Revelations - Galactica Mid Season
Finale
June 14 2008 00:57 Filed in:
Television
If your like me and I
assume most Battlestar fans, you are sitting in stunned silence
right now. Unlike season 3, Season 4 seems to be progressing at
breakneck speed toward the conclusion of the saga. The mid-season
finale “Revelations” took the show in some very unexpected
directions, and some not so unexpected.
I think the overwhelming senitment I
feel regarding the events of this episode are “What now?” It’s
certainly what our main characters must be thinking. Do not read
another word if you haven’t seen it yet and want to remain spoiler
free.
Ron Moore has said for some time that they would find Earth by the
conclusion of the series. This has driven much speculation over the
last couple of years. The overwhelming question really was what
time in Earth’s history would they arrive? Quite frankly, arriving
at present day Earth has been done. We could have seen the crew of
Galactica swoop into the solar system and send Bamber and Sackhoff
down to Earth on flying motorcycles getting in crazy misadventures
week after week. For those of you who haven’t seen GALACTICA 1980
or the original 1978 GALACTICA I highly recommend visiting it, but
not until after the new series finale next year. Its an eye
opener.
Well, we’ve found Earth now, something I didn’t expect to happen
until the series finale or in the last episode or so leading up to
it. Now we’re left with 11 hours of story left next year to come to
terms with the implications of the discovery. Quite frankly, I’m
conflicted about this development. Part of the incredible wonder of
the show for so long now has been about how the prophecies will
come to pass that will eventually lead our heros (and anti-heros)
to Earth. Now much of that mystery is gone. How the final 4 would
be revealed to the fleet and the Cylons has been answered. How they
instigated the eventual finding of Earth is mostly answered.
In one sense, Moore has bent us over and rammed us a good one. The
event that was supposed to signal the end of the journey in cheers
has happened well before the end of the saga. I actually see this
as the smart move. If we had waited until the last episode, the
expectations would have been overwhelming and completely
unreasonable. By springing it on us now, it exceeded our
expectations for this episode and indeed the first half of the
season.
Now, about the Earth we found. It has been my opinion for some time
that this was the only way we could have found Earth without being
cheesy or without betraying the overall darkness and tone of the
show, so my surprise that they found Earth this early was
certainly not surpassed by my reaction to the fact
that they’ve found it in a post-apocolyptic state. Radiation levels
high, the soil worthless, the signs of a former civilization in
ruins. This is how it had
to be for the series to
have an impact and make sense.
Regardless, I’m still very torn by the discovery. It’s like
premature ejaculation. I came 10 episodes too early, I guess. I
even question the impact of who the final Cylon is and whether I
actually care. The only thing we can wonder about is whether or not
the final Cylon will be friend or foe. But with no guidance or
clues as to what the purpose or signifigance is of the revelation
to come, I find it hard to get excited speculating about it.
As this is a show about characters, I think the thing that I found
the most fascinating about tonight’s episode is what I consider to
be the redemption of Saul Tigh. I found Galactica two episodes into
season 1 when it first aired at a time I was facing some serious
alcohol struggles myself. I found the portrayal of Tigh, his
drinking, and how it shaped and impacted him as a person and his
life was absolutely the most honest and accurate portrayal of an
alcholic I’ve ever seen on television. He’s frakked a lot of shit
up over the first 3 and a half seasons, but tonight he put it all
behind him. Outing himself as a sacrifice for the good of the
colonial fleet was him finally becoming the man he wanted to be.
And Adama’s reaction to Tigh’s confession that he was Cylon was
note perfect. Olmos is brilliant and the glue that holds the
universe of BATTLESTAR GALICTA together. It was a true shame, but
not unwelcome as a fan, to see that after it all wound down, that
we, for the first time in a long time, see Saul in front of the
bottle again. And will they continue to deal with the obvious route
of Adama himself becoming an alcoholic.
So what are we left with?
- An Earth, we assume,
but don’t know for sure, is lifeless and uninhabitable.
- A band of Cylons and
the last of the Human Race with no direction and no place to
go
- One more Cylon living
in secret. We don’t know where it is, or when it will be
revealed.
- A mystery proposed
concerning who or what is orchestrating the Human/Cylon alliance
and for what purpose...can we assume it’s the final unrevealed
Cylon that is driving this?
- Where did Kara’s
clone-viper come from or is it directly related to the previous
point? How, when and why have the final five been to
Earth?
- What of Tigh and Six’s
child? We now officially have an example of Cylons reproducing with
other Cylons but is hasn’t been mentioned yet at all.
I was not floored or astounded by Revelations, but it was certainly
one of the best episodes produced of the series. Extremely tense,
well-paced and exciting. Hardly a second of screen time wasted. But
I’m so conflicted right now about where the final 10 episodes could
possibly be going that I’m asking myself how much I really care. In
one sense, I think apart from the fact that we don’t know who the
final Cylon is, I could have been content with the series ending
with this episode. The characters, in stunned silence...seeing the
total destruction of their hopes and dreams for the previous 4
years.
On a side note, a question left unanswerd for me over the last 3
episodes. When Galactica found the shuttle and the wreckage of the
base ship, Adama immediately identified the Roslin’s abandoned
shuttle by the presence of her copy of Searider Falcon
that she had taken with
her. I need to go back and watch, but I’m almost sure that during
the scenes of Roslin on the base ship, we see that she indeed has
the book with her there, having brought it with her off the
shuttle. Either I completely saw this incorrectly or there is
something to it. Possibly part of the “orchestration” plan of who
or whatever is guiding our characters now.
Interesting.
Tags: Reviews|Battlestar Galactica