Not necessarily a reimagining, but a premise. A concept.

  • goldteeth@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    13 hours ago

    There was a miniseries on the SyFy channel called “Ascension” that, ostensibly, had the premise of being a murder mystery set on a massive generation ship launched at the height of the Cold War, which sounded fun in theory. 1960s Space Race technology, generations raised on Red Scare values despite the Soviet Union being a distant memory in every sense, a bunch of already-paranoid people trapped with a murderer with safety literally decades away - seems like there’s a lot of room for a story there, right? Well, if the words “miniseries on the SyFy Channel” didn’t tip you off…

    spoiler, not that I recommend ever watching this show

    They solve the murder by the end of the second episode, or at least they think they do. The subplot is nonetheless dropped entirely.

    Turns out the ship never left Earth. It’s in an underground bunker. The entire thing was a ploy to trap America’s greatest minds in a self-contained generational think tank and steal all the super-cool technology they invent. Which also eliminates the 1960s Space Race aesthetic because the ship is now, by design, more technologically-advanced than modern Earth, leaving… exactly none of the original hook intact.

    Except two episodes later they reveal it wasn’t even that, it was actually part of a top-secret government eugenics program designed to breed telepathic super-soldiers, and the show ends with a child super-soldier using her nascent psychokinetic powers to teleport all the bad guys into space for realsies. And the real murderer is some guy we’d never even heard of working for the, again, top-secret government eugenics program, and his motives were… Either never explained, or explained after the part of the show where I stopped watching.

    So anyway, a show that actually stuck to that premise would probably make for a pretty compelling yarn.