Apple TV's 3-Part Sci-Fi Series Makes Other Space Operas Look Bad

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Apple TV's 3-Part Sci-Fi Series Makes Other Space Operas Look Bad
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Pilou Asbæk as The Mule in Foundation season 3

From the post-apocalyptic depths of Silo to the alternate history spectacle of For All Mankind, Apple TV+ has quietly built one of the most impressive sci-fi libraries on television. There’s seemingly no corner of the genre it can’t master.

Space opera is no exception, and Foundation proves it with staggering confidence and scale. Now three seasons in, Foundation adapts Isaac Asimov’s legendary novels of the same name, once considered unfilmable. However, what could have been a cautious, watered-down translation instead feels bold and unapologetic. Apple didn’t just make a respectable adaptation. It delivered one of the most ambitious and visually commanding space operas ever produced for television. More importantly, Foundation doesn’t simply serve as a solid space opera. It expands what was once considered possible for the subgenre. With intricate ideas, nonlinear storytelling, and a striking level of audience trust, the series elevates the very concept of space opera. In doing so, Foundation sets a new standard that makes many other space operas feel creatively timid by comparison. Foundation Crafts Its Own Space Opera Aesthetic Apple’s Sci-Fi Epic Refuses To Look Like Anything Else When comparing Foundation to other space operas, the visual identity is the first thing that stands out. Many genre staples, from Star Trek to Star Wars and Firefly, each have distinct tones, yet their technology often shares a familiar design language. Swap a ship between them and it wouldn’t feel jarring. The same could even be said for The Expanse, the other TV show quietly pushing the boundaries for space operas. Its grounded, industrial spacecraft would not look out of place in most other shows and movies of the genre. There’s a shared vocabulary of metallic corridors, blinking consoles, and utilitarian flight decks that defines the genre. Foundation takes a different path. Its ships, architecture, and costuming feel almost operatic in their grandeur. The Galactic Empire’s gleaming halls on Trantor, ruled by Lee Pace’s Brother Day, are stark, monumental, and unnervingly pristine. They don’t resemble the lived-in grime of many other franchises. They look imperial in a way that feels genuinely ancient and futuristic at once. Even the cloned emperors - Brother Dawn , Brother Day, and Brother Dusk - are styled with a ritualistic uniformity that reinforces the Foundation’s themes of stagnation and control. The aesthetic is deliberate, thematic, and cohesive. Apple TV avoids playing it safe with Foundation. The production design doesn’t lean on the familiar space opera palette of exposed wires and battle-worn hulls. Yet nothing feels absurd or out of place. Every visual choice reinforces the scale and philosophy of the story. That balance is rare. Foundation carves out a unique identity while remaining unmistakably science fiction and unapologetically space opera. It looks like an interstellar future humanity could be heading for, but not one borrowed from anyone else. Few Space Operas Trust The Audience Like Foundation The Series Embraces Complexity Instead Of Explaining It Away With the notable exception of perhaps The Expanse, most space operas lean far too heavily on exposition. Characters frequently pause to explain political systems, technologies, and cosmic stakes in meticulous detail. The audience is guided through every concept step by step. Foundation resists that instinct. From its opening episodes, the series introduces psychohistory, galactic collapse, and centuries-spanning political structures without slowing down to over-explain them. Hari Seldon outlines his narrative-centric theory, but the show quickly moves forward, expecting viewers to keep up. This approach could have been disastrous. Psychohistory alone, a mathematical model predicting the behavior of trillions, is a complex enough concept to overwhelm any script. Add cloning dynasties and nonlinear timelines, and Foundation being incredibly confusing for casual viewers feels inevitable. However, showing restraint with exposition ensures that complexity becomes one of Foundation’s strengths. The series shows consequences rather than explaining mechanics. Political fractures unfold through action. Technological marvels exist without verbal instruction manuals. The audience is trusted to connect the dots. That trust elevates the viewing experience. Rather than simplifying its most ambitious ideas, Foundation allows them to breathe. The result feels immersive instead of instructional. By refusing to trip over itself in justification, the show turns complexity into its defining advantage. It assumes its viewers are paying attention, and in doing so, rewards them with a richer, more layered narrative. Foundation Pushes Space Opera Storytelling Boundaries It Turns Grand Sci-Fi Concepts Into The Core Of Its Drama The third reason Foundation stands above its space opera peers like The Expanse is the sheer scope of its ideas. This isn’t a traditional Hero’s Journey dressed in futuristic armor. It’s a meditation on history, inevitability, and power drawn directly from Isaac Asimov’s ambitious source material. Subscribe to the newsletter for smarter sci-fi takes Want richer context on Foundation, its visuals, and the future of space opera? Subscribing to the newsletter delivers smart, focused analysis and curated picks that deepen your appreciation of ambitious sci-fi storytelling. Get Updates By subscribing, you agree to receive newsletter and marketing emails, and accept our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. You can unsubscribe anytime. The timeline alone stretches across generations. The Genetic Dynasty of cloned emperors forces audiences to confront questions about identity and moral responsibility. Brother Day is both an individual and a copy, raising unsettling ethical dilemmas about autonomy and stagnation. Psychohistory, meanwhile, reframes destiny itself. Rather than focusing on one chosen hero, the series examines statistical inevitability and collective behavior. Salvor Hardin complicates that premise, challenging the idea that individuals are irrelevant within vast historical currents. Few space operas are willing to let intellectual exploration drive their drama. Many prioritize emotional arcs first and philosophical inquiry second. Foundation dares to reverse that balance at times. Entire storylines hinge on abstract debates about fate, governance, and control. Yet the show never abandons emotional stakes. Gaal Dornick grounds the theory-heavy narrative with personal conflict and doubt. The philosophical and the personal coexist rather than compete. For decades, Asimov’s novels were deemed impossible to adapt. By embracing their complexity instead of diluting it, Foundation proved otherwise. In the process, it redefined what television space opera can aspire to be; expansive, cerebral, and unapologetically ambitious. 158 8.6/10 8/10 Foundation 10 stars 9 stars 8 stars 7 stars 6 stars 5 stars 4 stars 3 stars 2 stars 1 star Like Follow Followed TV-MA Drama Sci-Fi Release Date September 23, 2021 Network Apple TV+ Showrunner David S. Goyer Directors Alex Graves, Roxann Dawson, Jennifer Phang, Mark Tonderai, Andrew Bernstein Writers Jane Espenson, Leigh Dana Jackson, Liz Phang, Eric Carrasco, David Kob, Addie Manis, Marcus Gardley, Lauren Bello, Olivia Purnell 8 Images Close Cast See All

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