Videos by ComicBook.com
Yes, I’m talking about Firefly, one of the best single-season shows of any genre, but also one that deserved so much more. Joss Whedon’s series follows the crew of the starship Serenity, led by Nathan Fillion’s Captain Malcolm Reynolds, in the year 2517. Earth has long been left behind, but the United States and China survived as superpowers, forming an Alliance and a new world order, with the crew operating in the shadows and on the fringes of that.
The show perfectly blends the Western and Sci-Fi genres: with the dry, dusty landscapes, grit, and gunslinging of the former, and the fantastical world and new-age technology of the latter, but crucially with societal and political issues that still reflected the modern day, using the genre trappings as a lens against the real world. With razor-sharp dialogue, complex characters, space exploration, and muddled morality, it stands as one of the best single seasons of science fiction ever made, and yet never got the chance to grow beyond that, for reasons that could have been avoided.
Why Was Firefly Cancelled After Just One Season?

Fox cancelled Firefly in December 2002, before the first season had even been aired in full, but the network was the maker of its own misery when it came to the show. Although Whedon was a hot commodity coming off the success of Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Angel, it clearly didn’t know exactly what it had on its hands with this series, nor how to sell it to people.
It aired the show in a difficult Friday slot, and occasionally moved it around or dropped it altogether for other events. It tried to market the series more as an action-heavy show with comedy elements, which, while it has them, isn’t a fair reflection of what it’s really about, nor its core strengths in terms of its characters. And most egregiously, it aired episodes out of order. The intended pilot, “Serenity,” which provided a proper introduction to the characters and world, was deemed unsuitable as a launchpad. Consequently, a new episode was ordered to better hook viewers (spoiler: it didn’t work).








