Dark Angel (TV series)
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| Dark Angel | |
(From left to right) Logan Cale, Max Guevara and Donald Lydecker. |
|
| Format | Science fiction Action/Adventure Drama |
|---|---|
| Created by | James Cameron Charles H. Eglee |
| Starring | Jessica Alba Michael Weatherly Alimi Ballard Jennifer Blanc Richard Gunn J. C. MacKenzie Valarie Rae Miller Jensen Ackles Martin Cummins Kevin Durand Ashley Scott and John Savage |
| Country of origin | United States, Canada |
| No. of seasons | 2 |
| No. of episodes | 43 (List of episodes) |
| Production | |
| Running time | 42 min. 83 min. ("Pilot") 62 min. ("Freak Nation") |
| Broadcast | |
| Original channel | FOX |
| Original run | October 3, 2000 – May 3, 2002 |
Dark Angel is an American biopunk/cyberpunk science fiction television program created by James Cameron and Charles H. Eglee. Dark Angel premiered in the United States and Canada on the FOX network on October 3, 2000, but was canceled after two seasons. The show chronicles the life of Max Guevara (X5-452), a genetically enhanced super-soldier, portrayed by Jessica Alba as an adult, and Geneva Locke as a child. The program is set in Seattle, Washington, USA, but was actually filmed in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada at Lions Gate Studios.
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[edit] Overview
In the year 2009, a genetically enhanced, 9-year-old female super-soldier who calls herself Max Guevara (Jessica Alba), escapes along with eleven others like her from a secret government institution, codenamed Manticore, where they were born, raised and trained to be soldiers and assassins. On June 1, 2009, months after Max's escape, terrorists detonate an electromagnetic pulse weapon in the atmosphere over the U.S., which destroys the vast majority of computer and communication systems, throwing the country into utter chaos.
The first season begins ten years later in 2019, as it follows the life of the now 19-year-old Max as she struggles to search for her Manticore brothers and sisters. In a United States which is now barely more than a Third World nation, she tries to live her life, evade capture, and learn to trust and love. She is aided by Logan Cale (Michael Weatherly), an underground cyber-journalist with the alias Eyes Only, Zack, a fellow X-5, her roommate for a time, Kendra (Jennifer Blanc), and her friends Original Cindy (Valarie Rae Miller), Herbal Thought (Alimi Ballard) and Sketchy (Richard Gunn) at Jam Pony, a courier company where she works as a bicycle messenger. Other X-5's are periodically introduced as well. One or two times a year, Max comes into 'heat' and experiences wild sexual urges as a result of her feline DNA.
In the second season of the show, the tone changes as Max brings down Manticore and frees the soldiers. She is helped in her escape by Alec (Jensen Ackles), in an attempt to facilitate the assassination and capture of Eyes Only and Joshua (Kevin Durand), a transgenic with canine DNA. She later learns that Joshua was the first transgenic created by Manticore's founder Sandeman. Max also finds out that Manticore produced soldiers for speciality environments such as desert and arctic conditions and consequently look vastly different from normal humans. A major theme in the second season is the discovery of an even more deadly enemy in a millennia-old breeding cult similar in structure to the Illuminati. This has resulted in humans even more formidable than the Manticore-produced transgenics, and even some with strong telekinetic powers. Ames White (Martin Cummins), a government agent introduced early in the second season trying to eliminate the loose transgenics, is revealed to be a member of the cult. When a strange message written in Max's genetic code makes an appearance on her skin, it is revealed that Sandeman is a renegate from the breeding cult. Ames White is Sandeman's son, which makes him related to Max and her transgenic brethren. However, the series was cancelled before the producers could play with this dynamic.
[edit] Synopsis
Max was bio-engineered in a government lab called Manticore in Gillette, Wyoming sometime around the turn of the 21st century. As with all of their creations (except Joshua, the first one), Max has a barcode on the back of her neck, with her identifying number sequence. The number as stated on the official website is (332960013452), but on the show it is (332960073452). She is an X-5 model and is thus referred to as X5-452. Max and her unit, her "brothers and sisters," named themselves back at Manticore, and sometime after she escapes, she assumes the surname Guevara after Che Guevara. Also in the last episode of season two (Freak Nation), it is revealed that offspring of an X5-X5 coupling produces a child with no barcode sequence.
Max and her unit were trained to be soldiers using harsh and brutal techniques, supervised by Colonel Lydecker (John Savage) designed for their special abilities. The genetically engineered supersoldiers had a design flaw though. They were missing the essential tryptophan amino acid in the brain resulting in seizures. This led to the removal and death of some of their unit. When they learned this, and Max began to get the shakes, their protective unit leader, Zack (X5-599) (William Gregory Lee) decided they should escape, and led them through a snow-filled forest as they were being chased by Lydecker's men. During a flashback, it is shown that Zack (X5-599) separated up the unit into pairs. Max was paired up with Jondy (who is never seen in the program as an adult). Max got separated from Jondy when she fell into a frozen pond (having been trained to hold her breath underwater for long periods of time) allowing her to avoid the search party.
Several months after her escape, terrorists detonated an electromagnetic pulse in the atmosphere over the U.S., on June 1, 2009. This destroyed the vast majority of electrical systems, not only knocking out all the vital electrical systems but also wiping clean all the electronic data, "turning all those ones, and zeros into just plain old zeros" throwing the United States into chaos. This made it a third world country overnight, which let corruption and crime flourish and eventually leading to a stricter martial control of the population.
By the year 2019, Max is living in Seattle, Washington, illegally squatting in an abandoned building, first with Kendra (Jennifer Blanc) and later with Original Cindy (Valarie Rae Miller) her best friend that she works with at Jam Pony (a bicycle messenger service). Other friends from there include Herbal Thought (Alimi Ballard) and Sketchy (a.k.a. Calvin Theodore) (Richard Gunn). She works at Jam Pony in order to be allowed to move around the city by means of a 'sector' pass and so she can scout locations to steal from. She lives her secret life as a cat burglar, in order to fund the expensive search for her 11 escaped "brothers and sisters."
It is during one of these burglaries that she meets Logan Cale (Michael Weatherly), and realizes that he's the cyber-journalist "Eyes Only." Interested in finding more about his highly skilled mystery visitor, he discovers who she is using security footage, and invites Max back to his apartment. Once there, and being well versed on his government conspiracies, he confirms his suspicions (sees her barcode) that she is one of the escaped X-5s from Manticore. Max and Logan make a pact: he will help her find her missing siblings, if she will help him take down bad guys. Logan also helps to protect Max from Lydecker, who's been looking for the escapees since their breakout.
Soon into the series (10 years after the escape), Max meets up with Zack. More siblings are found, and often with tragic consequences. By the end of the first season, a plan is developed to take down Manticore, one with Lydecker who defects from Manticore after an attempt to assassinate him, and the death of Tinga, one of "his kids." The plan is to destroy the genetics lab, crippling Manticore's ability to produce more soldiers. During their raid, Max gets critically injured, and is assumed dead, but she is actually recaptured.
The plan while successfully executed, including completely destroying (with explosives) the DNA lab but fails to totally destroy Manticore. Instead, a new, larger Manticore facility is established an hour outside of Seattle, Washington. Eventually, Max escapes but not before destroying Manticore allowing numerous transgenics to escape, creating the eventual public knowledge of their existence. Max reunites with Logan, only to discover that she's become a carrier to a deadly virus that was genetically targeted for Eyes Only.
Max's problems are further compounded when the government starts hunting down and destroying the escaped Manticore soldiers, led by Ames White. White is both a government agent, and a member of a secret ancient breeding cult similar in structure to the Illuminati which spans millennia. He's particularly focused on Max, who is revealed to have been created without junk DNA and for a special purpose.
Max befriends one of the new escapees, the first Manticore creation, Joshua (Kevin Durand) who seeks his "father" Sandeman, their mysterious creator, and a renegade member of the breeding cult. Max also teams up with Alec (Jensen Ackles), an X-5 who's genetically identical to her dead unit-mate Ben, and a magnet for trouble. They spend a lot of time covering up, taking out, or protecting the more unusual of the Manticore Alumni. Eventually, they join the other transgenics in the toxic section of Seattle, called Terminal City, and make a stand for their rights against the hostile humans.
[edit] Cast and characters
[edit] Main characters
The following characters were featured in the opening credits of the program.
| Character | Season | Actor/Actress | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Max Guevara (X5-452) | Season 1-2 | Jessica Alba | |
| Logan "Eyes Only" Cale | Season 1-2 | Michael Weatherly | |
| Cynthia "Original Cindy" McEachin | Season 1-2 | Valarie Rae Miller | |
| Calvin "Sketchy" Theodore | Season 1-2 | Richard Gunn | |
| Reagan "Normal" Ronald | Season 1-2 | J.C. MacKenzie | |
| Herbal Thought | Season 1 | Alimi Ballard | Disappeared, never mentioned afterwards |
| Kendra Maibaum | Season 1, Episodes 1-12 only | Jennifer Blanc | Max's first roommate, moved out |
| Donald Lydecker | Season 1, Recurring 2x1-2x3 | John Savage | Vanished after episode 2x3 |
| Alec McDowell (X5-494) | Season 2 | Jensen Ackles | |
| Joshua | Season 2 | Kevin Durand | |
| Ames White | Season 2 | Martin Cummins | |
| Asha Barlow | Season 2x5-2x21, Recurring 2x1-2x4 | Ashley Scott | Although credited did not appear in episodes 2x19-2x21 |
[edit] The 12 original escapees
The following characters escaped in the original 2009 Escape from Manticore. They were only featured throughout season 1. Ben (from episode 1x18) and Alec (from season 2) were twins. Max' also has a twin Sam who appeared in episode 2x19.
- Max (X5-452) (Jessica Alba) (Every Episode)
- Zack (X5-599) (William Gregory Lee) (1x6, 1x8, 1x9, 1x14, 1x20, 1x21, 1x22, 2x1, & 2x7)
- Ben (X5-493) (Jensen Ackles) (Episode 1x17) (deceased)
- Brin (X5-734) (Nicole Bilderback) (Episodes 1x8, 1x20, 1x21, & 1x22)
- Tinga (X5-656) (Lisa Ann Cabasa) (Episodes 1x14, 1x20, 1x21, & 1x22) (deceased)
- Zane (X5-205) (Unnamed Actor) (Episode 1x14)
- Syl (X5-701) (Nicki Aycox) (Episode 1x22)
- Krit (X5-471) (Joshua Alba) (Episode 1x22)
- Jondy (X5-210) (never shown as an adult)
- Seth (from the book)
- Vada (from the book)
- Kavi (from the book)
- Three other characters were mentioned as being in Max's group but didn't participate in the escape for various reasons. These included Jack(X5-417), who died after suffering from seizures, Eva(X5-766), who got shot, and Jace(X5-798) (Shireen Crutchfield in Episode 15), who turned back at the last minute.
[edit] Production
[edit] Background to series
Director James Cameron had planned to make a film of the comic book character Spider-Man. Unable to do so, Cameron moved to television and created the story of Max, a new superheroine. Dark Angel was influenced by cyberpunk, current superhero genres, and third-wave feminism.
[edit] Broadcast History
The first season of the show premiered on Fox on Tuesday, October 3, 2000. The show aired on Tuesday nights after That '70s Show and Titus during the 2000 - 2001 television season and did well with both critics and audiences, averaging 10.1 million viewers during its first season on the air.
The following season, however, FOX made the bold decision to move Dark Angel to Friday nights preceding the network's new series Pasadena in order to try and reverse their string of bad luck with the Friday night death slot curse and to give the network's new series 24 a better time period during the week. Their efforts to improve Friday nights were unsuccessful though as Pasadena failed to find an audience and was canceled before the end of its first season on the night, while Dark Angel saw its second season audience drop by nearly 4 million viewers between the first and second seasons, resulting in its inevitable cancellation as well, despite a strong and vocal fan base and a finale directed by series creator James Cameron.
Though fans of the show attribute Dark Angel's decline in ratings to FOX's decision to move the series to a lower-rated night of the week, many also cite changes in the show's format and tone during its second season as reasons for the large decrease in viewership. These changes were said to be a result of budgetary concerns -- any high-concept television series that heavily utilizes special effects are expensive to produce -- and the departure of several actors, as John Savage, Alimi Ballard and Jennifer Blanc had all left the series as regulars and popular recurring actors William Gregory Lee and Nana Visitor had been written out of the show prior to its cancellation. The final episode of the series aired on May 3, 2002.
After the end of the show's second season, a third season appeared to be close to getting the green light, but FOX instead canceled the show at the last minute in order to make room for Buffy the Vampire Slayer creator Joss Whedon's new science fiction series Firefly on the network's schedule. Ironically enough, Firefly suffered the same fate as Dark Angel and was subsequently canceled the following season as well.
Though canceled due to sagging ratings in its second season, Dark Angel has high availability with most on-demand services as the Sci-Fi Channel in the United States and E4 in the United Kingdom regularly air reruns of both seasons. As of 2003, both seasons of the show are also widely available on DVD.
[edit] US ratings
| Season | Premiere | Final | U.S. ratings | Network | Rank | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 2000-2001 | October 3, 2000 | May 22, 2001 | 10.1 million[1] | FOX | #70 |
| 2 | 2001-2002 | September 28, 2001 | May 3, 2002 | 6.00 million[2] | FOX | #114 |
[edit] Episodes
[edit] DVD releases
20th Century Fox released Seasons 1 and 2 of Dark Angel on DVD in Region 1 & Region 2 in 2003. Both seasons were re-released in Region 1 on June 5, 2007, with slim packaging.[3] The Region 1 releases contain several special features including commentaries, bloopers, deleted scenes and featurettes.
| DVD Name | Ep # | Region 1 | Region 2 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Season 1 | 22 | May 20, 2003 | February 24, 2003 |
| Season 2 | 21 | October 21, 2003 | June 2, 2003 |
[edit] Awards
- 2000: Saturn Award for Best Actress on Television — Jessica Alba in Dark Angel
- 2001: People's Choice Award for Favorite Television New Dramatic Series
- 2001: TV Guide Awards for Breakout Star of the Year — Jessica Alba in Dark Angel
- 2001: Teen Choice Awards for Choice Actress — Jessica Alba in Dark Angel
- 2001: Canadian Society of Cinematographers Awards for Best Cinematography in a TV Series
- 2001: International Monitor Awards for Best Visual Effects in a TV series
- 2001 Nominated for Golden Globe for Best Performance by an Actress in a TV-Series (Drama) - Jessica Alba in Dark Angel
[edit] Spinoffs
Written by Max Allan Collins, a trilogy of novels expands upon the Dark Angel television series. While based on the series, the books are not considered official canon within the Dark Angel universe.[citation needed]
- Dark Angel: Before the Dawn (2002) is a prequel to the television series, taking a detailed look at Max's past between 2009 and 2019. It introduced another '09 escapee, Seth. After Max and her siblings had escaped, Seth slipped out in the confusion and eventually ended up in Seattle, where he worked for Logan as a personal agent. The book is listed on Amazon.com as "Before the Dawn (Dark Angel)".
- Dark Angel: Skin Game (2003) immediately follows the events of "Freak Nation," the final episode of Season 2, describing the days between March and May 2021. Skin Game focuses on a killer terrorising the streets of Seattle and the growing suspicion and evidence that the killer could possibly be a transgenic. As the killings escalate, the US Army and National Guard prepare themselves for an invasion of Terminal City.
- Dark Angel: After the Dark (2003) follows Skin Game, describing the days in December 2021. Relationships are torn apart after Logan reveals a shattering truth about his past to Max, but when Logan is kidnapped, questions are set aside as Max's investigation into the capture leads to an old enemy, The Breeding Cult members of the Conclave. With the aid of a team of Transgenics, Max vows to find those responsible for the kidnapping, unaware that the Conclave are not only anticipating her arrival, but the arrival of The Coming. After the Dark answers many questions raised in the second season; The curing of Max's virus, the Conclave's agenda, the return of Lydecker and C.J. Sandeman, and Max and Logan finally getting together. (ISBN 9780345451842)
- Dark Angel: The Eyes Only Dossier (2003) collects documents pertaining to four ongoing Eyes Only investigations, tangentially related to Manticore and the Dark Angel universe.
[edit] References
- ^ "TV Ratings 2000-2001". http://www.chez.com/fbibler/tvstats/recent_data/2000-01.html.
- ^ USATODAY.com - How did your favorite show rate?
- ^ "Dark Angel is Re-Released in Slim Sets". TV Shows on DVD. 2007-03-14. http://tvshowsondvd.com/newsitem.cfm?NewsID=7021. Retrieved on 2008-07-14.
[edit] External links
| Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to: Dark Angel |
[edit] Official Sites
[edit] Articles
- Dark Angel news articles, 2000-2005
- To the Max: Embodying Intersections in Dark Angel
- Dark Angel - Max Guevera as a Modern Feminist Superhero
- Dark Angel Articles
[edit] Other
- Dark Angel at the Internet Movie Database
- Dark Angel at TV.com
- Boston.com's Top 50 Science Fiction Television Shows of All Time
- Dark Angel News, Info, etc.
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