Friday, June 13, 2008

Battlestar Galactica, "Revelations": No sleep till Brooklyn

Spoilers for "Revelations," the "Battlestar Galactica" '08 finale, coming up just as soon as I roll a hard six...

Frak me.

Okay, hands up, everybody who immediately flashed on Charlton Heston screaming, "You maniacs! You blew it up! Damn you! Goddamn you all to hell!" at the end of "Planet of the Apes" when you got a look at the wreckage of the Brooklyn Bridge?

In many ways, that amazing final sequence -- tracking from Adama's hand holding the irradiated fistful of dirt, past every major character surveying the reality of their "salvation" (including little character grace notes like Caprica Six reaching out a hand to comfort new lover Tigh), and then to that iconic frame of the Bridge as evidence that this is, in fact, Earth -- could have been the end of the series. Sure, it would be a nihilistic as hell ending, and one that left many, many questions still to be resolved, but so much of the amazing "Revelations" (one of the best episodes in the history of the series) had such an air of finality to it that I would almost be okay with all the loose ends. The humans and Cylons finally had something resembling an actual peace (signaled by the amnesty for the Final Four, as well as the freedom of the previously-incarcerated Caprica Six), Roslin and Adama have found each other for however much time she has left, Lee finally and unequivocally became a man, and the rag-tag fleet (now half-Cylon) had finally made its way to a place called Earth... only to find it in even worse shape than old Caprica (where at least the buildings were still standing and Helo could occasionally whip up a nice breakfast).

And yet I doubt anyone can complain that there won't be enough to deal with over the course of season 4.5 (wahhhh... I want it nowwwwwww!), given that we still have to deal with:
  • The identity of the final Cylon
  • The origin and nature of the entire Final Five
  • The origin of the rest of the skinjobs
  • The fate of the 13th colony, and what role (if any) they played in the destruction of Earth
  • The identity of the person/persons/entities that have been orchestrating all this, and what it means that "All of this has happened before and all of it will happen again"
  • The opera house vision and the fate of Hera
  • What exactly happened to Kara when she went into the maelstrom, and what she's really the harbinger of
  • Roslin's health
  • The true nature of Head Six, Head Baltar, Head Leoben, and all the other "angels"
  • Tigh and Caprica Six's baby
  • The whereabouts of Boomer and whether any of the 1, 4, or 5 models are still out there
And, oh yeah, what the hell does the rag-tag fleet do now? The algae planet blew up in the nova, New Caprica got nuked, and all the original Colonial planets are irradiated (and possibly occupied by Cavil and company, if they didn't all die in the attack on the Hub). Does everybody go back to the cursed planet of Kobol? Do they give up? Start mass-producing anti-radiation meds and figure out a way to terraform the remnants of Earth?

I don't know, but we obviously have until early '09 (sigh...) to speculate on that, just as we all freaked out about the Final Four revelation at the end of season three. Right now, I want to sing the praises of "Revelations" as an episode, and not as a launching point for what's still to come.

Because, again... frak me. I watched this on one of SciFi.com's hourly streams, on a small screen, with a whirlwind of activity going on around me and I could not have been more riveted. Bradley Thompson, David Weddle, Michael Rymer and company outdid themselves on this, one of the busiest and yet most emotional hours of "Galactica" ever.

And I wrestled for a while with my feelings about it being only an hour. On the one hand, the condensed running time meant that a lot of major events had to be glossed over or outright skipped -- Athena getting sprung from jail to help plot the suicide mission against D'Anna, the reactions of most of the characters to learning the identities of the Final Four, etc. -- in favor of squeezing in the story and hitting the real emotional high points. But much as I wanted to see, say, Gaeta learn that two of the men who nearly airlocked him were Cylons, or Caprica Six finally understanding Tigh's motivation for his special private visits to the brig, the finished product was like a gourmet five-course meal where every course was the entree. Everything we needed to see was there, immaculately written, directed and played.

Take Bill Adama's reaction to learning that his best, oldest friend -- the man he had trusted over the decades despite everyone else in the universe telling him he was naive at best, insane at worst for doing so -- was a Cylon. After having Adama's reaction start off the way every fanboy's did -- first confusion, then denial, followed by asking how Saul could be a Cylon if he got old and went bald? -- we quickly proceeded to watch our fearless, stoic leader lose his s--t on an epic scale. Remember what I said last week about Mary McDonnell finding new, terrifying levels of brilliance every time I thought she couldn't be any better? Take that, double it, and you've got Edward James Olmos in the raw here.

What made Adama's breakdown especially painful wasn't just Olmos letting it all rip (though I know my soul ached when I heard that first guttural yell), or even the knowledge of how well Adama usually carried himself in a crisis (though that didn't help), but rather that pre-credits scene, seemingly unnecessary at the time, where Lee talks to Kara about being afraid of his father, and Kara quotes Leoben's philosophy that the only way for children to reach their full potential is for their parents to die. Leoben is, of course, an ass, and so a large chunk of this episode was spent proving him wrong. Bill didn't die, didn't even injure anything worse than his knuckles (not physically, anyway), and yet Lee Adama managed to become a man -- not the scared, confused kid who could occasionally playact a man in seasons past -- in his father's moment of crisis. There will come a terrible point in the lives of many people, if one of their parents happens to live long enough, where the roles will reverse and the child will have to play father to the man. The moment on the floor of Bill's quarters, when Lee held his crying father in his arms and told him that everything would be okay -- that Lee would make sure it would be okay -- was that moment for the Adama clan, and while Bill eventually pulled himself together and the old dynamic re-asserted itself, I don't think there's any more backsliding for young master Lee. This is who he is now, and it was touching and scary and absolutely well-earned to witness.

(As an aside: I've always admired Jamie Bamber's work on this show but never felt the writers quite knew what to do with Apollo, which is one of the reasons his rank and role has changed so often. I'm glad that, in the end, they found the right one for both actor and character to play, because he was outstanding.)

And let's not forget the behavior of the man on the other side of the Cylon revelation: Saul Mother-Frakkin' Tigh, as played by Michael Mother-Frakkin' Hogan and his amazing acting eye. Of course Saul would out himself under these circumstances. It's the ideal scenario for him, really: he gets to unburden himself of his horrible secret, potentially save the fleet, and then die before he has to deal with being around all his comrades who have discovered his shameful true identity. And so he walks, resolute, into his oldest friend's office and sets himself up to die -- wants to die, really -- and then stands, just as resolute and ramrod straight, in the airlock as he waits for the gambit by Lee (a kid he once had little use for, and here comes to respect) to play out, one way or the other. It's like the "Galactica" production team is testing Hogan to see how much he can give by taking away as much as possible -- "Okay, Mike, try acting after we cover up one of your eyes for the rest of the series!" "Okay, Mike, now you're going to stand perfectly motionless for half an episode where you're the emotional fulcrum!" -- and he keeps passing their tests with flying colors.

And then, of course, there's Mary McDonnell herself, so brilliant in playing a completely different Laura from the one we saw for most of "Hub." This is a Laura at peace with everything, because she knows she could die soon but has the love of Bill Adama, who is able to be around Gaius Baltar without the old homicidal impulses resurfacing, who even respects the selfish twit enough to recognize that he has a better chance than she does of getting through to D'Anna. For a half-second, I thought Laura's "Take him. That's good" comment to Baltar's offer was just her keeping herself out of the line of fire and making sure he'd be the first one executed if D'Anna lost it, but I quickly realized that she and Baltar moved past all of that when she saved his life last week.

And that in turn led to James Callis getting his own wonderful turn at bat, as Baltar tried to talk D'Anna off the ledge of mutually-assured destruction. Again, we shouldn't believe a scintilla of Baltar's transformation into man of God, given all we know of him over the years, but Callis has sold me on it, and therefore I buy into how even hardcore D'Anna might be inclined to listen to him when he explains how brute force never worked in forging peace with humanity in the past. Baltar believes his own spiel about how we're all perfect creations of God's plan and therefore should be forgiven all their sins -- as his mortal enemy Laura forgave him in his moment of greatest vulnerability last week -- and therefore he believes that D'Anna can be forgiven by humanity, and vice versa.

If there was a frustrating part of "Revelations," it was one more of design than execution, and that was Tory throwing in with her Cylon brothers and sisters and telling humanity to talk to the hand. They've been taking Tory down this path all season, and Rekha Sharma did a fine job playing every step along the way. It's just that, in an episode where every other character, human and Cylon, were almost unfailingly wise and noble and self-sacrificing (even D'Anna, scary as she is, was convinced this was the only way to save her people), seeing Tory ditch her old crowd to go hang with the cool kids stuck out. It wasn't a false note, but it still didn't fit with the rest of the piece, especially since Anders and Tyrol got relatively short shrift during the hour. I liked how Tyrol seemed so calm at the moment of discovery, how he shrugged and told Sam to fess up to the missus, and I loved how Katee Sackhoff played Kara's reaction to this news (betrayed and yet full of resolve to fix this crisis, her lying toaster husband be damned), but I feel much more attached to those two than to Tory and would have rather spent more time with them somehow than with her totally overestimating her underestimation of Lee.

But again, everyone and everything else was so perfect here that I can forgive Tory her moment of false superiority. From Adama getting his uniform back on through the shot of the Raptors entering the atmosphere was just pure, concentrated happiness for almost every character on the show (save Tigh and Tyrol) -- and so of course all that happiness had to be dashed, in as devastating a manner as possible.

And of course the show that uses robots and space ships with FTL drives to tell stories about a post-9/11 world would eventually wind up with all of its characters wandering around a ruined version of lower Manhattan.

Some other thoughts on "Revelations":
  • I loved how the celebration montage paid so much respect to the history of the series. We had the smooch between the two longtime deckhands whose names I'm forgetting, a brief glimpse of the mining ship (who have always had it the worst of anybody in the rag-tag fleet), and of course Kara standing at the memorial wall, thanking Kat for her role in getting them there ("We made it, kid").
  • At one point in his speech, Adama refers to them being on the run for three years. Does that make sense? We know at least a year passed before they got to New Caprica, another year spent there before the Cylons showed up, several more months before the Exodus, then a very long stretch of time covering the voyage to the algae planet, the build-up to Baltar's trial, and all the shenanigans of season 4.0.Seems like it should be closer to four than three, no?
  • Another nice nod to continuity to have poor family-less Laird as the deck chief now that Tyrol got himself demoted.
  • Since there's all this talk of doing multiple TV-movies after the series is finished, I could imagine them devoting an entire one to all the things that happened off-camera in this episode -- again, much of it revolving around everybody responding to knowing the names of the Final Four. As I've said, there needs to be a scene at some point where Tyrol and a Sharon (preferably Boomer, but Athena will do) sit down and talk about how life could've been very different.
  • Now, why do you suppose D'Anna said that only four of the Five were in the fleet? We know she saw all five of them on the algae planet, and if she didn't recognize the fifth, she would just assume he or she was a random person in the fleet, so what? Was the fifth Cylon aready on the baseship (Helo? Laura? Baltar? Hot Dog?) and D'Anna didn't feel like spilling that news at that point? Is the fifth somewhere in the fleet but in a position where D'Anna knows he or she would never surface? Regardless of her reasons for (presumably) lying, I did like the way she cleverly informed Lee and Tigh that she was already in contact with the Four, implying that she was somehow communicating through secret Cylon means when she was just speaking loudly in the presence of all four of them.
I could probably go on for a few more thousand words -- including the usual raves for the work of Gary Hutzel's FX team and Bear McCreary on the score -- but it's nearly 11 o'clock and I want to get this posted the second the finale's done airing. What did everybody else think? And how do you intend to fill the gap between now and '09?

223 comments:

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Anonymous said...

Compare the cityscape with a current view of the southern end of Manhattan from Brooklyn. Notice the positioning of the base of the Statue of Liberty past the south end of the island. SoHo is under water - the sea level is just 4-5 feet higher.

They are in Brooklyn circa 7000 - 9000 A.D.

Anonymous said...

Two items that I would add to Alan's bullet points of pending questions:

* the nature of the cultural cross-overs with earth -- Greek gods, Watchtower, even frak-ified English language.

* who invented the cylons? This technology could not have naturally evolved, it must have been invented.

I suspect the writers here are ambitious enough to ultimately explain these.

My theory is that the show is set millions of years in the future. Humans have achieved immortality via nanotech and the universe is their playground. The colonists are specifically seeded and grown to mimic 1980s Americans with a few tweaks (warp drive, greek gods). Cylons are just humans as well, based on say 30th century earth culture and rudimentary immortality technology. The BSG universe is a zoo, laboratory, horse race, or reality tv show for these immortals. So our future immortal selves are the deux ex machina of the story.

Anonymous said...

Hello Bloggers.
I'm way late to the game, but I have watched BSG season 2 forward and caught up on DVD for Season 1.

While it seemed the pacing was a tad off for this episode, I agree with all the other posters who tend to think this is due to the writers strike.

At any rate, I was left so excited and resolved and both dread and hope-filled. Incredible effort all around, both acting and writing( although I do think the acting elevated the writing).
I completely believed that Lee would airlock Tigh and that he would have been devastated by doing so. I did not believe Lee was doing it for revenge due to Saul's destroying his father, but because, well, what other choice was there for Lee?

I tend to think that Kara is eithre dead and a spiritual guide. Or somehow, went through the nebula before her Viper exploded, via a frakkedup FTL jump. And wound up back at Earth, before its demise. She was not cause of its demise, but came back through another FTL glitch. When she left, it was fully intact. Something clearly horrible occured between her leaving Earth and coming back. Perhaps now Earth is just the worst rest-stop EVER.
"There must some way outta here"?

Anonymous said...

Well, for both of you who scrolled down this far to read yet another post... ;-)

First, I agree with everyone so far who said that this was very thoughtful analysis. I agree, I haven't seen the humanity in Cylon Tory yet, and kinda want to see how that's going to resolve--why is she doing what's she's doing now?

It's a small thing, but I also think the single jump to earth seemed a little hokey--I mean, in the last episode didn't they just jumped all over the place to find the hub--how can earth only be one hop away from Cylon space?

It took two times for me to get the full impact of the finale--my web connection was very spotty and the first time I only heard the heroic queue and the ships hading to earth--and I thought it was the end of the series. Only the second time did I get the full impact of the nuclear wasteland they found.

I have no idea what they are planning for the final 10 episodes, but if I were a writer onthe show, I think it would be interesting to turn everything on it's head--that earth was the home of the humans and the Cylons were first created there. Perhaps even question if anyone is really human anymore--maybe they're all Cylons. And all the real humans died out long ago...

;-)

Anonymous said...

"The Missing Three Will Give You The Five That Come From The Home Of The Thirteenth"

"The Home of the Thirteenth" is KOBOL since this is where the earth peoples emigrated from.

"The Five" are obviously ( or maybe not so ) the "Opera House Beings of Light."

"The Missing Three" in my very humble opinion has nothing to do with Cylon Model Number 3, D'Anna Biers or the Roslin/Baltar/Helo triad or the Tyrol/Tigh/Anders triad either. In fact, it is my very humble opinion that Tyrol and Tigh are not Cylons at all.

In my very humble opinion, and because the writers strike forced this episode, "Revelations" upon us, we still have three missing Cylons running around.

This is Earth. They made it. This is a glimpse into their collective futures. Now they have formed an alliance and The Cavel Group is still out there to be reckoned with.

"And you ask, Why.?", said Sharon to Adama way back in season two.
"well, maybe you don't" deserve to survive she repeats once again when Adama is asking her why the Cylons hate humans so much.

"What if God gave another creature, like the Cylons for instance, a soul" said Leoben Conoy to William Adama just before Adama smashed his skull in with a flashlight.

"God is Love" says Caprica Six to Gaius Baltar. Reminds me of something the prince of peace is supposed to have said about loving ones enemies.

Will this reconstituted Rag Tag Fleet of Fugitive Cylons and Colonials make all the right choices and inherit a Blue Planet future full of Clouds with a Yellow Moon and Star when The Cavel Group make their reappearance.?

"The Missing Three Will Give Them The Five That Come From The Home Of The Thirteenth" and can lead them back to a home where they can start all over ...

... Or will they repeat all that has happened before and will happen again and again and again and ....



.

Anonymous said...

Good Job! :)

R.A. Porter said...

@t-Asarlai, a quick clarification. The strike didn't force this episode on us. All the strike did was push back the start of this season from January to April and push back the final 10/11 episodes until next year. This was always episode 4.10, and the only real difference between it and the nine prior episodes this year was that Ron Moore absented himself during filming.

JDubbs said...

I believe the final 5th Cylon is on Earth and was the one who sent out the music to activate the other 4 and is somehow connected to the Maelstrom...De'Anna didn't know who it was...

JDubbs said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
JDubbs said...

I believe the final 5th Cylon is on Earth and was the one who sent out the music to activate the other 4 and is somehow connected to the Maelstrom...De'Anna didn't know who it was...

Alan Sepinwall said...

De'Anna didn't know who it was...

But there are tens of thousands of people in the fleet. D'Anna couldn't possibly know all their faces, even given her time undercover as a reporter, or as overseer on New Caprica. If she didn't recognize the fifth face, I would assume she would think it was a human she hadn't yet met.

John said...

Correct..De'Anna couldn't know every face in the fleet and quite possibly didn't know who the fifth one was but I do believe there are people somewhere on Earth and the fifth is there...Its just cooler to me to have it be an Earth person or 13th Colony person...I was originally correct about Anders being a cylon and people online thought I was nuts...I know I'm on to something here. Awesome analysis though...You put in your time...

Anonymous said...

@ R.A. Porter ...

my understanding based upon early news in 2007 is that they were rethinking the way season four was going to be presented. I read somewhere that the ending to S04E10, "Revelations", was changed in editing to allow for the possibility that they might not pick up BSG because of the writers strike ( Syfi Portal, Michael Hinman, Koenigrules and TwoBrainCylon, i think ) and that RDM wished to give it closure of a sort that could end the series with a tele-movie or two ala Firefly/Farscape. That was the scuttlebut at the time, i believe. Knowing his love for the ending to "Sopranos" this ending really doesn't surprise me. Truth is, there were at least two pictures removed from the Gallery at SciFi -- one of which has Kara Thrace sitting on a beach with a bonfire raging. Fact is, I seem to remember two.

Anyways, I am nearly 95% spoiler free and believe the last podcast I listened to was 306. I don't read the interviews too much. I even stopped reading Mo Ryan for about a year to make sure. I want to be surprised. What I see in this episode and my opinions are pretty much the opinions of an average viewer without an internet connection and avoids the supermarket checkout mags.

I just downloaded the podcast for Revelations and Hub and will now start listening to them because for me, the series ended with this episode. See you again in season five in 2009. I hope to be surprised


.

Anonymous said...

Leaving this for posterity.

Battlestar is set in Earths past.

All of this has happened before, and will happen again.

Anonymous said...

Agree - brilliant commentary from the majority . Lots of thinking demonstrated, in-depth character analysis - english lit professors should be impressed. Acting is brilliant.

Disappointed that we need to wait until 2009 - I hope it won't be disappointing. Not sure this is actually earth - seems like it should be, but perhaps it's not. Did seem too 'Planet of the Apes' and a bit contrived.

Since Galactica timeline is not synched with Earth, there were a lot of different spins that could have been done - which is why I still think 'not Earth?' - too contrived, too predictable. Does this imply that even without Cylon's help, humans will always blow themselves up? Too fatalistic, again very predictable. In my opinion, not BG's style to date.

Long and short - 2009 is too long to wait; don't have much choice. It is what it is. Parallels: Pregnancy, flu, waiting for summer vacation

Anonymous said...

Okay, I saw a lot of speculation about who the the final cylon will be. I didn't actually read through all the posts so I don't know if this character was ever put forth, but how about Billy? When he died way back when I was sure he'd come strolling into the room on some baseship at some point...

And yes... awesome episode/series etc.

Anonymous said...

On a lighthearted note, does anyone else wonder if Toaster Radio could be programmed to play "Havin' My Baby" in Tigh's head when Caprica Six walks by?

Anonymous said...

Just stumbled on the blog--love it. Thanks!

Okay... Everyone keeps commenting on the bridge ruins... I watched it several times (in SciFi's squidgy version of HD) and didn't see a bridge--it was the Temple of Aurora, which Lee had referenced from a book, of which we get just a glimpse, that Kara was reading, no? (presumably Pythia)---the radial arch configuration was unmistakeable. I need to go back, but I didn't see anything architecturally that pinned it as Manhattan--or any other real site.

Which brings me to this point: I think the dead earth is an illusion, a defensive fake projection (they've already demonstrated some pretty high end projection/VR technologies) or a decoy of some kind as part of the test... or even a fulcrum, the whole thing as a crucible by which the human race technically comes to an end by becoming a new (hybridized) species, e.g. the shape of things to come.

Da' Square Wheelman, said...

The 13th Colony is on Mars, our dead and mysterious neighbor. Check out the views of the world as the fleet approaches - nothing to indicate the usual continents.

Anonymous said...

Never posted here before, but just a few thoughts:

- RE: The hybrid's Starbuck prophesy: Doesn't Starbuck fulfill this? Doesn't she literally lead the human race to its end? She takes them there. In a literal sense, she has fulfilled her role.

- And who knows, maybe she was the bringer of the destruction of Earth the first time she was there. Considering how long space travel takes, there's no guarantee that in the time it took Starbuck to find Earth and then somehow return to Galactica, that thousands of years hadn't passed on Earth.

- ALSO, did anyone notice that DUALLA was on the ruined Earth as well? That seemed odd to me. She isn't really an integral cast member that requires checking in. After all, it's not like Gaeta was there.

- Speaking of Gaeta, everyone is talking about Tyrol having unfinished business with Tory. But Gaeta lost his friggin leg because of Anders - the same Anders who turns out to be a Cylon. That's got to hurt.

- Also, as Helo and Athen walk by, do we see a cross in the background stone work? Is that a sign that the show is moving from a generic monotheistic theme to a Christian one? The only reason I even bring it up is how Christ-like Baltar's injuries looked in the last episode. Maybe, he is the final one, and is also man's savior. From a Christian standpoint (and this is a limb), he has gone from being fully human (deceitful, etc) so is the next step fully divine. Perhaps even the ultimate Hybrid. After all, he does talk to "angels" and he could communicate with a heavenly creature like the other hybrids.

If you want to go a little further on that limb, this dead Earth could be a "tomb" that Baltar has to regain new life on. And who better than a scientific genius to help bring life back to a dead planet - thus recreating a world similar to the one he helped destroy.

I dunno...it's late and I'm just throwing some spaghetti against the wall. Tell me if it doesn't stick

Anonymous said...

Just finished today. My dream twist? I would love the final One to be the Cylon God. That would be the best payoff to D'Anna's reverence when she saw the final 5.

Anonymous said...

NBC and Apple have kissed and made up so those of us without either the inclination or the wherewithal to consort with the piratical, have now seen "Revelations".

On first blush I'm of the Earth-Earth camp. I don't see any reason why it shouldn't be, although as an homage to the original series (which I barely remember) it wouldn't be out of the storytelling question. The ruins clearly look like they've been ruined a long time. There are trees on the bridge, vines everywhere, the ruins are half-buried in soil.

But I wanted to ask--it showed up on some other discussions when this episode aired--Google Maps shows that the Jehovah's Witnesses HQ, the Watchtower, in Brooklyn is at about the right area for that pan shot to be Manhattan. Has that been disproven? (Perhaps "jdubbs" might know ... (-: )

Anonymous said...

I saw the whole series on DVD- never watched a single TV episode. The whole series was like watching one of my wife's boring daytime soapopera's. Bland, repetitive, monotonous. The only reason I watched this show was for the stunning, and I mean absolutely stunning perfomance of the Baltar character. Correct me if I'm wrong but is this the same actor that played the doctor on Deep space 9?? Baltar's whole journey from a selfish egotist scientist in the pilot episode, then to the accidental betrayer of the whole human race. Led by an angel to become first the presidental leader of the survivors, to eventually being an ultimate Christ like fiqure of salvation. Never has an dramatic epic been played so convincingly by an actor. I waited for Baltar's next word and step with baited breath thru the entire series. A masterpiece performance!

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