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"Someday I’m Gonna Form a Chrononaut’s Union"
- Frank Parker
"Ever wish you could live your last week all over
again? Well, my name's Frank B. Parker, and I do it all the
time. I work for a secret government project experimenting
in time travel. When things really get screwed up, I'm the
guinea pig they send back to take care of it. The catch is,
I can only go back 7 days."
- Opening narration by Jonathan LaPaglia for the television series 7
Days
I know that more people besides my wife and me must be fans
of the now-cancelled science fiction series 7 Days.
The UPN show ran from 1998 to 2001 for some sixty-six
episodes, and gathered a small but dedicated fan base. Most
of us have finally gotten over being mad about the show
being cancelled, but now we’re ticked off that it’s not yet
been offered for sale on DVD. I mean, c’mon, you can already
buy DVDs of the first season of the SciFi Channel’s remake
of Battlestar Galactica, which is less than a year
old. You can purchase absolute garbage like Doogie Howser,
MD, and Chupacabra Terror (John Rhys Davies, what
were you thinking when you accepted a role in that
stinker?), so why not a quality sci-fi show like
7 Days? At present, this remains a mystery.
Basic
premise of the show: An alien spaceship really did crash at
Roswell, New Mexico, in 1947. While the government
researchers who took charge of investigating the alien
technology never managed to reverse engineer interstellar
travel from the remains of the ship, they discovered an odd
and useful side effect: time travel. At a secret government
installation appropriately known as Never-Never Land (NNL),
scientists have been working on Project Backstep for almost
fifty years, and have at last managed to send a spherical
capsule back in time seven days.
The pilot starts with a terrorist attack on Washington DC
that kills the President and Vice President, throwing the
country into chaos. The obvious solution: use Project
Backstep to undo it. The problem: no test pilot has yet been
able to survive a Backstep trip. Enter Frank Parker
(Jonathon LaPaglia), an ex-Navy SEAL who is currently
residing in the highly classified Hansen Island government
sanitarium, where military and governmental agency
operatives who have slipped their cogs are kept safely away
from normal society. Frank is freed by a couple of MIB-types
and taken to NNL, where he and volunteers from each branch
of the armed forces undergo tests to see if they could
possibly tolerate a Backstep. It will come as no surprise to
the viewer that Frank is the only one who passes the stress
and tolerance tests, and he is then clued in to what the
project is all about. With only hours to spare before the
seven-day window expires, Frank is sent into the past armed
with the knowledge and evidence to prevent the terrorist
attack from taking place. Arriving scant hours before the
attack is to occur, he calls NNL with a pre-arranged
codeword - Conundrum - alerting the Project Backstep leaders
that a successful Backstep has taken place. The attack is
prevented, and Frank goes through what becomes one of the
recurring themes of the show: reacquainting himself with
people who didn’t experience the past seven days of his
personal timeline, because he changed what happened, plus
being the only one in the world who knows the often horrific
details of what happened in the original timeline. This
first time is of course the most awkward, as no one at
Project Backstep in the changed timeline has any idea who he
is, with the exception of Captain Craig Donovan (Don
Franklin), with whom Frank had served before he went off the
deep end and wound up at Hansen Island. And of course even
Donovan doesn’t know that Frank has been assigned to the
project, as he, like everyone else, never experienced the
timeline where that happened.
I enjoyed 7 Days immensely during its initial
primetime run, and managed to watch (and record) the entire
series again when it ran in syndication on Spike TV, and I
enjoyed it just as much the second time around. The
storylines were generally interesting and well written, and
the show had what is most essential to any successful
television series, a cast of characters that worked well
together. What fascinated me most, though, were the
philosophical ideas and implications of the basic premise:
to go back and change catastrophic events, preventing or at
least mitigating disasters and loss of life. It’s an
intriguing “what-if”. What if the events of September 11,
2001 could have been prevented? What if the victims of the
tsunami of December 26, 2004 could have been given enough
warning to get to higher ground? What if the crew of the
space shuttle Columbia knew about the damaged tile
that caused the failure and breakup of their ship on
February 1, 2003, or even better, that the falling foam
debris that caused the damage on takeoff had been removed or
better secured, preventing the damage from happening in the
first place?
Of course, the disasters in 7 Days were specifically
tailored as plot devices for the various episodes, but were
mostly of the “what if we could change this” type. Whether
it was preventing nuclear war, stopping a military coup, or
keeping the entire human race from being wiped out, the idea
was that the new timeline would be a vast improvement over
the original. A subject that ran throughout the entire
series followed from the fact that after the Backstep, the
only person who had actually experienced what ever led to it
was Frank Parker. This eventually led to Frank having lived
through a whole series of events that no one else had to
endure. The loss of loved ones, the feelings of helplessness
in the face of calamity, the sense of rage at stupidity and
evil, all happened for him, even though the events that
brought them about were subsequently erased. The fact that
he was already somewhat mentally unstable seemed to actually
be a strength in dealing with what might otherwise have been
an unbearable burden.
Another, mostly unmentioned, subject was the fact that every
Backstep was the first one. Sounds illogical, Mr. Spock? Not
at all. Follow the reasoning: In the first episode, no
successful Backstep involving a living pilot had taken
place. The President and Vice President are assassinated.
Frank Parker is chosen to attempt the first successful
Backstep mission. He succeeds and prevents the
assassination, so in the new, altered timeline, there is no
need for a Backstep. With me so far? Frank has experienced a
Backstep, and the rest of the Backstep team is aware that
one has taken place, but in the new timeline, no Backstep is
initiated. (Yes, time travel can make your head hurt, and
that’s just from thinking about it.) So the next time a
crisis occurs, a Backstep is launched, Frank goes into the
past, prevents the crisis from happening, and therefore no
Backstep is launched, until the next crisis, when... And so
on and so on and so on... And just to keep things simple,
and to prevent multiple Frank Parkers running around, only
one of anything can exist in any given point of space/time,
so when Frank arrives seven days in his own past, he and the
time travel sphere exist only at the point of arrival. It’s
never adequately explained just what happens to the Frank
and the time travel sphere that were minding their own
business at Never-Never Land up until that moment, but the
unspoken supposition is that they just cease to exist,
superseded by their future counterparts.
This is good science fiction, thinking person’s science
fiction, and it comes along all too rarely. Thought was
actually given to the concept, and the idea that there would
be consequences to meddling with events that had already
occurred, along with the strain on the human psyche. Like
all good fiction, 7 Days was, and is, thought
provoking, and well worth watching, both for the
entertainment value, and for the brain-stretching that
trying to understand some of the concepts brings about. Well
worth watching, even if you’ve seen it before. A word of
warning; there are always events taking place in the world
that you’ll wish could be undone. This show will make you
wish that there really were a Project Backstep, so that they
could be. |