Tuesday, April 10, 2012

"Firefly (2002) - # 2 The Train Job"



Jayne didn't fight no war...

Episode:# 2 The Train Job
Writers:Joss Whedon & Tim Minear
Director:Joss Whedon

I like the extremely Whedon-esque intro pre-opening credits sequence, taking our heroes into a Alliance-friendly bar come U-day. It has all the flair of his writing, placing our friends in a slightly uncommon situation, barely helping with their needed info being delivered, and helping making new points about the characters. I've always enjoyed those from Whedon. It doesn't exactly hurt having Wash making a giant threat with his non-weaponized transport spaceship.

We get to know Niska in this episode. A villain that makes crooks like Badger and Patience from the opening episode seem like model citizens. The one thing annoying me a little about this Niska is his accent. We're five hundred years into a future supported by the Earth-That-Was dual-superpowers of Americans and Chinese, and Niska sounds like semi-Eastern European... Anyway. Niska hires our crew to do a train heist, and the train heist is a nice episodic touch for our outlaws. Simple enough plan, but not especially easy to perform. You'll need a pilot with steady hands (like a leaf on the wind), a nut to jump from spaceship to train, and a couple of crew-members making an entrance for him at the trains roof. There's of course more trouble rising as well, but I like the crew's attitude towards the caper.

"I aimed for the head."

Jayne's got a lot to offer in this episode. Besides the opening refusal of fighting as he didn't fight no war, he also get to teach us about the chain of command and have a hilarious drugged incident after Simon takes action to secure other chains securing command of the captain-less Serenity. He also aimed for the head...

♪♬♫ You can't take the sky from me ♫♬♪
Whedon also uses this episode to help show Mal's ethics, companion's status in society, the poverty and struggles of outer planets and moons, and the Alliance's disinterest in helping their struggling citizens despite having a large number of peacekeepers passing by. It all helps build on the mythologies and legacies, and we even get to witness the first encounters of two by two, hands of blue; essential to the River-arch, but one Whedon never get to play out fully as the show got cut and the movie couldn't last three-four hours.

Finally I also like to mention the negotiation and understanding made with Niska's minions at the end. Taking out his lead man as he refuses to take the money back and explain their stand, and the subsequent second minion eagerly accepting. I still find that scene funny the third time around.


★★★★☆ # 2 "The Train Job"

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