Retro Review: Orphan Black, First Three Episodes

Along with movies and smiling, TV is one of those things that I’ve been having trouble finding time for lately. As a result, I was only vaguely aware of the existence of Orphan Black, and I knew barely anything about its premise. Sci-fi show, something something clones.

Tatiana Maslany as Sarah Manning in Orphan BlackHowever, I was on Space’s website looking for an update on the second season of Defiance (still a few weeks off), and I noticed they had the full first season of Orphan Black, so I decided to give it a shot.

Since I’m binge-watching this show, my reviews may have to be a little truncated for brevity’s sake. I will also be relatively loose with spoilers.

“Natural Selection” (pilot episode):

Our story begins with Sarah Manning, a con artist and general screw-up of the highest order. While waiting for a train, she notices a distraught woman lingering near the tracks. Moments before the woman commits suicide by jumping in front of a train, Sarah notices something startling: the woman looks exactly like her.

Being who she is, Sarah’s first instinct is to steal the woman’s purse and flee the scene. Sarah comes to learn the woman’s name was Beth Childs, and she was living a fairly comfortable life.

Sarah decides to take advantage of the situation by convincing society that Beth was in fact her, effectively faking her own death, and by briefly taking over Beth’s life long enough to steal all her money and ride into the sunset.

The opening scene to Orphan Black, featuring Tatiana Maslany as Sarah ManningSarah also displays a startling lack of curiosity about the fact that Beth was apparently her long-lost twin.

As you might expect, this scheme proves far, far more complicated than Sarah hoped. Pretty much everything imaginable goes wrong with this scheme right out of the gate — Beth was married, and a police officer, for starters. And just to make life more interesting, Sarah encounters another of her dopplegangers, who is promptly murdered before her eyes.

I was not impressed by Orphan Black out of the gate. My main early concern is that this will be one of those stories that just strings people along, providing lots of mystery but few answers. I’m all for mystery, but a good mystery will provide a steady stream of answers and new information while constantly opening new questions. A bad one will just keep piling on the questions.

Despite an almost absurd number of complications being thrown Sarah’s way in the first episode, essentially nothing happened. We learned nothing of value beyond the fact that there are a lot of people who look like Sarah. It just leaves you thinking, “Huh?”

I’m not a big fan of Sarah as a character, either. I’ve kind of got a chip on my shoulder regarding mothers who abandon their children, but even without that little blotch on her character, she’s just not a likable person. She’s a walking train wreck: selfish, erratic, and irresponsible.

Sarah impersonating Beth in Orphan BlackHer writing is pretty inconsistent, too. She often comes across as a complete moron  (You really thought you could just bluff your way through the life of someone you never met? Really?) but in times of great duress, she suddenly morphs into a criminal mastermind who can think her way out of anything.

With that being said, the premise of the show has a lot of potential, and this would hardly be the first show I’ve seen that got off to a rocky start only to improve later, so I decided to keep going.

It was also interesting to discover Orphan Black is filmed in Toronto. Some scenes took place within walking distance of where I used to live.

Overall rating: 5.9/10

“Instinct”:

The second episode picks up immediately after the pilot’s conclusion, with Sarah fleeing the unseen killer who sniped her German doppleganger (as opposed to her Canadian doppleganger). She receives a phone call from a mysterious woman who (believing her to be Beth) is desperate for some information the German was supposedly in possession of.

However, this is once again complicated by Sarah’s ongoing efforts to continue posing as Beth, which once again dovetail into every kind of bad you can possibly think of, and her family issues, as she struggles to keep her “death” a secret from her daughter while her distraught boyfriend makes life miserable for her foster-brother.

Sarah chases the assassin through Parkdale in Orphan BlackLike the pilot, “Instinct” manages the impressive feat of being incredibly eventful and almost absurdly complex while still advancing the plot in almost no meaningful way. At this point, Orphan Black seems to be the epitome of going nowhere fast.

Sarah also continues to show a bizarre disinterest in the fact that she has stumbled into a deadly web of intrigue involving a large of number of women who all share her face. If it were me, I’d be freaking the Hell out.

This episode is mainly noteworthy for introducing two more of Sarah’s duplicates: a prickly soccer mom named Allison, and a geeky eccentric named Cosima.

Overall rating: 4.9/10 I finished watching this episode only a few hours before writing this post, and I’ve already forgotten most of it.

“Variation Under Nature”:

At last, in the third episode of Orphan Black, things start moving forward. Sarah meets with Allison and Cosima, who reveal they are all clones — though how they know this is unclear — and that someone has been killing them off one at a time.

The many and sundry clones of Orphan BlackIt’s around this time that I came to another conclusion about Orphan Black: All the clones seem to be nuts. Sarah is, as noted previously, the poster child for screw-ups everywhere. Allison appears to be irritability incarnate. Beth was a mentally unstable junkie.

Only Cosima seems at all sane or likable. Unfortunately, she seems to be the clone getting the least amount of attention right now.

In general, Orphan Black has a real problem where all of the characters seem unhinged or just generally unlikable. At this point, the only character I have any real fondness for is Felix, Sarah’s brother, and even there, my feelings toward him are lukewarm at best. He’s an incredibly one-dimensional and borderline offensive stereotype.

Still, his baby-sitting gig has to have been the best moment of the series to date. “Look, Mom, we’re cross-dressers!”

Brilliant.

“Variation Under Nature” also features the already strained plausibility of the series taking a nose-dive. I’m used to TV cops behaving not at all like real cops, but then you’ve also got the fact that Sarah is still somehow managing to pass herself off as someone she knows essentially nothing about, and really crazy stuff like a woman just getting up and walking away after being impaled.

Felix in Orphan BlackOddly, the thing that bothers me the most might be the fact that Cosima is the only clone who wears glasses, even though they’re all genetically identical. How’s that work?

On the plus side, I’m growing increasingly impressed by Tatiana Maslany, who plays the clones. I may not be particularly fond of the characters she plays, but she does portrays them all convincingly, and does an excellent job of distinguishing them. Her speech patterns and mannerisms change radically from one clone to another, and they all feel very much like separate individuals.

I particularly like subtle details like how she occasional lets subtle elements of Sarah’s British accent slip through when Sarah is pretending to be Beth.

Ai, so many clones.

I’m also enjoying the Torontonianism of it all, which was on full display in this episode. Driving down the Gardiner, visiting the suburbs of Scarborough, chasing a suspect through Parkdale.

Mmm, nostalgia.

Overall rating: 6.1/10 Feels like the series is only now getting started. If they’d cut out the filler and condensed the first three episodes into the pilot, I’d have enjoyed it a lot.

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Tatiana Maslany as Cosima in Orphan BlackI want to like Orphan Black. I really do. I’m starved for some decent sci-fi, and it seems to have a lot of potential. The main plot about the clones is quite interesting, the lead actress seems very talented (and, to be honest, is also quite easy on the eyes), the production values are high, and it feels good to support a Canadian production.

But as it stands now, I’m just not enjoying it that much. The plot rambles, seemingly doing everything in its power to avoid advancing its most crucial points. The characters are uniformly unlikable. There is much that strains credibility or just flat-out doesn’t make sense.

As it stands now, I’m on the fence about whether to continue watching. I want to give it a fair shake, but after three episodes, it still seems a long way from finding its footing. If no more reviews appear on this blog, you’ll know why.

What I Want From the Next Season of Defiance + New Article

It’s going to be quite a while before the second season of Defiance rolls around, but for now, we can pass the time with the national sport of nerds everywhere: pointless speculation and wishlisting.

A promotional image for DefianceFor my part, these are some of things I’m hoping to see in the next season of Defiance.

More Votans:

I think the writers of Defiance were fairly smart to focus on just a few Votan races to start — mainly the Irathients, Castithans, and Indogenes. It allowed them to develop those cultures quite strongly, and they didn’t overwhelm the viewer with massive info dumps on all the Votan cultures at once.

But now I’d like to see them branch out a bit. I’ve had my fill of Irathients and Castithans (okay, you can never have too much Castithan story), and now I’d like to learn more about the more neglected Votans. I want to know what the Sensoth make of current events, and I want to find out what makes the Liberata tick. I’d like to know how the Volge stowed away on the Ark ships, and why they’re so violent.

The Votanis Collective:

Related to the above, I’d like Defiance to explore the Votanis Collective in greater detail. We’ve seen plenty of the Earth Republic. Now it’s time we learn about the other major political power.

What kind of cities do the Votans build? How have all their disparate cultures come together? How have the Irathients and Castithans not murdered each other yet?

The town of DefianceWith how much the writers for Defiance seem to like political intrigue, the Votanis Collective just seems to be a potential gold mine. So many different races all attempting to live and work together, all vying for power against each other and against the E-Rep.

I’d also be curious to see how Defiance’s Votans view the Collective. Do they feel guilty for not standing with their people, or do they view the Collective the same way the town’s humans view the E-Rep?

The wider world:

Both Defiance the show and Defiance the game have focused pretty much exclusively on the Americas, but the Arkfall changed the entire world. I’d like to find out what happened to the rest of Earth.

Were the terraforming’s effects uniform, or were there unique and strange environments created elsewhere in the world? Is Antarctica the paradise everyone believes it to be? Are the E-Rep and the Votanis Collective the only major political forces left, or are there others elsewhere in the world?

More Datak and Yewll:

Datak Tarr (Tony Curran) in DefianceDoc Yewll might not get as much attention as some of the main cast members, but I think she’s one of the more intriguing characters on Defiance. She’s so prickly and unpleasant, and we know she has a very dark past, but she seems to have a strong moral backbone these days.

I’d love to learn more about Yewll’s past. What horrors did she commit during the Pale Wars, and what made her want to reform?

Datak Tarr remains my favourite character on the show, so naturally I want to see him continue to get plenty of attention. Dude’s just all kinds of awesome.

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What are you hoping to see from the next season of Defiance? Comment and share your thoughts.

New article:

My latest article at WhatMMO is 6 Most Epic One-Time Events.

JOELZILLA.