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Camera Obscura by John Joseph Adams |
September 2006
An Xtremely Uncanny Resemblance
NBC gives The X-Men the Unbreakable treatment in its new series Heroes.
Heroes
NBC
"Chapter One: Genesis" (Pilot)
Creator: Tim Kring
Director: Dave Semel
Writer: Tim Kring
Starring: Santiago Cabrera, Tawny Cypress, Ali Larter, Masi Oka, Adrian Pasdar, Hayden
Panettiere, Sendhil Ramamurthy, Milo Ventimiglia, Noah Gray-Cabey
Air Date: September 25 at 9:00 PM on NBC
Rated TV-14 / 60 minutes / 2006
(out of four)
Heroes is the story of a group of people who suddenly start exhibiting strange
paranormal abilities: Peter Petrelli (Ventimiglia) can fly; Isaac Mendez (Cabrera) can see the
future in his art; Hiro Nakamura (Oka) can teleport himself with the power of his mind;
Claire Bennet's (Panettiere) wounds heal rapidly of their own accord; and Niki Sanders
(Larter)well, she has some kind of mirror-twin.
Meanwhile, an Indian professor, Mohinder Suresh (Ramamurthy) discovers that his father has died. His father, also a professor, had been studying the supposed next step in human evolution, which apparently involves a vast array of mutations which will imbue people with superhuman powers. So Mohinder sets off for New York City, where his father was doing research and driving a cab, to find out how and why his father died, and to continue his father's research.
The ensemble cast is rounded out by a few other "normals": Nathan Petrelli (Pasdar), the
slick politician brother of Peter; Simone Deveraux (Cypress), the girlfriend of Isaac, and
friend of Peter (who works as a nurse, and is administering in home care for her dying
father); and Micah Sanders (Gray-Cabey), Niki's son, who while apparently normal, is
super-smart.
There isn't much plot to the pilot, except to introduce the viewers to each of the
characters, and to show that these strangers seem to be somehow connected; some
connections are obvious, while others not as much, but it's clear that there's some force at
work (destiny?) that's drawing them together to do battle against some impending evil.
And there appears to be some sort of (government?) agency keeping track of the late
Professor Suresh's research, and presumably the titular heroes as well.
Strangely, several of the primary characters have suffered the loss of a father in some
wayPeter's and Mohinder's fathers are dead, and Simone's father is dying; the father
of Niki's child is MIA. Fathers seem as though they will be important somehow, though how
or why they're relevant to the plot of Heroes remains to be seen.
This all sounds like it could be a lot of fun, but Heroes doesn't quite pull it off, and even
manages gets started on the wrong foot. We open on a rooftop, with Peter standing on the
edge, apparently ready to jump. A voiceover ponders where humanity's compulsion to
answer life's questions comes from. But the voice does not belong to Peter, as one would
think; instead, it belongs to a different characterMohinder, who, of course, we
haven't met yet. After pondering the alley below himjust long enough for Mohinder
to finish his narrationPeter allows himself to fall toward the ground, and as he
plummets, we cut away to Peter, in a nurse's uniform, sitting in a room, at the bedside of a
dying patient. The images we opened onof Peter standing on a rooftop and then
fallingwere (cliché alert!) just a dream.
But there are other problems as wellfor one, the treatment of the superpowers.
When we first see Claire, she runs up to the top of a big staircase (70 or 80 feet high), and
leaps off, and plummets to the ground...and slams into it. She doesn't think she can fly;
she knows she's going to hit the ground, but she does this to further test her newfound
ability to heal wounds. Is it just me, or does this seem an incredibly stupid way to test your
powers? Admittedly, she informs us that this was attempt number six, so she'd tried five
other death-defying stunts to test her ability, but is she suicidal? If her abilities fail one of
her tests, she'll be dead. Doesn't seem like the best plan.
The acting and dialogue are just about as poor as Claire's logicwith characters
uttering lines like "Why would I understand that you think you can fly?" "Because you're my
brother." Oka and Ventimiglia are particularly appalling, Ventimiglia all the more so for
being on screen for most of the episode, and stinking up every scene. Oka meanwhile is a
caricature rather than a character, seemingly inserted for comic relief, but instead only
served as an annoyance. Ramamurthy and Gray-Cabey seem to be the two exceptions in
that they can actually act, the latter more than the former, despite the fact that he's just a
small child. But Ramamurthy looks to be a solid lead for the show to anchor itself on,
though how much screen time he'll get from week to week is anyone's guess. With such a
huge ensemble cast, I expect it's going to be difficult to find adequate time to further the
stories of each of the characters each week. It was so difficult in episode one, it seems, that
we didn't even get to meet all the characters in it: other principals not seen in the pilot
include Matt Parkman (Greg Grunberg) and D.L. Hawkins (Leonard Roberts).
The dream sequence opener was the first clue that Heroes wasn't exactly going to be
full of original thought. The pilot is your standard comic book superhero origin story, given
the Unbreakable treatmentwhich is to say, treated in a more realistic light: no
spandex, just people with freaky powers. But its most grievous sin is the characters' rather
uncanny resemblance to the X-Men. Not only because they appear to be mutants, or the
next step in human evolution, but also because some of the characters have direct X-Men
analogues. For instance, Hiro has the same abilities as Nightcrawler; Claire, Wolverine;
Peter, Storm (or any of the other flying X-Men). Stan Lee should consider suing somebody.
Heroes isn't complete rubbish, and it seems like there's a lot of room for improvement after
this very shaky start, but as it is now there's very little to recommend it. If you really want
a superhero fix, go read some comics instead.