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SyFy’s Newest Superpowered Romp Alphas Is Pretty Regular, Except for One Part

I’ve been wanting to write about SyFy’s newest superpower show, Alphas, for a while now, pretty much since I watched the very first episode. I wasn’t exactly sure how I felt about the show until I saw this article over on Wired and, basically, disagreed with everything.

First off, if you don’t watch the show, you should probably know what it is about. Alphas is about a team of people with superpowers who fight superpowered crime and, less frequently, regular crime. Yep. The show is very regular, except for one part, which happens to be one of the best things happening on television right now.

I find it difficult to take anything seriously when the term “power” or “superpower” is used in a serious matter. A few shows in recent memory probably felt the same way — replacing “power” with “ability” or some other synonym — the most notable being The 4400 and Alphas. So, Alphas received an immediate point for not having grown adults running around town saying things like “Just use your powers!” or “Wait, let me charge up my powers!” I understand there isn’t really another term for “superpowers,” but the reason why I don’t quite jive with the term is because superpowers tend to fall into the trap of being too powerful and used for a variety of characters throughout superpowerdom, which tends to lead to stronger foes being necessary, which then leads to the superpowers being used in even stronger ways. It’s a never-ending cycle and leads to superpowers being so overpowered that the situations the heroes get into become increasingly ridiculous to compensate for their overwhelming power. When I saw that the heroes on Alphas had abilities, as the show calls them, that were very limited, it scored another point. After that, though, I found that the show only gets one another point. Not because it is bad, but because apart from the aforementioned limited abilities and one of the characters (who we’ll get to below), the show is astonishingly regular.

The show focuses on Dr. Rosen, played by the venerable David Strathairn, a psychiatrist who deals with alphas, the show’s titular term to describe people with special abilities. He put together a team of alphas to fight crime and villain alphas. Bill, an ex-FBI agent, can summon super strength, but only for a quick burst because it puts stress on his heart. Nina, your stylish rich girl stereotype, makes people do what she says for a few minutes, an action the show dubs as “pushing” people. Cameron has super accuracy, something that actually makes him quite good at parkour somehow, but he loses the accuracy in critical moments due to nerves; he’s basically Marvel’s Bullseye, but not a lunatic. Rachel has enhanced senses, to the point where she can detect throat cancer on someone’s breath, but can be overwhelmed by too much stimuli. Finally, we have Gary, a high-functioned autistic who can sense electromagnetic waves in such a way to where the show depicts it as him being able to see floating screens with information on them, even television shows, and can also hear all accompanying audio. Ryan Cartwright’s portrayal of Gary and the dialogue written for his character is where Alphas stops being so regular and provides some of the most entertaining scenes and pieces of dialogue currently on television.

So far during season one, most of the episodes feature a new rogue alpha that Rosen’s team must capture in some way, resulting in said rogue alpha being sent to some ominous government-run imprisonment camp for alphas. The show’s story seems to follow the general arc most similar shows follow: Have a standalone episode, but tie it all together, either by theme or by actual plot, in the last five minutes or so to build up the events that will probably culminate in the season finale. Many popular shows do this — Burn Notice, Eureka, even geekdom’s own Doctor Who — and for those that desire some sort of deeply-woven narrative, so far, Alphas won’t whet their appetites. Instead, Alphas seems more concerned with making sure people can jump right in — never a bad strategy, but one that — as fans of Burn Notice will surely groan — quickly becomes tiring.

Though the show hasn’t even finished its first season as of yet, it hasn’t done anything to make its audience worry about the characters. Sure, it’s possible the writers can throw us a curveball and suddenly kill off a character, but so far, the episodes haven’t done anything to show us we need to be worried about our heroes. They’ll just use teamwork and save the day, then laugh at the end of the episode when someone makes a joke, or maybe a character will stare out of a window, anxious of what the future might hold.

It seems like Alphas doesn’t know what it wants to be, so it tries a little of everything. We have our love story, we have our X-Men style debate of whether or not alphas are just human and should be treated as such, we have crime fighting, and we have Gary’s charming humor. Though any piece of entertainment media shouldn’t be focused solely on one theme, Alphas doesn’t really blend the themes together, as they seem separate of the rest of the show. Even the title sequence can’t seem to decide what the show is about, blasting a fun rock track while showing vastly contradictory imagery: Grainy footage of a human flying through the sky in front of some buildings, what is that thing, look at how mysterious and scary the show is, but wait, now there’s a guy breakdancing for no reason.

Oddly, the show seems to know exactly what to do with Gary. The other actors are fine and the writing isn’t bad — just regular — but the perfectly tailored dialogue for Gary compared to the otherwise completely regular dialogue for every other actor on the show and obvious plot points make me wonder why the quality surrounding everything Gary-related raises so significantly. It is instantly noticeable, and it feels like the show has some kind of brilliant gunslinger consultant that breezes into writing and filming sessions and only has say over any scene in which Gary makes an appearance.

I wouldn’t tell anyone to avoid Alphas, but I wouldn’t recommend it to anyone either. If anything, I’d say, “That show Alphas? Gary is pretty awesome, but he’s not in every scene.” So, how do I feel about that show Alphas? Gary is pretty awesome, but he’s not in every scene.

  • Anonymous

    I’d watch it, but it’s on SyFy, and I’ve learned my lesson with them.  If it found its footing, they’d just cancel it to make room for more pseudo-reality series or wrestling.

  • Anonymous

    They at least let Eureka go for 6 seasons, even though the next 6th season will be its last, and even though Eureka is easily SyFy’s best show. But maybe they’re learning their lesson, since they gave Eureka an entire 13-14 episodes to close up the series, rather than just cancel it outright.

    I’m not really sure if Alphas will ever find its footing, unless the writers somehow transfer their Gary-talent to everything else.

  • http://www.facebook.com/keiek Jordan Hoskins

    I’d rather watch Caprica, oh wait, yeah they cancel their good shows.

  • http://www.facebook.com/amedeus8 Nick Gotshall

    Exactly what I was going to say. I saw the ads for Alphas, and it actually looked good. But I just refuse to deal with SyFy, anymore.

  • Sandiegocat

    I probably wouldn’t even watch Alphas if it weren’t for Ryan Cartright’s brilliant Gary. He just lights up the screen when he’s om. If the Emmy’s were in any way fair, Cartright would have been nominated this year.

  • Anonymous

    Totally agree. I think I would’ve given up on Alphas if not for Gary. To be fair, I might’ve come back to it when I had a large backlog of episodes to watch and virtually nothing else to do.

  • Anonymous

    Stargate Universe usually doesn’t get much kudos when people bring up syfy shows that get cancelled too soon, but it was really good at the end and i always thought Eli’s character was very interesting.

    Maybe the recently announced WWE Network will force syfy to reconsider bringing some shows back?

     unless syfy IS becoming the WWE network…..

  • AlphaFan

    I agree with you about the Emmys. Ryan Cartwright deserved a nomination (if not for Alphas, then for Bones in the past as did Eric Millegan for Zack on the same show). And come to think of it, so did Sofia Vasilieve as Arial on Medium. 

    But the past is the past and Emmys aren’t really about the craft of acting; it’s about public relations and spin.

  • Anonymous

    The best “super hero” TV show I have seen is Misfits (A British sci-fi).  I would describe it as Heroes meets Skins (Again, a British show). Previously my favourite had been Heroes.

    I will check out Alphas and see what it’s like, but if the new season of Misfits is good then it has some real competition.

  • Seba

    Sadly Eureka is only going to be 5 seasons. They (SyFy) teased us for 2 weeks with the idea of a 6th season then decided against another season and just added one extra episode to season 5. It’s probably going to be a rushed ending.

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1494468109 Ray Remillard ॐ

    The normal doctor and the super heros…it’s live action Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. The best thing about it (for me) is it’s not wresteling or ghost busting.

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1494468109 Ray Remillard ॐ

    Fun show indeed. Sadly, I hear my favorite character, Nathan, has opted out of season 3.

  • Jeckylnhyde7

    I think your view of this is sound. I just don’t agree with your status on recommending it. I seen my share of flops & all hyped shows that are not worthy of print. But, something that plays on “abilities” and still let’s adults be comfortable viewing. Without feeling like an idiot for watching a kiddie show. Is more than note worthy. And “Gary” is a great character! I would and have suggested this show.

  • Victor

    Alphas is the first show I’ve followed in about a decade. It’s hands down Syfy’s best show and in my opinion the best on tv. From  a filmmaking standpoint it’s gorgeously shot. It really doesn’t look like tv. I watch a minute of ANY other SyFy show and its’s like “Ugh another cheap tv camera set up.” The cinematography on the show is lyrical and superb. What really makes the show for me is how they propel the narrative by staging things actually HAPPENING. This ain’t Heroes lol. Wall to wall action shaped by the character’s abilities sensibilities and evolving narrative. Brilliant stuff. A fight or chase scene telling just as much about a character as a monologue. Dialogue exchanges that actually have a sense of urgency. Brilliant.
    The characters and cast are show’s the big aces. This is NOT a geeked out SyFy cast. They have have an a-list quality to them.  I care about them because well…they’re all so cool. EAch one could helm their own show (some have). But here they are one one dream team. When Bill and Cameron dive into action I wanna see how they throw down and wonder if they’ll get hurt. Nina is hot as hell and she revels in it. Rachel is cute as a button vulnerable and hyper competent.Thank god the show’s ladies aren’t the played out action-chick (ugh). The big violent guns are the guys. Not to be sexist but FINALLY some realism. Rosen is great. he’s the leader yet  he is NOT THE MAN lol. He get’s sonned often and is led as much as he leads. The omniscient old white guy is played out. Again realism. Gary is cool to. People seem to have a serious Gary fetish. The show is NOT about him. THANK GOD. He’s a side-kick, little brother and team mascot. His performance is in no way superior to Rosen’s or Bill’s layered strong guy/good husband, pro detective/fish out of water, violent mofo/big brother role. He pulls this of in an amazingly natural organically evolving fashion. Gary’s character is VERY dependent on interplay with Bill and he has become quite a nice little brother to him. Otherwise he can be one-note (we get it he’s the cute/profound rain-man dude).
    The action is AMAZING. These guys Know how to SHOOT action. The best on tv by far and better than most movies. Shot selection, lighting, beats, timing, it’s ALL there. And yeah Alphas KILL BAD GUYS  WITH EXTREME PREJUDICE. And they don’t cry or philosophize about it afterwards. REALISM.  Alphas also have sex lives. WOW. Seriously these guys just took the 21′st century emasculated geek handbook and threw it out the window. Apparently they didn’t get the memo, “Do not make a show with characters that geeks will find intimidating and feel insecure when they watch.” Lol. I knew from the first ep Gary would be everyone’s favorite. “Why can’t every character talk like Gary?” “Why do Bill and Cameron have to be smooth and commanding and convey such strength?” Deal with it. Not everyshow can be cry fests with dudes breaking down in every scene (Battlestar Galactica anyone?)  Lol
    Oh and I luv the use of powers. They really explore and develop them in rational and fantastical ways. The Red Flag plot is awesome and the one-offs are sometimes better. I’m sick of the shows where if you miss one shot of one episode you’ll be lost in the “mythology”. Not that serious folks. There is such a thing as plotting the life out of a show.
    The season Finale was AWESOME. Wow. The mis en scene was INCREDIBLE. This is quality filmmaking. What a crescendo! I’ll savor it while it lasts. It’s just too good to last before the haters shut it down.

  • A Akins

    i like alphas it is a good show. i love gary and think that it would be good if there was more of him. i dont know why people dont like it. it is one of my favourite shows. i think that you people are to fast to judge, at least watch the episodes before you decide that it is not good.


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