The pressure suit is a precaution in the event that the cockpit is breached. We saw Garibaldi do the same in the first episode of Season 5 and I believe he said at the time "...if this cockpit breaches I'm screwed...".![]()
Later on we learned that the buget for the entire disk was only two million dollars although they had to start from scratch with all of the ships and other effects since WB had lost the original files. No wonder there were only two segments instead of the planned three.
Name me one situation in the original series where we've seen someone inside a Starfury without spacesuit.
Name me one situation in the original series where we've seen someone inside a Starfury without spacesuit. Even Sheridan when he was checking out the new Fury in "Ship of Tears", or on his "What could go wrong" trip in "All alone in the night" was wearing a spacesuit. Let alone someone flying a long-range trip. Whether it was due to precaution in case of a breach, or due to Starfuries not being able to provide artifical atmosphere is a different question. Point is, we've never seen anyone without a spacesuit in a Starfury before, and there was no explanation other than "it's not necessary", and the suit "doesn't fit". Not that it matters much. It's only one example of careless treatment of the original out of the non-exclusive list I've posted above.
Name me one situation in the original series where we've seen someone inside a Starfury without spacesuit.
As has been said, Garibaldi in "No Compromises".
This scene didn't annoy me the first time I saw the Lost Tales, but, thinking about it now, it doesn't make much sense for Sheridan to be so unprotected. He is the President of the Alliance, after all!
Not a very good test of the feasibility of more B5. The stories were tired, the acting was wooden, and the production values looked like they were worse than the original series
I think there are still a lot of great stories that could be told. Crusade certainly would've gone places if it hadn't been canceled, but now it's just been too long. I agree with the person who said that it's baffling that noone had enough faith in JMS to give him the budget to make a new series.Not a very good test of the feasibility of more B5. The stories were tired, the acting was wooden, and the production values looked like they were worse than the original series
That's because they were. But, as others have said, this DVD was a test to see if there was still a market for the show. I personally think there is, if it's done right. The only thing is, that the original show was so well done (with the sole exception of not showing us Clark's POV) that there really is no way to top it, or even add to it as all the B5 productions since have shown us.
Later on we learned that the buget for the entire disk was only two million dollars
Later on we learned that the buget for the entire disk was only two million dollars
which is about the same as an episode of Stargate or Doctor Who.
I enjoyed The Lost Tales for what it was. It was nice to see the visuals get an update and it kinda made sense for the station to be a quieter place given what we found out in Sleeping In Light.
JMS will be reminiscing about B5 at New York Comic-Con next month.JMS: When I set out to write and create Babylon 5, it was with the intention of doing a five-year story and then you get out clean. We did that. Everything we set out to do, we did. My error was in falling so much in love with that universe, and the cast and crew, that I was tempted -- and succumbed to that temptation -- to keep it going. Some of the first TV movies were worth doing, such as In the Beginning. Others less so. Some of it added to the B5 legacy, some of did not, mainly because we were always fighting budgetary concerns that substantially limited where the story could go. But when you're in love, you don't see those things until later, in retrospect.
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