Before I continue, let me qualify my statements by saying that I loved the nuBSG mini-series. It was phenomenal. Much of the first season was fantastic and most of season two was very, very good. It was only with the flash-forward on New Caprica, and the subsequent downward spiral of melodrama and extreme reactions out of just about everybody almost all of the time that BSG completely and utterly lost my respect. With that in mind:
With the glaring lack of humor,
"33"
"The Passage"
"33" was the first episode of the series. And while there were some attempts at humor in the first season -- "Tigh Me Up, Tigh Me Down", parts of "Colonial Day" for example -- the amount of laughter across the rest of the series, particularly in seasons 3 & 4 cannot be denied. There's far more humor and happiness on even DS9 than there was on BSG. The point is the lack of a balanced approach to the human equation.
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"Resurrection Ship, Part II"
I'm not sure I'd categorize an episode which ends with the murder of Cain as an example of "happiness." Though, I will concede, that the episode, overall, has a positive message: Namely, how you treat people says something about who you are. Then again, this was one of the last truly exceptional installments of the series.
"Miniseries"
"33"
"Flight of the Phoenix"
"Sometimes a Great Notion"
Again, I agree that there was at least some semblance of optimism in the early going of the series ... so I concede that the miniseries, "33", and "Flight of the Phoenix" had optimismistic messages. I know that the ending of "Notion" has a nice little speech from Adama, but did you really pick an episode in which a prominent character (Dee) commits suicide, in which the President goes into seclusion, in which Adama tries to provoke Tigh into shooting him because he's too weak to commit suicide himself, as an example of BSG's "optimism"?
The thing is, I happen to think "Sometimes A Great Notion" was the best episode of the entire series after "Resurrection Ship, Part II." It even includes *one* example of people trying to find joy in a terrible situation (Helo, Athena and Hera laughing). But it's just one example, nearly drowned in a sea of severe depression and letdown.
the show demonstrated a real lack of humanity.
I'm always amazed when people miss the fact that the entire premise of the show was the validity and power of hope through adversity. Not just people who dislike it, and claim that it was all doom and gloom, but fans, as well. I was surprised every time I saw someone say they were expecting a downer ending to the show, with everyone dying or something. It was inevitable that there'd be a light at the end of the tunnel, otherwise the series would've made no sense.
Still, posts like that make me consider taking notes the next time I watch BSG, and itemizing every single moment of levity, happiness, humor (among the characters, not situationally, which costs us a good amount of Baltar comedy, but situational humor doesn't reflect on the characters' personalities), and hope. Hope is, of course, the easiest one, as you may have noticed above.
If the entire premise of the show was the "validity and power of hope" then why did episode after episode after episode insist on showing us almost entirely the most extreme reaction possible to adversity. The shouting, the shooting, the duplicity, the power-plays, the petty rage and jealousy, the insecurity, the hubris, the infidelity, melodrama, the death ... all of which was given much, much more prominence than hope, optimism, humor, joy.
If you want to demonstrate hope in the face of adversity, you need *something* to counterbalance the doom and gloom. And there's precious little of it -- even compared to a "darker Trek" like DS9. I'd go so far to say that nuBSG is the mirror opposite of the original BSG -- instead of insufferable campiness and levity, we get insufferable melodrama and despair. As I said, it's a style. And a valid one, provided we accept that's what it truly is. But make no mistake, it's not representative of the human equation. While humanity certainly is capable of (and has demonstrated) all of the negativity shown in BSG, it also is capable of (and has demonstrated) far more good than BSG displayed.
More to the point, this demonstrates how nuBSG completely misses the goal stated by both Eick and Moore themselves. They said they weren't going to go for a "dramatic" or "TV" thing ... but that's precisely what ended up happening. nuBSG is melodrama -- a stylized, myopic representation of humanity. My personal tastes aside, there is some value to BSG, to exploring our darker natures, but it isn't an honest portrayal of humanity -- and it needs to be acknowledged as such.
If you do go back through BSG and record all the moments which are examples of the "best" of humanity, I'd encourage you to do the same for every example of the "worst" of humanity. I know without having to go through the exercise that the "worst" would far outweigh the "best."
I wouldn't bother. After all that work these people would still lack taste, and still hate the show. It's really not worth it!
Comments like this one -- categorizing those who are critical of nuBSG as those who "lack taste" -- are a bit counterproductive, don't you think? I've no respect whatsoever for nuBSG, and I have plenty of objective criticisms of the show that I care to talk about on a message board, but I'm not going to impugn anyone for actually liking it.