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Author Topic: The Return of TV's Best Show (EVER)!
Malnurtured Snay
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After forty-years of cold war with an enemy hiding in space, the twelve colonies of mankind are nuked into oblivion by a deadly sneak attack by the Cylon forces. The only survivors assemble in a desperate attempt to find their only salvation, the thirteenth "lost" colony: Earth. Protected by the last surviving battlestar, Galactica, the survivors of humanity -- all 50,000 of them -- flee across the unexplored reaches of the galaxy.

At the end of the second season, a political upset had dethroned Laura Roslin and installed Dr. Gaius Baltar -- the man who allowed the Cylon sneak attack to succeed -- as the President of the Colonies. Having located an inhabitable world, and with so many tired of fleeing for what many believed to be a fictional world (Earth), Baltar ordered the establishment of a permanent settlement, New Caprica, and the dissolution of the fleet. In the last fifteen minutes of the 2nd season finale, Lay Down Your Burdens, we jumped forward a year to see where our characters were when the Cylons returned. Here's where they were:

President Baltar was living in a relative luxury on the grounded Colonial One, whoring it up with a couple of hot chicks, while the former Tactical Officer of Galactica, Felix Gaeta, appeared to have taken a big -- bad -- step in becoming Baltar's top aide. Kara "Starbuck" Thrace gave up the pilot's chair of a Viper for married life with Anders, and was trying to find scare medicine to treat his condition, while Tigh, recently relieved from his position aboard Galactica, arrived on the surface to try to establish a new life. Chief Tyrol -- with wife Callie and their child -- had become an outspoken labor leader, while former president Roslin led the new settlement's makeshift school. In orbit, a newly mustached Admiral William Adama maintains vigil aboard the Galactica, with former ECO Karl "Helo" Agathon as his apparent XO. Aboard the Pegasus, a weightier Lee "Apollo" Adama holds a grudge against Starbuck, although he seems happy enough with his wife Dualla.

And then the Cylons, investigating radiation-leftover from the destruction of Cloud Nine (don't ask), locate their prey. There's no time for an evacuation, and both Battlestars -- already understaffed to begin with, now "skeleton crewed" -- don't even have enough crew to mount any sort of offensive. Coming to a grim conclusion, Bill Adama orders the fleet's evacuation, and the remaining orbiting ships jump for safety. On the surface, Cylon fighters roar overhead as Centurions march through the settlement. Arriving aboard Colonial One, the Cylon human models --Six, Sharon, and Doral -- are greeted by President Baltar, who informs them, "On behalf of the Twelve Colonies ... I surrender."

So it's been about six months since the show's second season ended. Friday is either a two-hour premier episode, or two episodes aired back-to-back (I'm not certain), at 9pm on Sci-Fi, although this isn't the first original BSG material to make it out since then. Ten "webisodes" were produced, each three minutes long, showing what has happened on the occupied settlement between the seasons. The tenth will be available at some point today on SciFi channel's Battlestar Galactica webpage, where you can find the first nine (you might also try YouTube).

How long will it take to resolve this plot development? Remember, it took seven episodes to resolve the first season's cliffhanger, Kobol's Last Gleaming. There, the fleet was divided by a military coup of the civilian government. Starbuck disobeyed orders and took the captured Cylon raider on a suicide mission back to Cylon-occupied Caprica. Roslin was arrested by Galactica Marines, as was Lee Adama, who drew his weapon on Col. Tigh. A mission to Kobol ended in disaster, with one Raptor destroyed, and a team (including Chief Tyrol, Dr. Baltar, and "Crashdown") stranded planetside with Cylons closing on their position. To top everything off, the Cylon sleeper agent made her move and put two rounds in Bill Adama's chest. Seven episodes to resolve those plot points, and I've been avoiding as many spoilers as I can for this season, so I'm going to guess a minimum of five episodes before the Adamas and their Battlestars return to New Caprica to kick Cylon ass, rescue their people, and beat-ass back on the path for Earth.

bsg_18
L->R: Col. Tigh; Pres. Roslin; Bill Adama; Lee Adama; Dr. Baltar (sitting); Starbuck; Helo; Six (sitting); Boomer

Several people pointed me in the direction of Entertainment Weekly's feature article of Battlestar Galactica. Here's an excerpt:


There sure is a lot of frakkin' human drama on this sci-fi show. Sometimes there's more of it than there is actual science fiction � and that's exactly how they like it in Galactica's little corner of the cosmos. To be certain, the show has its fair share of far-out bits, like visually stunning F/X, trippy concepts (a half-Cylon/half-human baby whose blood has cancer-curing powers), and, of course, Number Six (Tricia Helfer), an immortal platinum blond Cylon partial to wearing crimson red dresses and high heels. But more than that, the show has distinguished itself as one of television's very best dramas � on a par with 24, The Wire, and Lost � because it so utterly transcends both its genre and its source material.

The original ABC series was a one-season wonder of Star Wars-era escapism that over time has attracted a nostalgic, multigenerational cult following. But this gritty new version has taken the same bleak conceit of its predecessor � the unceremonious obliteration of humanity on the peaceful planet of Caprica by cybernetic invaders � and rewired it with prickly, challenging post-9/11 relevance. No longer are the Cylons chrome-plated toasters with oscillating LED eyes � they've evolved into flesh and blood, which allows them to hide in plain sight, like, say, as a muckraking journalist (D'Anna, played by Lucy Lawless). Moreover, they're now motivated by their radical belief in one God to wipe out their creators from existence. Fortunately, the Capricans are as resilient as cockroaches.


I can't wait until Friday night at nine. I will attempt to live-blog the episode. It'll be so good, I'm sure I'll give up trying to live-blog it so that I can just enjoy it.

I. Can't. Fraking. Wait.

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www.malnurturedsnay.net

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Lee
I'm a spy now. Spies are cool.
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Now, look. The whole point of you getting yourself a little blog was so you'd be free to burble on there about whatever you wanted - pizza, Lego, pizza made from Lego - and we wouldn't have to read it. Wholesale re-postings of blog entries here violates the agreed deal. I've ordered the arrest and expulsion of five Ecuadorian journalists in retaliation.

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Never mind the Phlox - Here's the Phase Pistols

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Lee
I'm a spy now. Spies are cool.
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Interesting, however, that EW are comparing it to The Wire, which I haven't seen (it's not on terrestrial far as I can tell) but which is my Dad's favourite TV show EVAR.

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Never mind the Phlox - Here's the Phase Pistols

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Sol System
two dollar pistol
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Thank heavens for the annotated cast photo.

The Wire is powerful business, for sure. (But I've only seen the first season.)

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AndrewR
Resident Nut-cache
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I clicked this link thinking that they were going to start remaking Star Trek: Deep Space Nine. [Frown]

Gawd - Trisha Helfer has gotten thinner - so has Boomer!! This ISN'T a good thing.

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"Bears. Beets. Battlestar Galactica." - Jim Halpert. (The Office)

I'm LIZZING! - Liz Lemon (30 Rock)

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Peregrinus
Curmudgeon-at-Large
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I'm hoping it's just airbrush work.

I'm off now to order Lego pizza. Mmmmm, crunchy...

--Jonah

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"That's what I like about these high school girls, I keep getting older, they stay the same age."

--David "Woody" Wooderson, Dazed and Confused

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Mars Needs Women
Sexy Funmobile
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Well they showed the last webisode today. It ended somewhat on a cliffhanger that will probably be resolved in the main series. With the return of Doctor Who and BSG, I have a reason to live again.
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Lee
I'm a spy now. Spies are cool.
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I'll be a-torrentin' the complete thing tonight if I can find it.

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Never mind the Phlox - Here's the Phase Pistols

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Jay the Obscure
Liker Of Jazz
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The Wire is from HBO and is quite good.Now into what I think is the 4th season, it remains a terrific show.

Also check out other great HBO shows Deadwood and Rome.

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Great is the guilt of an unnecessary war.
~ohn Adams

Once again the Bush Administration is worse than I had imagined, even though I thought I had already taken account of the fact that the Bush administration is invariably worse than I can imagine.
~Brad DeLong

You're just babbling incoherently.
~C. Montgomery Burns

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Lee
I'm a spy now. Spies are cool.
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Deadwood is another show my Dad likes, but it's on Sky so I've never seen it. Rome, being a BBC co-production, was shown prime-time at roughly the same time it was on in the States. Hope they do do a second series (it was in doubt at one point).

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Never mind the Phlox - Here's the Phase Pistols

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Shik
Starship database: completed; History of Starfleet: done; website: probably never
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I thought this thread was going to be about "BJ & The Bear."

I cry tears of oil.

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"The French have a saying: 'mise en place'—keep everything in its fucking place!"

Registered: Jun 2000  |  IP: Logged
   

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