Re: First time impressions from the Babylon 5 virgin
"Racing the Night"
War Zone reminds me of Serenity, and this episode the Train Job, which is a bit ironic considering I've paired each series' network mandated second pilot with the original pilot. But that's how this episode feels. There's more of a story here than in War Zone, but there's plenty of exposition packed in, some of it excessive. I understand that this was unavoidable, since War Zone was made long after this episode, and at the last minute, but if only... (will that become this series' motto?) One additional point--Max's backstory here doesn't seem to quite match the one from War Zone, if I remember correctly. In this episode, Gideon says IPX assigned Max to the crew, but in War Zone I'm pretty sure it was Gideon's choice.
But enough about the continuity issues which will never be resolved (stupid TNT). What about the meat of this episode? It almost feels too early to be coming across a planet that was hit by the Shadow/Drakh plague. How rare is this thing supposed to be? I do like the ending, in which Gideon decides to stick with his principals, and the alien questions what he'd do three years from then. And the city CGI is pretty cool--probably the best I've seen in the three episodes I've seen so far--though Galen's hologram-esque thing looks fake (even given that it's supposed to look fake).
Finally, the reveal of Gideon's source is very interesting. What is that thing? Shadow tech? Vorlon tech? Perhaps something from a third party, such as the Thirdspace aliens or the Hand? For now, I'm calling it the idiot box.
Grade: B+
"The Memory of War"
The opening of this episode makes me wonder if I've got the order mixed up already. Has it really been four months since the events of A Call To Arms? And calling what happened in that movie the "Drakh War" disappoints me. I'd call that a large battle at best. Does this mean the "Telepath War" will be downgraded to a quick incident in one DVD movie now? I hope not. I see a Lennier, Lyta, Bester, and Zack segment out of that in the least.
Galen is pretty much Gandalf, isn't he--complete with magic staff. At least we know it's valuable, and irreplaceable. It was interesting to see another technomage (sort of), but there background is still pretty much a mystery, beyond what I've gleaned from the back of the novel and the Legion of Fire books.
The end with the idiot box was cool, though I wonder, considering Galen saves Gideon's ass every episode, will he actually listen?
Grade: B
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I'm liking Crusade so far. It's better than Babylon 5 was at this point. It's far from great, though--and dangerously close to falling into a predictable formula. It's also very episodic, despite the thread of the plague linking episodes. I guess there really isn't time to start an arc with 13 episodes. I don't want to start this debate again, but if Babylon 5 was Deep Space Nine, Crusade feels like Voyager more so to me. Just the feeling of the show. And I'm not using Voyager as a synonym for shit in this case, just to be clear. I like most of Voyager.
