yendi: (Darth Tater)
[personal profile] yendi
So, after playing the absolutely incredibly board game about seven times between Arisia and Vericon (thanks, [livejournal.com profile] ckd), I finally decided to check out (or, to use the technical term, "download from the bittorrents") the miniseries and season 1 of the new Battlestar Galactica.

Quick, pre-spoiler review: I like it, but I don't love it to the extent of wanting to form a cult around the show. It's got some nifty, nifty ideas, a ludicrous underlying premise, and some well-written characters.

I'd managed to avoid most spoilers (other than the big revelation at the end of the miniseries), so the show was pretty much a closed book for me going in. A few random, disorganized thoughts follow. By all means feel free to respond with, "they'll explain that in another season," but please don't actually tell me how, if they do address some of these issues.

Oh, and getting a good download of Season 2 is taking a while, so it'll likely be a week or two before I see it (other than the first ep, which I did nab).



By far the most fascinating aspect of the show, to me, is Baltar and his relationship with Six. There are multiple ways I could see them explaining this -- from the already-mentioned implanted chip, to post-hypnotic suggestions, to his being a Cylon, to this all being a massive psychotic break (although given the information "Six" has provided, this would also rely on her having told him a hell of a lot back on Caprica). He's basically masturbating in public half the time while attempting to be a scientist and a politician, something that could be played only for cheap laughs, but manages to be genuinely interesting most of the time.

I do have to admit, I'm surprised that he didn't expose Boomer; yes, telling her at the moment she took the test would likely have cost him his life, but it's not like he couldn't have let her walk away, then called Tigh. We're never really given any justification here (although his later comment that it's easier to make all tests negative implies something here).

Speaking of Tigh, if Ellen Tigh isn't the most ludicrously obvious Cylon, they've been dropping some awful hints (and have probably set themselves up for a Captain Atom/Monarch bad writing clusterfuck). I might buy that she's a sympathizer, at best.

Also, "Tigh Me Up, Tigh Me Down" is the best episode title ever.

Here's the thing I don't get about the Cylons as a whole. They claim to have only twelve models (and wasn't that info only given by the "implanted" Six?). Why? I mean, if they've got a fake Boomer on Galactica, they presumably have people on all ships. But what happens if the Boomer on Ship A gets transferred to Ship B, where another Boomer works? It just seems like something that could easily be avoided by creating dozens or hundreds of looks (even if they're otherwise the same "model"). And we've seen that variations of the same model can have different personalities (at least, the Boomer on Caprica seems to have split from the other Boomers we've seen), so they surely could also wear different faces.

Speaking of Boomer, why, exactly, did Tigh and everyone assume she was a Cylon? I mean, we've already seen that there are other factions (alligned with Zarek) who are not above violence. And Adama had just pulled a HUGE FUCKING ILL-ADVISED COUP against the President for, as his son noted, making a bad decision. And said son already mutinied over it. What's to say another pilot wouldn't, as well?

The card game, incidentally, needs to have a "naked Boomer swarm" Crisis card, per the end of Season 1. Just because.

Also, the use of "Frak" as a supposedly offensive word annoys me. Everyone uses it, all the time. Not just Starbuck and Apollo (who you'd expect it from), but pretty much everyone short of the priestess utters it; at this point, I'd like to see a curse word that actually seems to have some impact on the characters. "Frak" seems to be about as meaningful in BSG as it is in our day and age.

As an atheist, I tend to find the religious beliefs of both sides silly, but I find the humans sillier. How, exactly, did they evolve from the current state of general monotheism into a pantheistic state of worshipping Greek gods that have literally no current worshippers left? Yes, the Cylon war left the human colonies cut off for a while, but it still seems to be a strange and inexplicable evolution. And doesn't that make the use of "Apollo" as a call sign something bordering on blasphemy?

Also, are there no monotheists amongst the humans? Given the way in which Roslin is set up as an obvious Moses figure, this strikes me as weird.

Come to think of it, are there no atheists in either race? Baltar's the only one to ever express utter disbelief, and he's converted by the end of season 1.

Yes, I'm generally willing to let the treat the events leading to man's (and Cylon's) current religious state as the ludicrous premise that I should just accept for the sake of setting up and watching the show, but it does rankle. I tend to find prophecy-driven stories to be silly and inherently driven by deus ex plotting. B5 is a rare exception, since the major prophecies were explained by time travel. I don't see that happening here.

As far as characters go, as I've already said, Baltar's the most intriguing. I also like Tigh (the Londo of this show, in many ways, although without the extravagant sense of humor). That said, there are few folks I don't enjoy following, including the Cylons (three of the four models shown so far -- Six, Boomer, and Leoben -- all have interesting personalities, and Doral seems to be a good Generic Evil Bad Guy). The lone exception is probably Apollo. To keep the B5 comparisons alive, it's like making your show's hero Keffler. Yawn. I'll take Helo, Chief, and Starbuck any day. Although he's still my favorite character in the board game.

Finally, the show gets bonus points for making Dirk Benedict and his precious little penis whine.

(no subject)

Date: 2009-02-18 01:54 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mgrasso.livejournal.com
I'll argue that the series really starts to hit its sweet spot around the end of Season 2. A lot of people really dislike the arc at the beginning of Season 3, but I for one loved it while it was going on and a lot more due to future revelations (which the doubters might instead dub "retconning").

Surprisingly for a modern serialized show, I find that until this current season, I preferred the character-focused episodes/scenes to the myth ones. As you say, the characterization on the show is generally brilliant (Olmos's acting will stun you in a few episodes in Seasons 3 and 4).

Overall, while it's probably not in my Top 5 TV Series Ever, it's very close.

(no subject)

Date: 2009-02-18 02:19 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ex-gnomicut.livejournal.com
I am glad that multiple people (well you end Ta-Nehisi Coates) are now starting to watch this show and being underwhelmed, because I have felt fairly unpopular in geekdom for several years. I found the first season dul, and all subsequent seasons I loathed with the passion of fiery burning suns.

(no subject)

Date: 2009-02-18 04:21 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] emilytheslayer.livejournal.com
Um, hi. Between the LC icon and the Cutter reference user name, I checked out your journal and will be friending you now, kthanks. Library student in my last semester, here, and based on your user info I think we have some interest overlap. :)

(no subject)

Date: 2009-02-18 06:24 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] emilytheslayer.livejournal.com
Well, lynx isn't, and, oh wait, you were kidding.

(no subject)

Date: 2009-02-18 07:50 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ex-gnomicut.livejournal.com
Simmons folks get around!

(no subject)

Date: 2009-02-18 07:54 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ex-gnomicut.livejournal.com
I might have hated it less if I'd been drawn in more, actually. I didn't feel betrayed as much as I would have if I had been drawn in, but what it meant was the thing that irritated me (lack of planning for the mysteries, massive gender problems, overly emo characterization) didn't have any balance. I mean, it's not like Buffy or B5 were lacking in problems, but I had something I loved to make up for the problems.

Re: Apollo & colorful language

Date: 2009-02-18 02:22 pm (UTC)
ext_5134: (bollywood)
From: [identity profile] shugenja.livejournal.com
Blasphemy is relative. Most of the English speaking religious folks I grew up with would have been horrified if somebody named their child "Jesus," but it's a pretty common name in Hispanic circles.

What I would have been interested to see more of, as far as cussing goes, is people taking the gods' names in vain. "Frak" ends up sounding more like "damn" to me in terms of how it's used.

(no subject)

Date: 2009-02-18 02:26 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jdotmi.livejournal.com
The religion element is huge, and it all gets explained eventually. They're still explaining it in the final six or seven episodes of the series that are currently airing on SciFi right now.

Apollo gets better. Well, okay, let me rephrase that. EVERYONE gets better. And worse. And better. And worse. This show may love it's characters, but it's a very Joss Whedon sort of love. We hurt the ones we love. A lot. And make them beg for more.

Tigh^2 is one of the most beautifully dysfunctional couples on TV.

I have honestly only seen the first season, 1/2 of the second season, and one episode of the final season. But I've read Wikipedia and TWoP extensively for it. We need to buy season 3.0/3.5 and 4.0 still.

I think everything you wrote as a "wtf, show" moment up there does get an answer. Aside from one agonizing little big which is still being teased and teased and teased in the final season and is making people insane.

(no subject)

Date: 2009-02-18 02:45 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] stevietee.livejournal.com
The "Why are there only 12 models of Cylons?" thing drives me a bit batty, too, since it's an obvious dramatic plot device that they never really explain within the context of the story (or haven't in the first 3 seasons, which is as far as I've gotten).

(no subject)

Date: 2009-02-18 03:11 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] malinaldarose.livejournal.com
If you can avoid it until the series ends, don't watch Sci Fi. I'm only about six eps into season 3 (for various reasons), and they make a big deal about revealing who the other Cylons are...and then Sci Fi just goes and shows them in promos for the show.

(no subject)

Date: 2009-02-18 03:30 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] kradical.livejournal.com
IMO, you've seen the show at its best. Season one was tight and well-structured. Seasons two and three were a sodden, disarrayed mess. Season four has it sorta kinda back on track now that the end is in sight. Basically, it's following a similar arc to that of Lost -- starting out brilliant, losing its way and spinning its wheels for two years, then finally getting its shit together once an endpoint is determined.

(no subject)

Date: 2009-02-18 03:44 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] tnjade.livejournal.com
I <3 BSG. I didn't like (or didn't GET) B5.

I also <3 Stargate, Stargate: Atlantis, Firefly...and every Star Trek (yes, even Enterprise) iteration. Now that I look at it, it's not a very picky list. Huh...

*wanders off*

(no subject)

Date: 2009-02-18 03:51 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] coffeehouse.livejournal.com
I watched season one and two back to back while working nights for hospice. I got sucked in. Due to my erratic work schedule, I missed most of season three and then my brother got the set and I watched it straight through.
I love the characters.
I liken BSG to Dallas or Dynasty or Melrose Place.
Yes, some episodes are better than others.
Yes, as writers leave to go work on other things, the story gets muddled and finds itself again.
Yes, there are holes and lost threads and unravelled places, but, seriously, the paralleling of politics and racism and Jerry Springer moments in the series and in real life news is great.
The horrors of war, the tearing apart of ideals, sometimes the show is trite and sometimes it's brilliant.

It is one of the few shows that I actually made room for in my life. True Blood was the other recent one.

BSG reminds me of the first seasons of Six Feet Under, great characters in crisis.

I love it.

I know lots of people who hate it, but then, I am a geek raised on boxes of 1930s-1950 sci-fi from the attic and I love it.

(no subject)

Date: 2009-02-18 04:43 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] skitty.livejournal.com
Your complaint regarding the evolution of religion among the human colonies makes perfect sense, if one accepts the premise that the humans on BSG descended from present-day humanity as we know it. However, we have no evidence (by the end of the first season) to suggest that mankind was ever monotheistic within the reality of BSG.

Anyway, there are still many revelations to come. I'm glad you're watching. It's a silly show, but overall an enjoyable one.

(no subject)

Date: 2009-02-18 07:19 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] greektoomey.livejournal.com
...or the past.

(no subject)

Date: 2009-02-18 09:45 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dragontdc.livejournal.com
My understanding of the current BSG is informed by my understanding of the classic BSG. In that iteration, the show was taking place in the recent past and catching up to the current time, and Earth was a "lost" 13th colony. Ancient Greek mythology was assumed to have been a holdover from the original colonists (definitely alternate universe considering the real history of Earth mythology).

In the current BSG, there are some indications that the time line may be hundreds of years in the future, but the treatment of Earth as a "lost colony" coming from the same source as the other 12 seems to be holding (thus making it a similar alternate universe to the classic BSG in that way.)

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