So obviously the Raptor that Adama and Roslin fly in was never found by any archaeologists. . . . I like to think that old William Adama built that cabin out of respect for Roslin. He spent at the most 20 years living in it, before he piloted that Raptor directly into the sun.
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My thoughts on the final fate of William Adama.
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Well, it is one bigggg planet we are on. Take a rock, throw it over your shoulder and dig a hole where it lands. What did you find ? Dirt. I dont think we even know (do we ?) if the area
where it finally landed upon is even above sea level now. But yes that is one way of getting rid of the evidence, hmmm into the sun, I never thought about him yelling banzai or frakkkk as he heads into the sun.
Would'nt it rust/deteriorate to the point that the very small pieces would blown about and get buried also ? Speaking of which I never, never saw that ending coming. Chariots of the Gods was not even on my mind at anytime during the series.
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alternate ending was about group of archeologists finding a Raptor. TPTB chose not to go that wayStolen Kosovo
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I don't like the idea that Adama would just leave and never see Lee again. Especially when you consider how close they got towards the end. I understand he was sad, the ship he loved was beat to hell and back and than flown into the sun, the woman he loved dying, but you'd think he'd want to be around the only person he had left.
As for the Raptor, the ship was ment to take a beating in space. Depending on its location in Africa, i think it would still be recognisable as a ship after 150,000 years.
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Originally posted by thekillman View Postwell i do think that the ending of BSG wasn't the perfect one. i would've preferred if we just found a new world -without already existing humans- and just built a city and we create a new Colonial civilisation, especially since this civilisation has the knowledge of past mistakes
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Originally posted by thekillman View Postactually that's kinda how you DO solve past problems. the problem was making Cylons. if they wouldn't make cylons, the cycle would break. especially if everyone would teach their kids that if you design a robot it'll turn on you
What I said was that from the beginning we were told over and over again "All this has happened before, and it will happen again"
No matter where the fleet ended up at the end, be it on New Earth or settling some random planet. The narrative of the show was always going to end with the start of a new cycle.
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Originally posted by the fifth man View PostI don't like to think of Adama's ending. It makes me sad.
perhaps commanding the camp and the natives battle with dinosaurs and victoriously retaring together with his son and grandchildren
Or perhaps his ship jumps (maybe some preset failsafe command that unites the fleet) somewhere to bring him to another battlestar fleet, which he is now commanding to finish off those toasters once and for all and rebuild the colonies
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