Lost Planet Of The Gods Part II Analysis
By Walt Atwood
STORY SYNOPSIS
As the infected pilots recover in the Galactica's infirmary, the maverick
shuttle pilots brag up their victory in the Officer's Club. Starbuck and
Apollo are relieved to hear that the bridge crew has detected an unknown
blip trailing the Galactica fleet, just beyond tracking range. At first,
Tigh approaches Apollo about leading a recon patrol to see what's out
there. Then Serina appears and insists she is assigned as Apollo's
wingman. In the confusion, Starbuck launches in Apollo's fighter. Apollo
takes after Starbuck, followed by Serina.
The Cylon lure works. A slew of their raiders descend on Starbuck's ship
before he knows what hit him. Without a shot fired, Starbuck is lost at
the void's fringe. Aboard the Cylon Basestar, Lucifer and the Centurions
escort their catch to Baltar. It is here that we learn of Baltar's plan
to approach Adama with this new hostage as a peace offering. The
encounter is as much a surprise to Lucifer as it is to Starbuck.
On the Galactica's bridge, Apollo cannot resist staring into the scanner,
hoping to see Starbuck's Viper reappear. Serina consoles Apollo, but he
still cannot accept that their comrade could disappear so suddenly.
Serina presses on for marriage, saying that the predicament they are in
may never end, and Starbuck would've wanted them to move on. As Adama
performs the "sealing" ceremony on the Galactica's amphitheater deck,
Tigh notices a star appearing. If Adama is right, the planet orbiting
that star is Kobol: the birthplace of the human race.
Lucifer reports that the Galactica has been sighted approaching a dead
planet orbiting a lone star. Baltar figures out what is happening and
orders his personal craft readied. Lucifer cannot accept Baltar's
confidence in approaching the humans with a peace plan.
On the planet's surface, Adama wants camp set up on a site of pyramids, a
sphinx and other great ruins he suspects were once the thriving city of
Eden, "the first to fall" on ancient Kobol. Apollo and Serina are
grateful to have a dead planet to themselves for a honeymoon. As the
warriors ready to bivouac among the ruins, Adama orders a guard to be
posted.
As Adama, Apollo and Serina probe the pyramid "temple", which turns out
to be the tomb of "the ninth Lord of Kobol," they discover an elaborate
protective access system, which can only be opened by a Medallion from
the Council of Twelve. Apparently, the ninth and final lord returned to
Kobol to die after the thirteen tribes left to form new colonies beyond
the void. The writings in the temple reveal the "last days" of this
civilization. As Adama pays his respects to the dead, Baltar appears,
wearing his own Medallion. When the traitor greets Adama as "old friend",
the beleaguered Battlestar commander lunges for his enemy's throat.
Baltar insists he has been defamed by these treason charges. He tells of
how he has seen the Cylon seat of power in chaos; how the Galactica could
strike their capital and devastate the Cylons. Adama hisses to Baltar:
"you have the tongue of an angel, and the soul of a serpent." Apollo
takes Baltar into custody.
Back on the Basestar, a Centurion is paged to Baltar's throne room... to
find Lucifer perched on the pedestal and ready to declare Baltar's peace
envoy a failure. Though the Centurion is certain Baltar will deliver the
Galactica fleet to Cylon, Lucifer is "thinking out loud" about why he was
not chosen to be the new Imperious Leader over his "IL-group"
competition; perhaps a military victory under his command might change
his stature. "What is your command?" the Centurion asks.
On the planet's surface, the rookie warriors are enjoying their open-air
evening on Kobol, when Starbuck appears. Apollo orders the warriors to
ready themselves and demands that Baltar explain what is going on. When
Apollo takes the traitor back into the tomb to talk to Adama, Serina
notices that the sunlight is intensifying. As the light beams into the
tomb, it is caught by Adama's Medallion. the focused rays activate the
temple chamber's secret mechanism, and a deeper chamber is revealed. Once
inside, Adama discovers more writings of what happened here. But then the
tomb begins to shudder: the Cylons have begun a bombardment of the ruins.
Starbuck and Athena begin launching a counter-strike from the camp. On
the Galactica, Boomer and some of his fellow warriors report for duty.
"Lieutenant, obviously you can't even stand", Tigh warns Boomer. Boomer
replies "The Viper is flown from the seated position, sir." Just when all
seems lost for Starbuck and Athena, Boomer and company rout the Cylon
attack. On Kobol, the Cylon attack nearly kills those left in the tomb.
Adama is just about to learn of the thirteenth tribe when a Cylon attack
shatters the tomb, leaving the writings destroyed and Baltar trapped
under the rubble. While Adama's party try to free Baltar, they eventually
give up and abandon him. The traitor vows to get even with Lucifer, "you
have not heard the last of Baltar!"
Back on the surface, Adama, Serina and Apollo are reunited with Starbuck
and Blue Squadron when Cylon infantry guns down Serina. She is mortally
wounded but evac'ed to the Galactica before Apollo and Boxey say
good-bye. Apollo now must rear the little boy on his own.
A Second Look
This BATTLESTAR outing makes splendid use of John Colicos as Baltar, and
the phenomenal robot Lucifer, animated by Felix Silla and voice by
Jonathan Harris. The duel of the titan egos on the Basestar takes a
strange turn, mixing doses of comedy with treachery. The sight of the
IL-Cylon on Baltar's throne approaches farce. But the show belongs to
Colicos' Baltar, whose con-artist tour-de-force comes into full bloom on
Kobol.
The notion of a star appearing overhead at the very moment when Apollo
and Serina are sealed was well played, if a bit too coincidental. When
later Baltar apologizes to the air for defiling the ancient crypt, and
then begs Adama to "use your power... get us out of here", the whole
Kobolian mystery is a bit over the top. It is not clear if the show's
makers want us to believe that Adama is tracing the footsteps of history
for a well-grounded cause, or if his quest is based on some magic from
the dead. One good thing is clear: Adama's Medallion beat Indiana Jones'
staff-jewel laser to the Well of Souls by a few years. :-)
Missing from the Sci Fi channel "syndicated" version of this episode was
a nice shot of Starbuck's Viper on approach to the Basestar. Other scenes
seem chopped down to allow for commercial time. The explanation for
Boomer's sudden recovery isn't adequate, either. Way too abrupt. This
detracts significantly from the serialization aspect of the series.
Speaking of which...
This episode underscores the serialized, soap-opera nature of the series
does work well when it is allowed in the oven for long enough, and with
the right ingredients. "Part 2" capitalizes on all the events that came
before and does well on its own.
Jane Seymour turns in an improved portrayal of Apollo's bride, Serina.
Too bad it was her swan song in the role. She was really starting to make
something with it. But what was she doing out there on recon probe? That
whole scene almost made a farce out of Starbuck's abduction. It's like
Mom insisted on following Dad on his trip outta town. "Can I have the
keys to the station wagon?" More proof positive that the show's makers
did not take the war and military aspects of the series as seriously as
they should have.
Spectacle Value
Maren Jensen gives a nice cameo appearance as Athena, ready to fight the
Cylons: fluffy hair, makeup and all. If Calvin Klein ever needed a female
fighter pilot for a designer jeans ad campaign, Athena would be the lady.
Speaking of ladies, at least the "girl" demeaning was toned down. Too bad
they had to dub in those silly "Eeeee!" screams when the Cylons attacked
the camp. Maybe showing one of the ladies hopping into the turret atop a
land-ram would've been a better use of footage. They didn't even have to
show the turret firing; just one lady ready to fend off the attackers
while the others get clear to their fighters. But this was 1978, after
all.
This two-part story cemented the status of Richard Hatch and Dirk
Benedict as stars of the show. Make no mistake, even though some remember
it as "BATTLESTAR PONDEROSA", Apollo and Starbuck are at the top of the
characters list.
While this episode recycles some space and combat footage, the real
spectacle is the focus of the plot: the ancient ruins. Every Kobol scene
was effective, shot and performed better than anything thus far in the
series. Even the Cylon attack worked beautifully. That great success also
fuels the confusion behind what the series is trying to communicate about
this quest for thirteenth tribe: the physical manifestations seem to
suggest the quest is based on ancient heritage, while the
magical/legendary aspect suggests mysticism.
The other great thing about GALACTICA is the music. The score here was
much better than in "Part 1." This series championed the power of music,
even freezing an occasional touch of Colonial pseudo-disco in time. It is
a treat to listen to.
IF BATTLESTAR GALACTICA WERE NEW TODAY:
This episode would be the most viable. Even though the Cylons have
definitely worn out their welcome by now, the quest and the pursuit are
tightly bound in a drama that works well against the backdrop of ancient
ruins. Despite this, I also just watched a STARGATE SG-1 rerun of "The
Fifth Race," in which Colonel O'Neil is accidentally "programmed" to make
contact with the Askard race in another galaxy by reconfiguring the
Stargate portal. Ironically, STARGATE seems to borrow from BATTLESTAR's
theme of ancient mystery, underdog exploring the unknown, and the
serialization of drama. Maybe now, if the older franchise is revived, it
can learn from its younger student. STARGATE goes a step further by
layering its cosmic history. It isn't just found in ancient historical
texts in one place or time. The cosmos is much bigger than that. "The
Fifth Race" shows us multiple legacies that are ongoing and more complex.
What if this thirteenth tribe branched off, settling in more than one
place? Or what if the thirteenth tribe intermarried with another race,
and turns out not to be human anymore? Or what if it turns out that the
Galactica unknowingly is leading the thirteenth tribe, and will
ultimately settle on Earth? Or what if Earth is humanity's point of
origin, which then spread to Kobol, and lost track of its roots? (Maybe
the Great Colonies are thousands of years in humankind's future.)
They would have to do a better job depicting the abyss.
If they ever got their hands on another casting coup like Jane Seymour,
they had better not let go of her. Mistakus collossus!
They would have to be a little more clever with their allegories. Some
say the series reminded them of the Mormon legacy. Others say it was
derived from THE AENID by Virgil. There is also a whiff of the original
American colonists arriving from England to escape persecution under the
Crown. This was impossible to define in one year's slate of episodes. If
a revival were to champion an agenda, it would have to choose a direction
(or directions) to go in and be more thorough in defining them.
They would also have to be more careful how they treat regular
characters, like Baltar and Lucifer. Even a non-serialized drama cannot
show scenes like the one with Lucifer on the throne or the one where
Baltar is trapped in the tomb without showing how they are reconciled.
Irresponsiblus galacticus!
They should do what is necessary to lure Patrick MacNee back to the show,
if only for brief appearances and/or voice-overs. The introductory "There
are those who believe..." narrative is best kept alive, and delivered by
him.
TIDBITS & NITPICKS
Neat: the Cylons are supposed to still be hidden in the void, yet there
are stars everywhere.
Apollo's plea to Adama to flee Kobol "while the star is still dormant"
makes it clear that Kobol is in the heart of the abyss, not its far edge.
So why do we see so many stars there? Does the abyss mask a wormhole or
something that sends the ships across hyperspace to emerge in a new
galaxy, a la "The Long Patrol" and "The Hand of God"? This is never fully
established, one way or another.
Kobol must have a peculiar rotation. When they go into the tomb, it is
day, when Starbuck reappears, it is night. When Adama unwittingly opens
the tomb's deepest chamber, it is as if mid-day is near. When the Cylons
attack, it is night again. If these sudden changes occur because of the
fluctuations in the star, it's a miracle this world isn't in an ice age.
It makes no sense...
... for Apollo to allow his green pilot-trainees to make planetfall with
their Vipers. They don't need fighter-craft down there, much less that
many pilots.
... for the Cylons to attack the ruins, not the Galactica first.
... for so many pilots to be with their ships on the planet, and then
Boomer and his squadron launch with even more ships from the Galactica. I
don't think they are supposed to have that many Vipers at this stage in
the series.
Again, in order for the "endless" nature of this void to make any sense,
all craft in the Galactica and Cylon fleets, especially fighters, must be
capable of at least the speed of light, if not several times that speed.
The generic term "lightspeed" must apply to varying magnitudes of
faster-than-light travel.
Nice to see that Sara Rush's "Woman on Duty" is instead listed as Rigel.
She made a nice little supporting cameo in "Part 1", and again in "Part
2". She delivers a professional sounding "launch when ready." Too bad we
don't get to see more.
Even though Hatch's Apollo and Benedict's Starbuck get the top billing,
everyone else still gets the best lines, from Athena needling Starbuck to
get into battle, to Adama's parting shot to Baltar "It seems your friends
have sealed your fate as well as ours." And the best scene in this
episode was when Baltar first appeared in the tomb and Adama lunged at
the traitor. Lorne Greene still had some action in him! :-)
You have to love the charitable nature of Adama and his family. There's
Baltar, a guy who would make Hitler look like a pussycat, trapped under
that rubble, and Adama, Apollo and Serina are risking their lives and
giving themselves a hernia just to save that crazy, corrupt S.O.B. That's
compassion of Biblical proportions!
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