THUD: THE VISITORS RETURN... UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT
- By Devin Faraci
- Published 10/9/2008
- THUD

I have a few weaknesses - Friday the 13th and Planet of the Apes are certainly among them - but my weakness for the miniseries V may remain my most inexplicable, even to myself. At any rate, I've been excitedly following original miniseries creator Kenneth Johnson's efforts to get a remake or sequel off the ground, up to and including buying his novel, V: The Second Generation*.
And now V is returning to television, as a remake on ABC. That's the good news. The bad news is that Kenneth Johnson is not involved. Rather, a dude named Scott Peters**, who created The 4400, has written a spec script that ABC picked up (after all the networks passed on his pitch. Maybe that's some good writing. Somebody get it for me!). Peters has dropped the Nazi allegory, which is wise as that shit was so blatant and had the kind of goofy concept of substituting 'scientists' for Jews. I thought the generic 'scientist' went out of style with 1950s atomic monster movies.
Anwyay, Peters says that the new V will follow multiple stories but that the main one will center on Erica Evans, a Homeland Security type whose troubled son gets caught up with the Visitors. While I'm bummed that it's not Mike Donovan, I'm also happy that Peters is doing the best thing you can do with a remake: take the concept and make it your own.
What will be staying? The opening with the alien ships hovering over the major cities. The Visitor's evil plans for Earth. And possibly some other trademarks, according to Peters:
"Everybody has that imagery of their uniforms, or the visitor eating a hamster. It’s a science fiction icon and too good to pass up."
I'm imagining that this new version will be a miniseries or movie that serves as a pilot for a new series. And this being the 21st century, it won't just be for TV - Jace Hall, former head o Warner Bros video game division, is executive producing and will be helping to take the V franchise into the video game world.
I'm really hoping that these Visitors are our friends, and not totally shitty.
* my weakness only extends so far. This book is so poorly written I've barely made it 40 pages in.
** one 'on' away from murder!
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Comments
Comment #1 (Posted by Michael)
What about your weakness for Tron? Do you have that toy lightcycle underneath your friday the 13th poster, next to your planet of the apes bank?
Comment #2 (Posted by PFFFFFFFT)
Lets not forget your fucked in the head weakness for the shitastic Fantastic four films and X-men 3, dickwadd.
Comment #3 (Posted by Lexx-2)
Kind of in two minds about this. I would really loved to have seen Johnson's sequel come to fruition, but I liked The 4400 as well. I'm now just waiting for some deranged fanboys to start a boycott of this project, ala the hysteria from certain old-school fans that greeted the remake of Battlestar Galactica.
Comment #4 (Posted by BusBoy)
I smell shit.
Comment #5 (Posted by an unknown user)
Hey BusBoy, check your lip.
Comment #6 (Posted by Kaiju D'amato)
Wouldn't it be great if the remake fucked with everybody's expectations? what if they could get the entire audience thinking that maybe the aliens weren't bad guys? That would be a truly badass re-do.
Comment #7 (Posted by BloodyRabbit)
This is gonna be AWESOME! I'm a huge fan of the original series, and I definitely think that this is in VERY good hands. I read that Jace Hall is actually on of the producers on the project, which is great because he's the guy who founded Monolith Games (they made F.E.A.R, Condemned, TRON 2.0) so he knows what he's doing when it comes to storytelling and creating atmosphere. I actually found a show he has online that's just called The Jace Hall Show, and it's one of the funniest things I've ever seen. I CAN'T WAIT! Go JACE!
Comment #8 (Posted by B Dempsey)
This could be really good. I remember everyone balked at the idea of a Battlestar Galactica remake when word first hit the streets. "Starbuck is a chick?" and "The Cylons look human??" were some of the common criticisms. Now it's arguably one of the best SciFi TV series to date. I will definitely approach V with an open mind, and ignore any changes that might offend my nostalgic sensibilities. Hopefully it will get that gritty, realistic treatment that all the recent post-9/11 reboots (Bond, Batman, and BSG for example) have been getting.

