"Life on Mars" Life Is a Rock (TV Episode 2009) Poster

(TV Series)

(2009)

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10/10
Is there life on Mars? (Spoiler alert!)
Little-Mikey18 October 2009
Warning: Spoilers
It is perfectly all right to rant and rave at this finale. A lot of people have and they have good reasons for their displeasure. However, I think this ending is brilliant! To compare Sam Tyler's "Luke Skywalker" to Marty McFly's "Clint Eastwood" (from BACK TO THE FUTURE-part 3) is an insult in light of the ridiculous way the BACK TO THE FUTURE trilogy was concluded.

This season finale was made on short notice since ABC announced that the series would not be carried into a second season. So it was necessary to wrap all the loose ends together and close out the show.

Ending the series with Sam waking up in his pod, numbered "2-B" by the voice that turned out to be the voice of Windy, who at the start of the series called Sam "2-B" named after the flat he was living in, was brilliant.

Sam Hunt would've been a "senior citizen in space" but in 2035, who is to say that there weren't other "senior citizens" who had gone into outer space prior? The mission to Mars, giving "Life on Mars" an entirely new meaning was pure genius.

With some minute details to the landing craft, such as some art decorations on the bulkhead that were purely "1970s" and with some equipment that was inspired by the sci-fi classic, SPACE 1999, which was made in the early 1970s, this gives enough leeway for yet another season since this could all be a dream by Sam Tyler who was either hit by a car in 2008 and landed in 1973, or it could the dream of a Sam Tyler who really lived in 1973 but only imagined that he was really from 2008. Who knows?
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9/10
Not nearly as bad as others say!
jhojnackmsw15 June 2020
I liked it! Ka-Boom! Everything explained! I've also been using 'Life is a Rock' as my alarm ringtone since this episode aired!
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Season 1: High production values but a lack of heart and poor development of the idea all weaken it on the way to a terrible conclusion
bob the moo22 May 2009
So by the time this found its way to me, it had already been cancelled which, in a selfish way, was a good thing for a media-compulsive like me because I knew I had a start and an end to this series rather than an indefinite period of time. Of course it also put a bit of a worry in my head that something was "wrong" to get it cancelled – although these were not totally to the fore as series are never cancelled for quality reasons – mostly for financial or ratings reasons. I didn't think about it too much though but, when I did, it was to wonder why it hadn't worked because on the surface it all appears to be in place with good potential. The early episodes are a bit uncertain with an uneasy mix of tones – sometimes too serious, sometimes too knock-about in its humour, but after two episodes it had settled down. What we are left with is similar to the UK original in how it has the cases and the squad room provide structure week by week, while also having the mystery of why Sam is back in 1973.

The problem with the show is that although the former aspect is really pretty good, the latter is not done particularly well or particularly consistently. I didn't feel like I was getting close to the answer or that I was seeing any clever writing in this respect and it did limit how much I was able to put my heart into the show. Of course, in hindsight perhaps the reasons for this can be seen in the ending which, contrary to what some have said was a "last minute decision", but in fact was supposedly the plan all alone regardless of how many seasons they ran for. Others have ranted about it already so I'll be brief but the conclusion is awful – a checklist of reasons why the story (in Sam's virtual reality dream) was what it was. It is simple, it has zero heart and it is a million miles from the impact the conclusion of the UK version had on me. Perhaps this is why the viewing figures did fall off – the show never really has heart to it and what little it did have is jettisoned in an ending that is both simplistically basic but also has the temerity to suggest it is not even the answer (Hunt's shoe). What sticks in my throat even more is that Josh Appelbaum had said before the show aired that they had changed the story to go away from the ambiguous nature of the original saying "with this mythological element to it, it's not just a cop show, and if he was ultimately just in a coma or it was all a dream, it felt a bit unsatisfying. So we made it a deeper mystery." Firstly I don't think there was any ambiguity in the original but more importantly, the suggestion that he was improving on it and making it more satisfying is a joke.

Other than the heart, the lack of this development and the poor ending though, the show does have very high production values, mostly good plots, a fantastic soundtrack and a great cast; all of which are reasons why I actually did enjoy most of the episodes, albeit as nothing more than a solid cop show with a bit of a twist. O'Mara is a good lead – he has charisma and presence but also convinces in his confusion. Keitel is equally as good as Hunt – a role that he fits into really well. Indeed when it comes to Keitel, Imperioli and Murphy, they all do well within the context of what they are asked to do. Mol is asked to become too close to Sam too quickly and too easily and at first she is poor, unable to make this work. However as we get through this stage she gets better and becomes more interesting and convincing. The supporting cast features lots of famous turns from people like Winters, Whoopi Goldberg, Lisa Benet, Balfour, Gershon and others but, to those that watch HBO shows like The Wire, it is a little distracting to have Tergesen, Winters, Peters, Coleman and Gerety all coming through (what is it about HBO actors that they never seem to be alone in a film or show?).

So on an entertainment level, Life on Mars looks good and has some strong moments and episodes. However, with the "bigger picture" in the background, this is not all it can be and yet it neglects to really do much with this other than using it for characters and having something happen now and again to remind us about it (much like the smoke monster rumbling through in the first season or so of Lost). This lack of development is revealed in the way that it never emotionally engaged me and, while I liked the tough 70's edge to it, it didn't make me care – which, considering the awful ending, is perhaps just as well!
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Wrap It Up
lor_2 April 2009
The finale seemed a bit carelessly put together but had its moments. Worst for me is the lazy writing that added to the Back to the Future Riff of pushing the pseudonym of Luke Skywalker (it was funnier when Michael J. Fox improvised the name Clint Eastwood when facing opposition in The Old West), the running joke based on the famous David Bowie Song, re: Keitel is Major Tom. Highlight was a morbid, existential speech delivered by Michael Imperioli which was so powerful in content and delivery that it overshadowed all the facetiousness going on before and after it. O'Mara played his role properly bewildered, and Gretchen Mol got to show off 3 contrasting looks, but right down to the "one white shoe for mankind" final image it is obvious that the folks behind this series had tongues planted firmly in cheeks for the duration. I've got news for them -cult classics are ultimately in the eyes of the beholder (notably McGoohan's The Prisoner, or Robert Loggia in T.H.E. Cat), and cannot be forced down the audience's collective throat by a "let's throw in everything including the kitchen sink" approach.
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