Did they take out Adama because he doesn’t believe in the quest for Earth?
That gives creedence to those Dopers who believe the Cylons are using the humans to find Earth for whatever nefarious reasons.
How do the Cylons “program” Boomerbot? Do they have to be in close contact as they were in the base star? Does she have a chip as Balthar might?
The two Sixes on Capricia were looking at each other and apparently communicating. Maybe there is a Cylon wireless modem thingie.
Hey, wait a minute! The “Arrow of Apollo” is just a frakin’ arrow! In a frakin’ statue! How is that supposed to help them find Earth? Maybe there’s some receptacle in some ruin on Kobol where they can insert it to find Earth – like, there’s a starchart carved into a wall and the arrow, when inserted in the right place, points to Earth’s location – but still, why did Starbuck need to go to Caprica and get it? Wouldn’t a copy, made to the same dimensions based on a photo out of an art book, serve just as well?
Only the president, Starbuck and a few others know Adama was lying when he claimed to know Earth’s location. Killing him off relieves him of having to come clean publicly, while keeping the whole ruse alive – now most of the Fleet think he took the secret with him, but there’s still a chance of finding it from other sources (the Arrow of Apollo, whatever). That’s assuming Adama is dead. Had he lived – he was clearly opposed to Roslin’s scheme for finding Earth, so eliminating him eliminates an obstacle to the Cylons’ (hypothetical) plot to let the humans find Earth and lead the Cylons there.
When Boomer gets off her Viper in the landing bay of the Cylon basestar, she hears a voice in her head (gotta be in her head, she still has her helmet on) calling “Sharon!” So they do have some form of wireless communication, effective range as yet unspecified.
No, no, no. It’s an “adult” show. “Apollo” is going to stick his “arrow” in “Starbuck” and “show the way” to Earth. Don’t you get it?? And there are two chicks fighting over it! And the hilarious thing is, Apollo is gay! And under arrest… and… oh someone shut me up!
That was…wow, that was great. I’ve never had a TV show make my jaw hit the floor and stay there like the ending of this show did. I kept thinking…they can’t kill the head guy…he’s the head guy, she just shot him…twice…holy shit…what the hell just happened there?
Four months you say? Ack! I can’t wait.
I also can’t wait for them to release the first season on DVD so I can watch it all over again.
I hereby impart you with ‘Suspension of Disbelief’. Go forth, and let minor plot goofiness bother you no more! Besides, I would guess that if they found a starchart with a planet marked ‘Kobol’, and a arrow-shaped indentation leading to a mysterious unmarked planet, they would probably snigger, ‘The Lords of Kobol sure were simpletons’, and been off on their merry way.
Great episode, by the way. Exciting! Action-packed! It finally explains:
Jack. Shit. Two hours to explain just about nothing, and what little they do hint at or mention will be forgotten by the time season 2 rolls around. As always, I love the show, but the cliffhanger season-finale schtick is not nearly as captivating as writers seem to think.
I yelled and had my hand over my mouth for the last five minutes of the show. Holy moly.
One huge thing I’m worried about, however. My wife loves this show. This is the first SciFi in which she’s ever been even remotely interested. Specifically, she loves Cmdr. Adama. If he dies, she’s promised to never watch again.
While I greatly enjoy Farscape, I have a hard time taking seriously as “hard SF” any show that incorporates a functional equivalent of Doug Adams’ “Babel Fish.” (And that includes Star Trek and its fuckingdumbass “universal translator”, Mr. Roddenberry! :mad: )
Also, the idea that humans can mate with the entirely unrelated Sebaceans and produce offspring is too laughable to be laughable. (Same with humans and Vulcans, humans and Betazoids, humans and Klingons, etc.) The idea that humans can mate with human-form-Cylons and produce offspring, OTOH, is perfectly plausible if said Cylons were made from a base of human genetic material.
The “meaty” appearance of the interior of the Cylon basestar reminds me of a line from an old Robert Crumb cartoon: “It’s fun to crash in all-meat cars!” (Panel shows two all-meat cars colliding with a “splat” sound.)
(I’m pretty sure Crumb was doing a lot of acid in those days. The amazing part is, his stuff still seems funny when you’re straight.)
Not to hijack, but I though during The Peacekeeper Wars they said (or strongly hinted) that Sebaceans are ‘modified’ humans, made by those nutty peace-aliens.
The Peacekeeper Wars was the mini-movie-series-thingee made after the show was (sob) cancelled. 2 two-hour episodes. Good stuff.
There were these aliens with god-awfully-ugly faces that used to run around and use SPACE MAGIC! to inspire peace between warring aliens. They needed ‘Peacekeepers’ to keep the peace, so they went to some planet (Earth, it is hinted), and took some inhabitants and modified them to be suitable peacekeepers.
It seems that Stargate SG1 season 9 will be a mini-Farscape reunion, so there is always that…