Indeed, Londo seems to be a textbook case of “in too deep.”
Londo always goes deep... he often puts in all six.
Indeed, Londo seems to be a textbook case of “in too deep.”
Mass drivers, not nukes, far worse. Basically fires an asteroid at a planet. Nukes are bad, an asteroid impact much worse."The Long, Twilight Struggle"
The best episode of B5 thus far is a depressing but magnificent march through a cosmic graveyard.
What a showing for both Londo and G'Kar, who seem to have reached simultaneous peaks and nadirs in both literal power and moral resolve. From G'Kar hearing the Narn's ill-advised plan to assault Gorash VII (leaving the homeworld almost undefended in the process) to asking Sheridan for sanctuary, it was always clear how it was going to end.
Speaking of which, Londo's very brief reservations about the use of mass drivers and getting the Shadows involved in the battle felt like the last glimmer of decency before darkness envelops him - fittingly, what an excellent later shot of his reflection being submerged in shadow as he overlooks the battle.
The Shadows themselves continue to be as relentless and as fear-evoking as ever; what surprised me was that the Narn actually managed to do some damage to a Shadow vessel, for all the good it did.
The council scene was clearly one of the greatest sequences in the show up to this point, in an environment where the show's speechy tendencies were well-served. The trajectories of G'Kar and Londo have dramatically changed since the show's premiere (which seems so long ago). And there are still three seasons left. Whether or not Londo has embraced his villainous side, he certainly appears to be unwilling to hide from it any longer.
Though I enjoyed the actor, I spent most of the episode wondering why it was necessary for Draal to re-emerge now of all times. Of course, the answer is in the speech he gives which serves as the episode's namesake. This is a grim hour, to be sure. Ruled by shadow (literal and figurative), yes. But as Draal notes, even in this twilight struggle, there is the possibility of hope. There will always be, as Sheridan puts it, a fortress of light to make a stand against the darkness.
And the Narn-Centauri conflict feels like a mere footnote compared to that coming war.
Rating: *****
-As Londo instructs Garibaldi to gather the ambassadors to hear his announcement, we understand that any friendship the two had is gone forever. (or is it? As a newbie, I of course don't know)
-Mass drivers - akin to nuclear weapons?
-Did I hear Draal mention Zathras?
-"No dictator, no invader can hold an imprisoned population by force of arms forever. There is no greater power in the universe than the need for freedom. Against that power, governments and tyrants and armies cannot stand. The Centauri learned that lesson once. We will teach it to them again. Though it take a thousand years, we will be free."
-Kosh, frustratingly quiet. It's time for the Vorlons to get more involved.
That's a good question. I haven't watched the series (beyond the occasional episode) since my service in the Navy so I'm not sure how I would feel about it now. It depends what he concretely knew and how he went about it. I remember most of the broadstrokes but not as much of the details and how things played out in the minutia. This just gives more reason to rewatch the who show again.I would be specifically curious as to whether there were any members of the armed forces who felt, as some in B5 did, that it wasn't Sheridan's place to turn against his government in this manner.
I'm about 90% sure that's not the case. I mean it probably made him trust her a little less (though not so little that his tactical master stroke at Mars didn't hinge squarely on her) but her motivations were clear. Mostly he was angry at her acting on her own without even discussing it. Military leaders can be funny about that kind of thing...It's probably been discussed elsewhere in this thread, but I think there's also some feeling that Sheridan wasn't at all thrilled that Lyta blew up Z'ha'dum, and his goodwill toward her may have been severely compromised at that point.
Whether Lyta's actions there really do merit such a sharp decline in his trust/goodwill toward her is, I guess, left as an exercise for the viewer.
I would be specifically curious as to whether there were any members of the armed forces who felt, as some in B5 did, that it wasn't Sheridan's place to turn against his government in this manner.
Hell, most of the time I forget even existed and when I'm reminded of him, the only thing I can ever remember about him is "Oh, that's the character the network forced JMS to include and then he died."
I have absolutely no memory of Keffer. I only watched the show once so far, but I have clear memories of pretty much every other main character and a lot of the recurring characters, but I had to look Keffer up on the Babylon 5 Wiki, and he doesn't even look familiar to me.
Was there ever a reason only four members of the cast got the Army of Light uniforms and everyone else got...JC Penney dress shirts with a 5 embroidered on them?
Side-note: While it is 100% justified, I am always faintly amused that Sheridan literally turns himself into a military dictator in order to defeat Clarke. The State of Babylon 5 ain't exactly a democracy, and apparently his office is Military Governor!
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