| Index | 4 reviews in total |
18 out of 19 people found the following review useful:
Strike 3, 17 December 2001
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Author:
Mark-129 from United States
This was the third attempt to get a series from Gene Roddenberry's Genesis II concept, this time without any involvement from Roddenberry. The basic plot is similar to many SF series with returning astronauts traveling across a new Earth after some sort of cataclysm, searching for remnants of their civilization. As an example of what the regular series might look like, the pilot is broken into two separate stories. The first involving a culture who may have discovered the secret of immortality. But, at what cost? The second, more elaborate episode follows the astronauts into a battle for survival against a tribe of primitive forest dwellers. Well made and cast with well known actors, the pilot is action packed and interesting, but tired at the same time.
5 out of 7 people found the following review useful:
Bad knockoff of Roddenberry's Genesis II, 12 September 1999
Author:
David McCabe (mccabed@mediaone.net) from Massachusetts
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
Possible spoilers (but unlikely).
I saw this movie on TV in 1975. I don't remember much. All I actually
remember is a shot of star John Saxon using a crossbow he made from an old
automobile leaf spring. The premise of the film is similar to two previous
TV movies written by Gene Roddenberry:
Genesis II, starring Alex Cord as Dylan Hunt (1973)
Planet Earth, starring John Saxon as Dylan Hunt (1974)
I don't know whether Roddenberry had anything to do with this 1975 John
Saxon film, or whether Saxon's character was Dylan Hunt. The IMDB database
does not say. I suspect there was no official connection between this bad
1975 film and the film Saxon made in 1974 for Gene Roddenberry.
4 out of 6 people found the following review useful:
Smacks of plagiarism, 3 August 2006
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Author:
redbeard_nv from Boulder City
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
This weak attempt at a apocalyptic Earth premise was, IMHO, a thinly
veiled rip-off of Gene Roddenberry's "Genesis II" / "Planet Earth"
pilots, down to the name of the organization that ran the space
station/hibernarium being the same, "Pax". They went so far as to cast
John Saxon (perhaps not the greatest actor of his time, but would do
very well in many other roles) in the lead, drawing cries of plagiarism
from the sci-fi fan community. Gone, perhaps lost forever, if we're
lucky!
Many ask why Roddenb2erry didn't seek some legal recourse through the
Writer's Guild against this painfully leeched premise? He probably
didn't want to grant it any more attention than it already didn't
deserve.
0 out of 4 people found the following review useful:
Violent themes killed the series, 16 November 2010
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Author:
midge56 from Texas
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
Even though Roddenberry chose not to be involved with this third
revival of his Genesis II series project... the core problem was
prevalent in all three attempts. Roddenberry should have known better
on Genesis II and the sequel Planet Earth... because the reason Star
Trek was so popular was because it was a Utopian futuristic society
which had risen above wars, violence, disease, poverty, racism and
discrimination. It depicted mankind learning from its mistakes and
building a peaceful society of exploration, cooperation, invention and
forward progress.
This Trilogy did exactly the opposite. It showed the degradation of
society. Each film, while claiming Pax peace... was filled with
violence, segregation, themes of hatred and slavery. Themes of
technological regression. These were the very things that this
generation of viewers hated. No one wanted to see shows depicting
societal disintegration and backward momentum into archaic, violent
existences. These were offensive themes which no one wanted to view
even once, let alone on a weekly episode.
Even worse, the writers interpretations of ideal societies as depicted
on these shows such as an ancient Rome type of society... were the
perceptions and desires of people born in the 20's instead of the views
of the generations who were the target audience... the baby boomers.
Our generation hated wars and poverty, discrimination, big brother,
environmental damage and establishmentarianism most of all. They wanted
to see peace, progress, no poverty, no disease, clean air, no fossil
fuels, technological advancement... just like Star Trek.
This trilogy was just the opposite of the themes preferred by both the
peace generation or the yuppie generation that followed. Both were
antiwar. This PAX series was one violent conflict after another despite
the fact that they called their society by a name for peace. It was
just the opposite. Even worse, the core character from the past was a
violent man who managed to judge and then destroy one society after
another. In this final story, he managed to kill an entire city with no
more conscience than. "Oh well." Sure, they tried to kill him... but he
spilled the first and last blood with death. Who would want to watch
this every week. I had to fast forward through the violent scenes which
went on and on. Same mentality as a fist fighting western. I didn't
need to see people punching each other in the face for 10 minutes
straight. Even the good citizens were killed along with the bad ones.
It was still the death of an entire city and society by the lead
characters... and they wonder why this series attempt kept failing.
It had the same core problem whether it was the first 2 written by
Roddenberry or this last version which he was not affiliated with. They
simply did not get it... which is surprising considering that
Roddenberry was the one who originally understood the concept of the
Utopian society during the strong anti-war, pro-peace sentiment of the
60's and 70's.
Perhaps if they had created a truly peaceful, technologically advanced,
futuristic society for this series... it might have worked. But all
three of these movies were simply unpleasant to watch. Most of us
watched them out of respect for Roddenberry in the hope that he had
come up with a new series. We continued to hope that they would learn
their lesson in the 2nd and third movie but no such luck. It just went
downhill from the onset.
At the time these pilot movies were made, we had no conception that
society would truly degrade as it has over the past 10 years. Who could
imagine that it would go backward and not learn from its mistakes.
Fortunately, Roddenberry never saw what society finally became in the
21st century. But when these shows were made, our generations still
believed it would improve. How could we have guessed otherwise. While
there may be some truth in how a post apocalyptic society might degrade
in some distant future... our target generations were not interested in
seeing it. We wanted to see forward momentum and progress... not the
opposite. Thankfully, they brought back Star Trek until Berman finally
managed to destroy that as well... with the same narrow minded thinking
as was depicted in this violent trilogy.
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