One way to improve on the Ron Moore version would be to not put these people who only heard of Earth in old legends in current clothes and give them names like William or Laura.
Yeah, I was just about to comment that there seems to have been a movie version of BSG announced periodically ever since Moore's show ended. As for this news, my attitude at the moment is meh. A TV show is at least more promising an avenue for BSG's story than a movie would have been, but at a decade after Moore's show ended is definitely too soon.
That was literally never the point of it.
Baltar's presidency will very obviously be a Trump allegory.
One way to improve on the Ron Moore version would be to not put these people who only heard of Earth in old legends in current clothes and give them names like William or Laura.
Yes, thank you, I know that. I was making a joke. You know, ha-ha, that sort of thing.The new showrunner was just quoted as saying he wasn’t doing a remake, and Baltar’s presidency isn’t any kind of a mythology beat in the franchise.
Nu BSG was never supposed to be "hard science." And while many fans did get up in arms over the ending of the series revealing everything to be the work of God, if you pay attention you can tell that's basically where the show was going all the way back in the first season.The point of the original ending was faith in something greater, but all it does to the story is turn it into a literal deus ex machina.
Again, they were trying to create something the modern viewer could relate to, not create a unique and alien space civilization. And all things considered, I preferred this approach.One way to improve on the Ron Moore version would be to not put these people who only heard of Earth in old legends in current clothes and give them names like William or Laura.
Again, they were trying to create something the modern viewer could relate to, not create a unique and alien space civilization. And all things considered, I preferred this approach.
Well, if there's one flaw Moore's series had, it's that nothing was thought out in advance or planned at all. When they first started putting things together, they knew they didn't want this to be a bog-standard space opera, and I agree with the approach they took to things, even in hindsight of how everything played out in the end.If they wanted to do that, they should have just turned everything around and have the twelve worlds actually be colonies of Earth.
One way to improve on the Ron Moore version would be to not put these people who only heard of Earth in old legends in current clothes and give them names like William or Laura.
Yes, thank you, I know that. I was making a joke. You know, ha-ha, that sort of thing.
Nu BSG was never supposed to be "hard science." And while many fans did get up in arms over the ending of the series revealing everything to be the work of God, if you pay attention you can tell that's basically where the show was going all the way back in the first season.
Again, they were trying to create something the modern viewer could relate to, not create a unique and alien space civilization. And all things considered, I preferred this approach.
I was all set to say "meh" to the whole thing but that clarification helps. That said, I still feel rather burned by Moore's final season. I never watched any of the extra movies after that, nor Caprica. I'll wait and see what Esmail comes up with before I garner any interest.
In the first season alone we had an episode where Baltar's luck changes just because he rejects God, resulting in his "Head Six" abandoning him and things don't turn right until he admits he was wrong and turns to God, resulting in "Head Six" returning to him. In light of stuff like that, the finale's assertion that everything was the work of God is hardly out of left field.The first season made it clear that the show would very much explore religion, but that’s different from constructing your story so that God and angels (or are they? “God” doesn’t like to be called that) become responsible for everything from leading the Colonials to one Earth and then another, to presumably somehow ensuring that the secret of the business suit is preserved throughout millennia. Religion and pseudoscience can’t be applied towards a convenient handwave in story construction. “Oh, we need to end now… well, what did Larson start with, ‘Life here began out there?’ So we’ll stick with that and the rest, er, somehow it filters through the millennia? Or maybe God did it?”
Okay, now I kind of wish they alluded to that in the modern day New York epilogue of the finale. Maybe when Six mentioned God, have Baltar instead say something like "you know the Count doesn't like being called that."I'm sticking with my suspicion that the "Cylon God" spoken of in nuBSG is actually Count Iblis.
In the first season alone we had an episode where Baltar's luck changes just because he rejects God, resulting in his "Head Six" abandoning him and things don't turn right until he admits he was wrong and turns to God, resulting in "Head Six" returning to him. In light of stuff like that, the finale's assertion that everything was the work of God is hardly out of left field.
Besides, Ron Moore (who is himself an atheist) has said the religious stuff in BSG were very much a reaction to Star Trek's strict policies that everything needed a rational explanation. So with that mentality in mind, there was never a reason to expect BSG to be hard science at all.
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