The end of season 2 and start of season 3 is frakking amazing, mid way into season 3 the show feels a little like its meandering. Season four suffers the same problem of feeling aimless, and the big reveal and the pregnancy made me :rolleyes:. The resolution of Tom Zarek’s storyline was something I looked forward too, but they handled it clumsily(it should have been much murkier who was right and wrong).
The show never goes off the rails but it did feel like they did not know what to do at some point, but its only noticeable because of how amazingly good the earlier stuff was.
I agree completely. Viewers should just bear in mind that the show is very much a fantasy series under a thin veneer of science fiction, and that ultimately, the characters are more important than the plot. If you remember that, you’ll be fine.
I watched season 1 & 2 and gave up. It was interesting see it remade, but I didn’t care for what they actually did with it.
But then I also didn’t like Firefly or Star Trek 2009. Since then the [del]SyFy[/del] Sci-Fi community has stripped me of my pointy ear rank & barred me from all conventions until 2061.
There’s definitely some treading water, plotwise, around the middle of the run, where you can really tell they’re making it up as they go and are just padding events until the end of the season. The series finale is extremely divisive, and will probably color your opinion of the rest of the series retroactively, one way or the other.
You were misled by mere gloss and aesthetic. At its core, Galactica was conceived around the very best hyper-syncretist ancient astronaut woo-woo the '70s had to offer. It’s in its DNA.
The reboot remained stalwartly faithful to that, they just presented it better. Come on, though - the conceit of the show is that practically every religious and mystical tradition on Earth is a distant echo of the history of the rag-tag fleet, no matter how absurd or contradictory.
For a society that had space travel for millennia, BSG had remarkably little advanced technology. Except for the FTL and AI - the workings of which were never explained - it was essentially 2005 America in Space, right down to Starbuck’s HumVee. Furthermore, technology never played any part in the plots, in the sense that a no story was ever resolved through the use of some “reverse the polarity” contrivance or obscure law of physics. OTOH, the show had angels and gods, visions and prophecies, magic arrows and mystical temples, all from the very start.
Now, I’d be the first to claim that SF and fantasy are both essentially the same genre, just at different ends of the “Science” vs. “Magic” scale. I’m just saying that if you put Star Trek towards the SF end, and Star Wars toward the Fantasy end, BSG is much closer to the latter - and probably on the other side.
Well I think thats unfair, this isn’t a documentary we’re talking about. The sense I got was that the religious names being the same was a kind of “echo”, I definitely got the vibe that robot rebellions and synthetic but organic humans had been happening for a long, long, long, long time in a cyclical fashion. Its safe to assume every single “human” on the show were just past synthetics that had forgotten their origins and were going to go on to create synthetic humans themselves.
As others have said, the series finale draws strong opinions; it really angered/disappointed some people. I was happy with it, but to each their own.
I also think that season 3(?) gets very dull and drawn out, as they take a long break from the ‘main’ plot, and the story stagnates (IMHO). If you end up feeling as I do, bare with it, because they return to the story again afterwards. (Not to say that there isn’t some great stuff that happens in that season, but something about it was just bland to me).
I thought all of Buffy was great (until Joss went off the rails in Season 8) and I thought BSG was great too. Until, as noted above, Moore wrote himself into a corner and gave us the single most idiotic and unsatisfying series ending ever. It made the Dallas reset (“It was all a dream!”) seem like Shakespeare.
We are edging up to spoilers, so I’ll back off about BSG.
Science fiction doesn’t and in my opinion shouldn’t include fantasy. Having FTL made it science fiction. Star Trek had religion, the parallel Rome thing, and the aliens who were thought to be Greek gods, but that didn’t make it fantasy. Conan the Barbarian is fantasy. Buffy the Vampire Slayer is fantasy. Firefly was science fiction.