Wednesday, 22 October 2008
4.10 Revelations
There wasn’t much pausing for breath. Deanna made her demands that the Final Four should give themselves up to the Cylons and Tori was first to reveal her identity. That made sense. Of all of the Four she has been the one most readily willing to embrace her new-found Cylon side. And she didn’t waste time in revealing herself to Laura, happily swatting her down by stating she was done taking orders from her. In many ways, given Laura’s imperious qualities as President towards Tori and others, she kind of had it coming.
Tigh set things in motion by admitting to Adama that he was a Cylon all along. Since the Cylons were threatening to execute the hostages (they stated they actually had executed one, but we never saw it and it was never mentioned so it was impossible to know if it really happened, though I think we’re supposed to assume it did) Tigh had to take quick action.
Adama had a bit of a nervous breakdown when his friend of 30 years dropped the bombshell on him. That kind of character moment really deserved more time and inspection, but this was an episode that wasn’t hanging around so such introspection would have to wait. I am sure we’ll get to know Adama’s full response in later episodes.
With Adama losing it, and Laura a hostage, it was left to Apollo to step up and take a hold of the situation. Finally, the purpose of his political plot and positioning as president had value! He threatened to flush Tigh out of the airlock (an act, I think, that Tigh was practically welcoming) to prevent Deanna from holding all the cards. Tigh quickly revealed Tyrol and Anders were also like him, and soon they were also in the airlock.
Tyrol didn’t say much during this episode, but he did have a wry smile on his face for most of the episode. I think, after Tori, he is the next in line to have embraced his new nature.
Prior to this moment the Final Cylons had all heard some more music and been drawn to Starbuck’s pristine Viper ship. It was left to Starbuck to check it over and discover that it now highlighted co-ordinates that almost certainly could lead to Earth. (I must admit, for a brief moment, I thought the Viper itself was going to be the Final Cylon! Given the Cylons are machines after all!) It was a terrific sequence when Starbuck made the dash to the airlock, whilst Apollo’s finger hovered over the button to flush Tigh away. The music and the editing really carried the excitement terrifically – I never got a secure sense that all was going to turn out well.
As it happened, Starbuck’s news about the direction to Earth prompted a truce between Cylon and human, as instigated by Apollo. Even the Final Four Cylons were granted a quick amnesty (something that was a little too quick and casually doled out to be realistic, but this episode, as I have said, didn’t have time to hang around). They were to go to Earth together. I honestly thought the show was going to end right there (given I had no sense of time, or how long the episode had left, when I was watching). But oh no. . . the journey was not yet done.
The startling revelation was that the Fleet, and the Cylons, jumped to the route shown and made it to Earth. The image of the planet and the ships approaching it was a marvellous sight to behold. Again, I thought the episode was going to end right there, but it wasn’t done yet. They landed on Earth, and we got to see Adama feel the soil in his hands and then the camera panned past the dulled, almost empty expressions of the other major characters as they looked around this new Earth. It was barren, and the structures of the previous civilisation were now in ruins. And there the episode ended. . .
So what to make of THAT? Is this Earth our Earth? That is, does the Earth we know and live on figure as part of the mythology of Battlestar Galactica? Is the Earth they have found our Earth, only a long time in the past or way, way into the future? (Personally I go with the future idea, given the use of the ‘All Along The Watchtower’ song from the Season 3 finale.) Are we viewers the descendants of the 13th colony that has now, perhaps, ceased to exist? Or at least exists on a more savage level? Or in very few numbers? Is there anyone left on Earth at all?
It was a heck of an ending, and there’s only ten more episodes to go. The bitch of it is I am, for the first time, having to WAIT for the next block of Season 4 to air before I get to see it. I’m not used to having to wait! I want to know NOW!
Sunday, 19 October 2008
4.9 The Hub
With the likes of Laura, Gaius and Helo around the Hybrid, the base star started jumping on the Hybrid’s command. It was doing this a lot, apparently in pursuit of an ever-jumping Resurrection Hub. This set up the main mission with the Cylons and the Viper pilots having to work together when the time was right to spring an assault – get Deanna off the Hub and then blow the thing to pieces. That, in itself, was worthy of a whole episode’s focus. In actuality it was just a piece of the busyness that this episode was packed with.
With each jump Laura was briefly transported to a bizarre fantasy, perhaps her own subconscious, perhaps something more. There she met that religious black woman who guided her around an empty Galactica and showed Laura her death bed. I got the impression this was more symbolic than any genuine future glimpse. And the meaning of it all, that Laura was eventually presented with, was that she had lost the ability to love at all, and thus as a leader of her people it meant her people would ultimately fail in their quest to save humanity.
Or something like that, anyway.
This would prove crucial to the fate of Gaius. Whilst he was busy talking to the Centurion (very interesting, and very Gaius, how he became aware to the awoken consciousness of the Centurions and so quickly sought to win their minds with his words) he was seriously injured. It came to the point where Laura was left alone nursing him, and there he confessed that he had given the passcodes that allowed for the Cylon attack to occur.
It was believable how Gaius had reconciled his guilt with a belief in God. The idea that God made everyone, and made everyone perfect, and thus Gaius absolved himself of the guilt by a belief that he had performed a necessary function of God’s will was convincing stuff. What he didn’t count on was Laura seizing the chance to coldly allow him to bleed to death. It was only for her re-connection with humanity, and love, through Adama in her visions, that made her realise the importance of behaving humanely and prompted her to rectify her actions and save Gaius’ life.
The actual mission to destroy the Hub was a success; a startling changing of the parameters for human and Cylon now that Cylons can be killed, permanently. Where the likes of Cavill and the hostile Cylons will move to next will be an interesting one – their trump card has been taken away from them. Surely they’ll have something up their sleeves. . .?
Deanna was taken into custody of Laura. The act of deceiving the Cylons by breaching the agreement was also a bad move; Laura reneged on the deal and denied the Cylons equal access to what Deanna knew. That moment when Deanna implicated Laura as the Final Cylon was priceless. I guess the creators of the show just could not help themselves kick in that little jaw-dropper as a joke, only to snatch it back. Just when you thought the mystery was revealed. . . Oh no. Not THAT easy. Deanna has self-preservation in mind now that she can die, and knows the only thing she has of value is what she knows – I doubt she’s going to give up that information easily.
Mind, I know that the next episode is the last before the show enters a break before its final run. This will actually bring me up to date with the real air dates of the show. For the first time ever I will experienced the frustration of regular BSG fans by having to WAIT for a new episode rather than having them all ready to watch. . . It would not surprise me if Deanna reveals at least one or two of the known (to us) Final Four right at the last moment of the next episode leaving the massive cliffhanger of what the likes of Adama, for example, will do about the knowledge that Tigh is a Cylon.
In the meantime this episode ended on an almost perfect note with Adama, on his solo mission, meeting the base ship and finding Laura. I was very happy the episode included this reunion. And it was well handled. They hugged and Laura admitted that she loved Adama. His response was priceless. “About time.” Almost a tragedy that time, for these two, is something they don’t appear to have too much of.
Thursday, 16 October 2008
4.8 Sine Qua Non
There was much passing of roles and power in this episode. By the end of it Apollo had been sworn in as a stand-in President (ever since he became part of the quorum it seemed inevitable that would occur – though I thought it might have come after Laura’s death). Adama had gone solo flying on a hunt for the base ship, and Laura, and thus had left Tigh back in command of the Galactica.
Little did Adama realise he was putting a Cylon in charge! And Tigh is a Cylon with a lot to lose regarding Deanna exposing him for what he is, which may press him to make some hard choices later down the line. Mind you, he’s also been frakking Caprica Six too, with the revelation that she is pregnant coming out of the clear blue sky! Say what you like about the Cylons, they sure are a fertile bunch!
Lamkin once again made an appearance in this episode. Oh joy of joys, he remarked sarcastically. Fundamentally Lamkin was there to point out what was obvious – that Apollo in his quest for new leadership really was the only man for the job. Lamkin even postulated that Apollo had known this all along, in a repressed fashion, and made an interesting case about how Apollo always seemed to ‘fall in’ to roles of importance despite his apparent reluctance to do so.
One thing I totally didn’t get was the business with Lamkin’s cat. Maybe I missed something (I was slightly sleepy when I watched this episode, which evidently didn’t help). But one minute the cat was there, running around, and Lamkin was even talking to the thing. And then the next Apollo was shown the cat’s dead body; apparently it had been dead for weeks! What gives, man!? What was the deal with that frakking cat!? It felt like some kind of significant point was being made out of it but I'll be damned if I picked up on it.
And the Six that Athena shot wasn’t quite dead at the beginning of this episode, but died eventually without serving much purpose. But what she did see was the bright light of the apparent world after this world, so I suspect her role here in demonstrating that she was potentially going on to someplace else was the importance in keeping her around for this episode. Athena didn’t get much in the way of punishment for it though!
In effect this was a transitional, bridge of an episode – but given the importance of some of the changes – like Apollo’s presidency and Tigh’s command – it’s a massively pivotal set of changes. It was also good to see Tigh and Adama have a bit of a scrap, though I did half expect Tigh to flick out some Cylon strength like Tori has shown to possess. . . Adama has always perhaps been a little too tolerant of Tigh’s flaws, but then Adama appeared to be the first to recognise that his tolerance and closeness is his own key flaw, so it was a nice touch all round.
The real hook, of course, is what really happened to the base ship. That Raptor craft managed to jump back, but with a dead pilot and what looked like bullet holes in the hull suggests some form of battle took place. I don’t know if the ‘other side’ of the story is going to come in the next show, though that would definitely be my preferred kind of episode.
Tuesday, 14 October 2008
4.7 Guess What's Coming To Dinner
This episode started with an enthralling moment as the new Cylon base ship jumped to where the fleet was whilst the Demetrius was left behind with a malfunction. Unable to communicate that the base ship was no longer hostile, a full-scale attack was launched upon it. It was only Tigh making a call to hold the attack (showing new-found sympathy for the Cylons, and perhaps a deeper understanding of things than the apparent) averted the disaster.
So now Galactica had a whole bunch of Cylons to contend with, chief amongst them being Six making a plea that they would show the humans where they could find and destroy the Resurrection Ship hub in return for the Final Five and the freedom to leave. There were some interesting discussions regarding mortality, and what that meant in terms of significance to life that the Cylons never had. Potentially, if this hub does get destroyed then the stage is very much set for a complete wiping of the slate of the Cylon race and for the humans to once again be the only dominant race: poising things ready to occur again as they once had, as the prophecy indicates.
Everything certainly suggests that there is going to be some form of truce, and perhaps a merging of Cylon and human, with the main Cylons eventually becoming extinct and the Final Five being the key components in the fate of the humans to start the cycle over again.
Mind you, the end of the episode showed the Hybrid being reconnected and her first command was to jump. Since the humans were planning to go against their word to the Cylons (and the Cylons likewise) whatever truce existed between them is certainly flimsy. How things fare from here depends entirely on where the base ship has jumped to and what level of co-operation on both sides is forthcoming.
All in all, the way is being made clear to make the journey to Earth. What’s more impending is the potential ‘unboxing’ of Deanna which will then allow her to pinpoint the Final Five. Tigh, especially, doesn’t seem particularly keen on that secret being let loose and he may have measures in mind to prevent it from ever happening.
Athena, meanwhile, went and killed Six due to her paranoia about the child going away from her. Given Hera has drawings focused entirely on Six – and thinking of Six and Gaius in the opera house during the second season, discussing how the child was theirs – it seems inevitable that this is going to be the way of it. Is this some kind of metaphorical union between Cylon (Six), human (Gaius) and the child (Hera) that points the way to the fate of everyone? Is Hera the Final Cylon? That seems a great and logical likelihood.
I’ve started getting excited about Season 4, properly, for the first time since the first episode. Now it feels like we’re getting into the thick of it. And where the likes of Starbuck and Gaius and Laura and Hera are all going to play into the grand scheme of things is an intriguing unravelling waiting to happen.
Saturday, 11 October 2008
4.6 Faith
Laura, first, had the more digestible story. Through hearing Emily explain why it was she found the words of Gaius to hold meaning for her Laura was apparently coming round to believing in Gaius herself. Emily talked of a dream where she had crossed the river and saw her family waiting for her on the other side. Then, towards the end of the episode, Laura experienced the same dream, seeing Emily leave and cross the river whilst she saw her own mother.
It’s the classic life after death scenario, clichéd to the hilt, but here it was handled excellently. Laura moved from someone that had watched her mother die an ungracious death and believed that it held no more than blackness and emptiness to someone that had a new-found sense of hope that there was more to this world than she realised.
She explained as much to Adama at the end of the episode in a neat little coda where, perhaps with a new sense of clarity, she can make good on her pledge to be the one that leads the people to Earth and, in effect, becomes the prophecy of the dying woman. That along the way, as the Hybrid mentioned, she may eventually learn the secret of the opera house is something to look forward to. The opera house business was revealed right at the end of Season 1 and if that gets a decent pay off after all this time then it’s an impressive piece of foreshadowed storytelling.
The more dramatic, traditional story concerned Starbuck. At the hands of her mutinous crew the situation was eventually resolved with Anders stepping up (shooting Gaeta in the leg, something I doubt the increasingly bitter character is not going to take too well). And so Starbuck took a raptor with Athena, Anders, Leoben and a red shirt and Helo stayed behind and started the clock running. We had a good old fashioned race against time.
The raptor finding the broken fragments of the destroyed base star was a good plot turn. (Quite why the other Cylons didn’t annihilate it completely was somewhat fortunate!) There were Sixes and Boomers all over the place, some more willing to get along and join the humans for their own salvation than others.
The business with the Hybrid offered up the most interesting points. I’m sure the fanboys had a field day dissecting the potential meaning behind the hybrid’s cryptic words, but the gist of it seemed clear enough to me without having to pick it all apart. 4 of the final five would point the way to the Final Cylon, and this Final Cylon would go through a desperate time to find Earth where, apparently, everything had originated.
Starbuck was, once again, labelled as being one that would end the human race – but I still think this means only in the sense of a unification between Cylon and human rather than a straightforward massacre. That Starbuck’s function appears to be separate from the Final Cylon probably suggests she’s not it. Gaius seems a too obvious fit, and Laura’s role as “dying leader” surely counts her out. So all the main characters are covered except for the Adamas – unless the Final Cylon turns out to be someone more marginal. Right now, I don’t know if the likes of Anders and Tigh were ever ‘born’ in the natural sense and grew up. If they did, that paves the way for Apollo or Adama to be the Final Cylon. Otherwise, all bets are off. (I guess that would make Helo the only viable main character candidate!)
The idea that Deanna is going to be ‘unboxed’ is also a tantalising one. The moment she claps eyes on Anders (how I wished he had touched the Cylon control panel!!), or Tigh, or Tori, or Tyrol, is going to be a heck of a scene. And surely that moment cannot be too far away, with the Demetrius now linked back with the Cylon base ship and the whole bunch of them set to re-unite with Galactica. That’s a meeting I am looking forward to seeing!
Friday, 10 October 2008
4.5 The Road Less Travelled
It’s not like these are dull themes to explore, it’s just that sitting around talking about them introspectively for a show like Battlestar Galactica feels annoying. I know the show can be pulse-pounding and exciting, but the last two episodes have totally slowed the pace down to a drag through the sludge of the soul in this transitional exploration of many main characters. Whilst this may be a means of laying the groundwork for some major revelations I think it’s taking a little too long: I’ve already bought the majority of the transitions in the characters – if anything I am looking for the likes of Tigh and Tyrol to get a move on and embrace their new selves more quickly so the show can progress!
Tyrol had shaved his head by the start of this episode, clearly showing that this was a man going through a new phase of identification. That he seems, by the end, to have linked up and embraced Gaius was something of a weird surprise. It’s not something that I particularly buy into, mainly because I don’t understand it. I don’t understand the grip that Gaius seems to be holding over everyone anyway, all of a sudden.
Fair enough that this cult of followers that indulge him would make him start to believe his own sense of importance, but for the likes of Tyrol? Perhaps the awakening of his Cylon side has cracked open a monotheistic aspect to his psyche? I guess it’s a reasonable interpretation.
Gaius himself is obviously becoming more and more powerful in voice, and his movement is perhaps set to become larger and more potent. Maybe in the grand scheme of things there is to be a union between Cylon and mankind, and those in support of one God will find such a merging easier to handle. Who knows? For the most part I can say that it’s not a plot line that interests me all that much until its intention is made clearer.
What really salvaged this episode, for me, was the business onboard the Demetrius with Starbuck and an increasingly mutinous crew. Picking up Leoben (which had a fair amount of contrivance attached to it – perhaps explained away by fate rather than coincidence?) was always going to be a sticking point. That Starbuck gave him the time of day and listened to him was bound to happen. Quite how much that guy knows is another matter. He speaks of profound understanding of the universe and how things are supposed to be yet, when faced with Anders, there wasn’t a flicker of recognition as to what he really was.
So the episode ending with first Helo and then Gaeta and then eventually everyone admitting that they were no longer willing to carry out Starbuck’s orders, and were going to assume command. It’s hard to imagine how Starbuck is going to get away with her own pursuit of Earth in the face of this state of affairs. Is she willing to gp completely alone? Or with just Leoben? Or is there some way that she can wrangle the situation around to her will and have the crew trust her just a little more to see where it takes them?
Wednesday, 8 October 2008
4.4 Escape Velocity
Gaius was assuming the role of his cult leader status with the potential for it to develop and turn him into a genuine messianic prophet. Despite Laura wanting to pass laws that blocked the ability for Gaius and his followers to gather in one spot (following the attack at the start of the episode) Gaius eventually came through, after a bit of martyrish beating for his troubles.
Apollo once more served to oppose the strict grip on passing laws Laura was pushing through. Again I can see both sides of the coin. Laura’s actions have something of a tyrannical nature and Apollo is right to bring them to the attention of the quorum and have new motions voted democratically. However, given the state of the fleet and the few numbers left in the entire human race, drastic situations call for desperate measures.
Unfortunately, Laura is perhaps not in the best place to be making decisions, looking down the barrel of her own mortality. It seems that she’s definitely going to die this time. I mean, there’s no sign of Hera’s blood coming to her rescue! (Why is that? Is Hera no longer a viable means of curing her?) Potentially Laura may make moves and strike actions with increasing abandon, which may prove detrimental or helpful in the long run.
Tigh has developed a growing fascination with Caprica Six, wanting to know more about her as a means of knowing more about himself. This shows his growing curiosity and acceptance of what he is. Of the Final Four only Tori has embraced her new self, Tigh and Tyrol are struggling with it.
By the end of the episode Tigh had allowed Caprica to beat him fairly badly, but when he was asking for more she seemed to realise that pain was not what he needed – and instead she kissed him. Quite what that means for the future of their relationship remains to be seen.
Elsewhere Tyrol “frakked up” with his ship repairs and so went into himself, working tirelessly and then drinking. The resulting scene with him and Adama in the bar, with Tyrol letting rip about his disaffected life led to Adama relieving him of his post. If anything is going to ease Tyrol into a new transition as a Cylon it’s no longer having his wife, and his job – the two things that anchored him previously are now gone. And since his child is probably as important to the Final Four (it’s the only one of its kind, right?) then it will have no means of preventing him from embracing Cylonhood!
So that was that, really. Various key players slowly moving across the board to slot into a new place.
Saturday, 4 October 2008
4.3 The Ties That Bind
On some form of drug concoction she accused Tyrol of having an affair with Tori, which in turn meant a public show that the three Final Cylons needed to address, and so they conducted their meeting to discuss the matter. What they didn’t know was that Callie was watching and listening, and the news that her husband was a skin-job wasn’t something she took well.
The final, shocking scene in the airlock was excellently executed (if you’ll pardon the pun). Callie took her child to the airlock and set it to go, apparently ready to blast herself and her abominable half-Cylon child out into space. And then Tori turned up. What wasn’t so surprising was that Tori managed to talk Callie out of it. What was more surprising was the moment Tori had Nicky in her hands, when she belted Callie away with super strength, knocking her flat. By the time Callie came around Tori was in the airlock control room, ready to flick the switch. . .
So that was the end of Callie, blasted out into cold space. Given that Adama was consoling Tyrol at the end of the episode suggests the view must be that Callie killed herself (her attack on Tyrol, and the Doc’s opinion on her condition would corroborate that story). The reveal about Tori is the startling aspect to this. She had said she was enjoying the new lease of life, the change, which explains why she acted so impulsively as a Cylon.
The likes of Tigh, Tyrol and Anders almost certainly have this same potential. Quite how able they will be to keep their Cylon side suppressed remains to be seen; as does how their Cylon side may display itself should it come to the fore. It can only be a matter of time.
There wasn’t much progression with Starbuck, Anders and Gaeta and the rest on the ship searching for Earth (that’ll be a plot point focused on in later episodes, no doubt). But now Apollo is wrangling in politics, with Zarek baiting him to antagonise Laura, the issue about the secrecy of that mission, and the secrecy by which Laura and Adama conduct their decisions is being questioned.
Frankly, at this stage in the show, it’s an issue that doesn’t feel particularly relevant. But maybe it will prove to be so, somehow. So I watch and engage in it, generally wishing the action was elsewhere. Because elsewhere there was Cylon action going on!
I had been premature in my previous assumption from the last episode that the likes of Cavell and the other Cylon moulds had been destroyed. Caprica’s actions had been more of a warning shot – but it was one that backfired. Cavell apparently acceded to Six’s request to reinstate Deanna (how I cannot WAIT to hear what she has to say, if I ever will!) only to turn against her and attack her ship.
With the Resurrection Ship not nearby it seemed that Caprica Six and company, if they were blown apart, would be properly dead. Yet since we never witnessed the absolute destruction I can only hopefully presume total annihilation has not yet occurred. Either Six and co will get out to wage war another day, or she may download after all. Whatever happens, this is a rift between the Cylons that does not appear to be salvageable. It’s a fascinating crossroads they’ve managed to forge here, and quite where the Centurions will fall into this is an extra element of spice thrown into the mix.
Friday, 3 October 2008
4.2 Six Of One
For example, on Galactica there was little in the way of progression from what we had already come to learn about from the previous episode. Apollo was still leaving his position as CAG, and this episode gave him an emotional send off from all the crew (who seem somewhat quick to forget his swift courtroom defence of Gaius, along with his father!). And then there was Starbuck who failed to convince Laura she was wrong, but slowly managed to win Adama round into giving her a shot.
So the episode ended with Starbuck, Helo, and potentially a small crew being given licence to take a ship and go searching for Earth. This is almost surely going to turn into a massive decision, and a crucial element in the future of the show. I’ll be watching that plot thread with great interest.
Gaius, meanwhile, was being slowly seduced by Tori on orders of Tigh and the other Final Four Cylons to try and ascertain if he was the last Cylon. Tori seemed to become convinced that she had found her man, but I am still not convinced. There was the startling moment for Gaius, however, when his own doppelganger mental apparition turned up to talk to him!
Now what the hell was all that about? The Six in his head has now been traded for himself!? Does this mean Caprica Six may start seeing visions of her own self? This does, potentially, create the idea that the manifestations Gaius, and later Six, have been plagued with since the beginning are an entity entirely distinct and separate somehow. Quite HOW I don’t know.
In a welcome break we also got treated to some Cylon action, with them deciding what to do about the Raiders thinking for themselves and withdrawing their attacks by their own command. Cavell, and two other models of Cylon, decided to have the Raiders lobotomised so they could no longer function by themselves. Caprica Six and others decided that was not acceptable, and so took matters into their own hands.
The ‘release’ of the Centurions to have free will may have opened the door to the potential extinction of all the Cylon moulds. If all of this has happened and will happen again, what perhaps needs to happen is that the Centurions destroy their Cylon masters (as they once turned on their human masters) to become the dominant race of the Cylon species. Maybe for a while the humans and the Cylons will live in harmony, and then there’s a war, and an armistice. . . And maybe the whole thing starts all over again. That’s my hunch guess at how the show could play out (as I believe this is the last series and so my mind cannot help but start concerning itself with potential conclusions).
It’s a heck of a guess, but I am sure that Centurion free will has to have a major say in the shape of the future for the Cylons. Now that at least three of the moulds have been destroyed (I assume all of the Cavells and the Black Guy and the PR Guy were destroyed otherwise killing that one group would serve no purpose, since they can be downloaded easily enough) perhaps Six and the Boomer and Leoben moulds will start making key decisions that will govern the fate of the Cylons and the human race and their combined destinies.
Well, you’d hope so!
Wednesday, 1 October 2008
4.1 He That Believeth In Me
Tigh delivered the first gasping shock, with the brief moment where he appeared to have shot Adama straight in the head. Whoa! But, ah, it was just a brief flight of fantasy, or perhaps a pre-programmed urge that he repressed enough to prevent from happening (precisely the way that Boomer didn’t). Meanwhile, Anders climbed into a cockpit and, with a Centurion recognising one of his own kind, apparently prompted the withdrawal of the Cylons completely.
It was never really explained why the Cylons chose that particular moment to stage an assault that appeared to have the single intent of destroying the entire fleet. Surely they could have done this at any time, given they appear to be consistently able to track the fleet wherever they go. How do they do that? Why have they waited?
The return of Starbuck, and the plight of Gaius amongst the cult that had taken in him, were fundamentally where the title of the episode was derived from. Gaius, under extreme circumstances, turned to faith and prayed to the one God to save the soul of the little boy. This wasn’t the first time he had apparently prayed, though the important distinction here was that he wasn’t praying for himself this time. The show blurred the lines here with the apparently genuine miraculous recovery of the child, and Six’s smug satisfaction and confidence that it would happen purely through Gaius’ belief. It’s harder to reconcile BSG as promoting the possibility of a Godless universe when miracles like this happen, apparently as predicted by the likes of Six.
Is there really a one true God, and is Gaius really a divine being? Has that been the shape of his destiny all along? (Or is he, indeed, the Final Cylon?)
Which brings me to Starbuck, who I am becoming more convinced isn’t the Final Cylon purely on the basis that there’s so much suspicion and highlighting of the idea that she could be. Maybe it’s a double bluff, but I tend to think the spotlight is on her to keep our eye off the real surprise.
But that doesn’t explain what the hell did happen to Starbuck! She returned after some periods of blacking out, having apparently been to Earth and retaining a vague memory of seeing Saturn (though she didn’t know it was so). To her she had been gone a few hours, hence how mystified she was by the news she had been gone for two months. How very Flight Of The Navigator!
And not only that, she had returned in a version of her ship that was brand new, without a scratch on it. It does point to that idea of ‘rebirth’ for Starbuck, ship as well, but how that actually works in real terms is not easy to explain away. Nor is her new affinity with the correct journey to Earth and the concern she had that Adama, by Laura’s command, was leading them in the wrong direction.
The conclusion to the episode was a cliffhanger – ‘to be continued’ – with Starbuck entering Laura’s bedroom and holding her at gunpoint. I am sure Starbuck won’t shoot her, but quite how she’s going to convince Laura to trust her and follow her course is going to be interesting. (And the question of whether Laura should, given the prophecy mentioned in Razor is an intriguing quandary.)
Saturday, 27 September 2008
Razor
The story of Pegasus was told in flashback alongside a story that slotted, chronologically, not too long after Apollo had been granted Commander status of the ship. He made the decision to make the tough, hardline Cain-enthusiast Kendra his X-O and it was through her eyes did we see the history play out.
In truth, I was a little disappointed by watching the story of Cain’s decisions and the plight of Pegasus before it encountered Galactica. We had already been given the ‘beats’ of the story by hearing about the X-O who got shot, and the shooting of civilians when ships were looted of their assets. What I wanted was to really get inside the mind of Cain and understand how it was she had made those decisions in good conscience. Really, I didn’t get much past the idea I had of her previously: that she was a bitch with a single intent and will to get it done no matter what.
The biggest surprise regarding her was that she was a lesbian, and one that was getting it on with the Cylon that would come to be known as Caprica Six. Six’s treatment once she was discovered as Cylon, and the torture and rape that was no doubt encouraged by Cain, were no doubt fuelled by her own hurt and self-loathing about how she had been taken in and perhaps fallen in love with Six. (It also makes the fact that Six would be the one to shoot Cain dead a more salient, poetic act.)
Otherwise the events we had heard about worked out pretty much how they had been said they did, which left little sense of surprise and no real understanding of the motivation. The closest to rationalisation was when Cain was of the belief that Pegasus and her crew were completely alone and the only thing they had left was vengeance and anger to deliver some payback. That was fair enough when they thought they were alone, but why the shut off and murder of civilians once they were discovered?
The title ‘Razor’ was the justification, with Cain’s viewpoint being that they had to become like a blade that cuts, coldly, to survive. I understood what was being said, I just couldn’t believe in it from Cain and see where her head state was at. That was a shame really, because the story of Pegasus was one I was willing to get along for the ride with. Perhaps it was the fact that the story was told in flashback, and so drained of dramatic impetus, that prevented me from fully engaging in it.
There were two other notable elements which, perhaps, justified this being a special episode that was aired between Season 3 and 4 (otherwise there was no real point in the story of Apollo’s command and the mission Starbuck and co made, and how Kendra eventually sacrificed herself as repentance for what she had done).
The first notable element was a young Adama’s story during the first Cylon war, how he had come across a Cylon base that was conducting experiments on humans. It was there he found the first prototype hybrids that were being created. Some of the detail on all of that was kind of lost on me, in truth, but I got the impression that the Hybrids were the Cylons first attempts at what would eventually become the likes of Six and Boomer and the other moulds. These hybrids, however, appeared to have some special sense of the patterns of the universe, and how things that had gone before would happen again. . .
Which brings me to the second notable element, and easily the most juicy in light of the end of Season 3and what Kendra heard about Starbuck. The hybrid delivered some form of prophecy warning of how Starbuck would bring about the end of humanity and that she must not be followed. Quite what the meaning was all about was, naturally, kept kind of oblique.
My own personal take on it, and the direction I think that Season 4 is going to take, is that Starbuck will indeed bring about the end of humanity. And I also think she will bring about the end of Cylons. And what will happen is that the perfection of a Cylon-Human hybrid will be complete, and that will be the new race. . .
On saying that, it sounds like kind of too much of a bleak ending for all the various people we have come to know over the course of the Seasons of BSG, so maybe that’s something of a longshot!
So, in short, not a bad feature length piece that served as a diversion and a mild curiosity – but there was never any danger of it generating the immediacy and excitement of Battlestar Galactica’s regular episodes when firing on all cylinders. The story of Pegasus was mildly interesting, but there’s a better story we want to see play out!
Wednesday, 24 September 2008
3.20 Crossroads - Part 2
But I’ll get to that. First, the preceding 30 minutes of the show. . .
Yeah, yeah, it was all about Gaius and his trial. The thing is, the longer it went on the more certain I was that he was never going to be found guilty. The evidence supporting it all was just too weak, and then Apollo was cajoled into taking the stand against his father and speaking on Gaius’ behalf. It was a good speech, actually, addressing some of the issues of hypocrisy and warped justice that have peppered the show since the start. Battlestar Galactica has enjoyed those moments of moral dubiousness, and it was only right that they came back here to be picked apart and held up to the light.
So Gaius was free and, not soon after, apparently spirited away to his “new life” amongst some kind of cult people that considered him a form of God. The threads of that, no doubt, will be picked up in the next Season and potentially serve as a kind of bridge between human and Cylon.
As for the Cylons we know, not much happened with them. There was that bizarre shared dream between Laura, Athena and Caprica – but though the phenomena was presented it was never explored or explained. It was indicative of this finale as a whole: present a whole lot of crazy, inexplicable stuff and then leave it hanging in the balance.
Which brings me to that final ten minutes. Right around the time Caprica had her vision in the opera house of being with Gaius and the child and seeing the Final Five staring down at them, it occurred to me to count how many people were hearing the music on Galactica. There were four, I quickly realised, just before THAT scene.
It turns out the four of them – Tigh, Tyrol, Anders and Tori – were channelling a sitar version of All Along The Watchtower (I’ll come to that). Apparently it was intended to be that way, a trigger that would cause them to gather and awaken themselves to the truth: they were Cylons!
It was quite a moment. Coupled with the constant music, the Cylon attack and the power running out, it was pretty intense. I had previously earmarked Tigh as a potential Cylon after Deanna made her apology upon seeing the Final Five (I am guessing it was him she apologised too!), but I didn’t fully believe it, and I really didn’t figure the likes of Anders or Tyrol to be one (Tori, when she started behaving weirdly, I figured her as a potential, also).
Again, quite what it all means for the four of them and what they are supposed to do next hangs completely (and tantalisingly) in the balance. Tigh wants to go back to being the man he knows of himself, but I am fairly sure that all of them are going to be irresistibly drawn to their true selves and their true purpose. Earth, no doubt, figures heavily in this.
What I suppose is unique to this four is that they have been allowed to grow up, be born, in fact, as humans. Tigh, after all, has grown up with Adama. I was of the understanding that the Cylon ‘moulds’ don’t change and so could never have been children. But these other five are perhaps more ethereal, and exist in a spiritual sense at a fundamental level and only exist in humans. (Perhaps that’s the key to the Cylon’s eventual goal – to marry a Cylon spiritual form housed in the body of man. It’s the best explanation I’ve got up to now.)
And so we had the final reveal (as Apollo decided to ditch the lawyer life and get back in the Viper) of Starbuck piloting her ship. She looked the same. The ship looked the same. Except she was happy, and calming, and claimed she had been to Earth and everything was going to be all right.
And that’s all the explanation we got. The quickest conclusion to reach is that Starbuck must be the fifth and final Cylon, who realised the truth about herself upon death and has since seen ‘the light’ and knows how to lead the humans and the Cylon in that unification goal I spoke of earlier. That’s the quick and obvious – which makes me certain it’s not right.
The final shot was, as was almost expected at that moment, of Earth itself. Given that the song All Along The Watchtower existed, I have to figure that it must be a future Earth. That is if it is our Earth, and this set of us that existed in the 20th/21st century are a part of the BSG universe, I think we’re long gone now – but that song, in a sitar version – remains!
Ultimately then that last ten minutes were cracking stuff. I do feel like it also ran an extreme risk of being rather silly. I can imagine many people watching and throwing their hands up in the air, figuring that the show had finally just gone too daft all at once. The reveal of the four Cylons and a freshly-alive Starbuck and then the reveal of Earth coupled with familiar music was a mass crash of incongruous, surprising revelation not to be easily swallowed in one gulp.
I guess when this originally aired the fans of the show had a whole long wait between Season 3 and 4; time to absorb and analyse and get used to this explosion of new information. I don’t have that cushion. I’ve got the first half of Season 4 ready and waiting so I can get to see pretty soon how well all these balls that are hanging in the air get juggled around and managed to see if the show really has lost its marbles or if I’m in good hands for what, I believe, is the final Season.
Tuesday, 23 September 2008
3.19 Crossroads - Part 1
I’m expecting grim things.
For one thing we’ve got people seemingly cracking up out of nowhere. Tigh has started hearing music that he believes is coming from within the ship – but he’s not the only one who heard it as Anders apparently also did. And then there was Tori, the president's aide, who out of nowhere has started unravelling and shared that odd exchange with Anders.
I have absolutely no idea what she is all about, but it feels like something to be dreaded. Indeed, the whole business with Tigh and the weird music is an odd one. Is it a psychological metaphor, or is there some deeper significance to it? The closer to the nebulae they get, the more the music plays? Signs of civilisation? Was Tigh picking up music playing from Earth!?
And then there’s the president, whose cancer has come back and she has taken to the kamala again to ease her suffering (which explain the hallucinogenic dream that opened the episode featuring Laura and Athena pursuing Hera only to see Caprica scoop her up – I am sure that’s symbolic but I don’t quite know what of). What does it mean that the cancer came back? Another symptom of something going inherently wrong?
And then there’s Apollo, now turned fully against his father and against the military to pursue a life as a lawyer for Gaius. What the hell is that all about? If people weren’t behaving strangely and cracking up I would have found Adama’s dismissal of his son hard to believe – but at present it could simply be interpreted as another example of this angry malaise that appears to have descended on the people.
It was a good thing that all of this was happening amidst the trial, because the trial itself was rather dull, and continues to be rather dull. Try as they might it’s simply never going to be as exciting as they’d want it to be. The moment the raptor stayed behind and encountered a sudden appearance of Cylon base ships was far more exhilarating than any trial could be. Caprica Six said the base ships were tracking the fleet due to the tylium ship – and this has created a plan to use the tylium ship as a diversion. Perhaps it’s just the sense of unease getting to me, but that seems like a bad idea. What if the Cylons get to the fuel ship and destroy it? That leaves the fleet without fuel, stuck out there, and in a bad spot. . .
Potentially it could mean the Cylons get the jump on them on the journey to Earth and take the next step ahead of them. That’s if the Cylons don’t just blast the fleet to pieces. There’s a whole lot of things could go wrong, and this first-part episode did a good job in selling the potential that it very probably will. I’m expecting grim things indeed. . .
Monday, 22 September 2008
3.18 The Son Also Rises
This episode was all about Gaius being given a lawyer prepared to defend him. After one was assassinated, up stepped this odd, gravel-voice, shade-wearing, kleptomaniac Irishman and completely dragged the episode, and Battlestar Galactica, into one of the dullest places I’ve ever seen it.
An episode like this would be bad enough mid-season, but right towards the end as I am poised now it just seems like a dreadful mis-step. Maybe I am wrong. Maybe there is such a killer payoff going to result from this trial to make it worthwhile. . . But so far I am dubious. Aside from Starbuck’s end in the previous episode, the instalments lately have felt inert and lacking in purpose – as though the Season doesn’t know where to end and is so serving up episode after episode tackling different ideas just to fill in time before the finish.
Potentially, as this episode hinted, Apollo is going to be the driver to some scheme at the heart of Lampkin’s plans. The letter he sent to Gaius at the end, linked into the episode title, suggests that managing to convert Apollo against his father’s will is going to prove incredibly useful and powerful. But to what end, I don’t know. Perhaps my dislike of it is because the episode was dominated by this Lampkin guy who I just out and out didn’t believe in at all. Carrying a cat he didn’t like (that served only one purpose: to help Tyrol spot a bomb) and talking of deep-love between Caprica Six and Gaius, he just struck me as someone that was supposed to be all-knowing and profound about the human condition, but to me he sounded like he was full of shit.
If he turns out to be something to do with Final Five I am going to be very disappointed.
So the only reason I am now looking forward to the last two remaining episodes of the season is really because they are the last two remaining episodes, and Season Finales are generally good on any show, and on Battlestar Galactica they have been particularly good. Can I hope for a curveball, dramatic tone shift like Season 2? Do I dare hope for that much?
Saturday, 20 September 2008
3.17 Maelstrom
Although, for sure, despite Starbuck flying headlong into a cloud storm and exploding I think it’s certain she isn’t gone for good. Quite where she has gone to is another matter, of course. Like that Aurora figurine she came across, Starbuck has potentially been reborn into the next phase of her destiny. And though that’s all very well and good in a poetic, metaphorical sense it doesn’t answer very much in the way of hard and fast reality.
Metaphor played a heavy part here, though. From the ‘maelstrom’ image that Starbuck had been drawing, it was appearing in her dreams, in melted candles and in the storm cloud that eventually consumed her. It wasn’t difficult to surmise that the darkness at the centre of the storm could also be portrayed as the darkness at the centre of Starbuck herself; her destructive nature and guilt over her mother being a swarming blackness at the heart of her that had been pulling her inside out like a black hole.
She faced her inner demons, made her peace with her mother and flew into the eye of the storm. That all works well, metaphorically.
What’s not so clear is what the hell was going on! Leoben had been in her dreams, constantly, and appeared in her extended flight of fantasy as her ship plunged into the eye of the storm. Yet at the end Starbuck knew that he wasn’t even really Leoben, so who the hell was he? And was there ever really a Cylon raider anywhere? It seemed like there wasn’t until close to the end when Apollo apparently got a glimpse of the raider that Starbuck had been pursuing.
That’s deeply confusing.
I have to try and corroborate some level of Cylon involvement in all that transpired, but I get the feeling this part of Starbuck, and the Cylon's destiny, goes back further than either of them. There was mention of that space between life and death, which is crucially what Deanna was in pursuit of when looking for the ‘final five’. Again, I get the impression the ‘final five Cylons’ and the five members of the 13th tribe are perhaps one and the same, and are a link between man and Cylon.
And, naturally, this leads to the idea that Starbuck may be one of these five. That’s perhaps where she has gone. . . How all that works, how a member of the Cylon five could have been a little girl that grew into Starbuck and had no real understanding of herself, well, that’s deeply involved stuff that I can’t really fathom out. I just have to have faith with Battlestar Galactica that it knows what it is doing.
I think it must do. I can’t imagine ‘killing off’ a character like Starbuck was one that was done lightly and without careful consideration. And I liked the way this episode tied in her first encounter with Leoben, and the details of her flat from Season 2, and made it feel like this episode, this fate, had always been coming. I have a feeling that I probably won’t get much of an answer about all of this in the remainder of this season, but perhaps the season will end with some glimpse as to where Starbuck went to next. . . Exciting stuff.
Although if she turns up in the next episode having miraculously survived somehow then I want my frakking money back!
Friday, 19 September 2008
3.16 Dirty Hands
Gaius, from his prison cell, had been busy writing a book – a subterfuge piece about how the likes of Adama and other Capricans were set to forever rule, even in this new fleet society, and the peoples from other colonies would be forever bound into the roles and functions they were doing. Or, as Tyrol put it, his son would only ever be able to be an engineer because that’s what Tyrol would teach him and there would be no chance of him becoming anything else.
Tyrol was very much the focus here, harkening back to his role of union leader on New Caprica. Visiting the tylium processing ship, and the harsh conditions there, he instigated a strike that lead to his imprisonment. Adama was particularly harsh in his treatment of Tyrol, I thought. He threatened to take his wife, Callie, and have her shot first if Tyrol did not relent.
I know Adama has turned over a new leaf for himself to be a meaner chief, but that just seemed a step too far. Mind, it wasn’t clear if he was bluffing or not – but it didn’t seem like he was! (Odd that a man like Gaius is being allowed to have a trial, yet someone like Callie could be stood against a wall and shot without hesitation! I don’t think I buy it.)
Gaius and his impending trial looks as though it’s going to be at least one of the features of the season finale. Again, there seems to be a lack of impetus for the season at the moment, with another episode rolling by with little indication of forward momentum. I wonder if Gaius will get his trial. I wonder if he will be executed. I wonder if, after he is executed, he will wake up in a Cylon downloading tank. . . Maybe that’s the season finale!
It would seem that Gaius certainly struck a chord with people in the fleet, though, as his book got circulated and read in secret. This perhaps leads towards Zarek’s words about Gaius having a trial opening the door to a riot; but again I struggle to believe that people would have real sympathy for the man that lead them to New Caprica and was in apparent collaboration with the Cylons during their occupation.
So it was a good episode for Tyrol, but in the sense of progression and credulity I thought it struggled along more than it had to. But the sub-plot story of Celix, being turned down for pilot training only to be then awarded the status at the episode’s end was a delightful payoff. Until I know where this season is going, though, it’s hard to know if this was an episode that was more filler than anything else.
Thursday, 18 September 2008
3.15 A Day In The Life
Still, with this show anything can turn up at any time and produce a rapid acceleration of plot and excitement so it’s no big worry.
This episode focused on two aspects; Adama the man and Tyrol and Callie. The Tyrol and Callie situation was, I guess, a kind of metaphorical event for Adama in some respects. There they were doing a routine repair on the hull when there was a slight breach and they were locked into a room rapidly venting air. What started as a mild inconvenience escalated into a crisis.
During this time, Tyrol and Callie got the chance to re-evaluate their relationship that had been strained with work and their baby. Tyrol, in particular, got to realise exactly what was truly important to him in respect to raising his family and progressing from his old life to the new one.
The sequence where Tyrol and Callie had the doors blasted open and were ejected out into space to be caught by Apollo, Starbuck and Athena in a Raptor was a totally “Holy shit!” moment. I loved it. Although I was reasonably sure the two would survive, there was always the off-chance that Callie, perhaps, might not have made it. But they both did. Both live on, to live and learn.
Metaphorically, for Adama, the idea of venting out old ideas and blasting them out to be reinvigorated by a new awareness was kind of what his daydreams regarding his ex-wife on the day of their anniversary was all about. Tellingly, at the end, it seemed he hadn’t moved on much and knew he would do the same thing again next year. Still, he had at least recognised the need to show Apollo that he respected and loved him as a son and not just a member of his military.
Interesting that Adama’s imaginary conversations with his wife echoed the way Gaius and Caprica Six have both conjured ‘imaginary people’ to interact with exclusively. I think enough was done to try and ensure that it was clearly a flight of fancy, a daydream for him, rather than any hint that he might be some kind of Cylon.
Indeed, is it right that the Cylons do not age? That is their mould does not change? So for the likes of Cylon Boomer she was implanted with false memories before she knew she was a Cylon to ensure she believed she really was human? Which, therefore, suggests that anyone who has grown up with anyone else – and seen them grow up – cannot be a Cylon.
We’ve seen photographic evidence of a young Adama, and he watched Apollo grow up. So we know those two are fine. How long have Apollo and Starbuck known each other? Or Adama and Starbuck? Or Adama and Tigh? How long were Tigh and Ellen together? I only wonder all of this when considering who may yet be awaiting the reveal of being a Cylon all along – I am sure at least one major cast member will be!
Wednesday, 17 September 2008
3.14 The Woman King
Usually he’s a bit of a bleeding heart for Cylons, and even in this episode, when he is left defending the fate of the curious people of Sagittarion (who don’t believe in medicine or technology so much, so I guess they’re kind of Mormonic, or Luddite!?) when he believes they are being bumped off by the doctor.
As it turned out he was right, but he had to go through a lot of self-examination and cross-examination from the likes of Adama and Tigh, amongst others. In the end, Adama bestowed an apology and Helo saluted him so I guess that sort of puts them back where they started. The only thing we had gained was more of an insight into Helo’s character, which was worthwhile though probably not wholly consequential in the grand scheme of this Season.
What was pivotal, it would seem, is the brief scene with Laura and Zarek discussing whether to hold the trial of Gaius. Zarek was adamant, and apparently scared, that holding such a trial would open up a “hurricane” of trouble that even the provision of marshall law might not be able to contain.
I’m not quite sure where Zarek’s conviction comes from. I got the impression that, basically, since Gaius was so clearly guilty in the eyes of the people for their sufferings on New Caprica that the idea of even giving him a chance of being proven innocent would create anger and rioting. At least, if this trial goes ahead, it’s been granted an extra layer of interest!
Meanwhile Caprica Six was in her cell, being watched as she talked to herself and kissed the imaginary Gaius that had turned up for her. Again, I am forced to ask myself what the deal is with these two and each having an imaginary version of one another serving as their conscience of sorts. There’s hopefully some form of rationale behind this, but beyond mad thoughts about them both being Cylons that died and, on their way to being downloaded somehow got entangled en route, I can’t really fathom it out.
So that was that. A bit of a standalone, character study of an episode that Battlestar Galactica occasionally chucks out there – biding time until the next set of ‘to be continued’ episodes rear their heads! (They’re always the best ones!)
Monday, 15 September 2008
3.13 Taking A Break From All Your Worries
The main thrust of the plot concerned Gaius, now in captivity on Galactica. Tigh had the viewpoint that he should just be executed, whereas Laura and Adama were more inclined to try and get whatever information out of him they could. Gaius, himself, tried to commit suicide at the start of the episode and had a weird hallucination that he woke up in a download tank – but I was never fooled. I knew he wasn’t going to be revealed as a Cylon; I have become certain of that much now.
Probably I’ll turn out wrong later down the line!
But anyway, Gaius was eventually injected with some bizarre serum that Adama only saw fit to mention now, where the subject was placed in a situation of jeopardy and only his interrogators had the power to aid him. This was apparently going to make him speak the truth. (The end, intriguingly, hinted that there was a secret in him so deep even he wasn’t prepared to admit it. . .)
What he did admit was pretty much what we already knew concerning his part in the Cylon attack on Caprica and what he knew about the Cylon race in general. It was good in the sense that it allowed him to clarify for us exactly where his state of mind was at; but at the same time it didn’t really feel like I was learning anything new.
What was worse was the inertia of the episode since, by the end, Adama nor Laura were at all convinced by his story. The only forward movement was that they had decided to give him a trial (whatever that means) rather than outright kill him. It was not an ending to the episode that made me excited about the next episode, really. Hopefully I’ll be pleasantly surprised.
And the inertia of the episode carried through with Apollo and Starbuck. Both pretty much broke apart from Dualla and Anders respectively, and then met up. Starbuck hit Apollo with it: that he could leave Dualla and she would be there. But then he worried that he could not rely on her after the way she had treated him (understandable) and so ended up going back to Dualla and breaking down in front of her, begging she take him back.
Personally speaking, I’d rather be with Dualla than Starbuck any day!
Anyway, Dualla took Apollo back and Starbuck was back with Anders and the pair just shared some looks across the bar towards the end (the bar being where the episode got its title, from the Cheers theme song!). Again, back to square one with the sense that there was still plenty more of this love square to come.
So the episode ended in pretty much the same place where it had begun. That’s not really a great mark of anything, though I guess with this foreplay out of the way the season can march on and properly get into whatever it wants to sink its teeth into next.
Thursday, 11 September 2008
3.12 Rapture
In the meantime the cliffhangers from the previous episode were all resolved rather amicably and quickly! The Cylon ships headed to the planet all backed off, barring Deanna’s ship (a decision that had the startling prompt amongst the other Cylons that her dissension was not one they could tolerate any longer). Apollo instructed Dualla to go and get Starbuck, so he and Anders could get on with defending the temple for as long as they could.
Uneasy alliances all around then, but it made for a tense and enjoyable episode. Plenty of action and tension. Battlestar always handles this stuff well – in fact its battles and skirmishes and high-stakes situations are something of a trademark of the show for me. The only downside, for me, was the escape when the whole planet went supernova. Given there were people on the ground when it was all going off, and Tigh’s priceless remark about how it was going to be “photo finish” I was anticipating every bead of tension to be wrung out of the escape. Not so. It was all rather easy and over quickly. Probably as a result of time allowance on the episode in general rather than any artistic or dramatic decision.
Elsewhere Athena elected to have Helo kill her so she could download back on the Cylon base ship and get to her daughter again. The scenes with Athena and Cylon Boomer were bizarre; Cylon Boomer has become such a cold character! That seemed totally at odds with the character that existed on New Caprica. Still, it allowed Caprica Six justification to snap her neck, so no sooner had Athena arrived when she was back on Galactica, with her baby, and with Caprica Six in tow!
Add in Gaius managing to end up back on Galactica, also, and pretty much every major player is now back together in the same place for the first time since Season 2. The ramifications to all of that are mightily interesting. Galactica has a new signpost to follow with the supernova (in truth this seems like an event so preposterously unlikely I’ll need more justification for how that event just happened to occur at the moment in time) and plenty of interesting reactions from the people onboard to follow up on.
Meanwhile, back on the Cylon base star, Deanna’s model and the knowledge contained within has been maddeningly ‘boxed’ indefinitely, and so what, or more specifically who, she had learned about was left unknown to all but her. Which brings me to the beginning, and where the debate would have raged amongst the fanboys about who the final five could be.
There wasn’t much in the way of clues, save for the fact that Deanna seemed to only react to one of the figures she saw. When she saw this one figure she apologised for her ignorance. And, just before dying, she told Gaius he was right without defining what he was right about.
Gaius thought it might have been about whether he was a Cylon. The longer this idea has dangled the less I believe it. If he was, why would he have been the brilliant mind on Earth that needed to be infiltrated by Six to allow access to the defence systems? It just doesn’t seem right. (And yet there is that bizarre telepathy he shares with Six and the projection aspect to his flights of fantasy, so I’m not dismissing him out of hand!)
There was Starbuck’s revelation at the end, where she was shown the picture she had drawn all her life that resembled the 4,000 year old image found in the temple. On being shown this Starbuck recalled the prophetic words of the Leoben Cylon who told her she had a destiny to fulfil. This either marks her out as one of the final five, or maybe just a pivotal figure in the eventual destinies of the humans and the Cylons.
Does Deanna have reason to apologise to Starbuck as she did? That’s what I ask myself. I don’t recall them having all that much to do with each other. (Indeed, Gaius aside, Deanna hasn’t hurt very many non-Cylon people!) But then I’ve not seen everything she ever did whilst on New Caprica, for example, and maybe her apology was a more general one for whatever was perpetrated to the individual in question.
Point is, I don’t know. And I’ve rapidly watched the show from beginning to this point in isolation of any discussion, so it’s hard to retain all the facts and scenes and pointers that I could build towards any specific case. My out of the box suggestion? Colonel Tigh. Irony of ironies that the one-eyed hater of all things Cylon turns out to be one of the final five! But given that he had an eyeball gouged out, that seems to me to be something that Deanna would want to apologise for!
Wednesday, 10 September 2008
3.11 The Eye Of Jupiter
It was a situation that was going to get massively intense. And it started with Tyrol getting a hunch about something in the mountains so he went for a wander and inadvertently stumbled upon some massive temple – potentially the temple of the five from the 13th colony.
Right. OK. So here we bring in the Cylons, who also appeared four base ships strong at the planet on their own quest to find ‘the eye of Jupiter’ that apparently pointed the way to Earth and would be found in this temple. So all that business from the previous episode, again that I had mistaken and/or got confused by, with Baltar and Deanna going on about shadows in light had also brought them to this point.
I have to say they could have done a better job of making that a little clearer. I mean, maybe I was a bit sleepy when I watched the previous episode but I don’t think I totally missed the signpost on this thing.
So what’s the deal with the Cylons and the humans then? Because there are the Cylons going on about these five weird Cylon moulds that exist in the point between life and death. And now there’s this temple of ‘the five’. . . It seems to me that the history between the two races may have more common ancestry, or roots, than has been outlined so far. Or maybe it’s to do with the statement from the ancient book about how all of this has happened before and will happen again.
It’s intriguing stuff, but I am going down the line of thinking that there’s a serious link between humans and Cylons that is yet to be introduced. Perhaps they were once all like Hera, and then there was a split? Who knows?
In the meantime it was time for a whopper of a cliffhanger to end this episode on a ‘to be continued’ note. We had Baltar and Deanna journeying to the planet. Adama was priming nuclear weapons with a poker faced intent on whether he was going to use them or not. Starbuck had been shot down by Centurions already on the planet and set to wage war with the makeshift army of civilians down there. Apollo and Anders were facing off over whether to rescue Starbuck, with Anders held at gunpoint. And there was Tyrol, alone, trying to unlock the mystery of the temple. To cap it all, there’s only a bloody great supernova due to go off at any moment.
It’s a heck of set of plot strands all left in the balance! I can’t wait to see how they pick up the threads and move on from this!
Tuesday, 9 September 2008
3.10 The Passage
The 'passage' of the title was a route through an extremely radioactive star cluster and extremely bright planet to collect some form of food - algae - to feed the fleet. By the sounds of it the food wasn’t going to be particularly tasty or exciting, but it would keep everyone alive. Perhaps that issue is yet to arise; with the fleet perhaps resenting the food they are given and becoming mutinous or something. Maybe.
But things have changed in Season 3. The survivors have known harsh life on New Caprica already, which has perhaps made them more hardy. Also, in the previous season, this may have been a more political issue with Laura having to negotiate some tricky decisions to get people onside. But the political wrangling was more of a Season 2 thing and that presence has been (happily) muted more this season.
The episode also focused more on one of the more peripheral characters: Kat. It was revealed she got her flying skills being a trafficker back in the day, and also an ex-junkie, who had faked her identity to get on Galactica. This certainly shed light on the character we had seen in previous episodes (particularly Scar) and yet despite her grubby past she finished the episode a heroine.
There was an interesting diversion going on with Deanna and Baltar, where he was asking her about her experiences between life and death. She discussed how she saw five shapes, potentially the five other Cylon moulds. That’s an intriguing development. How do they come to exist in the space between life and death? It’s certainly a strange one, and probably not one that’s going to be easily answered.
There was an unlikely set of deductions made when Baltar and Deanna listened to the Hybrid. Baltar let the Hybrid touch him and then she blathered out some apparent nonsense that suggested seeing shadows in the light or something. I guess she was talking about the light in that space between life and death, but for a while I did wonder if The Passage, with its blinding light, might have held some weird revelation from within.
For a moment I wondered if Kat herself wasn’t going to see something incredible when she stayed longer to find her ship. . . but no such revelation came. So probably I was just joining two separate ideas together that were merely being paralleled rather than linked. But there’s no doubt this sub-plot with Baltar and Deanna is the driving narrative going on from this episode, whilst back on Galactica it’s more about waiting for the next discovery or crisis to propel Season 3 onward.
Sunday, 7 September 2008
3.9 Unfinished Business
The reason for the free-for-all boxing match was, as Adama explained, a regular event as a means for the crew to release their pent up frustration and grievances that military protocol dictated that they keep bottled up. It also served as a pretty handy means by which character plots could be explored.
So as various fighters took to the ring we were treated to brief flashbacks to their time on New Caprica and the story explaining whatever grievances existed. Adama had issue with Tyrell for allowing him to take Callie to the planet and abandon Galactica to raise his kid. As he pretty much goaded Tyrell into beating him to a bloody pulp the message was an admittance that he had gotten soft, as had his crew, and they had let their guard down and been beaten as a consequence.
In real terms, this suggests a more harder, tougher Adama may come to the fore. One, perhaps, taking a cue from Admiral Kane. . .? Though hopefully not as extreme!
I also believe Adama allowed himself to be battered by Tyrell as a form of penance for his own guilt at allowing Tyrell to go, and urging to Tigh to depart as well – given the dire consequences that decision created.
However, this episode was really all about Starbuck and Apollo, and the extraordinary story of what had taken place between them. Drunk at a party on New Caprica, they had taken themselves away from their respective partners and had sex, and then both had declared that they loved one another. It would have been a climactic moment, except this was all revealed whilst the two of them were pummelling the living shit out of one another in the ring.
We witnessed them finally getting together at a point when it had all fallen apart. I rather liked that.
That the morning after Starbuck disappeared and quickly got married to Anders explains why it was Apollo was so embittered towards her that time she requested drugs for Anders when he was extremely sick. As a consequence, in his own disgust, Apollo had jumped straight into the arms of Duala. Both of them, then, had hooked themselves up to someone else as a means of blocking the other off.
Refreshingly complicated stuff, I thought. But the real sucker punch came at the end of the episode. Exhausted, battered and spent, Starbuck and Apollo embraced one another and admitted that they missed one another. The demon between them had been exorcised. And with Anders and Duala both seeing what was going on, and no doubt realising what it signalled, the future between Apollo and Starbuck now is rather intriguing.
I don’t expect a happy romance to ensue, not with these two. But a will they/won’t they relationship hanging in the balance for a while has potential, I think!
So, good episode in all. It could have flopped over without delicate handling; but some nice editing (the shock reactions were displayed long before we understood their meaning) and just enough exposition without overkill meant the episode pulled the intent off with aplomb. Classy, actually, was the word that most sprang to mind immediately afterward. This was a classy episode.
Thursday, 4 September 2008
3.8 Hero
The backstory for Bulldog was that he was part of Adama’s crew when he was the commander of the Valkryie. Adama had been sent out to the border line between human and Cylon to see if there was any Cylon activity. Bulldog went over enemy lines, was spotted, and so Adama had him shot down and then rushed away from there to avoid detection.
As far as Adama was concerned, hearing that Bulldog had apparently survived and then been captured by the Cylons indicated that he had been exposed, and therefore he had broke the truce between human and Cylon and therefore been a catalyst for the holocaust on the colonies.
Crikey. That’s a tough pill to swallow.
It turned out that Bulldog had not escaped after all, rather he had been set free precisely so he could get to Galactica, and Adama, and either kill him once he knew the truth or perhaps in the very least de-stabilise Adama’s command. (In the eyes of Apollo that plan probably worked a tad.)
Handily Tigh was there to break free of his stupor and come to Adama’s aid; swallowing down his bile and see his role as one of an expendable soldier in a grand war. For Tigh to come around it needed a short, sharp shock like this to make me believe his ‘road back’ could occur, so in this sense the episode won me over.
But what of the idea that Adama could have started the war? It doesn’t quite ring true. In the vast expanse of space how did the Cylons so quickly detect Bulldog? Suggests to me they either knew he was coming or they were hanging around the borderline already. And how long had Six’s scheming with Balthar been in place? Before the Bulldog capture? After? I tend to think it was before - but I could be flat wrong about that.
A funny question would be: Why did the Cylons choose to cast themselves in the mould of humans? Was it to serve the God they believe in, or to better infiltrate and attack the human race? Or both?
And what Laura said rings true. For one thing Adama was ordered there, so what else was he supposed to do? And for another thing he is totally unaware of what else his superiors were up to in relation to potentially provoking the Cylons. What’s interesting is that we have now been given the idea of provocation. Before this point it was basically the case that the Cylons showed up out of nowhere and nuked the human race for no reason.
Now we are presented with the idea that humanity might not be blameless at all. That, perhaps, it was us that cast the first stone?
And meantime Cylon Xena – who I suppose I should start calling Deanna since she appears to have become a serious featured character! – was having her own weird sub-plot thrown in. She ordered a centurion to kill her so she could re-experience this bizarre place between her death and reincarnation. (Apparently her three-way sessions with Balthar and Caprica Six have opened her mind!?) This looks to me like an intriguing introduction to a new level of awareness for the Cylons, perhaps one that’s linked with those other five Cylon moulds that they don’t like to talk of?
Slowly some layers about the Cylons are being peeled away, opening up some fascinating possibilities. Pretty much that’s what this episode was about in general, I think; I just don’t know if it’s planting seeds here that will really blossom throughout the season, or just sprinkling a little spice to prickle things up a little bit.
Wednesday, 3 September 2008
3.7 A Measure Of Salvation
Once Apollo and Athena and other members of Galactica were onboard the biggest concern, for me, was whether Cylon Athena was going to get infected, too. It was certainly her concern the moment they realised there was an infection at play and got off the ship into quarantine.
As it turned out they found out the disease was not communicable to humans, and not long afterwards Athena was given the all clear. I was glad they didn’t drag that issue out, really. Instead the focus, on Galactica, was whether they could use the dying Cylons they had captured to wipe out the Cylon race.
The plan, of Apollo’s, was to jump to where the Cylons would find them. Then, when the base ships arrived en masse, with a resurrection ship nearby, they would execute the prisoners who would then be downloaded to the ship and infect the whole lot of them. (Are we saying there is only one resurrection ship now? Because they destroyed one, once! Was that it? There’s just one left? I struggle with that, but maybe it’s the way of it. And how does a biological disease get downloaded, exactly? Hmm.)
Laura was all for it. Adama was willing to go along with it. There was only Helo that was prepared to perform the ‘measure of salvation’ to prevent the mass extermination. It was certainly a dilemma for the viewer. I could see both sides; of how the Cylons had managed to create a consciousness that understood life, and therefore had moved beyond the role of ‘toasters’. But then in the same breath I could concede the view that humans created the Cylons, a mistake they made that they alone could remove and correct.
Both compelling. Ultimately I think I came down on the point of view that extermination was an acceptable proposition – given the mass genocide the Cylons performed first of all and have been chasing ever since. However, Helo intervened and killed the prisoners before they were in range of the resurrection ship so the chance was taken away.
Now Galactica have the hope that they are on the right route to Earth, but with the bitter knowledge that the Cylons are also on the same path. . .
Meanwhile, Gaius was undergoing a bizarre torture experience at the hands of Cylon Xena, whilst in his head Cylon Six was having sex with him to take his mind off things. It was all rather odd. But the net result was that Gaius wonld up crying out that he loved Cylon Xena, which appeared to have a marked effect on her. Where that’s going I don’t know.
The only other point I should note was that Starbuck was in a Viper and part of the squad out defending Galactica. From this I guess the gloomy, anxt-ridden Starbuck from the previous episode has put her issues aside enough to be allowed to continue in her military role. That all seemed brushed over way too quickly for me – but maybe it’s something that will be picked up later on and explained further. Either that or it really is over and done with, and that just leaves Tigh as the rotten soul festering away.
Tuesday, 2 September 2008
3.6 Torn
Self-pity turned outward, made destructive.
This idea, thematically, made Starbuck and Tigh contaminants on Galactica that were polluting morale. By the episode’s end Adama stepped up to try and nip it in the bud; telling them both to either sort themselves out or get off the ship. Starbuck, as a result, went to Casey and hugged her, suggesting that she has taken the route to swallowing her bitterness and trying to pull ahead.
Tigh, on the other hand, told Adama that his old self was gone and never coming back and he hit the bottle in a big way. His may be a character that is really going to hit bottom before ever getting a chance at returning to the fold – I just wonder if he will ever come back from the brink at all.
The view of a contaminant theme was continued with Gaius and the Cylons. He had plotted a course towards the next stage of the journey to Earth. The Cylons, unsurprisingly, have decided that they want to make that their next place to stop. (They have all the universe and decide Earth is the spot? Bastards!) However, a base ship was sent into the next marker and hit upon a problem: a Cylon-killing disease vessel, most probably left by the thirteenth colony en route to Earth.
Fundamentally a hurdle on the path to Earth; a barrier to prevent the Cylons from passing. Gaius went onboard the base ship and found this all out, and then chose to not mention it to the Cylons. But they saw it anyway!
There was a lot of interesting information about Cylons and Gaius, though, which was welcome. It was precisely the function I hoped Gaius would be used for during his time with the Cylons. Six spoke of ‘projection’, of how the Cylons alter their environment easily, to suit their own well-being. Like vivid daydreaming. Naturally, we have seen from the start that Gaius is also particularly adept at this skill, which inevitably made him raise the same question I was thinking:
Is Gaius a Cylon?
Crucially this question was not answered. Right now, it’s the possibility that makes the most sense. He asked about the five other moulds of Cylon he has not yet seen, asking why it was only seven of the twelve appeared to be the ones making all the decisions. These were good questions, ones I had been wondering about as well. And though there was no answer, it was good that the question was posed and was obviously a part of the bigger picture yet to be revealed. As long as the show’s creators have the matter in hand then I am happy to wait.
I have to figure that the Hybrid isn’t one of the Cylon moulds. I don’t quite know what the hell she was, mind. Talk of her being the voice of God, whilst controlling the ship, existing on a plane of experience completely different to everyone else. . . Yeah, OK. They’ll either go somewhere with that, or they’ll drop it like a hot brick.
So the episode ended with newly-named Cylon Sharan, a.k.a. Athena, discovering the blinking lion in space, and seeing the dead base Cylon base ship next to it. Is such fleeting exposure enough to contaminate Cylon Athena? Does that little machine have to be onboard a ship to give Cylons the disease, or is just travelling through that region of space enough? Are there lots of those disease-spreading space mines scattered all over that area? I guess the second part will let me know, but this was a very intriguing episode. It felt like the show was making big strides to the ‘next level’ of revelation regarding Cylons, and the journey to Earth, both of which are, I think, the next natural progression for the show to take.
Monday, 1 September 2008
3.5 Collaborators
And so Jammer was blasted out of the airlock. And he wasn’t the first, as rumours of other people that had gone missing were filtering up the chain of command.
Tigh and Starbuck figured heavily here, with both of them exhibiting a new-found bitter side to their characters as a result of their respective experiences on New Caprica. Starbuck, it seems to me, is the one who is least likely to bounce back quickly. Her statement about wanting to just scratch out Anders’ eyes spoke volumes about her state of mind. I am not sure what it’s going to take to bring her back from the dark place she is currently in. Likelihood is she’ll get worse before, if ever, she gets better.
Tigh may have a better chance. He had a long pause after the near-killing of Gaeta. It was this scene that was crucial for me. I can honestly say that if Gaeta had been blasted out of the airlock it might just have been a blow too cruel for me to take too well. Thankfully Starbuck was there to drop the point that he had been the guy feeding the resistance movement information and without him there would never have been a rescue mission at all.
I felt pleased for Gaeta, getting nods of respect and the company of the always-likable Tyrell at the end as he ate a meal. They didn’t speak, but just seeing the two of them – one vindicated, one humbled – sitting together trying to reclaim a bond given what they had experienced encapsulated pretty much where many of the survivors of New Caprica are coming from.
This is a crew and people that have been much-changed and had the boundaries of their lives shifted. How else could it explain Skarek being permitted the role of vice-President? Suddenly he’s Mr. Nice Guy? Suddenly the anarchist is gone? Maybe for the moment, but I think there’s a viper in him still ready to strike given the right motivation and opportunity.
Gaius, meanwhile, is now in the custody of the Cylons. This is potentially an excellent avenue for the show to take, as we can see the Cylon’s point of view through his eyes. The trouble I have found so far is that the Cylons were at their best when their rationale and motivation was unknown; so far whenever reason is revealed for what they do it sometimes feels contradictory and flawed. The show kind of negotiates its way around this problem by showing the Cylons themselves as disagreeing amongst themselves, but there was a sense of unity and purpose about the Cylons when they were less understood that feels betrayed by every new revelation.
By the end of the episode a pardon had been issued so the matter of who is guilty following New Capica has been dispensed with. Another slate wiped clean, leaving the way clear for the series to start burrowing into whatever plot machinations and character complications are going to be explored and developed. The way the show is balanced now, darker and more mature, I have little doubt that there’s dark times and turmoil ahead.
Bring it on.
Friday, 29 August 2008
3.4 Exodus - Part 2
Where to begin? Perhaps the beginning, where Tigh took the difficult but necessary decision to kill his wife. I think the way it was played suggested Ellen was aware that the drink Saul gave her was poisoned – that was the way I interpreted it. She confessed all she had done, explained her reasons were pure, and said she’d do it again. Then she accepted the poison cup and that was her end. A far more dignified finish for a character than I expected; it was only up to this point did I ever really take to her!
It’s fair to say that the effects of this on Tigh are probably going to reverberate for a while to come. The new Tigh may become a far more troubled and troubling man for what he went through on New Caprica.
The real feature of the episode was, of course, the ‘exodus’ from New Caprica. It was all gloriously knuckle-gnawing stuff. Not many shows get me up off my ass, urging people on like this episode did. For sheer jaw-dropping effect, take that instance where Galactica jumped into New Caprica’s atmosphere, plummeted in hot fire at a rapid rate, fired out Vipers and then jumped away before it hit the ground.
Whoa!
And of course there was that real moment of triumph; Galactica surrounded by four Cylon base ships, FTL drive broken (those things do have a habit of constantly getting damaged beyond repair – only to get repaired five minutes later!). Adama knew it was over. But I was yelling for Apollo to disobey his dad’s orders and turn up – and of course he did. This wasn’t going to be one of those bitter episodes. This one was going to punch the air and claim victory.
So Apollo showed up on a suicide run in Pegasus, blasted the hell out of everything for as long as he could, then they all bailed and jumped away to allow Pegasus to take out two base ships! GET IN!
I mean, seriously, this was cinematic blockbuster stuff – and this is a T.V. show? Unbelievable! But what really drove the thing home was the characters. Starbuck, for example, was a bittersweet story. She went back to get Casey, the child she thought was hers. She kissed and then killed her Cylon captor (I’m sure he’ll remember that moment all right!) and escaped New Caprica only to find that she had been duped, that the child had been kidnapped and was neither Cylon nor hers.
That’s gotta take the wind out of her sails, for sure, and like Tigh I get the feeling that her experiences on New Caprica are going to produce a changed Starbuck from the one we used to know.
So Hera – or the Cylon-Human baby – was ultimately delivered into the hands of the Cylons, accompanied by Gaius. It was clear from Xena’s words, about how she was sure the human race would never forgive and forget the Cylons for all they had done, that leaving the human race in peace is not going to be on the agenda. Still, what the baby means for the Cylons may be the next key in determining what their next move will be.
It was a happy, happy finish to the episode. Adama shaved off that moustache to let Commander Adama come through. Then he stepped out into the corridors of his ship; corridors that were now bustling with activity and people, just the way he liked it. A small smile played out on his lips. He had done it. The good old days were back. Galactica was back!
Did I say this episode deserved a round of applause? My mistake. It warranted an ovation. Fantastic stuff!