I don't care about how he got there at this point.
Babylon 5 is about choices and the consequences of those choices and believe me, Londo still has choices to make.
Jan
I don't care about how he got there at this point.
Yeah, how Londo was going to die was stated in the very first episode of the first season. There's still not enough information to know exactly how Londo and Centauri Prime got to this state; that's in seasons four and five, so stick around for the Londo ride; there's still plenty of twists and turns coming on that particular roller coaster.
But Kirk55555's specialty is forming opinions on things he hasn't seen yet.
At that point, I just stopped. It wasn't helped by the fact that the library only had the first one and a half seasons, and I was beginning season 2. Now, it has all the seasons, so I've been considering trying to watch it again when I'm done with Babylon 5, even though that was a really bad spoiler to get.
The stuff with franklin was ok, until he meets the singer. every scene with her is just painful. I liked seeing them test out using telepaths against the shadows, but the narn commander was a jerk for not helping. If it wasn't for B5, he'd be dead. The fight against the shadows was cool. I guess telepaths are good against them. It was weird to see Lyta apparently crying blood after the attack, in most things like this the person usually gets a nosebleed. Seeing the cavalry arrive was a cool scene. I'm glad Garibaldi showed G'Kar what he had to do as a leader. Seeing the shadows take some losses was also nice. Overall, this wasa decent episode, although the stuff with the singer stops it from being great.The stuff with franklin was ok, until he meets the singer. every scene with her is just painful.
Well it's a good thing that didn't actually happen. Watch seasons four and five, then we'll talk.But, having the actual writer ruin a character arc in the show is a weird experience.
He is definitely a different personality from the last Vorlon.The new vorlon ambassador is interesting, although I'm starting to wonder he is the vorlon equivalent of Darth Vader
Remember back in Dust to Dust we saw G'Kar's crazy eyes when he had his telepathic experience as well.It was weird to see Lyta apparently crying blood after the attack, in most things like this the person usually gets a nosebleed.
the arc you think is ruined hasn't started yet. You're only on page 137 of a 503 page book.Well, it seems like 90% of the time, my ideas are right, atleast to me. I generally know my reaction to things. I know what I like and dislike. In this case, I dislike spoilers that ruin an arc, except its usually my fault when it comes to spoilers.
Its more like if the publisher screwed up and printed page 503 as 137.
The only question is how G'Kar got into his palace to kill him, but at this point I'll just assume he was Londo's slave. Either that, or he gained the ability to teleport. Why not? It fits the stupidity of these sections.
I guess telepaths are good against them. It was weird to see Lyta apparently crying blood after the attack, in most things like this the person usually gets a nosebleed.
A mindset which thinks an episode can be judged on a two-sentence summary, and then rejects all additional data which suggests this might not be sufficient, might have trouble with the notion of not getting answers until an entirely different season.
I'm assuming that's what you're talking about, since the summaries of episodes mostly haven't affected my B5 watching, and the 2-3 episodes I thought would be bad based off the summaries in the paphlet that came with the DVD turned out to be good (Farscape got episodes skipped because of summaries because, by very early in season 2, I lost faith that they could do stuff that sounded bad to me in a good way, while B5 I trust more in that department, even though it has had, like all tv shows, a few bad episodes). Anyway, that Star Wars analogy doesn't quite work. It takes things out of context and hops around a trilogy of movies. This was a scene taken in context in its episode, that we are told is the future which nothing can change. But unless, like in the Dr. who analogy, G'Kar and Londo were robots on a fake Centauri Prime (I think thats the name of the centauri homeworld) and the real ones are relaxing on a beach somewhere on the real planet there really isn't anything else you don't know when it comes to the future. They just tell you everything. All thats left is the hows of a few things. But they tell you that Londo stays an ally of the shadows until his death, and is a literal puppet of theirs for a while, until right before he dies. Unless its his evil twin, there is now no suspense about his character arc. You know he'll remain with the shadows in the end, so they can't tease him redeeming himself and turning against the shadows (until his death when its far too late) since you know he doesn't. He can do unexpected things for the plot in general, and stuff that effects other people, but his personal story arc is now complete, we just have to see him get there. It takes all the guessing or mystery out of the arc, and as a first time watcher it really makes me angry.
I figured Lennier would find a way to stop the warrior regardless of his promise, and Marcus was the best choice. The missing section in grey sector is interesting, and it definately had potential. Little did I know that Garibaldi would be captured by the B5 version of mole people. Not only that, but the lead mole man is easily the most annoying character thats been on the show so far. I could barely decipher his gibberish most of the time, and he just wouldn't shut up. I was hoping Garibaldi would get his gun back and shoot him, but I guess getting rough with him was better than nothing. The Marcus/warrior fight was cool, even though Marcus got beat pretty badly. The monster in B5 looked cool, although I wish Garibaldi had managed to feed the annoying mole man to him. I'm not sure if the homemade guy thing actually makes sense, but it was interesting. Overall, this was an ok episode, and Delenn's stuff was decent, but the Grey 17 parts were not great. I think it had a lot of potential, and I was interested in those parts, but the end result didn't live up to what I thought it would be. It ended up being mostly annoying because of the mole man who wouldn't stop saying stupid stuff. He was beyond irritating.The only question is how G'Kar got into his palace to kill him, but at this point I'll just assume he was Londo's slave. Either that, or he gained the ability to teleport. Why not? It fits the stupidity of these sections.
Seriously? I mean, you're completely overlooking the actual emotional context of that scene. I though that Andreas and Peter played that perfectly, making it clear that this was an act of a dear friend helping another.
Another analogy would be the first Lost flash forward. Just because we saw that they got off the Island doesn't mean that everything that happened on the Island over the next season didn't matter.
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