Why this thread is in "TV & Media" forum...?
I'm guessing because it is open to all ships that appear in TV shows not just those appearing in so for example the HMS Indefatigable from the Hornblower series could appear as a ship of the week.
Why this thread is in "TV & Media" forum...?
The thing is the old series had about the same amount of dark elements (though often conveyed in dialogue rather than shown) but somehow still managed to show that there's still hope and that the colonists can come through their troubles. The new one made you question if it was even worth trying to survive for them.
To me the original never really converyed the darkness that would follow a civilisation beng wiped out.
Other than the pilot, we never saw conditions for those outside the Military and not living aboard the Galactica.
Never saw the struggles having to deal with food and fuel shortages, loss of ships etc.
Though I will concede some of that might well have been due to budget constraints and the era in which it was made.
Also, that shot looks more like the recent CGI redo we had in another thread here, more than it does from the old 1978 shots. I looked, but can't find it now.
Yeah, the dialogue in SW was sort of ambiguous on that:Not carriers. They didn't even exhibit the ability to deploy fighters until ESB, in 1980, two years after Galactica demonstrated the ability.Star destroyers, maybe, too.
And therefore the Cylons had to be changed from armored reptilian beings to androids, because there were limits on how many people (broadly interpreted) could be killed in that time slot, but no limits on robots.Anyway, the show never was what it could have been. For those not in the know, it was intended to be a miniseries or series of TV movies, but ABC put in a series order while the initlal movie was shooting and decided to air the show during the Family Hour, so a lot of the more adult content got removed, including a whole subplot about Serina dying of "pluton poisoning". So what we got was a kiddie friendly series.
Also, that shot looks more like the recent CGI redo we had in another thread here, more than it does from the old 1978 shots. I looked, but can't find it now.
Think there's a subtle difference in the lettering.
Yeah, that's how it looked to me too...Also, that shot looks more like the recent CGI redo we had in another thread here, more than it does from the old 1978 shots. I looked, but can't find it now.
Think there's a subtle difference in the lettering.
There is, that's why I think it's one of the redo shots.
That was interesting to know, thanks. And I suppose that's why the hooker with the heart of gold became the nurse with no skin showing below the neck?
Cassiopeia (Laurette Spang) was the socialator who became the medtech. Serina (Jane Seymour) was Boxey's mother, and was suddenly killed by a Cylon on Kobol.
There is, that's why I think it's one of the redo shots.
Right, I was just speculating whether the family-friendly directive was why Cassiopeia's past was dropped.
She did sometimes wear the "socialator" dress when off-duty. I'm thinking maybe The Long Patrol is where we saw it.And I suppose that's why the hooker with the heart of gold became the nurse with no skin showing below the neck?
See, this is another reason why I misinterpreted what J.T.B. wrote: part of me just knew that Cassie was ripe to be dead meat, I've no doubt because of her past.Well, actually Cassiopeia was originally supposed to die in the pilot. Allegedly it was misgivings about Maren Jensen's acting ability that led them to shoot a sequence where Starbuck rescues Cassiopeia from the Ovions, thus making her a running character.
Although the character of Cassiopeia was supposed to be "eaten" by the carnivorous Ovions of Carillon in the premiere, producers decided to retain Laurette Spang for the series, partially to help Maren Jensen (Athena), who was struggling with her acting talent, providing Spang with a steady job (at least for a yahren) as a Galactica medtech.
"Maren's time on Battlestar Galactica was reduced, because she was not an established actress and was in an adjustment period, going from model to actress, and at times, her acting was sub-par according to Glen A Larson, the producer of the show," Flagler said. He went on to mention that Maren and Glen clashed out in the open at times because he thought she was lazy because she did not know her lines but it was the fact, that Maren was already feeling the early effects of Epstein Barr Syndrome (which drains a person of their energy) making daily activities difficult.
Wow, that would have been subtle!There was a deleted scene in Lost Planet of the Gods where Cassiopeia had a short discussion with Apollo about starting her life over as a med-tech.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rzaHsvZQzZg
She did sometimes wear the "socialator" dress when off-duty. I'm thinking maybe The Long Patrol is where we saw it.And I suppose that's why the hooker with the heart of gold became the nurse with no skin showing below the neck?
Now THIS is my favorite Galactica. Both the ship and the show it comes from.![]()
[yt]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7iuj7u9hxjQ[/yt]Now THIS is my favorite Galactica. Both the ship and the show it comes from.![]()
Agree. Ever since I first saw her, as a boy, that Sunday September 17th 1978 on the series abc network debut.
In "The Man With Nine Lives", we saw the introduction of ... the supremely cool and enigmatic Borellian Nomen, a non-human/humanoid race of beings with their own unique warrior culture bound by particular precepts of honor, weapons and physiological traits (which I am still convinced led to the inspiration and development of the post-TOS Star Trek Klingon that we all know today).
I said he is young.In "The Man With Nine Lives", we saw the introduction of ... the supremely cool and enigmatic Borellian Nomen, a non-human/humanoid race of beings with their own unique warrior culture bound by particular precepts of honor, weapons and physiological traits (which I am still convinced led to the inspiration and development of the post-TOS Star Trek Klingon that we all know today).
Who were, in turn, the inspiration for the noticeably subpar Kazon on Voyager. Anyone who sees the casting connection will get a chuckle.
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