Shannara on MTV: I Have a Bad Feeling

In case you weren’t already aware, there is a television series in the works based on Terry Brooks’ sprawling Shannara series of fantasy novels. The series will be titled “The Shannara Chronicles” and is being produced by MTV. It’s scheduled for release sometime this year.

A map of the Four Lands, setting of the Shannara novelsThis feels like the sort of thing I should be celebrating. I’m desperate for some quality high fantasy television, a terribly under-served niche, and I’ve been a Shannara fan since I was a kid. But there are several things about this that are just making my heart sink.

Firstly, MTV. Need I say more? If I was going to make a list of networks I trust to make a quality, serious fantasy series, MTV would be waaaay near the bottom.

I don’t like judging products by their pedigree too much, and I won’t say that MTV’s involvement means this series is doomed, but it doesn’t inspire one to confidence.

The other main problem is what they’ve picked as the source material. The series will be based on The Elfstones of Shannara, the second book of the original trilogy. It’s a seemingly arbitrary choice, and it strikes me as a pretty poor one.

It’s not the worst book they could have chosen, but I’m only saying that because The Wishsong of Shannara exists. They’ve chosen to throw themselves into a worst of both worlds scenario by starting in the middle of the story and not jumping ahead enough to get to the really interesting Shannara stories.

Cover art for The Elfstones of Shannara, the second book in the original Shannara trilogySee, the Shannara franchise begun as a supremely generic — if still well-executed — high fantasy story. The first book, The Sword of Shannara, was pretty much a pure Lord of the Rings rip-off. Over time, the Shannara series started to develop a lot more personality, incorporating aspects of magitech and science fantasy while also developing the history and culture of the Four Lands very well.

But that hadn’t yet begun in The Elfstones of Shannara. While it wasn’t as transparent a Tolkien knock-off as the first book, it was still a very generic high fantasy with little to distinguish it from the pack.

But it is book two, which means newcomers to the franchise will be lost as to why the Ohmsford family is so important or what the backstory of the world is. Unless MTV wants to butcher the history of the series and just ignore the events of the first book.

I’m also not sure how they intend to get a full TV series from one relatively short book, unless they want to stretch out the story endlessly, which would get boring very fast, or start over with a new cast and story every season, which seems very foolhardy from a marketing and financing perspective.

If they wanted to go to the original trilogy, I really think starting with Sword would have been the best bet, even if it is obviously similar to Lord of the Rings. It gives people a good introduction to the world of Shannara, and it was the best of the first three books, derivative or not.

Cover art for a compilation of the Heritage of Shannara seriesBut the really smart thing to do would have been to go with something even later in the franchise. The second major series, The Heritage of Shannara, was where the Shannara series really came into its own. It had a much bigger and more cohesive story, and it transformed the Four Lands into much more than a weak Middle-Earth knock-off.

As a four-part series with a huge cast and a lot of literal and metaphorical ground to cover, it also offers much more fodder for a full television series

If I had a magic wand, I’d do a TV series based on Genesis of Shannara, as it was by far the most original and powerful of Brooks’ novels, but its bizarre mash-up of high fantasy, urban fantasy, and post-apocalyptic sci-fi is probably a little too unusual for the average viewer. So Heritage seems like the best choice.

There are other compelling options. The Voyage of the Jerle Shannara would also make a good TV show. A wild adventure into the unknown to battle a lizard monster, a crazy witch, and a freaky Borg-esque supercomputer? I’d watch.

Really, there are so many better choices than Elfstones. I don’t understand what they were thinking. It doesn’t even feature the most interesting aspect of the entire Shannara franchise, the sword of truth itself.

I want to believe the Shannara TV series will be good, but there’s just so little to give me any hope right now.

Massively and WoW Insider Reborn

There is good news for MMO fans: Though Massively was cut down by AOL, the team behind it is rising from the ashes with a new site: Massively Overpowered.

My gunslinger flying through the Abyss in AionThe site right now is just a placeholder. The team has turned to Kickstarter for funding.

I thought I’d be a good virtual citizen and help promote these struggling journalists… but after just one day, they’ve already got $40,000 of their $50,000 goal. I think I heard mention of some stretch goals, but I’m not 100% sure. I think it’s safe to say they’ll meet their minimum goal without much more help.

Nonetheless, it’s there if you want to contribute. Personally I’d encourage doing so — Massively is a valuable resource for the MMO community, and it deserves to continue.

I do understand people are wary of Kickstarter, and rightfully so. I myself have some concerns that MassivelyOP may not survive in the long term even if they do reach their funding goal… but I hope it does. It’s been a valuable resource to MMO fans for a long time, and I’d hope it can continue to be so for the foreseeable future.

In other news, WoW Insider has also been reborn as Blizzard Watch, relying on Patreon support for funding. It’s already up and running, albeit at a slightly reduced capacity.

Dance, cow, dance!I’m hoping the change in name might also signal a slight change of direction. Much as I like WoW, I enjoy all the other Blizzard titles at least as much, and it’d be really nice to have a sort of one-stop shop for Blizzard news.