Well, for anyone not really familiar with what the episode titles mean...Mmmmmm.... yes and no.
The movie begins and ends during the timeframe of WWE. However, in the in-between time you go quite a bit farther back. If jms himself thinks it's fine to watch it first, that will probably hold true for a great many otehr folks. I'd still disagree with them.
Well, for anyone not really familiar with what the episode titles mean...Mmmmmm.... yes and no.
The movie begins and ends during the timeframe of WWE. However, in the in-between time you go quite a bit farther back. If jms himself thinks it's fine to watch it first, that will probably hold true for a great many otehr folks. I'd still disagree with them.
"In the Beginning" is set roughly... 18 years?... after the final "regular" episode of Babylon 5. But it's a narrative, and most of the events being discussed are set about 10 years prior to "The Gathering" (the pilot movie).
The very final episode of B5, "Sleeping in Light," is set 20 years after the final "regular" episode of the series.
SO... if you're like me and prefer to watch things in the "in-fiction" chronological order, that's why I recommend "Sleeping in Light" as the last thing you watch.
That's precisely the way I prefer to watch the series as a whole. DWF is right technically, as he says, but "Sleeping In Light" is the perfect, if not outright necessary, capperSO... if you're like me and prefer to watch things in the "in-fiction" chronological order, that's why I recommend "Sleeping in Light" as the last thing you watch.
Asides from "Deconstruction" as others mentioned, "Voices in the Dark" arguably should be watched after "Sleeping in Light" as well. It's not a traditional frame, like In the Beginning or "Deconstruction", but it still has one.The very final episode of B5, "Sleeping in Light," is set 20 years after the final "regular" episode of the series.
SO... if you're like me and prefer to watch things in the "in-fiction" chronological order, that's why I recommend "Sleeping in Light" as the last thing you watch.
How so? I think what most of us promoting SiL as the final item to be viewed are looking at things from a primarily chronological point of view. Given that, there isn't anything except "Deconstruction" which can be considered, from that frame of reference at least.Asides from "Deconstruction" as others mentioned, "Voices in the Dark" arguably should be watched after "Sleeping in Light" as well. It's not a traditional frame, like In the Beginning or "Deconstruction", but it still has one.
How so?
True, true... but that's really in there only to avoid confusing the audience, who've already seen "Sleeping in Light." A simple narrative method to remind the audience "we're going backwards by a number of years."How so?"Voices in the Dark" starts with the destruction of Babylon 5 in 2282, as seen in "Sleeping in Light".
How so?"Voices in the Dark" starts with the destruction of Babylon 5 in 2282, as seen in "Sleeping in Light".
Hence why I said "It's not a traditional frame, like In the Beginning or 'Deconstruction', but it still has one."That's different than the way that "In the Beginning" handled it, where the entire story is set in the later time... in the form of Londo telling a story. The entire story is told from Londo's perspective, with Londo narrating it.
Just like "the story itself" for In the Beginning takes place in 2246-2248...Yes butyou then see the time count back and the station reconstruct itself. The story itself takes place in 2271.
How so?"Voices in the Dark" starts with the destruction of Babylon 5 in 2282, as seen in "Sleeping in Light".
Yes butyou then see the time count back and the station reconstruct itself. The story itself takes place in 2271.
Jan
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