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An Interview With John Kenneth
Muir, Author of Space:1999: The Forsaken
Q: How did The Forsaken
come about?
A: Mateo has worked really
hard to launch this book series, and we had discussed the idea
of a 1999 novel many times since we met three years ago at the
Breakaway convention in Los Angeles. When Powys acquired
the license, we began serious discussions about what kind of
story would be fun to tell in the 21st century. Mateo and I often
have intense rolling conversations about the series in which
we play off each others ideas and things just kind of snowball.
It was out of one of these rolling dialogues that The Forsaken
was born.. I pitched an idea to Mateo, he liked it, we tweaked
it together, and when we found something that was really exciting
and controversial he said, that sounds like
a book! Also, I credit Johnny Byrne. Hes very much
the spiritual father of this book. I had a three hour conversation
with him about the future of Space: 1999 and what kind of stories
would be interesting (this was back in January or February of
2001), and I used some of that material in various print interviews,
but he got me thinking of amazing things. Hes such an imaginative
and brilliant writer.
Q: What is your experience with Space: 1999?
A: I wrote a reference
book called Exploring Space:1999, for McFarland (www.mcfarlandpub.com)
in the mid-90s. It was published in 1997. It went to a second
printing and has sold very well. Ive been a guest speaker
at series conventions in Los Angeles and New York, and had the
good fortune to interview many of the programs brain trust,
including Johnny Byrne and Brian Johnson (for Filmfax), Catherine
Schell (for my book), and Martin Landau (for Cinescape). Ive
also written about Space: 1999 in Rerun Magazine and in my encyclopedia
of horror TV, Terror Television (2001). So Im very familiar
with the series; its an enduring love. It never gets old
for me, and I feel like Im always seeing something new
in it. Ive been following the DVD releases with excitement
and I was fortunate enough to read an advance version of Resurrection
back in the summer-fall of 2001, I guess it was. And it blew
me away. Scared me silly.
Q: Most of your work is
non-fiction, so did you have any trouble adapting to fiction?
A: Not particularly. Its
different, but Ive had good experience preparing for the
assignment. Although Ive written eleven non-fiction books
in the last six years, Ive also sold short stories to The
Official Farscape Magazine (That Old Voodoo in issue #
6 and another in issue # 8 called Make a Wish) and
Realitys Escape. Back in 1996-97, I wrote a novel entitled
The Cyprus Harlots. So this isnt my first stab at fiction,
or even at series fiction, for that matter. Since I was in high
school, Ive written scripts for crazy horror movies that
I made on videotape with friends, so fiction is fun for me.
Q: Whats the book
about?
A: In general terms, The
Forsaken concerns destiny versus free will. That sounds heady
and philosophical, but Space: 1999 was often concerned with just
such weighty philosophical issues. If you watch the first year,
its all about destiny. The Alphans seem to be dealing with
that mysterious unknown force. In Year Two, its all self-determination
we make our own fate, and all that. My thought
was that something pretty drastic and catastrophic - must
have happened between seasons to cause those overt philosophical
changes. Thats not to say the book is some dry, metaphysical
treatise. One of the things we wanted to do was include some
major action sequences
some tension and excitement.
Q: What was the challenge
of writing a Space: 1999 novel?
A: I love and admire Space:
1999 in the deepest sense imaginable, but it isnt a humorous
series, and wasnt designed to be. Personally, I find that
a little difficult as an author. Humor advances characterization,
story, everything, and its against my natural inclination
to hold back. Writing fiction for Farscape, for instance, feels
very natural because referential humor is such a core concept
of that franchise. In Space: 1999, there can be humor, but it
cant be the kind of zinger or self-referential joke youd
hear on Farscape, or Buffy the Vampire Slayer. Theres a
formality to writing for Space: 1999 that is a challenge. You
have to intimate cosmic possibilities without being
ponderous or pretentious. The book has to have gravitas, but
not be boring or staid. Its a delicate balance, but fortunately
I have good people looking over my shoulder to kick me in the
ribs when I misstep
The other difficult thing was the creation of a new alien race.
This isnt a TV show where you can put a few ridges on an
actors head and say these are space capitalists
or these are space communists, or this race
is like samurai warriors on another planet. You cant
get away with that in a full-length book. Your alien culture
has to be believable, consistent, and really and truly alien.
That was a major challenge, but I have to say, Mateo completely
encouraged my vision, and even augmented it. He was so supportive
of my efforts, and believed from the get go that this alien race
had to be more than the alien of the week.
Q: Any thoughts about following
Resurrection?
A: Bill [Latham] is a good
friend of mine, and he wrote a riveting, heart-pounding horror
story. Honestly, thats the kind of Space: 1999 adventure
I enjoy most. Give me Force of Life, Dragons
Domain, or End of Eternity any day! I like
the gory, gothic, horrific aspects of those episodes a lot. But
for the second novel of the Powys series, we all recognized it
would be redundant to follow a great story of that particular
genre with a similar one. We had to go in the opposite direction
do something totally different. In his interview with
Powys, Bill compared Resurrection to Star Trek II: The Wrath
of Khan, a rip-roaring adventure. Keeping the Trek analogy going,
The Forsaken is probably more like The Motion Picture. It is
concerned about the bigness of it all, and therefore
theres a lot of territory to cover! For instance, Resurrection
didnt leave the confines of Alpha, and had this tremendous
feeling of claustrophobia. The Forsaken is mostly a planetary
adventure, and that means lots of material involving Eagles in
flight, a new alien race, and other really intense plotting complications.
But we felt strongly that the planet adventures are an important
part of the Space: 1999 history and legacy, as much as the self-contained
tales I actually prefer, so we set out to create one that we
hope will surprise people.
Q: The Forsaken has been
described as a bridge novel? What does that mean?
A: Even the casual fan
knows how things changed between seasons of Space:1999. After
Year One, we lost Victor, Kano, Tanya, Paul, Main Mission and
so on. In Year Two, everyone was wearing new uniforms, Alpha
had lasers installed on the base, and Command Center was underground.
One mission of the bridge novel is to explain how some (not all
)
of these changes came about.
One of the things I like about the book is that it is almost
literally a bridge. It starts out very much like a Year One adventure
in mood and mystery and ends like a Year Two adventure in terms
of conflict and action. Its sort of the missing chapter
in Space: 1999 history. Thats what will make the book controversial.
Q: How so?
A: As soon as you fill in a blank, there will be people who dont
like what youve fit there. Some will accept it; some wont.
But the great thing about this new book series is that Mateo
is willing to ask hard questions and follow ideas through to
their natural conclusion. I actually chickened out on a few things,
but Mateo has balls of brass. If something should happen because
its right, its going to happen in the novel. On a
TV series, characters cant change week to week. In a book
series, especially one in which some characters disappear,
there is the possibility for growth, death, reversal, development,
you name it. How these changes are received is anyones
guess
but its a very provocative idea. I hope it gets
people talking. Thats the way to get the series back in
the forefront of the publics imagination to make
it faithful to what came before, but also to energize it with
new, exciting ideas. The more people that pick up Resurrection
or The Forsaken and start feverishly debating them, the better.
Thats an infusion of new life, because it means people
care.
Q: Does that mean beloved
characters will die?
A: Im not going to answer that. Read the book.
Q: Is The Forsaken a sequel
to any particular episode of Space: 1999?
A: The book begins with an event we saw dramatized in one particular
episode, and then explains, rather dramatically, the catastrophic
ramifications of that event. It isnt a sequel in the traditional
sense of the word, but something that occurred in Year One causes
the Alphans considerable grief.
Also, theres a thematic strand that Bill created in Resurrection
that is followed up in The Forsaken, to give the book series
its own internal consistency.
Q: Do the supporting characters
appear in The Forsaken?
A: They do. Alan Carter and Paul Morrow play major roles. Tony
Verdeschi is there too, to a lesser degree, and there are some
surprises for Tanya. Just about everybody is in the book: Sandra,
Kano, Mathias, Ben Vincent, Bill Fraser, et al. Theres
fleeting mention of Yasko, Jim Haines, Petrov, Crato, and other
Alphans we know and love. I felt very strongly that the book
series needed to re-establish the supporting characters and bring
them forward with unique things to do.
Q: What do you think the
fan reaction will be?
A: You can never tell. Ive written books about many different
TV series, and some fans appreciate the thought that goes into
your work, even if they disagree with your conclusions, and others
merely despise you for honestly offering them. I have found Space:
1999 fans to be a very thoughtful and welcoming bunch. Theyve
always been very respectful of me, even when we had disagreements
about particular episodes or ideas. I think they understand that
the series is supposed to be awe-inspiring, challenging and sometimes
tragic. And I think those words pretty well describe The Forsaken.
If a fan goes into a reading of the book with those notions,
he or she wont be disappointed.
Q: What do you think is
Space: 1999s greatest strength?
A: It asks the important questions about humanity. It doesnt
fall back on political potboilers or genre tropes. It is about
mankind facing his destiny among the stars. Thats enormously
appealing and the reason why the series remains popular after
all this time. The stories beckon and stir our souls, and we
long to know, along with Koenig, Russell, Bergman and the others,
the mysteries of our beginnings and our ending
Q: If you had to describe
The Forsakens theme in a few words
?
A: Oddly enough, it would probably be a line of dialogue
paraphrased - from a low-budget John Carpenter movie, Prince
of Darkness (1987): Although there is an order to the universe,
it isnt at all what we had in mind
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