Television Review


BATTLESTAR GALACTICA: Final Cut

By: Jason Davis
Review Date: Tuesday, September 13, 2005

"Final Cut" takes the seasoned concept of a documentary being produced inside a drama and serves up an excellent hour of TV drama. Skillful handling of the military/journalist relationship coupled with Lucy Lawless guesting as journalist D'anna Biers and more of the show's trademark philosophy combine to produce a satisfying hour that contextualizes the preceding season two episodes in terms of folks outside the show's regular cast.

M*A*S*H and BABYLON 5 have both employed documentary episodes to change the narrative perspective on their characters. The latter series even devoted an installment to journalistic corruption in the form of ISN's propaganda campaign against the titular space station's crew. BATTLESTAR GALACTICA continues the legacy with Biers investigating Galactica in the wake of the Gideon Massacre. With Adama and Roslin's blessing, the reporter is allowed full access to the vessel which leads to some remarkably subtle interactions between journalist and crew. The heart of the episode plays on the essential conservativism of the military contrasted with the naturally liberal notions of the media. While the former is concerned with maintaining the status quo, the latter desperately wants to overthrow the establishment in the pursuit of truth. As ever, the Galactica's crew is wary of anyone who might undermine the security of the fleet and some soldiers are more comfortable in front of the camera than others. Pilot shouting matches and Colonel Tigh's obvious distress at being taped provide "behind the scenes" highlights while interviews with Lt. Gaeta and CPO Dualla not only give the characters first names, but offer them a moment in the spotlight without the full weight of their duty limiting their lines.

Where GALACTICA succeeds far and away over B5's similar outings is in the casting of Lucy Lawless as Biers. Similar journalists portrayed on B5 were often unlikable and obviously biased, a criticism that can't be leveled at GALACTICA's stunt casting. Lawless conveys a journalistic intensity that assures viewers that she'll get what she wants, but doesn't exude the arrogant self-righteousness that too easily creeps into the portrayal of such characters. The revelation in the final scene is doubly successful as a result of Lawless's performance and puts another interesting spin on Cylon agendas.

It wouldn't be a proper episode of BATTLESTAR GALACTICA without a nod to the ongoing debate of human and Cylon philosophy. This time, the lecture comes from a Viper pilot who explains to the documentary crew the necessity for "deactivating" the human part of a pilot during combat. "The human part will get you killed," she says offering another insight into creator Ron Moore's subtle argument that the differences between human and Cylon may not be as vast as viewers imagine. The Caprican Valleri's realization that she's still alive aboard Galactica carries a disturbing quality of excitement that suggests depths hitherto unplumbed by the episodes thus far. The opening of every episode promises that "they have a plan," but how this episode fits into that plan remains to be seen.




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Pilot Fishing, part 1
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THE 4400: The Ballad of Kevin and Tess
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STARGATE SG-1: Flesh and Blood
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Comments/Responses
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• Sep 13, 2005, 07:38am •
BSG sucks both old and new...the Cylons both old new are about as menacing as a off balance washing machine on the spin cycle. The technology is dumbed down they have FTL drive but don't have energy based weapons? How stupid is that? Reimagining crap is still crap...

• Sep 13, 2005, 07:45am •
Thank you for your comment, Dragon621. If you like, you may remain, but for the most part those of us here will discuss the show from a viewpoint of liking it. So, since it seems you don't like either the new or the original incarnations, you may find our discussions rather boring.

Now, on to the discussion!


• Sep 13, 2005, 08:45am •
Yeah...I've never found a villain that completely wiped out a race too menacing either. To each his own though.

I think my favorite part of this episode was not the use of the BSG theme, but actually the portrayal of that one space battle. Having it take place only over the radio was an excellent way to handle it. It put the viewer in the position of the typical BSG crew. They don't get to see the battle, and it really gives you the impression of how much the whole battle is completely out of their hands.

What I'm wondering is, why did Lucy Lawless make such a positive piece given the true nature of her character? It seems like something she shouldn't have done.

dawntreader • Sep 13, 2005, 09:04am •
ah, hmmm...

i think you forgot one show that also has done the news reporter caught in the action thingy. SG-1

• Sep 13, 2005, 09:16am •
I wondered about the positive spin on that piece as well. My guess is that she wanted to ensure that she could get access to the Galactica again if necessary by not alienating Adama. It is also possible that she would have put together a piece that actually represented her true feelings as long as they don't directly contradict or conflict with the Cylon plan. These Cylons sometimes seem to be more human in their actions the some humans. Third possibility is that she has her own agenda. Has anyone heard whether Lucy Lawless will be a recurring presence? With her as one of the 12 models of Cylon, it seems it would be difficult to not have her on at least occasionally. And using the original theme really evoked a great emotional response from me at least. If this show keeps up impressing me more each week as it has been doing, the sky's the limit.

• Sep 13, 2005, 09:38am •
I will agree that this episode, as most episodes, raises more questions about the Cylons than it answers. But I think that the reason she gave such a positive piece was spurred by her discovery that Preg-Boomer is still alive. As Cylon Aaron Doral put it, the safety of the child is paramount. They want to make sure that the child survives. If Bears had put together a negative piece, it would have again fractured the fleet and put the survival of the child at more risk. So by making a piece that helps to unify the fleet behind the Galactica, she contributed to the future survival of the child.

• Sep 13, 2005, 10:46am •
They evolved.
They rebeled.
There are many copies.
And they're fracking HOT!

• Sep 13, 2005, 12:02pm •
The reason that Lawless's piece on the Galactica was very positive is very much like the early scene in Gladiator where Maximus and Quintus are talking down about the Germans. They are out there reveling in their defiance, and Quintus remarks that "a people should know when they are conqured", to which Maximus replies "would you Quintus? would I? The Cylons look at us as curiously odd things.

We cling to hope, knowing full well that we are looking extinction right in the eye. It gives them something to chuckle about, because they have no fear of us and we are of no percieveable threat to them anymore. This air of superiorty is only reinforced by the fact that they slipped out a crucial bit of intel, through the news report ruse, right from under our noses. To the Cylons, we probably really are talking monkeys.

In the ancient world, after the battle of Luctera, Sparta slid from its pedestal atop Greece but refused to acknowledge it. As it shrank in military and cultural significance it came to be seen by other greeks and the romans as something quaint. Like, look at these ridiculous spartans... they are still convinced that they matter in the world.

• Sep 13, 2005, 01:51pm •
I think that to understand how D'Anna Biers approached her job you have to look at the original Boomerbot. During most of the time she was on board she wasn't a Cylon pretending to be Boomer, she *was* Boomer. She genuinely believed herself to be human and had no memoriy of the acts of sabotage and subterfuge she commited. Similarly I think that during the time she was on the Galactica D'Anna Biers *was* D'Anna Biers. It was just somewhere, very deep inside her psyche that the Cylon agent dwelt watching with a mind vast, cool and unsympathetic.

• Sep 13, 2005, 01:54pm •
While I like the new BSG, I did think that this episode was a bit lacking. The attack of the Cylons and Lawless seeing the book that that pilot was reading (I forgot his name) were far too convienent to story line.

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