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Taken
01/11/2002 Source: Rod MacDonald 

Stephen Spielberg's new mini-series on SCI-FI Channel which begins this December 2002 in the USA.

Stephen Spielberg's Taken

In the near future, twenty hours of television are lying in ambush just waiting to abduct us. We'll be transported to a mindless zone where our eyes, unable to move right or left, will be fixated upon a television screen.

We'll be fed addictive stories which will be portrayed by lifelike characters and before we know it we'll be - TAKEN!

This is the master plan of that old weaver of Science Friction tales (not misspelled), Steven Spielberg. Roswell, alien abduction, Area 51, Bermuda Triangle, crop circles, government conspiracy and hybrid beings - elements of these have all been thrown in the pot and stirred up to produce something akin to the alien version of 'Roots' except that here the enslaved have more ethereal chains.

It even has a reference to 'Close Encounters'. In this story, the film has become a fact which fits neatly into the plot. A little bit of self-justification does your morale a lot of good. It's a wonder Private Ryan doesn't appear somewhere in the script or even Schindler.

After all, didn't he disappear at the end of the film, taken away by Ruskies?

Anyway, the story commences with a dying American pilot from the Second World War. Russell Keys doesn't end up as a mangled piece of flesh and bone somewhere in enemy territory but emerges from a blue light to find himself with his mates on safe ground suffering from convenient amnesia. (Look up medical dictionary for the condition, convenient amnesia. Millions have it!)

This is a story which moves through time, space and generations. Keys finds memories become apparent which lead him to believe that he has been abducted by aliens and irrevocably altered. Bad enough, you would think, but this curse is passed on to his children and their children in turn. They're all future UFO fodder!

Along comes Owen Crawford. He's the guy behind the Roswell Conspiracy and indeed he becomes a sort of 'X-Files' Smoking Man in the future. We also have Sally Clarke, a lonely woman ostensibly knocked up by an alien to produce a hybrid child. And there we have it - we get not just two families but three reacting together throughout the next sixty years.

It's science in action. A two body problem, ie the Earth and the Moon is quite easy to solve but add the Sun's gravity and things become much more complicated.

Likewise, the drama resulting from three mutually interacting families becomes much more compelling and interesting. Presumably, each family has characters for us to identify with. Maybe the spectrum of character traits found in most humans can be found here. So no matter what you're like, you'll find your niche in this series.

Spielberg is a clever cookie in many respects.

According to the information given on the website, Spielberg says this series is 100% character driven. He wants people to watch this and for the advertisers to take notice. There's also something for all ages, from old folk from the war years to middle-age hippies to young kids who would like to imagine themselves as being something more exciting than what they are.

Throughout the years, kids have wanted to be Superboy, Spider-man, Tomorrow Children, Skywalker and others of a similar nature. Curiously, I wanted to be like Zachary Smith.

Apart from me and others like Uncle Geoff who wanted to become an omnipotent deity and settled for editor instead, this series is all things to all people.

To find out more about 'TAKEN', go to the scifi.com website which was reviewed in last month's edition.

Here you'll find a movie type site, which is quite interesting to watch and also additional pieces of information about the new series.

The question is: Will it be a success? Spielberg usually makes money out of his projects and maybe this will stir up thoughts about aliens, abduction and such matters for an entirely new age?

For those of us who have seen it all before, it may be entertaining television nonetheless.

Rod MacDonald

click here to buy Stephen Hunt's The Court of the Air

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