SFGate.com
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2005/06/08/DDGQJD4D2O1.DTL&feed=rss.entertainment
When Fox canceled 'Firefly,' it ignited an Internet fan base whose
burning desire for more led to 'Serenity'
Neva Chonin, Chronicle Critic at Large

Wednesday, June 8, 2005

It's a foggy Thursday night in late May, and the upper lobby of San
Francisco's Van Ness 1000 theater is teeming with a rowdy assortment of
revolutionaries, renegades, and women in Wild West garb and Chinese
pajamas squaring off against black-suited men wearing blue surgical
gloves. 

It could be the usual summer tourist throng, but it's not. These are
fans of a long-canceled television show called "Firefly," and they've
been waiting in line all afternoon to preview an unfinished cut of
"Serenity," the big- screen spin-off of their lost series. After the
screening sold out, some fans bought scalped tickets for more than $100
on eBay; others camped out in the lobby and hoped for a miracle. 

Joey Saade, 19, was among the first to score tickets ("I kept calling
the theater"), and traveled from San Jose to see the movie with his
brother and three blue-gloved friends. They share the front of the line
with San Leandro native Arielle Kesweder, 23, and her own "Serenity"
posse. Decked out in 19th century garb as "Firefly" character Kaylee
(in one of Kaylee's flouncier moments), Kesweder says she heard about
the screening from an e-mail and "immediately maxed out" her credit
card getting as many tickets as she could for her friends. 

Some people might question these fans' devotion to a series that ran a
total of 13 episodes (of which only 11 aired). Some people have never
been in love. Written and directed by TV auteur Joss Whedon (creator of
"Buffy the Vampire Slayer" and "Angel"), "Firefly" was a polarizing
phenomenon from its first episode in 2002. Its wildly inventive premise
and pithy dialogue earned it critical praise, but good reviews couldn't
save it: Fox showed episodes out of sequence, frequently pre-empted the
show and finally canned it mid-season. 

Granted, the premise was a hard sell for commercial TV. "Firefly" is a
space Western set 500 years in the future, in the aftermath of a civil
war between rebels known as Independents (or Browncoats) and a
tyrannical conglomerate called the Alliance. The Independents lose the
war, and under Alliance control, corporations rule openly; Anglo and
Asian influences merge into a eccentric polyglot culture; men in black
(with blue hands) carry out sinister covert operations; and
astonishingly ugly cannibals called Reavers plunder at will. On the
outskirts of this universe, the crew of the Serenity (part of a class
of ships called Firefly), led by a former Browncoat, survive by pulling
off heists and outsmarting the authorities. 

When "Firefly" was canceled, fans -- dubbed Browncoats in honor of the
doomed-but-noble Independents -- campaigned to have it moved to another
network. True to Browncoat tradition, they failed -- but their efforts
convinced Fox to release the show as a DVD set that included three
unaired episodes and behind-the-scenes extras. The DVD quickly sold
more than 200,000 copies. Impressed, Universal Pictures climbed
onboard, enabling Whedon to make "Serenity" (due out Sept. 30), which
picks up where the series left off. 

"Serenity's" existence is a testimonial to the tenacity of fans and the
power of the Internet, where Browncoats have spent the past three years
inspiring converts, drafting petitions and even kibitzing with the
"Firefly" cast on bulletin boards. Whedon and Universal are now stoking
enthusiasm with their own "Serenity" Web sites, asking Browncoat
communities across the United States, Australia and Europe to spread
the word as they count down to the movie's release. Whedon knows
"Serenity" will have to move beyond its "Firefly" base to succeed
commercially, and he's actively recruiting Browncoats as guerrilla
publicists. 

"It's a viral thing, encouraging them to encourage other people to see
it, " he explains over the phone while stuck in a Los Angeles traffic
jam, where he's en route to an editing session. " 'Serenity' doesn't
have Tom Cruise or 'I can't believe I'm in the body of a third-grader'
slapped over the title, or any of the other things marketing people
latch onto. What it does have is our belief in the film." 

With the "Star Wars" and "Star Trek" franchises finally ending, hopes
are high that homeless science-fiction buffs will find their way to the
"Firefly" universe -- nudged, perhaps, by some online fan-to-fan
marketing. Whedon, at least, is cautiously optimistic about the future
of his feisty Western in space. "The opinions of a thousand fans still
won't carry the weight of a thousand execs, but I've never seen a
studio operate the way Universal has in regards to my little movie.
They've been enthusiastic, intelligent -- yes, I'm using the word
'intelligent' about a movie studio -- and supportive every step of the
way." 

Glenn Yeffeth, editor of the anthology "Finding Serenity: Anti-Heroes,
Lost Shepherds and Space Hookers in Joss Whedon's 'Firefly' " (BenBella
Books; $17.95; 240 pages), thinks 'Serenity' has a good shot at
becoming a crossover hit, even sans Tom Cruise. "No question 'Firefly'
was quirky, combining science fiction with a Western," he says. "But
it's really about the search for meaning in a meaningless universe, and
it's a notch above the very best writing of other television series out
there." 

San Francisco Browncoats organizer Renee Balmert, 32, is happy to fight
the good fight for her show, regardless of the outcome. "You either
love Whedon or you don't," she says. "His series are hard to pin down,
which is why they're hard to promote. But Joss is great at gathering
people around him who have the same vision. There's a wonderful rapport
between him and the fans, and between fans and the actors in the show."


Whedon admits "there is a bit of a cult" around his work -- and him. "I
have exactly one reaction to that: Whoo-hoo! It puts a little pressure
on me, but at the same time it makes me proud and excited. Every artist
wants to reach people on a primal level. Part of that is a pathetic
need, or maybe a less pathetic desire, to connect and talk about the
important things in our lives while entertaining the s -- out of
everyone. 

"Some fans are, shall I say, idiosyncratic," he adds. "But those are
the people I'm writing for; those are the people I'm writing about. By
and large they're extremely cheerful, amiable, witty bunch. They're
passionate and sometimes unhappy. I have the utmost respect for that. I
write the work like a fan. So if a fan is crying about something I
wrote, there's a good chance I cried while I wrote it." 

When they're not talking up the movie, the SF Browncoats will be
organizing a "Firefly" raffle during the Comic-Con convention in San
Diego next month, with proceeds benefiting the women's support
organization Equality Now, a favorite Whedon cause. Other summer
distractions will help fill time until September: More guerrilla
screenings are planned, and a three-part "Firefly" comic series arrives
in July. 

If "Serenity" flies at the box office, will there be more "Firefly"
films, even a trilogy? "Hell, yes," says Whedon. "Hell, yes, there will
be more." And if it crashes? Whedon's stoic shrug is almost audible.
"I've gotten a certain amount of closure that I didn't have when the
series was canceled. The movie delivers what I want to deliver the way
I want to deliver it -- with action, violence, humor and fun. I'll feel
we told the story we wanted to tell. " 

Like "Firefly's" Independents, he will keep flying. "But in my secret,
greasy heart," he confesses, "I really do want to come back to this
universe. I can't help it. I'm a fan." 



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Meet The "Serenity" Crew: Capt. Malcolm "Mal" Reynolds (a.k.a. Capt.
Tightpants, played by Nathan Fillion) is a world-weary ex-Browncoat
whose crew acts as his dysfunctional, post-apocalyptic family. They
are: First mate and former soldier Zoe (Gina Torres) and her
pilot-comic relief husband, Wash (Alan Tudyk); cheery ship's mechanic
Kaylee (Jewel Staite) and hunky mercenary Jayne (Adam Baldwin);
hooker-in-space Inara (Morena Baccarin) and galactic preacher Shepherd
Book (Ron Glass); the distractingly handsome doctor, Simon (Sean
Maher), and his troublesomely telepathic sister, River (Summer Glau). 
"Firefly" And "Serenity" Online: 

-- Serenitymovie.com: The official film site. 

-- Cantstopthesignal.com: Whedon's site, which carries news about sneak
screenings. 

-- Fireflyfans.net: An online watering hole for the devoted. 

-- Bigdamnboard.com: A database for all things "Firefly." 

-- Whedonesque.com: The ultimate resource for all things Joss. 

-- Hellmouthcentral.com: More Joss worship. 

-- Forums.prospero.com/foxfirefly: The biggest and best of the Firefly
bulletins boards. Series actors have been known to post here. 

-- Browncoats.com is international Browncoat central. Sfbrowncoats.com
is home of the San Francisco Browncoats. Their mailing list can be
found at groups.yahoo.com/group/sfbrowncoats. The Silicon Gulch (San
Jose) Browncoats' mailing list is at
groups.yahoo.com/group/SiliconGulchBrowncoats. Sacramento Browncoats
hang their hats at groups.yahoo.com/group/SacramentoBrowncoats. 



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