obsession boyfriend i'm psyched     i'm dreading enemy

(need an explanation?)

advertisements


Battlestar Galactica (review)

Paging Dr. Asimov

I can't say that I actually have fond memories of Battlestar Galactica. I have only vague memories of the show itself, of shag hairdos, and Starbuck getting caught with some chick or other in a Viper launch tube, and the cool robot dog, and a kid named Boxey which I thought was kind of a neat name for some inexplicable reason, and bits from after the show jumped the shark, when they found Earth, and all the colonials could jump really high because of some ridiculous thing to do with gravity. Or was that in V? It's all kind of a blur.


more below the ad... scroll down...


Mostly I just have a nebulous leftover feeling of: How cool is this that we can watch something every week that's not as good as Star Wars but still has spaceships and space battles and evil robots and neat stuff like that? I have this feeling that I owe stuff like Galactica (and V) a huge debt of gratitude for contributing to my eventual geekiness by pandering to my Lucas-fueled little-kid desire to see space battles with evil robots.

So I'm really not very happy with Sci-Fi Channel's "reimagining" of Galactica.

It didn't need to be reimagined, for one thing. I think we were all perfectly content with our vague memories of shag hairdos and "god I love Star Wars so much I'll watch anything even remotely trying to cash in on it," and if we weren't, there will always be DVD to remind us how bad the original series was. We certainly didn't need a bad new series to drive the point home.

The entire concept makes no sense, for starters. I remember thinking this even as a little kid. How could Earth be a lost 13th colony of humans who came from elsewhere in the galaxy if we know for a fact that humans evolved on Earth?* When it comes right down to basic scenarios, Galactica is SF for fundamentalist Christians who just don't buy into that fossil crap or geology or radiocarbon dating or other such nonsense.

But okay, as premises go, I've seen worse. But there are other issues that must be confronted. Like, if these people in this new Galactica really are our long-lost cousins, lost so long ago that we've so totally forgotten about them that no snippet of legend or myth remains, and yet they still have all this stuff that are recent inventions of Earth's -- such as given names like Laura and William, and neckties, and chat shows and pianos and gift shops and, dear god, PR people -- how can they not have heard about Asimov's Laws of Robotics?

I mean, hello! These stupid colonials created the Cylons, and then what happened is that "the day came when the Cylons decided to kill their masters." This is a bad way to build robots, and also: Don't give them the secrets of thermonuclear weapons, cuz then when they decide to wipe you out, it'll be easy. But then, if my advice had been followed, this "reimagining" couldn't have been the mushroom-cloud porn that it is, in some spots at least.

These people are really, really dumb, so dumb that you're almost rooting for the Cylons. They had this big war with the Cylons -- who are, mind you, really, really evil robots with no compunctions about killing humans; they're like silicon-based Urak-Hai with a space program -- and then there was an armistice and the Cylons disappeared to no one knows where, and since the Cylons thoroughly failed to show up at the annual Let's Be Friends meeting for four decades, the humans figured: Hey, everything must be cool, so let's totally dismantle all our defenses against, oh, a secret surprise and likely ironically imminent attack.

*sigh*

Oh, and another law, besides the don't-kill-humans one, that Asimov neglected: If you make robots look like superhot blondes, embed an instruction for them not to em-bed the people who can give the robots access to the entire human defense system. "What have I done?" moans dufus genius Dr. Gaius Baltar (James Callis: Helen of Troy, Bridget Jones's Diary), after he gives hot robot chick Number 6** (Tricia Helfer) access to, like, all military computers everywhere in the 12 colonies in exchange for a few rolls in the sack. Granted, the hot-blonde-chick robot is an idea the Cylons hit upon themselves, but still, this is an object lesson for us real humans who may so be tempted. Since she is Cylon-made, she also is lacking the don't-be-a-bitchy-girlfriend law, and so she has no constraints in her programming to prevent her from nagging him for being sarcastic and complaining about his cheating on her with organic people.

If this new Battlestar Galactica sounds like a soap opera, just wait: It gets worse. Secretary of Education Laura Roslin (Mary McDonnell: Donnie Darko, Mumford) ends up being the highest-ranking official left alive in the 12 colonies after the Cylons make the planets extra crispy, but as if leading the ragtag survivors to freedom weren't enough, she's also just learned she has -- *gasp* -- breast cancer. Commander William Adama (Edward James Olmos: The Road to El Dorado) was just about to decommission his antiquated battlestar when the attack came, but as if shouldering the responsibility of wielding humanity's last best hope, an old rustbucket, weren't enough, he also has to contend with -- *sob* -- his bitter and estranged son, who's now under his command.

It's a bit of a stretch how writer Ronald D. Moore, a seasoned veteran of some of the more worthy Star Treks, manages to make Adama's son also Apollo, by putting some quotes around Captain Lee "Apollo" Adama's nickname and shoehorning it into the middle there. Starbuck and Boomer not only are merely quotes in the middle of someone else's names, they've also had sex changes and morphed into women (Katee Sackhoff and Grace Park), I guess because, you know, gotta get some tough ass-kicking girls in there to deflect femi-complaints about the sexy robot broad. The girl Starbuck and Boomer are just as boring and cardboard as all the male characters, so score one for equality.

Still, it's kinda cool to see Horatio Hornblower's friend Mr. Kennedy aka Jamie Bamber get some work (he's the fake Apollo), and his American accent is truly amazing-- Hey, wait: American accent? Aren't these people supposed to be on the other side of the galaxy or whatever, separated from the humans of Earth long before there was an America? What gives?

This may be the worst thing about this new Galactica: It looks like the society of the part of Earth we call the industrialized West, maybe a few years into the future, and where everyone dresses really sharp, like Armani did all the costumes. The captain of a civilian spaceplane, for instance, gives welcome-aboard and if-you-look-out-the-left-window speeches that are a stunning instance of pangalactic synchronicity. I mean, c'mon: The French think we're insane because we refrigerate our cheese, and let's not even get into how alien the Japanese are, and yet these people on the other side of the Crab Nebula would fit in right next door?

I'm sure there'll be plenty of opportunity to explain this. They left it all open for a sequel or, Asimov protect us, a series. I'm not saying I wouldn't watching it or anything, but I no longer think Boxey is a cool name.

*Of course it may truly all be a ruse put about by the transdimensional mice and we Earthers really are descendants of the B Ark, but if we get into that kind of metaphysics, we'll be here all day.

**She is not a number! She is a free Cylon!

[reader comments on this review]

viewed at home on a small screen
rated TV14-LSV (Part 1), TVPG-LV (Part 2)
official site | IMDB

Bookmark and Share

who I am


I'm MaryAnn Johanson: writer and ponderer in New York City who drinks too much wine and thinks way too much about such inconsequences as movies, TV, books, and the meaning of life.
[email me]

• contributor, Film.com
• member, Online Film Critics Society
• member, Alliance of Women Film Journalists
• member, International Academy of Digital Arts and Sciences
• visit my scratchpad blog, MaryAnnJohanson.com
• read my Doctor Who fan fiction

photo by David Speranza

(postings feed)

Add to Technorati Favorites

monthly archives

recent screenings and hot movies

just opened
red for no Death Race
red for no The House Bunny
green for go The Rocker
green for go Hamlet 2
green for go I.O.U.S.A.
green for go Trouble the Water
box office top 5
green for go Tropic Thunder
red for no The House Bunny
red for no Death Race
green for go The Dark Knight
green for go Star Wars: The Clone Wars
top limited releases
yellow for maybe Vicky Cristina Barcelona
red for no Fly Me to the Moon
green for go Bottle Shock
Elegy
green for go Hamlet 2
coming soon
green for go Flow
yellow for maybe Hounddog
red for no Sukiyaki Western Django
green for go Traitor
green for go The Perfect Game
yellow for maybe A Thousand Years of Good Prayers
now playing
red for no Henry Poole Is Here
red for no Brideshead Revisited
red for no Pineapple Express
red for no Jack Brooks: Monster Slayer
red for no The Mummy: Tomb of the Dragon Emperor
red for no The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants 2
green for go Step Brothers
green for go Man on Wire
yellow for maybe Mamma Mia!
yellow for maybe Journey to the Center of the Earth
red for no Swing Vote
yellow for maybe The Wackness
green for go American Teen
green for go Mongol
green for go Stealing America: Vote by Vote
green for go The X-Files: I Want to Believe
green for go Boy A
green for go Hancock
yellow for maybe Hellboy II: The Golden Army
red for no Space Chimps
green for go Wall-E
green for go Wanted
red for no Meet Dave
green for go The Visitor
yellow for maybe Death Defying Acts
yellow for maybe August
red for no Harold
yellow for maybe Up the Yangtze

2008 screening log

new on dvd

08.26
green for go Chicago 10 [buy]
green for go Where in the World Is Osama Bin Laden? [buy]
yellow for maybe August [buy]
red for no Redbelt [buy]
red for no Postal [buy]
green for go Alfresco [buy]
green for go Heroes: Season 2 [buy]
green for go The Nightmare Before Christmas: 2-Disc Collector's Edition [buy]
green for go Brotherhood of the Wolf: Director's Cut Two-Disc Special Edition [buy]
08.19
green for go Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day [buy]
green for go Street Kings [buy]
green for go Recount [buy]
green for go The Proposition [buy]
green for go Television Under the Swastika [buy]
green for go Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles: Season 1 [buy]
green for go House: Season Four [buy]
green for go House: Seasons 1-4 Collection [buy]
08.12
yellow for maybe Smart People [buy]
yellow for maybe CJ7 [buy]
yellow for maybe Felon [buy]
green for go Blue Murder: Set 3 [buy]
red for no The Racing Game [buy]

advertisements

search

Google
flickfilosopher.com
web
Powered by
Movable Type 3.36