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    Battlestar Galactica - TV Review

    From The Deadbolt:

    Battlestar Galactica - TV Review

    By Brian Tallerico
    July 14, 2005

    Some excerpts:

    Let's cut right to the chase - with Lost and Arrested Development currently on summer vacation, the best show on television is not only on Friday nights (traditionally, a television wasteland), and not only a sci-fi series (a genre gone stale over the last few years), but it's called Battlestar Galactica. A sci-fi remake on a cable channel is the best thing currently on TV? Trust me, I'm as shocked as you are.

    "Scattered" picks up immediately where season one ended, with Captain Adama (Olmos) shot, the President (McDonnell) in jail, Starbuck (Sackhoff) on Caprica, Tigh (Hogan) in charge of the ship, and the crew of Raptor One stuck on Kobol. In other words, the title of the episode is literal, as all of the characters are off on their own adventures. Sound complicated? It is. Battlestar Galactica, perhaps more than any other show on television, requires rapt attention just to follow the plot of one episode, much less to grasp some of the deeper, philosophical underpinnings of the entire arc of the show. My biggest concern/complaint is that picking it up at this point without having seen an episode before, with a dozen characters already spinning in motion across the universe, may be near impossible for new fans. If you're one of those fans who haven't warp jumped on board, all I can say is stick with it. It may seem a little confusing now (I've seen every episode and I had trouble picking up at the same speed we ended last season with) but, in a short while, I think you'll understand it all.

    Click on the link to read the entire article.

    It's nice to be important, but it's more important to be nice.

    #2
    The main reason to watch Battlestar, besides the excellent ensemble, is that it separates itself from the traps of its genre by being about so much more than aliens and warp drives. At its core, the show is about classical human drama from father-son relationships to mortality to belief in free will. I'm as shocked as anyone that the deepest show on television right now is a sci-fi remake but there's no getting around the issues of philosophical identity that creator Ronald D. Moore is addressing brilliantly week in and week out. Like the best sci-fi writers, he uses a fantastic setting to address completely relatable issues.
    And THIS is why I watch it.

    Plus the stuff blowing up.

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