Fly me to the moon
Finally took my first sip of the kool-aid and watched the Battlestar Galactica miniseries. It took me two hours, but I finally got excited sometime around the big meet up at Ragnar. I love the recognition that combat in space is not like air combat in WWII--it's been a while since I've seen that in science fiction. It's occasionally very obvious that ZOIC is doing the f/x, and that makes me smile. It's weird adjusting to the 'sound in space' thing again, but I'm trying hard to pretend it's part of the score. I really like a television show that presents characters with hard choices that have no 'right' answer. And I'm assuming that sometime during the series Starbuck becomes 'cool' because so far I'm not seeing it.
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--stoke me a clipper, I'll be back for Christmas!
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Which was when I started getting the 'oh, I see, she's an ass'. Later amended to 'cigar smoking ass'.
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You'll get it when you see the series.
But yes, eventually she becomes human, and then cool.
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(Because the idea that because somebody is good at something--whether flying or playing football--gives them the right to fuck with other people is one that made high school not fun. Plus, as much as it makes me cool and iconoclastic, I don't particularly enjoy being at odds with the majority.)
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She is on a hair-trigger, and she is relatively volitile, but she has some good reasons for it too. Later on when she's humanized, it's more sensical.
Also, there are podcast commentaries starting with ep 1.09, on Sci-Fi.com, although they may also be on the DVDs. They're good.
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In fact, every single character in that show is very, very deeply flawed in one way or another. Expect those flaws to make you wince from time to time.
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Just keep in mind: No one in Galactica is the Best of the Best. They were on a ship about to be decommissioned. This isn't where the flagship Enterprise.
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The writers admitted they cheat on the sound in space -- their compromise was to muffle it.
I really like the faux-documentary style jigglycam in the spaec shots, and (after watching for a while) really like the decision to have ultratech only as needed for the central premise (FTL and cylons), and keep everything else circa-2000 (or earlier!) technology -- there's an immediacy and meta-realism (not realism, since the supertech isn't realistic given the other limitations, but real in a meta sense, of being able to imagine yourself there).
I warmed up to everybody. Nobody's simply a "hero"; nobody's supposed to be. Every character will sometimes disappoint me, and sometimes amuse me and sometimes inspire me. Starbuck is, in fact, a full-of-herself ass -- that's one aspect of her. She has others. Her personality flaws cause problems. She deals with them realistically.
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totally agree
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As for everyone else, there isn't a single weak or unrealistic character on the show, each and every one of them is wonderfully written and beautifully portrayed. Hell I even adore Tigh and I loathed him in the beginning. That combined with incredible plots, fantastic direction and effects, and a kickass soundtrack...well what more could one ask of a series really? Once again, Ron Moore is a fucking genius.