Babylon 5 was structured to follow linear time (barring the occasional flashback), which is something you can get around in a print novel focusing on the plot you want and developing that as far as it needs to go before switching. The threads of the show are brought in and out when they can best be thematically linked to the story, and when they occurred in "history." The Regent gets a keeper in 2261. We don't see the full effects of this until 2262. For the rest of season four we're not just going to watch the Regent suffer; we need to move our attention to other parts of the story.once more and more complexities started being added to the over-arching narrative of the series, things started to get a bit dicey and the task of balancing each new 'mini-arc' with the overall story of the series became more and more difficult to execute, ultimately lessening the series' ability to actually function as a 'novel for television' the way JMS originally intended it to.
Well I would say that the Narn/Centauri plot and Civil War are primary plots, because the main characters are Humans, and Minbari, and Narn, and Centauri - the Shadows are a catalyst to the story and important, but they weren't the main focus of the story. An analogy Joe used early on to describe Babylon 5 is a WWII story. I think that's a good description; WWII isn't only about Hitler; there was also Italy, and Japan, and Russia, and the United States, and the other countries, and atomic bombs, and everyone's different motivations for joining and how the aftermath of it affected them differently. The story is about before, during, and *after* the war. The aftermath of the Shadow War affects all the races, and bringing the Narn/Centauri conflict back to the forefront was an important part of that having been set up as early as "Midnight on the Firing Line." As Joe says in the script book about "Movements of Fire and Shadow/The Fall of Centauri Prime":structure the series (B5) so that the Shadow War is really the 'main' arc, with the 'secondary' arcs of the Narn-Centauri War and the Earth Civil War playing out alongside it
jms said:And here, at last, is the reason revealed for a five year arc
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You can't create that sense of dread in a single episode. You can't generate that deep horror in a story by introducing it four minutes into the episode and paying it off thirty minutes later, followed by the reset button and they all laugh, fade out. The dread we feel, the horror, is in seeing that train coming over the course of weeks, months, even years. It's not simply a matter of a five-year arc allowing for a greater complexity in storytelling, it's the emotional impact of that story. It's about creating dread.
edit: P.S., not saying your idea of making the shadow war the main arc of a reimagining isn't valid; just saying that it wasn't what jms was going for.
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