Nope. The only actual context is how many people are really familiar with BSG. It's still not as well-known beyond the sci-fi community like Star Trek and Star Wars, but enough that the name might strike a bell with some like so many other cult classic properties.I wasn't talking about dedicated sci-fi fans. I thought it was clear from the context of our conversation.
I actually said more than once that there are people who have at least heard of Battlestar Galactica--but that's where their knowledge of it ends. As such, they're not that familiar with the property as far as its setting, characters, storylines, etc. To a large extent, it was perhaps known to many as "Battle of Galactica," part of the Universal Studios Tours from '79-'92.Nope. The only actual context is how many people are really familiar with BSG. It's still not as well-known beyond the sci-fi community like Star Trek and Star Wars, but enough that the name might strike a bell with some like so many other cult classic properties.I wasn't talking about dedicated sci-fi fans. I thought it was clear from the context of our conversation.
Fair enough, except I think you have to infer I only know sci-fi fans since I was responding to the claim that only sci-fi fans know of the show with the statement that I don't think I know anyone who hasn't at least heard of the show.
This is what I find odd, did the Reptile Cylons die out, or were they murdered dead by the Robot Cylons... Why was the magic Ghost Cylon played by Patrick McNee so prorobot-Cylon if his people had been butchered by the Robot Cylons?
But can you imagine the nice robot Cylons trying so hard to serve and save the Reptile Cylons as they are passing through some sort of extinction that they cannot counter?
Reminds me of the mechanoid Kryten from Red Dwarf still making meals for the skeletal crew of the crashed star ship he was on, a thousand years after they had died.
The original reptilian Cylons were wiped out by the robotic versions. IIRC, the Imperious Leader had Macnee's voice because it was Count Iblis (also Macnee) who enabled the Leader to have that kind of power.
Can we reopen the old sub-forum now?
The original reptilian Cylons were wiped out by the robotic versions. IIRC, the Imperious Leader had Macnee's voice because it was Count Iblis (also Macnee) who enabled the Leader to have that kind of power.
Apollo's account in "Saga of a Star World" was ambiguous: "There are no real Cylons left. They died off hundreds of yahrens ago, leaving behind a race of super-machines."
That would be interesting to know which episode.There's some stuff about this in the deleted scenes. I can't remember which episode, but there's one such scene where Apollo is talking to Boxey and explaining how the original, reptilian Cylons were wiped out by the centurions.
I don't want to sound like a stick in the mud, but I like the current re-imagined BSG and don't need another one yet.
nuTREK came 43 years after the first tv show debuted, nuBSG came 26 years after the first tv show. It seems too soon to "reboot" this franchise again.![]()
That would be interesting to know which episode.There's some stuff about this in the deleted scenes. I can't remember which episode, but there's one such scene where Apollo is talking to Boxey and explaining how the original, reptilian Cylons were wiped out by the centurions.![]()
Baltar: I know you.
Iblis: Do you?
Baltar: I remember that voice, the voice of the Cylon Imperious Leader.
Iblis: The Cylon is a machine.
Baltar: Now. But once they were a race of beings who allowed themselves to be overcome by their own technology.
The Hatch could make a great Adama if he played it a bit like Tom Zarek.Who would you rather played nunu Adama?
Richard Hatch or Jane Seymour?
Baltar: I know you.
Iblis: Do you?
Baltar: I remember that voice, the voice of the Cylon Imperious Leader.
Iblis: The Cylon is a machine.
Baltar: Now. But once they were a race of beings who allowed themselves to be overcome by their own technology.
Ultimately, the appeal of BSG as a movie now is the same to Universal as the appeal of the TV series was in 1978: Star Wars with the serial numbers filed off, nothing more and nothing less.
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