Farscape does Back to the Future in an episode that sends its cast back to Earth and back to the 1980s. Featuring a few fun moments for fans, the episode nonetheless does itself no favours by inviting Back to the Future comparisons.
Season Four, Episode Twelve: Kansas
Crichton (Ben Browder) is rescued from EVA Earth orbit by D'Argo (Anthony Simcoe), Rygel (Jonathan Hardy), Aeryn (Claudia Black), Noranti (Melissa Jaffer), and Chiana (Gigi Edgley), who find their way through the wormhole in D'Argo's ship. Meanwhile, Scorpius (Wayne Pygram) and Sikozu (Raelee Hill) stay behind on Moya for a disappointing B plot.
Along with Pilot (Lani Tupu), Sikozu and Scorpius form the not so brilliant plan of allowing Grayza (Rebecca Riggs) to board Moya under the theory that if she sees Crichton isn't aboard she'll leave them alone. At least by the end of the episode we see Grayza leave a spy aboard so that this doesn't go as completely without a hitch as Sikozu mysteriously thinks it will. Scorpius, we see, has his own ulterior motives for the plan and his reunion with Braca (David Franklin) shows he's still got a friend among the Peacekeepers after all.
But most of the episode involves Crichton interacting with his family, trying to stop his father from going on the ill-fated Challenger mission. In addition to the 80s setting, the episode also borrows the "fading from existence" effect from the Robert Zemeckis movie for when younger Crichton (Jamie Croft) seems about to die. Mostly this just has the effect of making the episode seem like Back to the Future done quick.
The best moments of the episode are fan service moments, like when Chiana, posing as "Karen Shaw", takes young Crichton's virginity.
Also worthy of note are Aeryn's inexplicably groovy scavenged duds.
The show previously referenced Back to the Future in the first season episode "Back and Back and Back to the Future", a far more interesting episode than this, to be quite honest. I started watching Farscape during the first run of the fourth season which I think, looking back, was probably the most flattering way to see season four. Pilot and Moya's design, Chiana, Crichton--these were all new to me. Now I'm finding season four puzzlingly mundane at times compared to the first three seasons. I wonder if this had to do with any pressure from SyFy to make the show more palatable to general viewers. Still, there are some very good season four episodes and I'm still looking forward to all the drama with the Scarrans.
. . .
Farscape is available now on Amazon Prime.
This entry is part of a series I'm writing on Farscape for the show's 20th anniversary. My previous reviews can be found here (episodes are in the order intended by the show's creators rather than the broadcast order):
Season One:
Episode 1: PilotEpisode 2: I, E.T.Episode 3: Exodus from GenesisEpisode 4: Throne for a LossEpisode 5: Back and Back and Back to the FutureEpisode 6: Thank God It's Friday Again Episode 7: PK Tech GirlEpisode 8: That Old Black MagicEpisode 9: DNA Mad ScientistEpisode 10: They've Got a SecretEpisode 11: Till the Blood Runs ClearEpisode 12: Rhapsody in BlueEpisode 13: The FlaxEpisode 14: Jeremiah CrichtonEpisode 15: Durka ReturnsEpisode 16: A Human ReactionEpisode 17: Through the Looking GlassEpisode 18: A Bug's LifeEpisode 19: NerveEpisode 20: The Hidden MemoryEpisode 21: Bone to be WildEpisode 22: Family Ties Season Two:
Episode 1: Mind the BabyEpisode 2: Vitas MortisEpisode 3: Taking the StoneEpisode 4: Crackers Don't MatterEpisode 5: Picture If You WillEpisode 6: The Way We Weren'tEpisode 7: Home on the RemainsEpisode 8: Dream a Little DreamEpisode 9: Out of Their MindsEpisode 10: My Three CrichtonsEpisode 11: Look at the Princess, Part I: A Kiss is But a KissEpisode 12: Look at the Princess, Part II: I Do, I ThinkEpisode 13: Look at the Princess, Part III: The Maltese CrichtonEpisode 14: Beware of DogEpisode 15: Won't Get Fooled AgainEpisode 16: The LocketEpisode 17: The Ugly TruthEpisode 18: A Clockwork NebariEpisode 19: Liars, Guns, and Money, Part I: A Not So Simple PlanEpisode 20: Liars, Guns, and Money, Part II: With Friends Like These . . .Episode 21: Liars, Guns, and Money, Part III: Plan BEpisode 22: Die Me, Dichotomy Season Three:
Episode 1: Season of DeathEpisode 2: Suns and LoversEpisode 3: Self-Inflicted Wounds, Part I: Would'a, Could'a, Should'aEpisode 4: Self-Inflicted Wounds, Part II: Wait for the WheelEpisode 5: . . . Different DestinationsEpisode 6: Eat MeEpisode 7: Thanks for SharingEpisode 8: Green Eyed MonsterEpisode 9: Losing TimeEpisode 10: RelativityEpisode 11: IncubatorEpisode 12: MeltdownEpisode 13: Scratch 'n SniffEpisode 14: Infinite Possibilities, Part I: Daedalus DemandsEpisode 15: Infinite Possibilities, Part II: Icarus AbidesEpisode 16: Revenging AngelEpisode 17: The ChoiceEpisode 18: FracturesEpisode 19: I-Yensch, You-YenschEpisode 20: Into the Lion's Den, Part I: Lambs to the SlaughterEpisode 21: Into the Lion's Den, Part II: Wolf in Sheep's ClothingEpisode 22: A Dog with Two Bones Season Four
Episode 1: Crichton KicksEpisode 2: What was Lost, Part I: SacrificeEpisode 3: What was Lost, Part II: ResurrectionEpisode 4: Lava's a Many Splendoured ThingEpisode 5: PromisesEpisode 6: Natural ElectionEpisode 7: John QuixoteEpisode 8: I Shrink Therefore I AmEpisode 9: A Prefect MurderEpisode 10: Coup by ClamEpisode 11: Unrealised Reality