When Joss Whedon announcedFirefly, his newest series, he was then-current pop TV’s golden boy. He’d transformed his 1992 flop film,Buffy the Vampire Slayer,into atop-rated TV show and created a successful spinoff,Angel. Buffy had taken the world by storm, and anticipation for Whedon’s next work couldn’t have been higher.

That it was a proposed sci-fi show didn’t phase anyone—despite the outcome of his work onAlien: Resurrection, his other genre forays were already beloved. The once and future expander of the MCU into a full-fledged mega-beast of a franchise was good to go, as far as audiences were concerned. But of course, the show was canceled after a single season.

Buffy the Vampire Slayer

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The Young Slayer, Sorta

Wunderkind is a phrase tossed around all too easily regarding any relatively youthful up-and-comer in the industry — Seth MacFarlane, for example earned the moniker when he brought backFamily Guyfrom the dead over and over again. However, Joss’s earning the title is a little odd. He’d come up under his father’s shadow, Tom Whedon, a writer on such perennial megahits asBensonandThe Golden Girls,and his grandfather John, who helped turnThe Andy Griffith ShowandThe Dick Van Dyke Showinto all-timers forDesiluback in the 1960s. It was no wonder that Joss Whedon had a legacy to live up to, as well as an already well-established “in” to the industry at large.

Cutting his teeth on shows likeRoseanneandParenthood, Whedon soon sold his first feature script,Buffy the Vampire Slayer,which came out in 1992. The film was much goofier than Whedon later claimed he intended, and it came and went without much of an impact. Licking his wounds after the film and before his TV version would come out, Whedon turned to script doctoring (famously helping shape the firstToy Storyinto something watchable), and then writing Ellen Ripley’s rebirth in the commercial smash/critical flopAlien: Resurrection.

firefly class ship serenity Cropped

Since theBuffyfilm had been such a flop, when Whedon entered the postThe X-Fileslandscape and turned the TV version of the property into a hit, everyone was surprised. He’d invented modern teen procedural TV. But whenFireflywas announced, nobody knew what to expect. In terms of what Whedon’s past experience could mean for an entire sci-fi franchise of his own, it was anyone’s guess what he’d turn out.

A More Cynical Sci-Fi Tale

WhenFireflydebuted, it was something like the opposite ofStar Trek.Instead of a gleaming ship backed up by a powerful federation of brave explorers seeking out new life, it was apocalyptic, featuring former combat vets on the run from the glossy, controlling government in a darker universe. Humanity had not embraced each other despite their differences in Whedon’s space opera. They had simply used up the Earth then fled to a new galaxy to use it up as well. An even bigger difference was thatFirefly’s universe focused solely on humans, rather than alien life.

Looking toward our future, the show was negative in its outlook on our ability to deal meaningfully with climate change and instead of a Federation. The only political unity was an alliance of convenience between China and the West, with the characters speaking a mix of English peppered with Chinese cursing or sporting some surface-level Asian cultural affectations. It wore its influences on its sleeves, someBlade Runnerhere, someStar Warsthere, in both the Western-theming and the captain, Malcolm Reynolds (Nathan Fillion) dressing like Han Solo. The pedigree was there, as well as the influences of a Gen X-er getting his own sci-fi sandbox.

Firefly series cast and Captain Mel Reynolds (Nathan Fillion)

Keep Flying (In Our Memories)

When FOX, after airing episodes out of order and barely advertising the series, canceledFireflybefore its half-season order of fourteen episodes had even finished airing, fans were flabbergasted. Joss Whedon, who still had his other shows on TV, had faltered somehow, and now the golden boy’s property was no more. After the mess withMacFarlaneandFamily Guy’s multiple cancellations, it just seemed more of the same from the current crop of FOX executives. Audiences fought hard for it to continue, but to no avail. At the time, fans likened it to the originalStar Trek, itself canceled after three seasons (each with successively fewer episodes than the previous) and never completing its five-year voyage.

Fireflyhad never gotten a chance to shine, and so things that would have started earning it critical reappraisal never solidified. Only after it hit big on DVD did people start talking about the show. Articles about how there were no Asian characters of note in its Sino-English universe, or how characters like Adam Baldwin’s muscle-headed merc, Jayne, seemed a lot like Ron Perlman’s muscle-headed merc, Ron Johner, fromAlien: Resurrection. Then there were those who examined Whedon’s claims that it was a story inspired by the Confederacy after the American Civil War, meaning his already racially rocky universe was making heroes out of those who fought on the side of slavery. Other viewers questioned his treatment of female characters, particularly focusing on Inara (Morena Baccarin), a courtesan Mal almost exclusively refers to as a “whore” throughout the scant episodes. This claim was given weight when a formerBuffy actresses came forward about his abuseon that show.

If the series had gone on, gotten even a second full season, these issues might have derailed it. There would have been more content to critically judge on those various fronts. As it is, being truncated so early, it’s caught like aJurassic Parkmosquito, forever enshrined in amber and therefore kind of timeless. Ironically,Fireflycan keep flying because it never really got a chance to.

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