Okay, I came into this episode expecting to hate it,
because I had read all these comments on-line from fans
saying things like "Thank god the second season at least
has not yet had any episodes as weak as some first-season
episodes such as 'Infection' or 'Grail'." So, I expected
to totally HATE it.
However, I didn't. Sure, it's been done, but that didn't
stop the episode from being a creepy, suspenseful,
science-fictiony story with some great lines (especially
from Garibaldi, Ivanova, and Sinclair) and some interesting
character development.
It's not going to be my FAVOURITE episode (so far, that honour goes to either "Sic Transit Vir" or "The Long Night") by a LONG shot, but I didn't hate it either.
We learn, for example, that Sinclair has a death-wish and
that the reason he's always going out on dangerous missions
every chance he gets is because he has been traumatised by
the Earth/Minbari war and thinks it would be easier to find
something worth dying for than to find something worth
living for. We find out that Garibaldi has a rather
chequered past--but no more than the fact that it IS
chequered--no details as of yet. We find out that there is
a growing "Pro-Earth" movement of fanatics heavily against
aliens. And we see our first ISN reporter.
I also liked this episode because it showcased (partially)
Dr. Stephen Franklin. Franklin is a character that most
fans HATE for some reason, and I can never see why. So for
me, it's always interesting to actually see him in action,
so I can decide for myself. Me, I like him just fine so
far. (And this may be a little embarrassing of a thing to
put on a public webpage, but I think he's dang
exotic-looking! How come whenever female B5 fans are
listing the males of B5 that make them drool, he is NEVER
mentioned? I mean, what is he, chopped flarn?)
As for the story itself...well, the reason that I LIKED it
is probably the exact reason that most B5 fans HATED it.
You see, it's very, VERY..."Star Trek".
Yes, I'm serious. The ideals and morals of the story are
very much closer to the open-minded, optimistic, "power to
the people!" attitude of Trek than they are to the USUAL
dark, gloomy, paranoid and predjudiced B5 atmosphere.
Maybe it didn't fit but I LIKED that message and I adored
Sinclair's quote: "We are ALL aliens, to each other. Too
tall, too short, too light, too dark. ALL imperfect."
That sums us up so perfectly.
And of course, that is the EXACT reason--the Trek-ness--why most B5 fans HATED it. Heck, even Straczynski himself said he wishes he could just pretend it had never happened! But that's the amazing thing about Babylon 5. It has so MANY different elements, so much diversity, that different fans can like it for completely OPPOSITE reasons! What one fan loves another may hate--and yet, they are still both fans of the same show.
It had pretty good makeup effects and some very tense
action sequences. Ivanova had that great line, to the
ISN reporter, when she was trying to bug Sinclair in C&C:
"Don't. You're too young to feel that kind of pain."
And the ending speech by Sinclair, which I am sure I am
going to mangle, was just BEAUTIFUL. The last line,
especially, is sooooo quotable. It also sounds like
something Kirk, Picard, Sisko or Janeway would and could
say. I'll try to quote it here:
ISN REPORTER: And now for the big question, the one that's
on everyone's minds--should we just give up and go home? Is
it worth our while to stay out here? Or should we pull
back to Earth and deal with our own problems?
SINCLAIR: No, absolutely not. And for a simple reason.
Ask 10 different scientists what we should best do to
protect our environment, our health, our genetics--and
you'll get 10 different answers. But ALL the scientists
agree on one thing--one day, it may happen in a hundred
years, or a thousand, or even a million, but one day, our
Sun WILL cool off and go out. And if we are still confined
to Earth when that happens, not only will all of us be
lost, but we'll also loose--Marilyn Monroe. And Lao Tsu,
and Shakespeare, and Einstein, Buddy Holly, Eristophanes.
All of it. It will all have been for nothing--
--unless we go to the stars. .
Sniff. Beautiful, poignant stuff. Gorgeous. And so true.
Excuse me while I get a handkerchief...and go make a
donation to NASA.
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