10 years after the Earth-Minbari war...
I'm resolved to watch for the Nth time my all-time favorite piece of science-fiction: Babylon 5. Yesterday I saw 1x01 Midnight on the Firing Line, and I was surprised at just how fast-paced the show is! With the election going on, there really does seem to be a immediacy to the drama, and you can really feel that change is in the air.
Also, for a 1 hour set-up (not counting The Gathering), the episode does a fantastic job at fleshing out the characters. Londo's first line is Ah, Mr. Garibaldi! How perfect! And we learn that he'll be locked in a death-match with G'kar in 20 years (we hear about it three times - once with Sinclair; once Sinclair warning G'kar that "not every dream" ends well for him; and once again from Londo to an unaware Garibaldi).
Ivanova's hatred for telepaths is set up in the only slow-paced scene in the entire hour (and it works so well, since Garibaldi explains, Ivanova likes to wind down after work; she's in her civi's).
Vir makes his appearance, floundering.
Even Kosh gets to be enigmatic (They are are a dying race. They should be allowed to die. Sinclair: Who, the Narn or the Centair. Kosh: Yes).
We'll see a complete reversal of the Narn/Centauri goodguy/badguy dynamic by the end of the season, but the the set-up as is, is fantastic (we even learn that Narn was under Centauri occupation for 100 years).
I'll post a couple thoughts each episode in this thread as I go through the show. Don't expect spoiler-code or the like - I've seen this show so many times I can hardly count. I want to actively observe how the show builds up to the grand themes that come to fruition 4 or 5 years down the line.
I encourage you to come along for the ride.
And so, it begins.
I'm resolved to watch for the Nth time my all-time favorite piece of science-fiction: Babylon 5. Yesterday I saw 1x01 Midnight on the Firing Line, and I was surprised at just how fast-paced the show is! With the election going on, there really does seem to be a immediacy to the drama, and you can really feel that change is in the air.
Also, for a 1 hour set-up (not counting The Gathering), the episode does a fantastic job at fleshing out the characters. Londo's first line is Ah, Mr. Garibaldi! How perfect! And we learn that he'll be locked in a death-match with G'kar in 20 years (we hear about it three times - once with Sinclair; once Sinclair warning G'kar that "not every dream" ends well for him; and once again from Londo to an unaware Garibaldi).
Ivanova's hatred for telepaths is set up in the only slow-paced scene in the entire hour (and it works so well, since Garibaldi explains, Ivanova likes to wind down after work; she's in her civi's).
Vir makes his appearance, floundering.
Even Kosh gets to be enigmatic (They are are a dying race. They should be allowed to die. Sinclair: Who, the Narn or the Centair. Kosh: Yes).
We'll see a complete reversal of the Narn/Centauri goodguy/badguy dynamic by the end of the season, but the the set-up as is, is fantastic (we even learn that Narn was under Centauri occupation for 100 years).
I'll post a couple thoughts each episode in this thread as I go through the show. Don't expect spoiler-code or the like - I've seen this show so many times I can hardly count. I want to actively observe how the show builds up to the grand themes that come to fruition 4 or 5 years down the line.
I encourage you to come along for the ride.
And so, it begins.