1983 was perhaps the peak year for the TV mini-series, with The Thorn Birds, The Winds of War and V all premiering to big ratings. V features a worldwide alien invasion, as huge, circular motherships arrive and take up stationary orbit all over the planet, directly over large cities. The media soon dubs them the "Visitors", and they appear human, although sensitive to the light and with strange voices. They seem to be benevolent at first, sharing medical and technological breakthroughs, while not asking for anything in return. But of course they are after something, and they will stop at nothing to get it, and soon they are disposing of enemies and setting up human collaboration units to weed out the "undesirables". A group of people soon set up an underground resistance, but can they hope to stop the seemingly superior alien invaders?
Marc Singer stars as a heroic war correspondent who is the first to learn of the aliens true nature, along with Faye Grant as a biologist, Jane Badler as an alien commander, Richard Herd, Andrew Prine, Leonardo Cimino as a Holocaust survivor who sees the writing on the wall, Evan Kim, Michael Wright, Bonnie Bartlett, Neva Patterson, Robert Englund as a friendly alien, and many more.
This was probably intended as a starting point for a series, but instead it led to another mini-series the following year, before finally a short-lived series (and a remake in 2009). It's derivative of a lot of things, namely the Arthur C. Clarke novel Childhood's End. It's also a very heavy-handed allegory of the Nazi occupations in Europe and the Holocaust; the alien symbol is even a variation on a swastika. The effects are decent, if dated at this point, and the script, by writer-director Kenneth Johnson, never really rises above average. But it's fun in a dopey, Saturday-morning serial way. At slightly over 3 hours, it's also a bit short as far as mini-series go.
V
1983
Action / Adventure / Sci-Fi
V
1983
Action / Adventure / Sci-Fi
Plot summary
Aliens pretending to be friendly come to Earth and are received openly. The aliens have disguised themselves to look just like humans. When it is discovered that the aliens' planet is dying and that they have come to rape the Earth of its natural resources, the war for Earth begins. An important key to the humans' success is distinguishing their own from who the aliens are.
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A rather obvious Nazi allegory, but well done with some surprises
Girl Power!!
Long before Janeway (Kate Mulgrew) assumed command of the Starship Enterprise, long before 80s prettyboy Starbuck (Dirk Benedict) had a sex change turning him into Katee Sackhoff ...there was "V".
Back in the late 70s and early 80s, it was unheard of to put a woman in power (the honourable Mrs. Margaret Thatcher notwithstanding),but here we see a series that pushed the envelope. Not only was the antagonist (beautiful Jane Badler) one of the most formidable characters in scifi history, but the leader of the good guys (Faye Grant) was one tough cookie herself. Throw into the mix a few beefcakey gents with great abs and whose shirts always seem to fall off, and you've got yourself a great show for the ladies.
Me, I'm actually a dude. All the same, I love shows that offer a viewpoint contrary to the usual male-dominated adventures that Hollywood churned out for the first 100 years. This was one of the first shows that really gave women proper credit for being leaders and warriors (and genocidal villains). Faye Grant delivers a particularly powerful performance as an ordinary geek who's suddenly thrust into leading the human race to salvation--not your typical born leader yet one who accepts the responsibility nonetheless and does it with passion.
Jane Badler... *phew, a moment of silence for bodacious Jane Badler, please* ... all I can say is she was the fantasy gal that got me through me pre-pubescent years. Homina homina.
Sure, the show has many flaws befitting an 80s TV series. It can seem cartoony at times, predictable and cheezy. But this is what made 80s TV so GREAT! Today's kids may have a tough time understanding it, but they should give it a try just the same. The overall quality and production of this miniseries was stellar, with special effects that were so colossal they were used 10 years later in the motion picture "Independence Day". Created and directed by Kenneth Johnson ("The Incredible Hulk") and musically scored by Joseph Harnell (again, "The Incredible Hulk" ...best made-for-TV music ever),this miniseries was nothing short of huge. Any kid who was alive back in 83 HAD to see this or else risk getting pummelled in school gym class.
Being, I dunno, 6 years old at the time, I hardly noticed some of the complex themes this show introduced. The miniseries has a very WWII-era slant to it with many allusions to fascism, political deception and the underground movement to liberate an oppressed race. At times you feel like you could be watching a historical recount of Nazi occupation. Other times the show makes a pretty strong argument for vegetarianism, especially after you see human beings being prodded and carted off to slaughterhouses. And on an individual level we see an intricate soap opera of human behaviour, how people are driven by different passions (for better or worse) in extreme situations. The overall theme, which keeps recurring throughout the whole series, seems to be that everyone can make a difference regardless of age, sex, size or stature. This show makes you want to go out and kick some butt, fight for what you believe in, vive la resistance, or maybe I should just hold up 2 fingers and say "V". Rock on!
fun network sci-fi for its time
War correspondent Mike Donovan (Marc Singer) is imbedded with the Salvadorian rebels in his latest global hot spot reporting. He's being attacked by a government helicopter when an alien ship suddenly shows up. Multiple alien ships have stationed themselves around the world. Alien leader John claims to be peaceful seeking our help. They need to manufacture some needed compounds in exchange for knowledge to the benefit of mankind. Mike is one of the journalists invited onboard on one of the alien ships. Everything seems alright but it's too good to be true. Some people are being kidnapped or eliminated by the aliens. Mike sneaks back onboard and films some horrifying discoveries. The aliens are simply dumping the chemicals that they manufactured and the aliens turn out to be lizard people. The aliens create a fake crisis blaming scientists and instituting martial law before Mike can televise his videotape. Med school student Juliet Parrish along with others start organizing resistance in L.A.
It starts with a great premise. After all, it's another War of the Worlds and that's always good sci-fi. It does run into some writing hurdles along the way. It struggles with the scale of the story. There is a limitation to TV production and it's hard to maintain the epic scope over the length of the mini-series. One must always keep that in mind. Other script issues are more inexcusable. It's notable that there is no human political lead characters because they wouldn't be able to explain how the world could have devolved into that situation. It's trying very hard to equate the show with Nazi Germany but Hitler was not an alien. Also I don't know how the bad guys can be narrowed to only scientists. Essentially scientists are the Jews of this world and it doesn't really make sense. It's a lot of awkward writing. There is an easy solution to most of it. It could do a time jump. One can yadayada a lot of things if the show skips a few years. As for the videotape, Tony should have spent all his time copying it and spreading them around. Quite frankly, it would be a great story development if copies of a copy of the tape become the inspiration for other revolts. Despite its many issues, it's a fun network TV sci-fi show and the various problems can be overlooked... for now.