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‘The Expanse’ at 10: the outer space drama that should have been as big as ‘Game of Thrones’


In the first episode of “The Expanse” (which debuted 10 years ago this weekend), a spaceship makes the biggest meal of changing direction since Austin Powers attempted an [insert very big number]-point turn in the bowels of Dr Evil’s secret volcano lair.

The Canterbury, the vast ice hauler that’s home to several of the show’s leads, needs to investigate a distress beacon, so it initiates a “flip and burn” maneuver. This requires the entire crew to strap themselves into bespoke chairs, bite down on special mouth guards, and inject themselves with a cocktail of drugs that will help them withstand the intense g-forces generated by the ship’s abrupt 180 and subsequent deceleration. The message is clear: travelling through space in “The Expanse”‘s version of the future is hard. Really hard.

Because — although the show is set in a similar 24th-century time period to “Star Trek: The Next Generation” — you won’t find any transporters, warp drives, or casual tête-à-têtes with alien species here. The human race has made it to outer space in large numbers, but we’re still confined to our own Solar System. Forget vast Federations of peace-loving planets — in “The Expanse”, it turns out we can’t even get on with each other, as an opening caption reveals that Earth, Mars, and the residents of the asteroid belt stand on the precipice of war.

(Image credit: Amazon MGM Studios)

Just to accentuate those anti-“Trek” credentials, debut episode “Dulcinea” features: a zero-g sex scene being brought to an abrupt halt by the ship’s gravity being switched on; an executive officer (played, in the briefest of cameos, by “Breaking Bad”‘s Jonathan Banks) having a breakdown; and two key characters torturing prisoners for information. Oh, and by the time the closing credits roll, the aforementioned good-ship Canterbury has been comprehensively, unambiguously destroyed — along with most of its 50-strong crew — by forces unknown.

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