Outcasts: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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(Import from TV Tropes TVT:Main.Outcasts 2012-07-01, editor history TVTH:Main.Outcasts, CC-BY-SA 3.0 Unported license)
 
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** Stella's capable of being one, as we see in episode 5, but she's really more of the cerebral sort.
** Stella's capable of being one, as we see in episode 5, but she's really more of the cerebral sort.
* [[The Atoner]]: Cass.
* [[The Atoner]]: Cass.
* [[Benevolent Boss]]: Tate tries to be this. [[Evilutionary Biologist|He doesn't]] [[Well Intentioned Extremist|quite]] [[Playing With Syringes|succeed]]. Stella more or less hits it, though, as long as you don't cross her.
* [[Benevolent Boss]]: Tate tries to be this. [[Evilutionary Biologist|He doesn't]] [[Well-Intentioned Extremist|quite]] [[Playing With Syringes|succeed]]. Stella more or less hits it, though, as long as you don't cross her.
* [[Bio Augmentation]]: Of both the physical and mental kind.
* [[Bio Augmentation]]: Of both the physical and mental kind.
* [[Bratty Teenage Daughter]]: Lily, right down to the sulking and stealing for attention.
* [[Bratty Teenage Daughter]]: Lily, right down to the sulking and stealing for attention.
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* [[The Main Characters Do Everything]]: Probably inevitable, given the small number of people on the colony.
* [[The Main Characters Do Everything]]: Probably inevitable, given the small number of people on the colony.
* [[Mama Bear]]: Josie.
* [[Mama Bear]]: Josie.
* [[May December Romance]]: Stella and Tipper, though it may have just been a one-time thing.
* [[May-December Romance]]: Stella and Tipper, though it may have just been a one-time thing.
* [[Meaningful Name]]: Cassius Cromwell, who is not an innocent man, named for two of history's greatest betrayers (Cassius, murderer of Julius Caesar; Oliver Cromwell, genocidal dictator).
* [[Meaningful Name]]: Cassius Cromwell, who is not an innocent man, named for two of history's greatest betrayers (Cassius, murderer of Julius Caesar; Oliver Cromwell, genocidal dictator).
** Elijah, the [[Scary Black Man|scary, black]], prophetic Advanced Cultivar.
** Elijah, the [[Scary Black Man|scary, black]], prophetic Advanced Cultivar.
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* [[My Greatest Failure]]: Tate {{spoiler|exiling and attempting to wipe out the [[A Cs]] after having ''created'' them in the first place}}. Cass {{spoiler|working for the cartels on Earth and killing a young boy}}.
* [[My Greatest Failure]]: Tate {{spoiler|exiling and attempting to wipe out the [[A Cs]] after having ''created'' them in the first place}}. Cass {{spoiler|working for the cartels on Earth and killing a young boy}}.
* [[Omnidisciplinary Scientist]]: Stella, who seems to be a neurologist, meteorologist, medical doctor, and geneticist, and Tate, who knows biology, medicine, and agriculture, but is also called a "geneticist". Possibly a side effect of [[The Main Characters Do Everything]].
* [[Omnidisciplinary Scientist]]: Stella, who seems to be a neurologist, meteorologist, medical doctor, and geneticist, and Tate, who knows biology, medicine, and agriculture, but is also called a "geneticist". Possibly a side effect of [[The Main Characters Do Everything]].
* [[Our Presidents Are Different]]: President Tate is President Personable on the surface, but is a [[Well Intentioned Extremist]] underneath.
* [[Our Presidents Are Different]]: President Tate is President Personable on the surface, but is a [[Well-Intentioned Extremist]] underneath.
* [[Parental Abandonment]]: Lily feels Stella abandoned her for fifteen years.
* [[Parental Abandonment]]: Lily feels Stella abandoned her for fifteen years.
* [[Pedophile Priest]]: Some squicky insinuations about Berger.
* [[Pedophile Priest]]: Some squicky insinuations about Berger.
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* [[Utopia Justifies the Means]]: Both Richard Tate and Julius Berger believe this, but are polar opposites on how said utopia should be run.
* [[Utopia Justifies the Means]]: Both Richard Tate and Julius Berger believe this, but are polar opposites on how said utopia should be run.
* [[Visionary Villain]]: Berger.
* [[Visionary Villain]]: Berger.
* [[What Is This Thing You Call Love]]: {{spoiler|<s>The duplicate Josie.</s> All of the planetary entities.}}
* [[What Is This Thing You Call Love?]]: {{spoiler|<s>The duplicate Josie.</s> All of the planetary entities.}}
* [[What Measure Is a Non Human]]: In regards to the AC's, and in episode 8, {{spoiler|in regard to the Omegas, like Fleur.}}
* [[What Measure Is a Non-Human?]]: In regards to the AC's, and in episode 8, {{spoiler|in regard to the Omegas, like Fleur.}}


{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}

Revision as of 17:16, 9 January 2014

Outcasts is a British SF show broadcast by The BBC in 2011, produced in collaboration with South African and German partners.

The series is about a group of colonists attempting to survive on a planet called "Carpathia", after Earth got nuked in World War III, which apparently was caused by a major confrontation between the USA and China over Taiwan. The hardness of the SF steadily decreases over the series. The initial tension develops from disputes among the humans about the best way of surviving and organising, with the majority of the colonists, led by President Tate, wanting to set up a stable community, and the military Expeditionaries, led by Mitchell Hoban, wanting to strike out further into unknown territory. But there are even more serious tensions between the standard-issue humans and the "Advanced Cultivars", genetically-engineered humans created to have a greater chance of surviving hostile environments. And there is also the question of whether the planet really is uninhabited by sentient life.

While the show has attracted some fans, it received some strongly negative responses from other SF fan commentators, and generally hostile reactions from the mainstream press reviewers. From the sixth episode on, it was moved from its original weekday primetime slot to a desultory Sunday late-evening slot, suggesting that the BBC had pretty much given up on it. A second season looks unlikely was not commissioned.


Outcasts provides examples of:

  • Action Girl: Fleur, who shows no hesitation in shooting people or chasing down suspects.
  • Action Mom: Josie Hunter definitely qualifies.
    • Stella's capable of being one, as we see in episode 5, but she's really more of the cerebral sort.
  • The Atoner: Cass.
  • Benevolent Boss: Tate tries to be this. He doesn't quite succeed. Stella more or less hits it, though, as long as you don't cross her.
  • Bio Augmentation: Of both the physical and mental kind.
  • Bratty Teenage Daughter: Lily, right down to the sulking and stealing for attention.
  • Brilliant but Lazy: Tipper, a self-described child prodigy. He's apparently the only one on Carpathia who can solve complex math formulae and equations.
  • Came Back Wrong: Josie Hunter, in episode 6, with a side of Cloning Blues.
  • Canine Companion: Pak's dog ( whatever it was).
  • Colony Drop: Possibly what's about to happen 2 seconds after the final credits roll, as a massive landing craft blindly heads straight for Forthaven.
    • More likely it was a troopship carrying an occupation force.
  • Color Coded for Your Convenience: PAS officers wear blue, XP's wear white/brown. You can tell Berger is evil because he tends to wear pinks and purples.
  • Cosy Catastrophe
  • Cowboy Cop: Cass, frequently. Although his lapses from the rulebook are often motivated by believing in the innocence of someone who his bosses think needs to be locked up.
    • Jack is bordering on a dangerous example of this. His ordering the assassination of Rudy just may be his Moral Event Horizon.
      • He does all right in the end, though, when he stops Berger, using his power as interim president.
  • Curse Cut Short: From the pilot-

 Tipper: I'm the voice of liberty.

Cass: Well, I'm the voice of f-

Stella: Deep brain visualization, have you heard of it, Tipper?