Pegasus Actual
Gold Member
That sounds ominous. Like you're going to beat me down mercilessly with a 2,000 page B5 encyclopedia or something.Apologies to Pegasus, but I'll leave your reply to tomorrow.
That sounds ominous. Like you're going to beat me down mercilessly with a 2,000 page B5 encyclopedia or something.Apologies to Pegasus, but I'll leave your reply to tomorrow.
"Things fall apart; the center cannot hold; mere anarchy is loosed upon the world, the blood-dimmed tide is loosed, and everywhere the ceremony of innocence is drowned; and what rough beast, its hour come round at last, slouches towards Bethlehem to be born?"
I reached the end of season 4 yesterday, I forgot what a mess the last episode was. I wasn't planning on watching any of season 5 (except the sendoff) but maybe I will anyway. There's some good Londo/G'kar stuff in it at least.
A mess? That episode is a glorious, weird creation. I love it when they go high sci-fi.
One thing that's always fun about watching old sci-fi shows is seeing how right/wrong they were when it comes to technology.
Holy shit does B5 have some of the worst computers ever. Computer, I need to run a simple keyword search! Search will take..... five hours.
Or the goofy customized newspaper recycling kiosk.
Except they seemed to have real-time video communication with Earth. Besides the computer definitely made it sound more like "oww so complicated that hurts computer's head" than anything. I mean JMS was posting about the show online, he just didn't quite put the parts together.Most of their computers/terminals were basically tablets, so that's not terrible. For searching, it sorta makes sense that not every bit of information would be stored on every ship and station, so you would have delays waiting for transmission through hyperspace.
Indeed.The font choices, however, have no defense.
Except they seemed to have real-time video communication with Earth. Besides the computer definitely made it sound more like "oww so complicated that hurts computer's head" than anything. I mean JMS was posting about the show online, he just didn't quite put the parts together.
Indeed.
Well he just kinda spun-off large chunks of Sinclair's arc to Sheridan. Otherwise they're not so different. Shell-shocked I guess but after learning what happened to him he seemed kinda over it. As for has been, they just kinda flopped the aspect of Earth not liking Sinclair all that much to the Minbari not liking Sheridan. And Delenn is slobbering over Sheridan after talking to him like 4 times anyway so meh.
I don't remember anything interesting about Lochley, we'll see when I get to S5 I guess. But it went from woman second... to woman second... to woman second... except this time she's technically in command because Sheridan is President of Whatever now. Moving a couple of characters around for the awful Byron plot is hardly a big deal or a masterstroke.
That's my point, it's all fine I guess but people act like he did some sort of amazing job as if you'd never know it wasn't the original plan. And that's just ridiculous. The Sinclair/Sheridan stuff is pretty obvious. Then you have stuff like Talia getting telepath Super Powers from what's-his-face oh wait Talia is leaving here is Lyta again and remember here's a clip of her getting some Vorlon magic and now she's going to be the super telepath... I'm not really to it yet anyway so it's all a bit hazy but the Telepath War stuff is all in books anyway and really fizzles out as far as the actual show is concerned.
Were the executives really all that wrong though? Aside from the fact that JMS did little to nothing with the character... some recurring and main cast Starfury pilots would have been a good thing in my opinion. It would cut down on the silliness of critical station personnel constantly taking the things out for a spin, and would offer more interesting combat scenes. Having a fairly robust roster of fighter pilots helped the BSG reboot in that regard immensely (admittedly I'm a bit of a fanboy there).
I've participated in B5 fandom for years, and argued endlessly over just about everything related to jms and the show. I would hazard a guess that you haven't. Given that don't you think it is a wee bit pretentious to make assumptions about what "everyone" thinks? I mean you're certainly free to have issues with B5 and jms' writing, but I can at least tell you with a great deal of certainty that there is a whole fucking lot of people out there that enjoy them more than you.I didn't even realize it was a debate. I thought everyone agreed that JMS could have used a couple of people to clean up his scripts.
One thing that makes this more interesting, is that when the pilot was filmed, Delenn was intended to be male. The plan was to use an effect to deepen Mira's voice, but apparently couldn't find anything that sounded good so they dropped it and softened her prosthetics for the series. But if they'd stuck to it, that would certainly add another layer to the transformation.There's a lot going on in "Revelations", but if I were a betting man, I'd place good money that the #1 memorable factor here is Delenn's epic unveiling. She's out of her chrysalis, she shows up in a big white robe, and she shocks the council, shocks the audience, shocks anyone who hasn't watched the unfortunate DVD transfer to the second-season opening credits and already knows Mira Furlan no longer needs a bony cranial ridge. She's something else now, something surprisingly human-esque. She's completed the transformation. Sheridan seems surprised by her beauty, leading to an iconic cinematic moment we all saw in the trailers.
Obviously he was preparing to impress hot earth chicks with his cultured demeanor.G'Kar shares a quiet moment of dark contemplation with Na'Toth. In it, he quotes an Earth poet, William Butler Yeats. Maybe it's a little hokey when fictional aliens do this stuff, but you know what?
Sorry for skipping/deleting some parts, but this was long enough already.
Well, I think you're mostly wrong here. We dealt with some of the original plans for Sinclair, in the earlier posts, but even if we assume that had changed by the time the series went into production, there are other issues with just going Sinclair->Sheridan. Like the aged version of him in Babylon Squared. What was the point of that? Just throwing it in just to handwave it away is pointless and violates the principle of Chekhov's Gun (which jms is quite fond of). And where does Valen fit in? Was there supposed to be a second character with a Minbari connection, and if so what was the point of Sinclair? Or does Sinclair come back as Valen after winning the first Shadow War off screen and goes to Z'Ha'Dum and becomes president of the ISA?
And there was no storyline about Earth not liking Sinclair. He was a minor officer with a dead-end career until the Minbari pulled him out of obscurity by getting him assigned to B5. This got the xenophobic Knights suspicious of him, and then he ruffled a few feathers due to how he ran the station and got investigated in Eyes. I don't see how you can compare that to Sheridan being widely known as the greatest hero of the Minbari war to humans and reviled by the Minbari warrior caste for his "honorless" actions against the Blackstar.
I'll just reiterate my feeling that I don't think he really planned out that many contingency plans. I'm trying to picture JMS with a flow-chart of backup characters and back-stories and 'connections' shifting between characters under certain circumstances and I just don't buy it. Even if he claims so, he comes off a bit Derek Smart-ish to me.Now that's a bit of a strawman. Your original assertion was that jms "claims things were planned out when they really weren't", that what was I was arguing with. Not that all the "escape hatches" were "masterstrokes".
The Byron and friends plot is so far out of my mind at this point I can't really comment. Like I said, maybe when I get there. I just remember it not being good. And not having much arc payoff. And I certainly didn't last more than a couple of episodes of Crusade. It just wasn't engaging TV.In the case of the Byron story, what we got was clearly inferior to what was originally intended. But it did allow the story to happen, let the over all story arc proceed, still putting Lyta* on the path of war with the PSI Corps that we saw the fallout of in Crusade. That's what these reassurances to fans were about - that he had back-up plans so the story he was trying to tell, the 5 year arc fans were getting invested in, wouldn't fall apart the moment real life decided to rear its ugly head and put bumps in the road.
(*Lyta would have been part of Byron's cult, just not his lover. Presumably very, very angry at Ivanova for betraying them to Bester.)
Sure they were addressed in goofy ways by dialogue. That doesn't mean it isn't silly. And between the screen time they gave one-off pilots and the senior staff going for joyrides you'd have plenty of room for developing some recurring pilot characters.I'm not seeing the problem here. Sure, Talia and Lyta were presumably intended to serve similar roles a certain central points the over all arc, but they're not the same character. Lyta is intense but awkward, Talia is elegant and cool. Even if put in the same situations their approach and interaction with the rest of the cast would have been different... I find it very unlikely that had she stayed, Lyta would have gotten involved with Ivanova for example.
And I will say that I though the departure of Andrea Thompson was very well handled. It resolved "control" traitor plot, had a significant impact on Ivanova, established the PSI Corps as even more ruthless and sinister than previously shown, and reintroduced Lyta with a more interesting backstory that tied her more directly and naturally into the season 3 plot than Talia would have been.
You were already complaining that the alien characters were getting enough screen time, and now you want to add more? Each existing character had purpose, a role to play in the arc. Adding more would mean taking away from someone else. Yes, jms could have reworked the story to fit Keffer into it (the earlier note about possibly moving the "Shadowman tie" to Keffer suggest that he did at least consider that). But in the end he chose not to, and I respect that. While the Starfurys were undeniably cool and unique with their portrayal actual space physics, they were peripheral to the story and there was no need to give them any greater focus.
...and while I don't feel like going through the episodes and counting, from memory I would disagree that there was "critical station personnel constantly" out in the Starfurys. I'm pretty sure it was only a few times per season, and then generally addressed in dialogue.
Wow what a heavy cross to bear.I've participated in B5 fandom for years, and argued endlessly over just about everything related to jms and the show. I would hazard a guess that you haven't.
I didn't mean literally everyone. But I haven't ever seen anyone outright defend JMS dialogue as good in the general sci-fi discussions I've been a part of over the years. Usually the line I get from even people who love the show is that the guy had an insane script workload, which he did, and you can't expect the dialogue to be super sharp and polished, which is fair enough. But if you dig lines like "you couldn't find it with a hunting dog and a ouija board" there's nothing I can do but shake my head.Given that don't you think it is a wee bit pretentious to make assumptions about what "everyone" thinks? I mean you're certainly free to have issues with B5 and jms' writing, but I can at least tell you with a great deal of certainty that there is a whole fucking lot of people out there that enjoy them more than you.
Watched 2x4
It was a fine episode. They lost a big ship, tethered some little ones in a line, and found it again, while losing a poor little starfury to the shadow which has better science clearly.
Garibaldi used butter to seduce the doc into eating ....well, butter. It does sound good. Maybe i'll make some of this dipping sauce, however you spell it. Are there more than 3 ingredients?
The CGI of hyperspace sadly hurts my eyes, and the sound design hurts my heart. We used some animaniacs to cleanse our minds of those things. Mmmm.....excellent sound design.
Season 2 is where the fun begins, so much that it will glorify the somewhat weak starting season. I love that they made Londo a multilayered character but that was not going to be possible if they have used a lesser actor.
This is the season where G'Kar starts to shine, in fact every single character evolves, Sheridan does it faster because there is a need to keep up. Franklin evolves in a much slower pace while Marcus has a very subtle transition.
I am on 04 08 at the moment and i am enjoying this thread immensely.
I reached the end of season 4 yesterday, I forgot what a mess the last episode was. I wasn't planning on watching any of season 5 (except the sendoff) but maybe I will anyway. There's some good Londo/G'kar stuff in it at least.
Or the goofy customized newspaper recycling kiosk.
One thing that makes this more interesting, is that when the pilot was filmed, Delenn was intended to be male. The plan was to use an effect to deepen Mira's voice, but apparently couldn't find anything that sounded good so they dropped it and softened her prosthetics for the series. But if they'd stuck to it, that would certainly add another layer to the transformation.
Obviously he was preparing to impress hot earth chicks with his cultured demeanor.
Just started season 5. Some thoughts on season 4:
i love the sit downs with the people behind the curtain parts. First there was Hippie Joe at the end of S3 and later on the industrialist.
The Garibaldi narration is god awful. Also ISN really puts the bald in Garibaldi. They used about the worst picture for him.
Season 5 intro im not feeling. Especially the end with the spray painted JMS credit.
Thirdspace started off alright. Ended up being a slightly longer regular episode. Nothing special. Nothing ill ever watch again.
In the Beginning was amazing but only if you are fully up to speed with the show. A lot of fan service here.. a lot of questions answered and gaps filled.
Back to S5.
"In the Beginning" is another piece I remember well. It's really, really good. And it's also mistakenly viewed first by many first-time viewers who haven't been informed what not to do. I suppose that's a less likely scenario at this point in time since people are being directed to watch the show on go90, which doesn't even have the telefilms. But then again, there are so few "like" clicks on the episodes that I'm pretty sure it's not a matter of B5 being kinda niche, but rather, simply that go90 is a largely dead service. So maybe not.
Either way, can you imagine watching that thing first? Whambam. Revelation. Whambam. Revelation. None of it means a thing. Then you hop into the show confused and the better a job you did remembering things the less mystery the series contains. Lose-lose!
I did! By accident of course. (I mean, the title *was* 'In the Beginning'...) Didn't understand a thing of what was happening and didn't finish it either. I put off starting the series proper until a few months later and luckily wasn't spoiled all that much, but it wasn't a great start to B5 in any case. Maybe change the title though!
Anyway, I'm loving this thread, honestly didn't think it would last this long, but here we are and the best is yet to come. Kudos for taking the time to write all those lovely recaps Jeff, really brings back memories and makes me long for a rewatch. Please keep it up so I can have my daily fix
I failed your test.
But I am very glad you've become reconciled to your tag.
Sheridan works so well because the new earth government thinks he is a smiling go getting bootlicker war hero who is down with the regime and will stick it to the Minbari after they forced in Sinclair.
Just watched the Long Dark, and came back to read Jeff's writeup.
Yep to all of that. It was an introduction to the Shadows, yes? Well don't answer that, it doesn't matter really. Crazy dude didn't die even though he tried. Everything else, could basically predict all the dialogue. The horrible lighting didn't help matters, and why exactly does every doorway fill with steam before anyone can walk through? What benefit is there in space to wasting water in this fashion? Silly.
So i moved on. And the next episode was much better.
Talia finally attempts to have a purpose. Of course, she is still fairly useless - she's not that high a level of telepath, and she possesses zero skills outside telepathy. Including self preservation. Sigh.
Another villain who is pure evil when met by the camera, this actor does his best with a dichotomy of personalities coming through. It's not terrible by scar guy standards, so ok.
The episode ends with a note about section 31. I got that right, right? Which of these came first, anyway?
Well, then, to muddy the waters further, Sinclair->Sheridan was not presented as an "escape hatch" situation, but rather that there jms seeing issues with the arc that could be improved upon. Now we now know that O'Hare's illness forced his hand, but given that the original plan has been published (as discussed earlier in the thread), and I'd say the changes were in fact for the better, so I see no reason to doubt him on this.I don't think you really even need a president. As for aged Sinclair not fitting in I mean isn't that part of my argument. That the 'escape hatches' are overblown? The whole thing started in response to someone saying that it "really shows" that he had planned out escape hatches.
I care about you misrepresenting parts of the story. If you're going to critique it you should at least get the details right. And the warrior caste already knew that the surrender happened in connection to Sinlcair's interrogation as per the assassin's "You have a hole in your mind" taunt in The Gathering. The exact details were never revealed to the Minbari public, but not because of any fear of resentment towards Sinclair, but because the idea that humans had Minbari souls would cause massive disruption and unrest in their society.Because who cares? The Minbari warrior caste was surely going to hate Sinclair once they found out they surrendered because they looked at his soul. Slightly different characters that end up in the same role anyway.
Derek Smart? A minor video game developer who's been living off rehashing a modest success for decades now and who's most relevant contributions to his field in recent years is a 1500-ish selling game on Steam and being a Gamer Gate supporter? And you're comparing him to Straczynski, who's been a successful professional writer for nearly 4 decades in tv and comics, received plenty of awards, nominations and critical acclaim, even developed a damned Oscar nominated movie from scratch. Jeez.I'll just reiterate my feeling that I don't think he really planned out that many contingency plans. I'm trying to picture JMS with a flow-chart of backup characters and back-stories and 'connections' shifting between characters under certain circumstances and I just don't buy it. Even if he claims so, he comes off a bit Derek Smart-ish to me.
Sure they were addressed in goofy ways by dialogue. That doesn't mean it isn't silly. And between the screen time they gave one-off pilots and the senior staff going for joyrides you'd have plenty of room for developing some recurring pilot characters.You're not going to miss out on much characterization by not having those scenes of Ivanova getting bored and going out for a Starfury ride, or Sheridan getting some hours to keep up his flight status. And yes yes I know if you don't put Sheridan out there then he doesn't get kidnapped by the gray aliens but once again who really cares as it was pretty goofy and didn't they already deal with grays abducting people when some yokel was suing them at the council?
I guess I get the feel that by good, you meant gritty and realistic. Which of course it isn't. It's often exaggerated and colorful. And I like that. It reminds me of classic British shows like Blake's 7 and Dr. Who.I didn't mean literally everyone. But I haven't ever seen anyone outright defend JMS dialogue as good in the general sci-fi discussions I've been a part of over the years. Usually the line I get from even people who love the show is that the guy had an insane script workload, which he did, and you can't expect the dialogue to be super sharp and polished, which is fair enough. But if you dig lines like "you couldn't find it with a hunting dog and a ouija board" there's nothing I can do but shake my head.
Sigh... But then I have to find time to actually write replys to everything myself. I have important, life-fulfilling things to do instead, like play Earth Defense Force.I want to note, btw, that I'm avoiding the back-and-forth between BlackLagoon and Pegasus Actual merely because there are a lot of things in their spoiler-tagged (thank you both, since we have a few first-timers!) that I don't remember well enough offhand to take a stance on. <3
But aren't the Explorer ships amazing? I just loved the concept, the sole part of the human fleet capable of navigating hyperspace, and the look of 'em too.Something about the CG of the Cortez in partifcular looked painful, though -- there was a mountain of aliasing, at least on the go90 stream.
I guess I should have been more clear, the assumption is that Delenn would have become female after the chrysalis since I can't see them still trying to pass Mira off as male in lighter, more human-like prosthetics.That's fascinating. I've kinda know about it but never really researched it. Ultimately, I can't speak for what-ifs (of course) but all things I can consider being considered, I'm glad Delenn remained female. There's a better male/female cast balance among the major characters than most of B5's peers, especially up until several years later. Plus, I recall likingJohn/Delenn as a romance, which, I mean, technically could have happened regardless but I'm not sure the networks would have been OK with it otherwise.
In the Beginning was actually the introduction to the series for a whole new generation B5. It was the first thing TNT aired when they took of the series in January 98, and the centrepiece of their promotion of the show. At the very least it seemed successful at grabbing their attention and making them watching the show."In the Beginning" is another piece I remember well. It's really, really good. And it's also mistakenly viewed first by many first-time viewers who haven't been informed what not to do.
I care about you misrepresenting parts of the story. If you're going to critique it you should at least get the details right. And the warrior caste already knew that the surrender happened in connection to Sinlcair's interrogation as per the assassin's "You have a hole in your mind" taunt in The Gathering. The exact details were never revealed to the Minbari public, but not because of any fear of resentment towards Sinclair, but because the idea that humans had Minbari souls would cause massive disruption and unrest in their society.
I guess you're not that familiar with him to not understand the comparison. Like JMS he posted a shit ton online to hype up his project, Battlecruiser 3000AD. Granted he was more abrasive than JMS and he delivered on his promises a hell of a lot less than JMS did. He loved to blame the publisher for everything that ever went wrong, much like JMS loved to blame others for anything that went bad.Derek Smart? A minor video game developer who's been living off rehashing a modest success for decades now and who's most relevant contributions to his field in recent years is a 1500-ish selling game on Steam and being a Gamer Gate supporter? And you're comparing him to Straczynski, who's been a successful professional writer for nearly 4 decades in tv and comics, received plenty of awards, nominations and critical acclaim, even developed a damned Oscar nominated movie from scratch. Jeez.
And he's a writer. Of course he has his head filled with alternate ideas and plans, with could'ves and what ifs. That's how a lot of story is put together, and these don't automatically disappear into thin air once the preferred path is chosen. Claiming that it would be somehow beyond him to hold onto these as the show progressed is pretty absurd.
So I'm not going to argue that this is a high point of B5, but it's still a much less common issue than you originally stated, and further it largely disappears with the introduction of the White Star in season 3. At which point what do you do with your pilot? You'd have to redefine his role into "guy who does stuff" or something, making him Marcus without the Ranger background to tie him more closely into the story.
Not necessarily. I like gritty and realistic sure. I like flippant and quippy like Joss Whedon. I just find JMS's characters sound very samey, and his humor to usually be corny, sometimes to the point of cringe. The humor lands on occasion for me, Drazi rules committee for instance, but that's the exception not the rule. To me that's not really a style thing. Exaggerated and colorful can be fine too. I just don't think it was good.I guess I get the feel that by good, you meant gritty and realistic. Which of course it isn't. It's often exaggerated and colorful. And I like that. It reminds me of classic British shows like Blake's 7 and Dr. Who.
SHERIDAN: "Knock-knock."
IVANOVA: "Who's there?"
SHERIDAN: "Kosh."
IVANOVA: "Kosh who?"
SHERIDAN: "Gesundheit!"
SINCLAIR: "Knock. Knock."
IVANOVA: "Who's there?"
SINCLAIR: "IT"S KOSH."
IVANOVA: "Kosh who?"
SINCLAIR: "...Gesundheit, Susan."
Sigh, had a big reply in the works and then I came down with something nasty which kind of derailed everything...Man, our thread's close to dead lately! Maybe the B5 renaissance fever has already faded.
I'm happy to contribute my cynical takes on occasion... I'm on 3x18, Walkabout right now, so here are some out of order disjointed thoughts....Man, our thread's close to dead lately! Maybe the B5 renaissance fever has already faded. Well, no matter; I'll try to keep this going and I look forward to updates from other viewers when time permits. I'll be watching another episode or two tonight and doing further write-ups tomorrow!
"A Voice in the Wilderness"
B5's first two parter feels like sixty minutes of material stretched out to eighty, especially in its first part. Fortunately, once it finally gets going, it reaches a satisfying, albeit familiar climax. I've probably (definitely) seen too much sci-fi but large stretches of the main plot felt very predictable, up to the guest star of the week(s) being needed to take over the role as the planet's guardian. Granted, who else could it be? Certainly not Londo, who is on this mission seemingly only so Delenn owes him a favor at a later date. Not very elegant writing there.
The sub plots also felt a tad by the book. Who didn't see Garibaldi's ex move on and get married? It's one of the oldest cliches in the book. At last it served to humanize him a bit more (and I hope they move on from his behavior towards Talia. I think JMS is playing it for laughs but I'm just creeped out).
Franke's action music continues to be insipid. He stacks diminished chords on top of each other like a first-year music student. It's one of the laziest ways to build tension and it completely takes me out of the show. I can only speculate on what a better composer (even with the same budget) could have done with this type of canvas. A shame we'll never know.
Star Trek alumni watch: Ron Canada, portraying the type of character he pretty much always portrays.
Still following, I want to see what you think about the rest.
Sigh, had a big reply in the works and then I came down with something nasty which kind of derailed everything...
I'm happy to contribute my cynical takes on occasion... I'm on 3x18, Walkabout right now, so here are some out of order disjointed thoughts....
I appreciate that they built the Franklin stim plot over time and whatnot... but him going walkabout is just lame. The plot with the new and dying girlfriend is pretty much a waste of time.
What do you want?