Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Serenity now!
Serenity now!
Jan 31, 2026 6:01 AM

Why review a television show that pleted even its first season nearly three years ago? The confluence of events and circumstances that resulted in the cancellation of the Fox show Firefly in 2002 has done little to destroy the resiliency of the Firefly phenomenon. While only 14 episodes were ever made, and only 11 of those ever shown, once plete series of Firefly came out on DVD, it topped sales at Amazon for months (it’s currently ranked #7). Fans of the show around the country host parties to watch plete series with their friends. And today a full-length movie debuts in theaters, bringing the resurrection of the Firefly franchise full-circle.

Just what is it about this show that has made it such a phenomenon? It’s one part western, one part space opera, and one part action-adventure, a creation of Joss Whedon, of Buffy the Vampire Slayer fame. Others mented on the show’s libertarian themes, but in the final analysis I think these claims are somewhat overblown. While libertarian emphases are clearly present, contract ultimately is not king.

Instead, one of the keys to Firefly’s popularity and resonance with people is the relationship between the captain and the crew. Nine people find themselves thrust together, with no one else to depend on but each other (and sometimes not even then). The captain of the Firefly-class transport Serenity is Malcolm Reynolds, or Mal (Nathan Fillion); his first-mate and fellow war veteran is Zoe (Gina Torres); her husband the pilot is Wash; Jayne is the mercenary muscle; Kaylee is the ship’s engineer; Inara is a panion,” an official prostitute (a profession respected in the Firefly universe); Simon is the ship’s doctor; River is his younger sister; and Book (Ron Glass) is a Shepherd, the future’s version of a clergyman.

Throughout all the adventures of the Serenity’s crew, what es clear is that Mal views everyone as part of a family, the basic unit munity in the ‘verse. Simon, River, and Book are the new additions to the crew as the series begins. As Mal and the others learn more about Simon and River, it es clear that they are running from the government. This es a leitmotif in the show, and from the previews seems to be the main thrust of the feature movie: River was abducted and abused by a government-run school for gifted children. Once Simon finds out that River is in trouble, he works relentlessly to free her. In seeking transport onboard Serenity while fleeing, Simon and River eventually e members of the rag-tag family.

Says Joss Whedon of Mal: “He’s not just out for himself no matter how many times he’s going to tell you that he is.”

Mal first and foremost seems to run a business on Serenity. He’ll transport or salvage anything he can to survive on the outskirts of civilized planets. His existence at the fringes of society is due largely to the role he played six years earlier in the War for Independence. He was a sergeant in the Independent army, and served with Zoe. The Battle of Serenity Valley, for which the ship is named, was a crucial defeat of the Independents (also called the Browncoats). After that, the Alliance gained the upper hand, and eventually consolidated power and government of all the populated worlds in the galaxy.

That defeat was a turning point in Mal’s life. He rades die, he saw his friends abandoned by Independent reinforcements, and he saw the defeat of his fight for freedom. When Mal says, “That’s what governments are for, to get in a man’s way,” he’s talking primarily about the pervasive influence of the victorious Alliance. Mal once says , “That sounds like the Alliance, unite all the planets under one rule so that everybody can be interfered with or ignored equally.”

So while Mal tries to put the days of responsibility for others behind him, as captain of Serenity he invariably puts the needs of others before his own (sooner or later). When Book pushes him to find an explanation for why he would put himself in danger to provide refuge for Simon and River, Mal admits, “It’s the right thing to do.” The confluence of political and economic power in the unity of the Alliance and the Blue Sun Corporation following the war represents a real and pervasive threat to human flourishing.

Mal is a conflicted man, who refuses to acknowledge God, who he feels abandoned him in Serenity Valley. Mal reacts harshly to the Shepherd’s attempts to talk about God: “If I’m your mission Shepherd, you best give it up. You’re e on my boat. God ain’t.” At a meal when Book asks, “Captain, do you mind if I say grace?” Mal responds, “Only if you say it out loud.” But even so he cannot bring himself to abandon others.

When he finds out that the supplies they stole in “The Train Job” were desperately needed medicines, Mal reneges on his contract with the fearsome Niska to return the medicine to those who need it. A conversation with the Sheriff of Paradiso, the afflicted town, displays Mal’s underlying moral code:

Sheriff: “You were truthful back in town. These are tough times. A man can get a job, he might not look too close at what that job is. But a man learns all the details of a situation like ours, well, then he has a choice.”

Mal: “I don’t believe he does.”

Firefly is a show with its own sub-culture, its own language, its own genre, much like the makeup of Serenity’s crew, a collection of riff-raff. You can see similarities and familiar bits in Firefly, but bines these things in a way that makes it unique. The little things in the show, such as the fact that people speak Chinese as well as English, make the Firefly ‘verse a rich plex world.

It’s clear that passion and loyalty to those he cares for is going to be the theme of the feature movie, Serenity, which focuses on the Alliance search for River. It’s this sense of family and devotion to others that subtly permeates the show that in the end makes it pelling. Firefly is simply a great show, with rich depth, acerbic wit, and authentic emotion.

This review has been crossposted to Blogcritics.org.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
King Jesus and Political Discipleship
A new book asks us to consider what exactly the Gospel calls us to be and to do as citizens in a fractious, contentious, confusing time. Spoiler alert: It looks a lot like the cross. Read More… Our current political reshuffling has been dizzying, perhaps even more in the munity than among Americans in general. The conservative shift toward populism under Trump empowered both a push for real nationalism—blood, soil, industrial policy—as well as even more fringe movements such as...
Jimmy Lai Trial Adjourned Until September 2023
Lai remains in prison as Hong Kong awaits word regarding Lai’s international legal counsel. Read More… Entrepreneur and freedom fighter Jimmy Lai’s fight for justice will now drag on for nine more months as the Hong Kong High Court adjourns his trial. The es as Hong Kong waits for Beijing to rule on allowing King’s Counsel Tim Owen, a British lawyer and internationalist specialist, to join Lai’s defense team in his fight against the country’s draconian National Security Law. The...
Spielberg’s The Fabelmans Captures the Magic and Mystery of Moviegoing
The director of such blockbusters as Jaws and E.T. and the Oscar-winning Schindler’s List and Saving Private Ryan delivers a thinly veiled autobiographical account of how he came to be a believer in our secular religion. Read More… Modern society has no shortage of candidates for substitute religions. Instead of attending religious services, we can assemble at football games; in lieu of studying the lives of the saints, we e to know Harry and Meghan. And, for much of the...
Withdrawing from Afghanistan: One Veteran’s Crisis of Command
Lt. Col. Stuart Scheller’s now infamous video calling civilian and military leaders to account for the Afghanistan-withdrawal debacle cost him his career. Was it worth it? Read More… On August 26, 2021, Stuart Scheller posted a video on LinkedIn and Facebook in which he strongly criticized senior U.S. military and civilian leaders for the embarrassing way in which the country had withdrawn forces from Afghanistan in the preceding days. The video was shared more than 40,000 times and “liked” over...
Scorsese’s Hugo Is a Family Film Worth Revisiting
The director of Taxi Driver, Raging Bull, and Goodfellas delivered a delightful holiday treat that captures the magic of cinema and how one mechanism—the motion picture camera—can free us from the constraints of the purely mechanistic. Read More… Martin Scorsese turned 80 last month and he deserves celebration. He’s one of perhaps five directors in Hollywood who is respected as a master of the cinematic art, and the one most closely identified with the art itself. Perhaps this is because...
C.S. Lewis: How ‘Medieval’ Was He?
An important new addition to Lewis studies explores the influence of the medievals on Lewis the writer. But Lewis the thinker was just as importantly an anti-modernist modern. Read More… When es to evaluating C.S. Lewis’ engagement with medieval authors, Jason Baxter performs the heavy lifting with ease, almost with wings. The Medieval Mind of C. S. Lewis: How Great Books Shaped a Great prises, in effect, a sequence of primers on major and minor figures—Boethius, Pseudo-Dionysius, Calcidius, Dante, Nicholas...
My $50,000-per-Person Poverty Dinner
An 8-part series on what the author of The Tragedy of American Compassion saw from his ringside seat at the welfare reform passionate conservatism fights. Read More… “You don’t know about me without you have read a book by the name of The Adventures of Tom Sawyer; but that ain’t no matter. That book was made by Mr. Mark Twain, and he told the truth, mainly.” Those are the opening lines of The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. I can start...
Art as Spiritual Journey
A new book shows how the greatest works of art were more than just opportunities to feel something but pilgrimages to the divine. Read More… In his essay “The Philosophy of Medieval Art,” Bishop Fulton Sheen opens with the statement, “There is no such thing as understanding the art in any period apart from the philosophy of that period.” In other words, far from being a frivolous elective course for aimless liberal arts majors, Sheen explains that the discipline of...
Hong Kong Blocks Visa for British Lawyer in Lai Trial
The CCP succeeds in delaying entrepreneur and democracy advocate Jimmy Lai’s trial by almost two weeks. Read More… Hong Kong freedom fighter Jimmy Lai was scheduled to go on trial this week for alleged crimes against China’s National Security Law. However, Hong Kong’s immigration department has succeeded in pushing the trial back by denying Lai access to a key international lawyer on his legal team: Timothy Owen, whose visa was recently withheld by a Hong Kong court. The trial, originally...
Jimmy Lai Gets 5 Years for Fraud as He Awaits Trial
Hong Kong’s freedom fighter takes another brutal hit from Beijing. Read More… Held in solitary confinement, 75-year-old Jimmy Lai is still awaiting trial for the crime of resisting the iron grip of the Chinese Communist Party in Hong Kong. On December 10, however, that grip got a little tighter. A Hong Kong court sentenced Lai to an additional five years and nine months on two counts of fraud, related to a leasing issue with his pro-democracy newspaper, Apple Daily. According...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved