Entry tags:
Huh. I don't have time for an essay...
Some random thoughts about BSG episodes. Mostly non-spoilery? But I'm cutting anyway, so, um, possibly spoilery through the finale.
As far as I can tell, the most reviled episode of BSG seems to be, hands-down, Black Market. The Woman King follows it rather closely, with Dirty Hands being right after it, iirc.
Now. I'm not saying those aren't shit episodes: they are. (at least, the latter two are complete ass. I have a fondness for Black Market that is explicable with my love of guns and Lee shooting things) And all three have some logistical issues coupled with lousy racial tendencies (and that whole: poor people are always unwashed and whiny and need the rich white guys to save them bullshit).
But the one thing they all three have in common is that they remember something large portions of BSG don't: that there is a civilian fleet attached to the military ship, and civilians are not military.
That, right there, is one of the reasons I loved Greg Pak's BSG comic (not that Season Zero bullshit). Because Pak remembered the fleet, and it wasn't just there to be remembered when the writers had run out of ideas and were suddenly reminded, "Oh, hey, we haven't done an allegory about unions yet!"
Frankly, I'd rather have half a season of episodes dealing with the fleet than even ONE Hero or a Day in the Life. You could excise both episodes from show canon and, surprise, not a damned thing would be altered--in fact, all those canon inconsistencies in Hero, and the awful "All Women Are Blonde Drunk Sluts" label from aDitL are pointless, anyway.
What is in any of the five episodes that really needed to be there?
The three dealing with the fleet could have been expanded and integrated into other episodes (multi-arc dissension amongst the civilian populace vs. random "Earth First!" moments? YES PLEASE. Let's not even discuss the destruction of Gina having an actual plot of her own that didn't include Baltar). The two dealing with Adama's Manpain... well, um...
Nope. Got nothing. They were wastes of time.
(although, once again, how did NONE of the main human characters not go "...dur, why do the Cylons want us to find Earth?" in season two? Maybe they all hit their heads in the shower.)
As far as I can tell, the most reviled episode of BSG seems to be, hands-down, Black Market. The Woman King follows it rather closely, with Dirty Hands being right after it, iirc.
Now. I'm not saying those aren't shit episodes: they are. (at least, the latter two are complete ass. I have a fondness for Black Market that is explicable with my love of guns and Lee shooting things) And all three have some logistical issues coupled with lousy racial tendencies (and that whole: poor people are always unwashed and whiny and need the rich white guys to save them bullshit).
But the one thing they all three have in common is that they remember something large portions of BSG don't: that there is a civilian fleet attached to the military ship, and civilians are not military.
That, right there, is one of the reasons I loved Greg Pak's BSG comic (not that Season Zero bullshit). Because Pak remembered the fleet, and it wasn't just there to be remembered when the writers had run out of ideas and were suddenly reminded, "Oh, hey, we haven't done an allegory about unions yet!"
Frankly, I'd rather have half a season of episodes dealing with the fleet than even ONE Hero or a Day in the Life. You could excise both episodes from show canon and, surprise, not a damned thing would be altered--in fact, all those canon inconsistencies in Hero, and the awful "All Women Are Blonde Drunk Sluts" label from aDitL are pointless, anyway.
What is in any of the five episodes that really needed to be there?
The three dealing with the fleet could have been expanded and integrated into other episodes (multi-arc dissension amongst the civilian populace vs. random "Earth First!" moments? YES PLEASE. Let's not even discuss the destruction of Gina having an actual plot of her own that didn't include Baltar). The two dealing with Adama's Manpain... well, um...
Nope. Got nothing. They were wastes of time.
(although, once again, how did NONE of the main human characters not go "...dur, why do the Cylons want us to find Earth?" in season two? Maybe they all hit their heads in the shower.)

no subject
So, no. I won't be watching it.
no subject
Good working theory for TPTB, too.
*ducks and runs*
no subject
Wait, the pilot for Caprica aired? When? We watch SyFy all the time and didn't see any promos. I thought it was starting in the fall.
no subject
I like both Black Market and The Woman King (even though almost all the regulars went out-of-character in The Woman King so Helo could be The Man Alone) (except Tigh, whose skepticism throughout the episode and reversal at the end were both nicely in character). I don't remember which episode goes with the title Dirty Hands. [reading other comments] Oh, the one with the strike? I don't think I was impressed with that one, one way or the other.
no subject
I'm upset about the underuse of Gina, too. Especially since I remember an interview saying that the point of the character was to have a Six interacting with people other than Baltar. He was still the only main character she interacted with!!!
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
Oh, no. I just don't want to have missed the broadcast. ...Is there going to be a broadcast?
no subject
lousy racial tendencies
Much as I like Bill Duke and Sarah Porter and Elosha, I think all the black characters on the show have been religious leaders, pimps, or Dee. Or Skulls, who turned out to be pretty much an asshole. Huh.
Predictably, I like all the non-Adama parts of A Day In The Life. Carol-Anne, though, pretty much cemented my belief that Ron was using this show as free therapy. ;)
It's funny, I had the impression that Dirty Hands was fairly well-regarded by most of the fans who don't think that every episode MUST serve the arc, because it did deal with the Fleet's problems more-or-less realistically. I'm just going by TWoP though; Jacob's Espenson-worship may have gotten it a more favorable reception there. I liked it except for the way they kind of wrote Adama and Roslin out-of-character to serve the allegory about unions. But the scene where Seelix gets her wings will never not be awesome.
no subject
Huh. I really LIKE Dirty Hands. It looks like some people before me said it, but I thought that one had more of a reputation for "underrated stand-alone" than crap episode.
I think Woman King could've been done well, and definitely had stuff in there that could've been interesting to address. I don't think Black Market could be salvaged, because I think the point when they decided it would be ~kewl~ and noir-like to have abused hookers in the fleet was a bad sign of things to come.
I'm trying to think of how many episodes/storylines actually dealt with the civilians (and it was almost always in a way that sucked). I still really love "Colonial Day" from S1 because it's one of the ONLY times they got into the political world.
I hate A Day in the Life. I used to feel neutral toward Hero, but I'd probably hate it now since I grew to hate Adama's manpain in the season and a half that followed.
no subject
no subject
I would have LOVED to see a multi-arc storyline about the fleet. Or the politics. All of these civilian stand-alones had at least a couple of interesting ideas that were overwhelmed by big messages and speechifying. Maybe with a coherent, plotted arc, they wouldn't have been so half-hearted and one note.
no subject
THERE ARE NO FLIPPY SHIPS AND PILOTS.
no subject
no subject
1. Adama and Roslin shoved so out of character, it's laughable. (not to mention a few others, iirc). It's really obvious they went, "WE NEED AN ISSUES SHOW." and "Hey, anyone seen Babylon Five? No? Season one has this episode we can totally frak with." "COOL." (B5 did it better, because Sinclair is Awesomesauce) And then they couldn't fit everyone in, because they'd have to create these new characters, so instead they shoved established ones into roles they didn't fit.
2. There is no lead-up and no follow-up. BSG is not supposed to be a bottle show. There is absolutely NO IMPACT from this episode. At all. And that's just pointless.
no subject
The only redeeming bit is Athena visiting Caprica in her cell.
no subject
And I am STILL SO PISSED. Because it was MARTIAN MANHUNTER IN MY GALACTICA and should have been SO SO AWESOME.
no subject
(I think I'd like the non-Adama parts of aDitL, if they could be pulled and merged elsewhere? sigh. That whole season needed re-writing to organize everything better and get more plotlines interwoven. AND I KNOW I SAY THAT A LOT.)
Dirty Hands might actually be loved. I don't actually know. I just count is as awful, and wish it could have been better. Seelix getting her wings will ALWAYS be awesome.
no subject
Actually, all of my crankiness boils down to: no one on the writing staff had a plan, sat down, and worked out how to make the civilians part of the overall plot without making them the bad guy/victim. And that sucks.
no subject
no subject
Besides that it was just silly...
I DID like Dirty Hands for the same reason you did, though...I just wished they'd been a little better about intertwining it back in with the main plot throughout the rest of the series...like a lot of other things...
But S4-4.5...the writers went INSANE. They wrote themselves into a corner after they found "Earth" and the only thing they could think of was to have the main actors kill off most of the secondary cast in an idiotic gunpornfest so they wouldn't have to worry about giving them any more character development...oh, and make Adama a total JACKASS while still imagining that still made him the hero... I've basically completely disconnected all of S4 from being considered canon and will just make up my own version and use that or anybody's ficverse that fixes the show.
Course we've always gotten these characters better than they did anyway, so...;)
no subject
I'm not big on mythos changing in fanfic plotbunnies, except to make the Final Five the same as the other Cylons. 'Cause having copies is half of the fun of being a Cylon, darnit! Ellen is Seven, Saul is Nine, Tory is Ten, Sam is Eleven, and Chief is Twelve.