If you can, try to stick with it. The first season should be viewed as a "prologue" that sets up the events of the stellar seasons 2-4. The season gets much better by the end BTW. Season 5 serves as sort of an extended Epilogue to the previous seasons. There are a few spinoff movies of varying quality and a cancelled 13-episode spinoff series. It may not have the best special fx but what it lacks in visual effects it more than makes up for in terms of character development. If you are a fan of DS9 (which didn't have a particularly good first season either), you will probably end up enjoying it (and probably even see some interesting parallels). There are also some intentional allusions to Lord of the Rings as notedI fell into a show hole and decided to give Babylon 5 a try. I know it was a popular show, but had never had a chance to see it. I bought season 1 and I've watched the pilot and first episode, and I gotta tell you, so far I'm not impressed. It seems kinda cheezy. Is it gonna get better? What season was the best?
1) The Vorlons and Shadows being "higher beings" tracks directly to/with LotR's Ainur, with the Vorlons - Kosh and Ulkesh in particular - also directly mirroring the Ishtari (Wizards)
The Cold War imo is probably a stronger influence especially in the original proposal where the Shadows want to overthrow the Vorlons and their domination to place themselves on top (a cynical reading of the non-aligned and post-colonial movements). But also in what in the show with the Shadows and Vorlons trading technology and military support as well as assassinations to prop up leaders favorable to them.
I wouldn't characterise the Shadows as wanting to "overthrow" the Vorlons exactly.
especially in the original proposal where the Shadows want to overthrow the Vorlons and their domination to place themselves on top .
1) The Vorlons and Shadows being "higher beings" tracks directly to/with LotR's Ainur, with the Vorlons - Kosh and Ulkesh in particular - also directly mirroring the Ishtari (Wizards)
Heck, Tolkien's creation tale with Iluvatar and the song of creation is very heavily influenced by the Kalevala and its use of songs as spells in the creation of the world. The Valar are not any kind of evolved alien species in Tolkien. They are the agents of god, the creator of everything.The Vorlons and Shadows take their inspiration from the Arisians and Eddorians of "The Lensmen" series. Two hyper advanced races who use lesser races as pawns in their ancient war. Even seeding worlds and guiding the evolution of some races.
You're reaching farther than Plastic Man on all of these. Most are similar only in the broadest sense. It's like saying that anything with a spaceship in it is mirroring Buck Rogers. Also, LotR borrowed from older myth cycles heavily. That whole "ring corrupting people" thing? Not original. It's lifted from stories of Siegfried and the Rhinegold. The tale of Turim Turambar is a riff on the tale of Kullervo, which Tolkien wrote an interpretation of in 1914.
Oooh, I envy you the first two times you watch! Two times because you'll see so much that was set up ahead of time. But the nice thing is that no matter how many times you watch it, there's something new you'll notice or that you'd forgotten. Have fun!I am planning on buying the entire series. In the past, I have only watched a few shows here and there but I liked what I saw. I am looking forward to it.
The deal with Warner Bros. Domestic Television Distribution makes Go90 the exclusive streaming outlet for the series, which also include “Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles,” “Almost Human,” “Babylon 5,” “Believe” and “Stalker.”
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Go90Verizon laid off 155 workers from the go90 product on January 17, 2017. Verizon plans to rebuild the product onto the Vessel platform it purchased earlier in October 2016. This comes after questions about the success of the platform and mockery by competitors such a T-Mobile CEO John Legere. Analysts are reporting the go90 platform as being "pretty much dead.". In early March 2017, T-Mobile launched a joke campaign to "rebrand go90" mocking what it perceived as Verzon's missteps.
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