plan it was bright. After a mere 19 episodes the exhibit was cancelled and V was gone forever.

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Since that time, I ran across friends who didn’t like the series. Whenever I found articles about “V”, the series follow up was always dismissed as crass exploitation of the franchise. Last week, WB released the series (possibly to test the wind for a fresh mini series) on DVD for the first time. Finally, after nearly two decades (can it be that long? ) I have been able to finally look what the series was all about. Here are my impressions:

There will be many SPOILERS so please do not read further if you want to be surprised.

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1. This series isn’t abominable. It is not as beneficial as the two mini-series but it is entertaing in its occupy lawful. I also judge that this reveal was innovative in the field of TV Science Fiction. Prior to “V”, Science Fiction was very episodic. Star Coast, Space: 1999, Logan’s Urge, Planet of the Apes, Buck Rogers and to a sure extent, Battlestar Galactica all told self contained stories. The dwelling was resolved by the demolish of the hour. “V” The series was different in this respect. It had account arcs and continuing location threads. Every episode ended in a cliff-hanger and it left you wanting more. In this aspect, it has a current flavor. Like Babylon 5, StarGate SG 1 and Season 3 Enterprise, it tells a astronomical memoir over a speed of several episodes.

2. People could die on “V”. For most TV shows, you know that the heroes will gain it in the kill. Not on “V”. Over the 19 episodes, long-standing characters like Dr. Maxwell and Elias Taylor select the farm surprisingly abruptly. This raised the stakes dramatically and kept the viewer enthusiastic in the story.

3. The cast was stout. Marc Singer was perfectly cast as brave Mike Donovan. Micheal Ironside ruled as perfect tough guy Ham. Jane Badler was very memorable as Uber-B**ch, Diana. June Chadwick was suitably catty as Diana’a rival Lydia. Duncan Rehgar was incredible as Charles, the leader’s envoy. His fight with Donovan in “The Hero” is classic. He was a vast villain and it is a tremendous shock when he is killed after a mere 4 episodes.

4. There is a sense that this is merely a contemplate at a global war with the Visitors. For the first 12 episodes or so, The Freedom Network newscaster, Howard K. Smith ( A accurate journalist by the scheme) reads the headlines on the position of the war. We learn that the Visitors are sweeping through Spain and so forth. This makes us understand that The resistance in LA is only one myth in this global conflict. It really gives the epic a positive gravitas.

5. The stories are often action adventure tales that are on par with anything that was on the air in the mid 1980s. Unfortunately, the sociological aspects that made the first mini series so memorable are ignored completely. The prove, evan though it is watered down, is appealing in its acquire moral.

There are some things that are unfortunatle about this show:

1. All the SFX are recycled from the two mini series. (I assume one novel shot was filmed for “The Dreadknot.”) Even entire sequences are lifted from the minis. Remember when Donovan is on horseback and is being chased by a skyfighter? Well, the entire sequesce appears again in “The Champion.” After a while, it becomes really grating to watch the same shots over and over. I know that SFX on TV was really expensive serve then but WB should have spent some money on current shots.

2. As the series goes on, it is definite that there was less and less money bugeted for each episode. The first episode, “Liberation Day” has an outdoor crowd scene with hundreds of extras. By the last episode, we only have the main characters walking around on the standing sets. By the demolish, the production valules of the explain looked rather thread bare.

3. The producers decided to exploit the alien lizards by showing them without their Human masks. This was a mistake. The people who created the lizard makeups were not as artful as John Chambers. As a result the lizard appliances were very stiff and immoble. By showing the Lizards in their natural spot too often, it undermined their credibility as a gross threat. The paunchy face lizards were about as scary and convincing as a halloween dart on screen. It became a bit laughable.

4. I detest cliffhangers that are unresolved. I can’t understand why they would originate a cliffhanger for a exhibit that was doing poorly in the ratings. It is really unfair to viewers who watched every episode.

5. The Star Child. One of the substantial weaknesses of “The Final Battle” was the ending where Elizabeth gets all glowy like Decker in Star Slump the Motion Record. Elizabeth uses some kind of well-organized powers that reach out of nowhere and saves the day. In the series, the Star Child goes through some type of metamorphosis and comes out of a cacoon as a 17 year ancient cherish interest. Elizabeth’s powers become a crutch that the writers could employ to solve any problems that face the main characters. This undermines the drama of the series and cheapens the series. The powers were kind of kooky. The Star Child could levitate objects and people, mimic voices, had a photographic memory, raise the insensible etc. She could do whatever the residence required. It was exclusive that they spent so grand time on her character. I guess, as a writer with a deadline, she was really handy to have around.

Well, thats my hold on the series. I reccomend that if you like V, chances are you will like the series. It is a more cartoony version of Kenneth Johnson’s creation but is excellent as entertainment and a nostalgic skedaddle assist to the 80s.

V: The Series was a very weird television present. On one hand, The Final Battle ended and it was a very satisfying kill to the 10 hour miniseries. But this weekly series did actually made some gripping points to the ongoing anecdote but it was soon abandoned as well as most of the originally cohesive cast.

The series starts out about a year later and we soon behold that Diana and the snappily wants revenge over the red dust. As we soon catch out, the dust is unpleasant to people and really can’t be old-fashioned anymore and the visitors patiently wait for the dusts effects to end. This sets up many fine episodes about the visitors regaining control. However, gone is the Nazi allegory and it therefore goes for power and corruption plots all the while the resistance is serve to fight the Visitor’s once again.

I found myself really enjoying the first several episodes. The acting was solid, Diana was as defective as ever and they took chances and killed off regulars and that added to the dramatic impact. The Nathan Bates subplots were actually appealing and you really began to disapprove Mr. Chang. Michael Ironside was also very fun to gape. And the “soap opera” of “Charles and Diana” was also very gripping.

However, as it went on toward midseason, the series started falling apart by the seams. The thought of the resistance always winning and episodes ending with showing Diana heart-broken began to hasten thin. They unbiased beat us over the head with Willy and his butchering of the English language, which is a shame, because he was such a charming character and performed well. The special effects were reused over and over again. The campiness factor of eating rodents was draw over done and all originality that they could have tried for unbiased went away.

Then, when we earn the modern credit sequence, the display beautiful noteworthy became a chore to sit through. Gone are some of the better and well acted characters. And the plots became paper thin and were filled with “filler” scenes where you objective feel they were making it up as they went along. Add in “romantic flashback” scenes, illogical situations, cheesy actors making guest appearances and you can glimpse that because of the plucky chances they took with the series at the first, they were left with splendid grand nothing. The acting also suffered, especially Faye Grant, in which she gave very uneven performances toward the waste, especially in the abominable episode “The Secret Underground”. That episode was the worst in the entire race. The display ended with the Episode “The Return” and it actually felt like it would redeem itself but by then, it was too tedious. There was no saving “V.”

This DVD collection of V: The Series is no frills. They attach episodes on both sides of the DVD, making this a 3 DVD collection. Box is nice looking with righteous shots of some of the cast but nothing extra comes with it. The report and sound quality of this collection is about as great as you would request from an early 80’s expose.

I had a safe time with this series and it was fun to peep how it played out up to the unresolved cliffhanger. If you are a V fan, this is aloof a must have.

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