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Television: Caprica, A Show Worth Watching! by Cadence

20 Oct 2010

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Hey all! I was initially going to start doing some regular recapping of Caprica, but it occurred to me that my audience would be fairly limited. Instead, I’m going to use this space as a plea to those of you out there who have yet to give this show a chance.

Caprica is one of the most incredible television shows that I have ever watched.

Before I begin, I want to make something absolutely clear. This show is NOT Battlestar Galactica. The tone is different, the storytelling is different, the cinematography is different, and the characters are different. There are some common elements that they share of course, such as philosophical issues pertaining to AI, the twelve colonies and their peoples, and William Adama himself; however, that’s where the similarities end. BSG was a dark and gritty show and yet it had humour. Caprica, though lighter in concept, manages to be even darker in tone. This is a good thing. Battlestar was an incredible feat of television, but why would we want a copy of it? Caprica is a distinct entity and it stands on its own two feet. If you hated or didn’t watch BSG, give Caprica a try. If you loved BSG and are worried about comparisons, stop worrying. If you watched the pilot and gave up, pick it up again.

Here are five reasons why you should watch Caprica:

1. The Characters:

Many an argument against a television show starts off with a mention of how lacking the characters are. Complaints range from lack of depth, to erratic or inconsistent behaviour, to a lack of purpose. The characters in Caprica suffer from none of these problems. When they act erratically, it’s because of their depth and complexity. When they lack a purpose, it drives their search for one. When they do things for simple reasons, it’s because it makes the most sense. The cast of characters is so disparate in regards to their needs and identities that not a single one treads on the toes of any of the others. Each character’s life, motivation, and direction provide incredible tension and drama. No one is a good guy or a bad guy. The apparent villains have legitimate reasons to do the things they do, while the so-called good guys do awful things to further their goals. Even the recurring characters are more interesting than most of the characters you’ll find on regular network television.


Obviously, the actors are also in need of heavy praising. Every single actor on the show gives his or her character a life that few shows will ever know. Even the least talented amongst them have something unique to offer the show and its audience.

2. The World.

In fewer than 10 episodes, Caprica has introduced us to an extraordinarily complex universe. With twelve full colonies and many more distinct peoples, it seems like there would be a huge amount of exposition to cover and yet the creators and writers have managed to imply much more than they ever tell us as directly. There is tension between worlds, religions, races, facets of the media, rival corporations, and more. I will expand on the complexity of the world in my last point.

3. The Music.

There is one melody in Caprica. When I first saw the opening sequence, I almost laughed at how ridiculous it was. Now, it gives me shivers every time. The tune is used in so many different contexts that it evokes a whole slew of emotions at once. It also has a haunting quality to it that lends itself to pretty much every situation on the show. When it isn’t playing, an intense drumbeat creates mounting tension. Many scenes involve characters sitting around and thinking about what is going on around them. The music drives these scenes and makes them comprehensible. You can feel the contradictory ideas floating around inside their headss.

If you’re a LOST fan and for more information on musical context, check out my previous article about how Television Music Moves Me.

4. The Cinematography.

The colouring is beautiful. We are shown a magnificent, lively, and colourful city and yet the shots of the characters are incredibly bleak and grey. Every scene is given a uniform tone with some sort of underscored theme relevant to the plot, then, at a second glance, another unexpected colour pops out. The editing is also phenomenal. The camera is jerky, but without the deliberate shakiness of a documentary. Other times, the camera remains calm and steady. I don’t know much about the technical aspects of this, so that’s all I will

say about the matter.



5. The Ideas.

The show remains topical, with issues like terrorism and religious extremism at its core; however, these are hardly the only topic covered. While BSG always implied that humans were arrogant and full of hubris, to have thought that they could play God and create life, Caprica looks at the issue from the opposite direction. Instead of a retrospective message of warning, we get a feel for what actually drove the twelve colonies towards the creation of the Cylons (the AI that eventually rebels against its creators). The show deals with racism in the form of immigration problems. It deals with the struggles of growing up in the character of Lacy. It deals with the media by showing us serious news programs alongside satirical political commentary. It deals with power struggles and corruption in the form of Joseph Adama and Daniel Greystone (who both deal with different aspects of this issue). It deals with homosexuality by making it a non-issue (i.e. one of the characters is gay and there isn't an ounce of prejudice in anyone who interacts with him). It deals with the afterlife by showing us a digital world in which we could live on forever. It deals with pretty much everything!



Just frakking watch the show!


In conclusion, I beg of you all to give Caprica a chance. It seems likely that it is going to get the axe, so find people with Nielsen boxes and start making them watch. It’s airing on a Tuesday night, which is a problem for many, so DVR it instead!

Thanks for listening.

Caprica for Season 2!



- Cadence

32 comments:

  1. I also think is a good show.I wish more people decided to watch it this season.

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  2. facebook-63266561220 October 2010 at 07:03

    I think it's a good show too, but as a BSG fan I think the atmosphere should feel similar, and until now, Caprica did not feel like it's predissesor. It happened again, because it happened before. It doesn't need to be BSG, it just needs tie -ins to the mythology as a whole. There should be mysterious things/beings leading these people to the fall as it should mirror the fall of Kobol and Earth 1....or give us more information on how the fall of Kobol could have happened.

    I think everything else is great about it, but it shouldn't be called a prequel unless it truly relates. However these first 2 eps back, I have noticed a dramatic change in tone. It now feels like the way it should...and I hear that it's now suppose to not shy away from it's BSG roots.

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  3. Thanks for the comment :).

    My response is a complicated one. In BSG, they kept repeating that the cycle has happened over and over again and that this was the repetition that might break the cycle. The reason given was the Cylon belief in the one true God.

    So, first of all, who's to say that mysterious beings aren't doing this as we speak? The STO storyline might be leading us in that direction.

    Second of all, even if that isn't the case, maybe the interference of the mysterious beings was specifically to help break the cycle. The "angels" saw something different (i.e. a belief in the one true God for real this time, who they serve) and decided to lend a hand.

    That aside, I'm against making the tone more like BSG. Adding tie-ins is one thing, changing the feel and pacing is another. As I was arguing, Caprica has its own tone and it ought to revel in what it has. I'm all for shout-outs to the mothershow though.

    One thing I didn't mention that makes Caprica very different from BSG is that BSG was essentially made up as the writers went along. Caprica is part of their pre-built universe and they have to tread more carefully for fear of fanrage inducing retcons. They don't seem to have any so-called "filler episodes" (like Black Market, or Scar on BSG) for that reason, which is awesome.

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  4. That's what worries me. The show may be too smart for its own good. I mean, that's why I love it, but if it gets cancelled because people couldn't get their heads around the material, I will be very sad. Caprica belongs on a channel like AMC or HBO, where nuanced cerebral television shows seem to thrive.

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  5. Exactly! One of the most interesting aspects of Caprica is how half of the plot hinges on the fact that Daniel and Joseph conspired to steal Tomas Vergis' work. Right off the bat, the protagonists are cast in a shady light. Whether or not Daniel meant for two people to get killed isn't the point. Whether or not Vergis would do/has done the same kind of is irrelevant. Sure Daniel had reservations, but he ultimately goes through with the plan.

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  6. I can't believe that something this good has the chance of being cancelled with all the other "real world" trash on TV that tries to pass for entertainment. The complexity and depth in the characters and script make it a must see. I can't wait for Tuesday evenings. My Syfy channel airs the episode twice on that night and I watch both times (and the re-runs later in week). Maybe the complexity and depth is the very thing that is hurting ratings. It takes intelligence to catch the subtle nuances. I tell everyone I know about the show and how good it is.

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  7. I think that the show is good - however sometimes too quirky for your average joe. If you follow the themes of BSG, then you can follow this show easily. However, always remember you need your thinking cap on when you watch. This is not a show for feeble minds. It's smart, original and wonderfully acted. Looking forward to this seasons cliffhanger!!

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  8. I really like this series. Granted, after following BSG for its full four seasons, I will admit I was a little on the leary side. But, that leariness didn't last long and now I am up on every single episode that has been shown on SyFy. Do I think it is the best show on television? Well, it is one of the best out there. It has depth, imagination, excellent stories, great characters and plots, and I can't wait to see more. I say all this because this show outstrips most of the frakkin' crap out there- like Dancing with the Retards and Fattest Loser. So, let's keep Caprica alive and have it get a second season at the very least and four at the most (have to match BSG's run at least).

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  9. Thanks Cadence! That was great! I really love this show, as well as BSG, and I really hope that the numbers pick up in the next couple weeks. Thanks for a great read.

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  10. SYFY'S Caprica is not the "best" television show I've ever watched in my lifetime, but it is unquestionably very good. I agree with the author of this article, who focuses on the complexity of the characters in the story. Moral relativism abounds here as opposed to *morality,* but the viewer is led to understand the reasoning behind each character's reaction and/or course of action. The line between protagonist and villain is so blurred that the viewer sometimes finds himself/herself sympathizing with the villian(s). E.g., murder is acceptable if expedient or serving a higher purpose. It's a fantasy, after all -- a world of high technology that modern society has only scratched the surface of. It seems logical that the rules can often be "bent." It's a show that with the suggestion of events relevant to our 21st-century world that leads the viewer to imagine, "What if...." All said, it's a pleasant, entertaining and somewhat cerebral way to spend an hour on Tuesday nights, IMO. You don't have to be a fan of BSG to comprehend or enjoy it.

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  11. I'm really glad to see that stuff finally started happening. I was about to give up on it, but NOW its getting interesting!
    Oh wait, was this post about Caprica or Rubicon? I forget...

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  12. facebook-63266561221 October 2010 at 00:56

    Right. I agree that there could be mysterious beings as "Mother" has this quality.

    What I mean by tone is the mystery or mystical feel should be in both because the mythology presented in BSG is that the both Caprica and BSG are repeating a previous cycle...the law of averages do not apply yet since that argument is at the end of BSG and Caprica takes place before.

    I understand that both shows are in different situations, but truth be told since humans are humans, all issues are the same. Daniel obviously thinks that Caprica needs a military defence---so like in BSG there is an "Us vs Them", it's just in BSG it started out to be Cylon vs Humanity, but ended with splits and convergences in both parties and in Caprica it's humanity vs humnaity for right now. Both shows are about the survival of a little girl, or in Caprica's case, little girls. Both shows are about families sticking together and breaking down. Both shows are about religious differences and similarities. Both shows are about facing death. And both shows are about finding out who 'you' really are.

    I just feel that Kobol's backs story should also be linked as it was in BSG. I am not saying they should be paced the same...but there should be a feel that these events are tied to the future one's and that there is something 'bigger' at work leading these people to the fall. In BSG everyone, but Helo was corrupt too (remember Lee's speech in Crossroads about being a gang and not a civilization??) The difference in the shows are amounts of people, and laws and the showing of how the beliefs change, everything else is still the same because everyone wants to live! The difference is the belief in just how long and for what purpose (control issues) and to what end.

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  13. You can't have the same tone and feel in Caprica that you had in BSG... one is set at the pinnacle of a corrupt complicated hyper-efficient society, the other is a Hodge Podge of leftovers lurching from one crisis to the next. It would be an insult to say that BSG's forceful presence was not in significant part due to the plot the writers entangled us in... and it's unfair to require Caprica to hold that environment, since in that world it doesn't exist yet.

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  14. Yay thanks for reading :D!

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  15. I agree with the posters; this is a show that you have to use your head a little bit. If it is boring to you then you probably can't wrap your noodle around it, especially if you don't know the history. I agree with ya'll in that it has a different pace and feel than BSG. When the camera starts wiggling too much I get dizzy, so I hate that in any show. I had severe withdrawal when BSG came to an end. Although I hadn't heard that Caprica may be canceled and was surprised, because it keeps me stuck down to the couch for an hour (I'm hyper). If it is too "hard to follow" for some, then switch to the sit-coms. I love it and we need to let them know. They had better not cancel it, because I might do something, like cry.

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  16. I think the problem is essentially the move to Tuesday night. You have giants like NCIS playing at the same time, so the competition is way bigger than before, and I guess that in the middle of the week people want their mind numbing procedurals.

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  17. I had the exact same reservations early on, but the pilot simply blew me away. It was the cinematography and acting that initially drew me in and then everything just exploded outwards.

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  18. Lol, if it's cancelled, I hope we don't get cliffhangers :P.

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  19. You've said everything there is to be said - except--Barnabas--and not just cause I love Marsters - because the character's depth is incredible, he is evil as can be, yet vulnerable at the same time. The last episode shows that amazingly well. I consider Barnabas a great lead-in to the BSG story-line an especially Gaius. I agree, anyone expecting BSG will be very surprised. It's lead episodes were a bit slow, but I stayed with it and am so glad i did.

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  20. Nice article. I first red the comments and then the article, so I'm sorry if I mixed some things up.

    I watched BSG and I agree with the writer that the shows shouldn't be to similar, after all, we want originality! It's argued by someone that it is to similar by ideas and taking place in just a different setting.
    Agreed, the ideas and the background are the same. But it is worked out totally different: characters are built up different (we start with good guys doing bad things), more storylines which are closely intertwined (but still there seems to be no way to tell which way the stories are heading), less action vs. more 'mind twists' and more which I can't think of right now.

    A negative point (I found it a bit annoying) could be the high amount of switching storylines (mainly Season 1.0) and uneven amount of time each storyline gets. Also, the (in my eyes) main character Zoey, doesn't get enough face time.

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  21. I disagree. These people don't have any interest in Kobol. Why would they? They aren't on the run or looking for a planet on which to live or following some sort of religious prophecies. They're just living their incredibly dramatic daily lives. Yes, there are plenty of thematic similarities as you pointed out; however, a show about survival after a nuclear genocide has a very different perspective than a show about the creation of an intelligent AI. BSG was all about retrospectives and trying to learn from the past in order to move forward, while Caprica is all about making those initial mistakes.

    As a final note, for Caprica to build an audience, it can't move closer to BSG. To tie it in more heavily than it already does would just reinforce the sense that you need to have been a BSG fan to watch Caprica.

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  22. Hey, thanks for the comments :)! You made a great point of there being less physical action. I really love the scenes that involve characters just staring out windows and thinking. On BSG, characters just didn't have time for that since it was all about survival. Here, they can move at a more normal pace.

    I responded to the comment you mentioned while you were writing this, so here was what I argued in regards to themes being similar:

    There are plenty of thematic similarities; however, a show about survival after a nuclear genocide has a very different perspective than a show about the creation of an intelligent AI. BSG was all about retrospectives and trying to learn from the past in order to move forward, while Caprica is all about making those initial mistakes.

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  23. Agreed completely. Thanks for the comment :).

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  24. Caprica is quite an exceptional production. I think it rivals DEXTER in the scope of its writing and character play and has surpassed it as the latest new "HOT-TV" production. It is also a parable of where we are today not just in this country. So many points of reference are spot on when paralleled to today’s America. I have suggested to many of a friend to watch this program.

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  25. I agree. The writers just seem to have an incredible understanding of how and why each of the characters get to the places they find themselves. It's also very much like the America of today. Great point.

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  26. Well lol, it would seem that The Gee is correct. I hadn't seen the episode yet when we were having this discussion. I must say I don't mind the way that they incorporated the celestials (I really like that expression) into Caprica. Celestial Zoe seems to be nothing like Head Baltar or Head Six. They were kind of moody and very forceful. Celestial Zoe seems patient and kind. I wouldn't want a repeat of Head Baltar and Head six.

    I'm not arguing that I hate tie-ins... I just want Caprica to be its own show. Celestial beings are present in this universe so that's fine. I just don't want the same kind of themes dealt with. I guess we will see.

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  27. The Celestials are there. Didn't you see tuesdays episode?
    This one looks like Zoe.

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  28. I completely understand/appreciate your point, but I'm arguing its opposite :P.

    First of all, the reason many of those BSG fans dislike Caprica is because Caprica isn't BSG. They were expecting nuclear genocides and fast-paced tension. Caprica provides a much slower and cerebral tone. My point in this article is that, though it takes place in the same universe, it doesn't try to be BSG. While these people take that as the reason they hate the show, I take that as a good thing. Why flog a dead horse?

    In response to you, you're right, there are thoughtful ways that those elements of the BSG mythology could have been adapted to Caprica successfully, but most attempts at doing so would bog down Caprica's plot with leftovers from BSG. I say it's best that they didn't attempt that and that they built Caprica to stand more on its own.

    That being said, crossover comics for hardcore fans would be a great way to do something like that. Also, as Caprica evolves (hopefully into a second season) I'm sure it will start to go down some of those roads.

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  29. facebook-63266561225 October 2010 at 21:22

    Look I like Caprica, Just as a BSG fan I see how an [secondary] avatar in the 'universe' could be created as the idea of leading people comes from the avatar's creators. There's a a lot of BSG fans that don't like Caprica at all and I am not one of them. It's just the writers don't go out of their way to make people think about that aspect. Battlestar fans have to dig deep to apply these concepts from Caprica back onto the mythology as a whole.

    Kobol and/or earth 1 should have an effect here because these gods and spiritual beliefs derive from the original corrum of 12. That it also why is also interesting that Athena is Willow's schools figure head/patriot arch as Athena was the one to commit tragic suicide and of course it then ties Zoe to Hera as Hera is the daughter of 'Athena' (Sharon Agathon) and Willow uses herself as a mother figure to these kids, as it is Zoe's and Daniel's technology that leads them all to ressurection technology (Fields of Elysium?! - the 8 models)

    In the final five comic series it is revealed that "The Guardians" come upon the 5 as they return home to Kobol after the distruction of Earth 1. ---Ellen learns that 'souls' can be copied to machines as the guardians had souls with in them-- something she was missing in order to ressurect her father (and soon to be son) John Cavil and create the other 7. It is also revealed that virtual 6 was there to guide Saul's father, Micheal, and Pythia (Saul's mother) in the Kobol Exodus. IMO there should be more parallels and mentioning of these things.

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  30. Also, as a side note, the fact that you noticed all of those REALLY interesting things tying Hera and Athena to Zoe and Clarice shows that the show is giving you material for thought, which other shows don't do. It doesn't just have to directly tell us these things, it need only imply it for further analysis, which is what you did! That's awesome!

    Finally, those comics you mentioned sit within the realm of BSG mythology so it makes sense that it would make use of BSG's plot devices. Caprica's distinctive tone doesn't lend to that. It will have to slowly work its way in (like we see with Celestial Zoe in last week's episode).

    Lol, thanks for continuing an interesting discussion!

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  31. facebook-63266561227 October 2010 at 15:22

    Thanks for reading despite our difference in opinion. (:
    Honestly, now that I have caught up (missed the past 2 eps back), I already feel a change and the show has suddenly given me the things that I felt were missing. It never had to be Battlestar in it's everyday sense, I can appreciate not wanting to overwelm a non Battlestar viewer, but just a few elements of 'something bigger and mysterious' happening to these people. With "Unvanquished" and "The Things We Locke Away" I feel I am getting that resolution. The episodes feel tighter. Those things (no matter how one wants to theologically or scientifically define them), that made this universe feel like it is pulling them in a specific eerie direction, has finally started to show some face in Caprica.

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