Not with a bang or a whimper -- more like a clunk. We'll be reviewing the series finale of Battlestar Galactica here, so anyone who hasn't seen it and doesn't want to be spoiled should stop reading now.
Starting with a miniseries in 2003, Ronald Moore's reimagined Battlestar Galactica grabbed and repelled fans of the original series and science fiction in general. The 1978-79 show starring Lorne Greene, Richard Hatch and Dirk Benedict sometimes made it to the level of entertaining camp, but spent a lot of time being silly without seeming to realize it. Moore, not saddled with the original's need to milk the Star Wars crowd for viewers, got rid of the flashing lasers, evil emperor-styled thrones and cute furry robot-dog and went for a good deal more realism in terms of the military angle. He also added quite a bit of philosophical layering to the show, which raised questions about what it meant to be human. And he used his different characters to explore a range of theological issues unusual for television, not to mention unusual for the Sci-Fi Channel, home of "Sci-Fi Original" movies like Flu Bird Horror and Alien Apocalypse.
Moore used the basic story from the earlier series. A scientist named Baltar betrayed humanity to the Cylons, artificial life forms who then nearly wiped out humanity in a sneak attack on its Twelve Colonies. The last warship, the battlestar Galactica, collects a few other ships and about forty thousand people and seeks a way to escape the Cylons. They search for a mythical lost planet, home to the 13th tribe of humanity, known as Earth.
But Moore added some touches to give the story depth. Humans had created the Cylons, who rebelled against their makers in an earlier war. The Cylons had also developed models that duplicated human beings down to the cellular level, who moved among the human population unsuspected by their enemies. He gave Galactica much more of a submarine claustrophobia atmosphere than the shiny Star Wars set it resembled in 1978.
Over the course of the show, human beings tried to learn the location of Kobol, the ancient origin world, to see how to find Earth. The civilian government, led by President Laura Roslin, was at times on the side of as well as opposed to the military leadership of Commander and later Admiral William Adama. Fighter pilots like Lee "Apollo" Adama and Kara "Starbuck" Thrace played roles in both the military story and character and plot development of the show. Cylons were found in the very midst of the ship's crew -- no one could assume they were safe. And in the middle of all this was Gaius Baltar, the scientist who had given defense computer codes to a woman he thought was a corporate spy but who turned out to be a Cylon. Baltar's treachery was never discovered, and at times he was a political and religious leader while almost constantly haunted by a vision of the Cylon lover to whom he had given the key to humanity's defenses.
Recently, Galactica found Earth, but realized it had been destroyed many years ago. Humans found themselves actually allied with Cylons, some of whom had split from their main group following a civil war. The search for a permanent home was complicated by distrust of the new allies, an abortive mutiny and political coup, and the mystery surrounding Starbuck, who had disappeared while exploring a mysterious planet and then reappeared with the directions to Earth.
So we wind down to the last episode. I've read some responses that suggest it was brilliant and others that it stunk. I personally think it was not bad, but it had a lot of things that go clunk! in it.
The "rag-tag fugitive fleet" finds the planet we call Earth, only we learn that the entire series has taken place about a 150,000 years ago. The humans on the Earth they find are primitive, barely able to use tools. At first they plan on settling and living like they did on their own worlds, but Lee Adama argues they should leave all of their technological trappings behind and make a new start in this new world. Everyone agrees, and we see the characters start to settle in on this new world, which they will call Earth because it represents the dream they have had since the beginning. Laura Roslin, suffering from cancer since the show began, finally dies while flying with the man who has come to love her, Admiral Adama. Starbuck, now knowing she was some kind of ghost or angelic messenger of the god the show frequently refers to, disappears, leaving Lee Adama talking to himself. Baltar and the resurrected version of the Cylon to whom he betrayed all of humanity plan to begin a life of farming together. And so on. The angelic messenger version of this Cylon and Baltar himself show up again to tsk-tsk how human beings some 150,000 years later (our day) are once again trying to create artificial life and intelligence.
We do get a great money shot of the fleet moving slowly towards its destruction in the sun, arranged the way they were in the opening credits of the original series, with Glen Larson's original theme in the background.
So five years of show winds up as an eco-fable, which is silly but doesn't take away all of the great work that Moore, his writers and his cast have done. At least the dumb idea of getting rid of all the technology comes from Lee Adama, easily one of the least likable characters on the show other than Baltar and the chief Cylon villain, Cavil.
Plan to move in with a human population that has its own indigenous diseases and such without taking your modern immunization with you to protect them and you? Clunk!
Figure on developing agriculture all over again without benefit of modern tools or anything to make the agricultural implements needed to do that? Clunk!
Tory Foster's airlocking of Cally Henderson earns her a broken neck at the hands of Henderson's husband Galen Tyrol, but Baltar's complete betrayal of humanity, selling out the humans to the Cylons on the attempted settlement at New Caprica and collaboration with the Cylon regime that included signing execution warrants earns him...happily ever after with his Cylon babe? Clunk!
Human/Cylon hybrid child Hera is the potential savior of the human race as well as the Cylons, but she ends up being nothing special to the immediate survivors who settle on Earth. The Baltar and Cylon angelic messengers suggest that a news story about finding a genetic ancestor to all human beings, who is sometimes called "Mitochondrial Eve" or MRCA (Most Recent Common Ancestor) refers to Hera. Unfortunately, since the theory of the MRCA debuted in the late 1980s, developments in molecular science and DNA research have called it into question. Clunk!
In any event, though the show ending didn't live up to the promise of the first two or three seasons, I've had a whole lot of fun watching it and thinking about it. I've appreciated the fact that a TV show didn't shy away from asking questions about God and depicting characters whose religious faith strengthened them and fueled their hope, rather than some sort of serial killer psychosis. So safe voyage, Galactica. Thanks for the ride.
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