Objects in Space

Last updated
"Objects in Space"
Firefly episode
Fireflyois2.jpg
River holding the "object"
Episode no.Season 1
Episode 14
Directed by Joss Whedon
Written byJoss Whedon
Production code1AGE11
Original air dateDecember 13, 2002 (2002-12-13) (Fox)
Guest appearances
Episode chronology
 Previous
"Heart of Gold"
Next 
Serenity: Those Left Behind
List of episodes

"Objects in Space" is the 14th episode of the science fiction television series Firefly . It was the 10th episode to premiere on Fox during the series' original broadcast and aired on Friday, December 13, 2002, one day after the network announced the show's cancellation.

Contents

Serenity encounters Jubal Early, a ruthless professional bounty hunter who will stop at nothing to retrieve River. But River, feeling unwelcome on the ship, takes a novel approach to escaping from the long arm of the Alliance.

The inspiration for this episode came from Tim Minear, who gave Whedon the idea by merely mentioning Boba Fett. Whedon expanded upon the suggestion and extrapolated it into the villain of this episode, the "preternaturally cool, nearly psychotic bounty hunter" Jubal Early. Whedon has said that if he were forced to pick one piece of work to represent his entire body of work, he would pick this episode. [1]

River's and Early's tactile and spiritual connection with physical objects reflects an existential experience in Whedon's youth and his subsequent study of Jean-Paul Sartre's existential novel Nausea . [2]

Despite being placed as the final episode on the home video releases, it was the tenth episode produced and was intended to take place before "Trash" and "The Message".

Synopsis

As Serenity flies by a planet, River lies in bed. She arises and takes a walk through the ship's rooms and corridors, encountering her shipmates in varied conversations with each other.

Simon is relaxing with Kaylee in the common room, telling her an amusing anecdote about medical school. River suddenly "sees" them looking at her, with Simon telling her that he'd "be there right now", implying she is responsible for taking him away from his successful medical career. She then finds Jayne and Shepherd Book in the kitchen, where she "hears" Jayne repeat his confession to Mal about selling out the Tams on Ariel, and Book mutter an angry but cryptic statement hinting at his less wholesome past. River continues to wander the ship and is moved by the sound of ocean waves as Zoe and Wash passionately kiss on the nearby bridge. Above the cargo bay, as Mal and Inara discuss her impending departure, River sees their unspoken frustrations over their unrealized relationship. None of the people she encounters are aware of her presence - except when speaking directly to her - making it clear that this is River's mind "walking" telepathically through the ship.

Fleeing the intense emotions, River runs down to the unoccupied cargo bay, where she spots a tree branch and picks it up. Suddenly, the real world returns, and she finds that she is holding one of Jayne's pistols while the crew surrounds her in a panic. Mal takes the gun from her and discovers it is loaded with the safety off. He orders her not to touch a weapon ever again, and River runs off, crying.

Meanwhile, a small vessel silently hovers above Serenity. The crew discusses what to do with River. When Zoe muses whether River has ever handled a gun, Kaylee reluctantly tells everyone about her experience during their assault on Adelei Niska's skyplex, when River killed three men with her eyes closed. The crew begins to speculate that River may be a "reader", having psychic powers, and though Simon objects, they question whether she might be dangerous. Both River and a man in a red spacesuit listen in. Once the crew goes to sleep, the man boards Serenity. He runs into Mal, subdues him, and locks the crew in their cabins. He surprises Kaylee in the engine room, ties her up, and threatens to rape her unless she keeps quiet. When Book hears him moving downstairs, the man disables him with a blow to the head. Simon hears a noise and rises to check on his sister, only to be attacked by the stranger, who addresses him by name. The man, Jubal Early, reveals that he is a bounty hunter pursuing River. As he waxes poetic and shares his opinions about various topics, he tells Simon that Kaylee will suffer unless he helps him find his sister.

Simon and Early search the ship, and run into Inara; Early pistol-whips her when she tries to appeal to his emotional side. The two men eventually reach the bridge, and Early, impatient and annoyed, threatens to shoot Simon if River doesn't give herself up. River then responds over the ship's intercom, explaining that because no one wanted her on Serenity but she didn't want to leave, she "melted away" and merged with the ship itself. River contacts Kaylee, telling her to cut herself free. As River reveals dark secrets about Early's past, unnerving and distracting him, Kaylee frees the crew, and River tells Mal she has a plan to deal with their assailant.

Early becomes suspicious when River mentions "how shiny it looks", and realizes that she isn't part of Serenity, but rather broadcasting from his own ship. He suddenly becomes frantic and tries to bargain with her, but River reassures him that she's ready to surrender as she cares for her shipmates and thinks leaving them is for the best. Simon attacks Early, but the hunter shoots him in the leg and knocks him flat on his back before donning his helmet and exiting Serenity. Once he's free of the ship's artificial gravity, Mal suddenly appears and shoves him off the ship into the deep of space, while River puts Early's ship on a preprogrammed course to nowhere and happily returns to Mal.

Later, in the infirmary, Simon carefully guides Zoe and Wash as they treat his bullet wound. Inara walks away from Mal as he tries to examine her cut lip. In the cargo bay, Jayne mocks Book's failure to defeat Early, despite "all them years of priest trainin'", and Book implies that he fought Early and only succumbed after a prolonged fight. Their friendship restored, Kaylee and River play jacks while Kaylee relates a racy anecdote from her past. River picks up and examines the bouncing ball, with its swirling, multicolored surface, as she drops it on the floor. Early, quietly floating through space as his oxygen supply slowly runs out, mutters to himself "Well, here I am."

Themes

In the DVD commentary Joss Whedon explains that this episode is intended to resolve the crew's tension regarding River, ending with their acceptance of her as a valuable member of the crew. Whedon struggled with various ideas of how to approach the script until Tim Minear gave him the idea of using a bounty hunter.

Existentialism

As Whedon discloses in the DVD commentary, much of the dialogue and imagery was inspired by Jean-Paul Sartre, especially his novel Nausea . In his essay We're All Just Floating in Space, [3] Lyle Zynda analyzes this episode's interpretation of existential meaninglessness, arguing that both River and Early perceive physical objects as divorced from the meanings with which others imbue them. For example, when River picks up the gun, she sees it as a harmless branch—an object, as she says, that "doesn't mean what you think"—transformed by her perspective into a benign thing of beauty. Early likewise describes his gun as "pretty" with a pleasing weight (both features separate from its function) yet acknowledges that its design aids its intended use, which Whedon describes as "grotesque".

While moving through the ship, both River and Early seem to be acutely aware of and derive sensual pleasure from their environment, stroking the walls, conscious of the physicality of their surroundings. Whedon notes in the DVD commentary that one of the ways he illustrated this quality was to keep camera focused on River's bare feet as she walked. Early, admiring specifics of the ship's design, significantly echoes the episode's title when he says, "People don't appreciate the substance of things. Objects in space." It is the "physical implication" of a world without morals, the moral implication of which was verbalized by another of Whedon's creations, Angel: "If nothing we do matters, then all that matters is what we do."

Zynda argues that ultimately, River and Early's ability to experience objects divorced from their common meanings allows them to imbue those objects with a value of their choosing. Whereas River chooses a perspective that brings joyful wonder, Early chooses to contemplate those same objects with despair.

Early enacts one of Sartre's central ideas, the concept of "bad faith", when he denies his responsibility for his actions by claiming he is not free to do otherwise. [4] When River accuses him of hurting people, he counters, "It's part of the job." She replies, "It's why you took the job."

Guest cast

Related Research Articles

<i>Firefly</i> (TV series) American space Western television series

Firefly is an American space Western drama television series, created by writer and director Joss Whedon, under his Mutant Enemy Productions label. Whedon served as an executive producer, along with Tim Minear. The series is set in the year 2517, after the arrival of humans in a new star system, and follows the adventures of the renegade crew of Serenity, a "Firefly-class" spaceship. The ensemble cast portrays the nine characters living aboard Serenity. Whedon pitched the show as "nine people looking into the blackness of space and seeing nine different things."

Serenity (<i>Firefly</i> episode) 1st episode of the 1st season of Firefly

"Serenity" is the original intended pilot for the American science fiction television series Firefly created by Joss Whedon. It was the first episode produced for the series and premiered as the show's series finale on Friday, December 20, 2002 on Fox. With studio executives unsatisfied with the episode for the series premiere, the show's second episode, "The Train Job", was re-written and produced as a second pilot to be aired first. The episode shares its name with the 2005 feature film Serenity, which serves as a continuation to Firefly.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Malcolm Reynolds</span> Character from "Firefly"

Malcolm "Mal" Reynolds is a fictional character and the protagonist of the Firefly franchise. Mal is played by actor Nathan Fillion in the 2002 TV series Firefly and the 2005 film Serenity. In the series, Mal is a former Browncoat sergeant and the captain of the "Firefly-class" spaceship Serenity. The character was named at No. 18 in TV Guide's Greatest Sci-Fi Legends list in 2004.

"Bushwhacked" is the third episode of the science fiction television series Firefly created by Joss Whedon.

"The Train Job" is the original series premiere and second episode of the American science-fiction western television series Firefly created by Joss Whedon. It was the second episode produced and aired on Friday, September 20, 2002, on Fox. The episode was written by Whedon and Tim Minear as the second pilot to the series following Fox after executives were unsatisfied with original pilot "Serenity", which later aired as the series finale. According to the 2003 DVD commentary, Whedon and Minear had only two days to write the script.

"Safe" is the fifth produced episode of the science fiction television series Firefly created by Joss Whedon. It premiered as the show's seventh episode on November 8, 2002 on Fox.

"Shindig" is the fourth produced episode of the science fiction television series Firefly created by Joss Whedon. It premiered as the show's sixth episode on November 1, 2002 on Fox.

"Our Mrs. Reynolds" is the sixth episode of the science fiction television series Firefly created by Joss Whedon. It aired as the show's third episode on Friday, October 4, 2002 on Fox.

"Jaynestown" is the seventh episode of the science fiction television series Firefly created by Joss Whedon.

"Ariel" is the ninth episode of the science fiction television series Firefly, created by Joss Whedon.

"Out of Gas" is the eighth episode of the science fiction television series Firefly created by Joss Whedon. It differs stylistically from the rest of the series, in that it tells its story alternately in three timeframes: events in the present, events in the near-past that led to the present, and events in the past that led to the formation of Serenity's core crew.

"War Stories" is the tenth episode of the science fiction television series Firefly created by Joss Whedon.

"Trash" is the eleventh episode of the science fiction television series Firefly created by Joss Whedon. It is the first of three episodes that were not broadcast in the original 2002 Fox run.

The Message (<i>Firefly</i>) 12th episode of the 1st season of Firefly

"The Message" is the twelfth episode of the science fiction television series Firefly created by Joss Whedon. It was the fourteenth and final episode produced during the show's production, but was placed before "Heart of Gold" and "Objects in Space" on the home video releases. "The Message" was the second of three episodes along with "Trash" and "Heart of Gold", that were not broadcast in the original 2002 Fox run and later aired on the Sci-Fi Channel on July 15, 2003.

Heart of Gold (<i>Firefly</i>) 13th episode of the 1st season of Firefly

"Heart of Gold" is the 13th episode of the science fiction television series Firefly created by Joss Whedon. It is the last of three episodes that were not broadcast in the original 2002 Fox run.

<i>Serenity: Those Left Behind</i> Comic book

Serenity: Those Left Behind is a 2005 three-issue comic book limited series published by Dark Horse Comics. It was written by Brett Matthews with Joss Whedon credited for story, illustrated by Will Conrad, and colored by Laura Martin.

<i>Serenity</i> (fictional spacecraft) Fictional spacecraft from the television series Firefly

Serenity is a fictional spacecraft that appears in Joss Whedon's Firefly television series and related works. Set in the 26th century, the series follows the nine-person crew of the Firefly-class vessel, a small transport ship, as they earn a living through various legal and illegal means. The ship is the main setting; it appears in all fourteen episodes, the film, and several comics.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Shepherd Book</span> Character from Firefly

Derrial Book is a fictional character played by Ron Glass in the science-fiction/Western television series Firefly and its sequel movie, Serenity. He is a Shepherd, and provides frequent spiritual advice and perspectives for the crew of Serenity.

<i>Serenity: Leaves on the Wind</i> 2014 six-issue comic book miniseries

Serenity: Leaves on the Wind is a 2014 six-issue comic book miniseries published by Dark Horse Comics, based on the 2002 science fiction television series Firefly, and the 2005 feature film into which it was adapted, Serenity.

References

  1. reddit AMA (April 10, 2012)
  2. DVD commentary for "Objects in Space", chapter 3.
  3. Espenson, Jane; Yeffeth, Glenn (2004). Finding Serenity: Anti-Heroes, Lost Shepherds and Space Hookers in Joss Whedon's Firefly. Smart Pop series. ISBN   1-932100-43-1.
  4. Sanchez, Julian (September 30, 2005). "Out to the Black: The existentialist libertarianism of Joss Whedon's space western". Reason Magazine. Retrieved 2007-07-17.