The War of the Gods (Part 1) Analysis
By Walt Atwood
STORY SYNOPSIS
Lieutenant Bojay (portrayed by Jack Stauffer), formerly of the Battlestar
Pegasus, is leading Jolly (Tony Swartz) and a contingent of Silver Spar
squadron vipers on a deep space probe ahead of the Galactica. As they near a
planet, mysterious lights appear in space and begin buzzing the fighters
with unusual speed and swiftness. Bojay orders the pilots to hold their
course, they won't contact the Galactica until they have more information.
But as the vipers probe deeper, the pilots are suddenly overwhelmed by a
bright light and high pitched screech from a brilliant alien colossus which
causes the pilots to black out in flight. On the Galactica, the bridge crew
suddenly looses track of Bojay's patrol. There was a seismic report from the
sector where the planet is located. Apollo, Starbuck and Sheba (Anne
Lockhart) volunteer to fly a recon mission to the last known position of the
Silver Spar patrol.
Upon arriving in the space where the vipers disappeared, Apollo's patrol
finds no traces of the first probe. The scanners indicate no life forms on
the planet. Still, Apollo decides to lead the patrol into this world's
atmosphere for an examination of the surface where the disturbance took
place. Sheba comments on the strange environs of this planet; while
beautiful and habitable, the sky has an eerie glow and the vegetation is all
red tinted. The vipers set down in a lush meadow near a huge, burned out
crater that resembles the crash site of a great ship.
As the warriors start to descend the wall of the crater toward some
wreckage, a strange, white-caped man appears nearby and warns the warriors
off. Apollo and company meet the man, who identifies himself as Count Iblis
(Patrick Macnee). Apollo's hand scanner cannot read anything, from the
wreckage or from this stranger. Iblis tells in curiously vague references
that he is the lone survivor of the crashed vessel, downed by the hitherto
unknown Great Powers. When Apollo offers aid, Iblis smiles and returns the
offer, apparently believing he has plenty to offer the them. Sheba seems
sympathetic, even drawn, to Iblis. An irked Apollo wonders if this strange
man, who speaks in convoluted riddles and seems distressed yet also appears
fit and full of energy and confidence, could somehow be a threat. Sheba
half-speculates Iblis could be one of Baltar's spies, but Starbuck seems to
think one man couldn't be very dangerous. A shuttle is summoned to bring
Iblis back to the Galactica.
Once back aboard the battlestar, Sheba offers to escort Iblis to quarters
and an examination. Adama is curious when Apollo and Starbuck tell of their
encounter on the planet. The commander will await a full report on Iblis.
But Sheba seems completely captivated by the newcomer. She agrees to take
him on a tour of the bridge. While there, the ship's instrumentation goes
haywire. When Iblis departs, everything reutrns to normal. Apollo and
Starbuck visit the Galactica's head surgeon, who reports that all attempts
to scan Iblis' body have failed. When Adama learns from Tigh that Iblis was
seen touring the bridge, the commander is outraged. Why would an unknown
alien be exposed to a sensitive military post? Adama demands the Iblis be
summoned to the commander's office immediately. Apollo and Starbuck find
Iblis touring the triad court (like combining basketball with a little pool
and doubles tennis) with an adoring Sheba, who is now in a civilian dress.
Apollo orders Iblis to accompany him to the commander's office. Both Iblis
and Sheba protest. Apollo offers Iblis the chance to come freely, or as a
prisoner. Sheba leaves, insisting Iblis "is the only man who ever really
knew me." Iblis goes to leave, but stops and says with an eerie smile
"Apollo, don't ever make the mistake of threatening me again, or you'll
forfeit your life in the wink of an eye."
Adama privately confronts Iblis, who reveals very few answers. The strange,
caped man offers only this: "Your people will be safe, under my leadership."
Sheba takes Iblis to an agro-ship, where they tour an arboretum. There,
Iblis reveals he can read Sheba's mind, about her wish to be reunited with
her father, Cain. He uses this to seduce Sheba. In one of the Galactica's
labs, Apollo and Starbuck ask Dr. Wilker (John Dullagham) if Iblis could be
an android. Wilker agrees that it is very possible to make a lifelike
machine. Just then, the Galactica goes on alert. The fleet is being buzzed
by the bright lights which the viper patrols encountered earlier. Adama
addresses the fleet's public address system, assuring people not be alarmed.
There are no hostile moves being made by the lights. Interceptors are
launched. The pilots try to track the lights, but find any attempts to keep
up with them impossible. Before the ships can turn around to return to the
Galactica, the brilliant alien colossus appears again and the interceptors
disappear. Adama again confronts Iblis. This time, Iblis displays the power
to move a candle display by sheer force of will. Iblis offers that he is
from a race of beings that have harnessed the power of the mind. He proposes
that he will perform three "miracles" as tests of his worthiness. Passing
these tests will mean that Iblis will assume leadership.
In deep space, a Cylon basestar is buzzed by the strange lights. Baltar
gazes into a malfunctioning scanner while Lucifer reports that the Cylon
fighters are not swift enough to intercept these lights. Baltar muses on the
origin of the lights: "Adama. He has scientists aboard the Galactica." Could
this be some technological breakthrough? Lucifer expresses hope that it is.
This astounds Baltar. Lucifer indicates that the alternative is that some
other force in the Universe has been discovered, one that is more powerful
than their own. On board a freighter starship fashioned into a refugee
habitat, Sheba shows Iblis the primitive conditions people live under.
Apollo again confronts Iblis, but this time Iblis rallies the civilians to
his support. He says to go to the agroships and see that there is food in
abundance. Sure enough, Dr. Wilker and the agroship hand show Apollo that
the trees bare new fruit. On the Galactica, the Council of Twelve convenes,
and Iblis tells them what they were thinking. The first test Iblis will face
is to "deliver your enemy unto you this night".
On the Cylon basestar, Lucifer reports that attempts to intercept the lights
proved impossible. Baltar decides to contact the Galactica and fly in his
fighter to negotiate with Adama. News of Baltar's pending arrival spreads
"like sunbursts, through every corner of the fleet." The people are
jubilant. Their enemy has been delivered.
A Second Look
Once again, BATTLESTAR has shown us a two-part story where the first part
stands on its own.
One thing I found odd: Apollo's scan of the red planet indicated "NO LIFE
FORMS", yet we see the surface of the world covered with vegetation. And we
hear the faint sound of songbirds in the background during the lush garden
scenes.
There are some very loose ends in this story: why did the bright lights
start buzzing the vipers in the first place, and why did the brilliant alien
colossus abduct the fighter pilots? Were the Great Powers trying to keep the
pilots from discovering Iblis on the red planet? If so, why didn't they
simply drop the pilots off again, headed in the opposite direction? Why hold
them against their will? This contradicts the notion of free will in this
episode.
Why did the Council of Twelve not confront Count Iblis about the ship found
crashed in the crater on the red planet? Shouldn't they make him explain
what happened? It seems like everyone forgot where this Iblis was discovered
in the first place. It doesn't make any sense for the fleet's leadership to
welcome an alien so easily.
If Iblis must allow people to flock to him of their own free will, how did
he get away with sweeping Sheba off her feet? She initially expressed
concern for his well being. It seems that he took control of her by reading
her thoughts and exerting telepathic influence over her. That's more than
just con-artistry. Sheba's careless attitude toward Apollo is also
disturbing. While her insubordination exhibits clearly that she is being
influenced by Iblis, it also seems to take her out-of-character too
suddenly. Would she be so disrespectful of a superior officer, so quickly?
The scene where Apollo confronts Iblis on the triad court, only for Iblis to
turn and make a clearly terroristic threat to Apollo, was off the scale.
Apollo was within his rights (and duties as a commissioned officer) to
arrest Iblis right there, with Starbuck as his witness. Of course, they
were all soft on Iblis right from the start. Iblis should've been placed in
military custody from the time he was discovered on the red planet. It is
the duty of warriors to treat a newcomer in a potentially dangerous
situation as a suspect. Clearly, they had Probable Cause.
Count Iblis wins support from the civilians far too easily. The elder lady
(Paula Victor) says "forget Adama" too quickly. If the people of the fleet
respect their own protectors so little and exhibit such opportunism, then it
seems they survive in spite of themselves, not because of themselves. Such a
mentality would not last long in the icy cold of space...
A paradox is created by Baltar's arrival aboard the Galactica. Did Iblis
cause Baltar to make contact? If so, then it's a foregone conclusion that
not all of the dancing lights are hostile to Iblis. In fact, Iblis would
have to be responsible for the lights buzzing the Cylon basestar. Why else
would those lights visit the Cylons? Lucifer indicates they were previously
unknown to the Cylons.
If Iblis did not cause Baltar to come to the Galactica, but simply saw the
future and took credit for it, then why did the lights buzz the Cylons?
This episode walks a fine like between the telepathic science fiction of
STAR TREK and the magical, spiritual fantasy of STAR WARS (20th Century Fox,
1977). The scenes where Sheba is being influenced by Iblis seem too much
like the Jedi parlor tricks, like when Obi-Wan Kenobi affected the "weak"
minds of the Imperial guards near the Skyport. GALACTICA would do best to
keep inside sci fi territory.
Spectacle Value
The brilliant alien colossus, or "ship of lights", was a great special
effect. The visual effect gives the impression that this is a huge, Death
Star-like city in space that would make a Colonial battlestar, or even a
Cylon basestar, look small in comparison. But equally eerie is the music and
the sound effects that go with the colossus.
The little round balls of light do the job, but are less impressive. They
seem too surrealistic, especially when superimposed over BATTLESTAR's
existing special effects. They also seem inconsistent in size. And the sound
issue begs the question: while it is one thing for warriors to use radio
communications to converse while in flight, how do the lights use sound to
cause them pain? Sound, on its own, does not carry through the vacuum of
space. If the sound is being carried over their comm system, why don't they
just turn the volume down, or shut it off? If the sounds from the lights are
not being carried via comm-link, then how do these warriors come to hear
them? Are the lights causing the ships themselves to resonate? Or maybe the
sound is telepathic in its conveyance, much like the mutant telepaths in the
subterranean Temple of the Holy Fallout in the bizarre post-apocalyptic tale
RETURN TO THE PLANET OF THE APES (20th Century Fox, 1970).
The scenes of the planet surface, apparently seen through a red filter, may
seem like a cheap special effect. Still, they work. It's a shame the show's
makers didn't see fit to show the fighters touching down in a locale more
exotic than a meadow. Despite all this, the planetfall scenes are a dramatic
improvement over seeing so many previous worlds in darkness. The scenes of
the crash site are very effective.
We finally get to see a Colonial warrior using a handheld scanning device
that seems vaguely reminiscent of the tricorders seen in STAR TREK. Apollo's
unit has what appears to be a very small liquid crystal display. Too bad the
makers of this show couldn't stray a couple of decades into their own future
and borrow a Palm or PocketPC for ideas. This is one place where BATTLESTAR
can make better technological sense than TREK: show the warriors using a
handheld device with a built-in scanner, communicator and computer that can
use a wireless link to the spaceships for telemetry purposes. We've already
seen warriors using headsets for hands-free communications. Why not marry
the two ideas? This would actually make for a very plausible special effect.
The costume worn by Count Iblis may not seem at first to be technically
considered a special effect, but it only helped an already capable Patrick
Macnee give that much more of a magnetic presence to his role.
IF BATTLESTAR GALACTICA WERE NEW TODAY...
Iblis' seduction of the Colonial people, including Sheba, would have to be
less magical and more human in nature. Iblis would have to be shown as more
of a lawyer-like con-artist.
There would have to be more exploration of interesting alien places, like
the red planet and the crash site. And there would have to be more detail on
what's going on there than just a "high radion levels" cop-out. Why not show
civilian specialists accompanying a survey mission? It would add depth to
the relationship between the warriors and the refugees in the fleet.
There should also be exploration situations where the Colonists meet aliens
that are profoundly different from the human race. An excellent example of
this would be the beautiful Speilberg picture CLOSE ENCOUNTERS OF THE THIRD
KIND (Columbia Pictures, 1977) which Galactica should've patterned itself
after in the first place.
If BATTLESTAR were to be revived, its makers should think seriously about
bringing Patrick Macnee back to the show. He may be getting older, but he's
just too good to pass up.
This episode proves that BATTLESTAR does not need the Cylons. It would be
far more interesting if the Galactica and her fleet encountered other alien
races-- some more advanced, some not --whose intentions were unclear.
Conversely, it would also be very entertaining to see a "strange bedfellows"
story in which the Galactica has to join forces with a Cylon basestar to
escape a common problem.
The whole use of the Freighter Gemini to exhibit the malcontent dregs of
humanity, combined with the all-too-foolish Council of Twelve (aka dumb old
men draped in grey and white) has, by this point in the series, become a
very tired cliche. An insult, in fact. It's almost as bad as the repetitive
use of Cylon combat footage. If the conditions in the fleet are that bad,
then why doesn't someone propose a seeding program, where a small percentage
of the fleet's people have an opportunity to part ways and settle on some
isolated planet at their own risk? Given that the fleet apparently has the
ability to manufacture fighters and important equipment, why not groom small
contingents of warriors to accompany each group of "Colonial offshoots" in
establishing a new home? This could lead to a variety of stories, including
mutinies from those who do not wish to wait their place in line.
Tidbits & Nit-picks
In this episode, we get to see the warriors making planetfall on an unknown
world, then returning to the Galactica without even mentioning
decontamination procedures.
This marks the last appearance of Lucifer, or any other IL-series Cylon, in
the original BATTLESTAR series. A pity, since they were the only interesting
Cylon characters on the show.
If Iblis' presence jams all of the Colonists' equipment, how did they manage
to launch a shuttle with him in it?
If the presence of the mysterious lights jams Cylon equipment like Iblis
jams the Colonists' equipment, how did the Cylons know the lights were
there, much less launch fighters to investigate?
It is strange enough that Sheba is able to give Iblis a tour of the
Galactica's sensitive posts, but it is patently absurd to think she can give
him a tour of the fleet at will. That takes time, fuel to shuttle from one
ship to another, and permission. Sheba is, after all, in the military.
Earlier in the series, in the episode "The Magnificent Warriors", we are
left with the impression that the fleet has three agroships; a Cylon attack
destroys two of them and damages a third. During this BATTLESTAR outing, we
see at least one, maybe two, such ships. The impression left in the episode
is that there are several such vessels in operation. And apparently, there
is enough excess room in the ship Iblis tours with Sheba for an arboretum.
This implies plenty of room for growing both crops and less space-efficient
trees and other non-agricultural plant life. All this implies that either
there were more agro-ships in the fleet to begin with, or the fleet's
internal industrial infrastructure was able to build new ships.
If the Colonists have the ability to either build new ships or rebuild
existing ones while in flight, then why can't they work to improve the
living conditions of their population?
In this episode, we get to see Adama at his desk with a pen and papers. On
board a fleet in deep space under emergency conditions, one would think that
this kind of primitive technology would be unheard of. Again, these folks
need a Palm or a PocketPC for all their notes, memos and other
documentation.
Once again, BATTLESTAR gives the Bad Guy the best line: when the bright
lights buzz the agro-ship while Iblis is romancing Sheba on board, he tells
her "Don't be beguiled! They taunt you with a glow that conceals everlasting
darkness! Look away, Sheba!" Of course, Casseopia comes in a close second:
"When all of our medical technology fails, we still resort to blatant
feminine wiles."
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