Click HERE, HERE, HERE, HERE, or HERE to see lots more pictures from the
episode.
WOW!
I am not normally a big fan of what I call the "Earthforce"
episodes, nor of space battles as opposed to character
development, but I have gotta say, this is one of the BEST
B5 episodes ever. It, like The Coming of Shadows,
in Season Two, won a Hugo award. Out of B5's two
Hugo-winners, The Coming of Shadows is definitely my
favourite, but this one is great too. It is great because
of the suspense, the tension, and the tragedy. The sense
of impending doom, the wonderment at how did things GET
this bad?, and the simple fact that in THESE space battles,
it's GOOD guys against GOOD guys! We have to kill our OWN
people to save ourselves. In this case, every single blast
of pretty lights, every single snazzy special effect, is
killing someone that either we or the main characters
KNOWS, personally. That's the difference. That's what
turns what could have been a pretty standard episode into
something truly meaningful, scary, and heart-wrenching.
And when it's over, NOTHING will ever be the same in the B5
universe...
The episode pretty much has one monolithic plot, as the
part with Delenn ties back into it later. This was really,
by far, my favourite part (and I'm kinda ticked that I
couldn't find a picture of it). It was SO GREAT getting to
see Delenn be her good ol' butt-kicking self from the first
season again, especially knowing ahead of time that this
will be just about the very last of this side of her we'll
ever see...
I loved her getting RIGHT into the face of the snooty guard
on the Grey Council's ship, I loved her angry, fiery speech
to the Council itself to get off their robed butts and DO
something!, and she easily by far got one of the best lines
of the whole series, let alone this episode:
Enemy Earthforce ship: "Stand down or we'll be forced to
open fire!"
Delenn: "Why not? The ONLY Human Captain ever to survive
a battle with a Minbari fleet is behind me. YOU are in
front of me. If you value your lives, BE SOMEWHERE
ELSE."
Upon which, they all turn tail and jump the HELL out of
there...and we realise yet again, how perfect she and
Sheridan are for each other...
You want space battles? This episode has them out the
wazoo. Except, of course, with the added B5 dimension of
showing the EFFECTS of the big noises and shiny things. It
reminds us that war is NOT fun. It KILLS people, people
just like you and me, people just like our families and
friends. Sheridan calls his father just before the battle,
trying to pretend it's just a casual, friendly call, but
they BOTH know that this could very well be the last time
they ever speak to each other. Clark's evil order to OPEN
FIRE on the Mars colony because they declared independence
causes civillian lives to be lost. Major Ed Ryan mentions
how the captain of one of the "enemy" Earthforce vessels is
someone he knows, with a wife, three kids, and an
Abyssinian cat named "Max". (For me, the cat was the
crowning touch.) And to me, the most dramatic scene--the
one where the reporters at ISN FINALLY get the actual truth
out after years of being too afraid to say it, as they can
ALREADY see the troops heading towards the building, and
they go off the air while being attacked. This is a great
example, for me, about how Straczynski can make you care
about even the MINOR, background characters--at the end of
the war, when the REAL ISN comes back on the air, and the
first reporter you see is the main lady one you're used to
seeing (the one played by Maggie Egan; the character
doesn't have a name beyond "ISN Anchorwoman"), my reaction
was, "IT'S HER!! SHE'S OKAY! SHE WASN'T KILLED!!" Then I
stopped, looked at myself, and went, "WAIT a minute...since
when did I care so much about a background character!" But
that's just it. The writing is so good that it makes you
cheer even the minor people. And seeing how this scene
went, you would not be remiss in assuming the poor lady had
been killed.
Arc advancement? You got it. In this episode, you can
FEEL the plot moving under you, so fast that you might fall
off unless you're careful, in fact. By the end of
Severed Dreams, Mars, Orion 7, and Proxima 3 are
independent colonies. ISN no longer exists--until it comes
back shortly afterwards as a pure propaganda machine.
Delenn BREAKS the Grey Council. That is it. The Minbari
no longer HAVE a ruling body. AT ALL. And if all
that wasn't dramatic enough, Babylon 5 itself BREAKS OFF
FROM EARTH!
I also love how they managed to do all this big dramatic
stuff with things that had been set up carefully, through
all this time. Delenn broke the Grey Council by convincing
them that they were not following the rules set down by
Valen--rules we HAVE heard before. Garibaldi's security
team was able to fend off the boarding parties (which was a
nice touch, by the way--sci-fi battles practically NEVER
think to use boarding parties, as my brother has lamented
on several occasions) by using the Narn security force they
got in the last episode. The White Star stared down the
Earthforce vessels, we already knew that Mars has wanted
independence for some time, B5's secession itself was
foreshadowed by Sheridan taking off his Earthforce badge in
Messages from Earth. And Sheridan was able to make
that fateful announcement by using the holographic system
of The Great Machine on Epsilon 3!
Another theme of this episode that I liked was heroic
women. Oh, yes, B5 has ALWAYS been pretty darned
equalistic, and for that I thank them. But to me, it
seemed that most of the best suspense/drama highlights were
by female characters. Ivanova in her Starfury, Delenn and
the Grey Council's the valiant Captain Sandra Hiroshi's
kamikaze "blaze of glory" ending, and the brave ISN
anchorwoman trying her best to get the REAL news out even
while under attack by government troops! In this episode,
the women truly shined, and being a feminist, I
abso-fraggin-lutely loved it.
You would think that in an episode this serious they would
not have any time for any humour. Ah, but you're
forgetting, this is Babylon 5, a show that is actually
WRITTEN well, so yes, they DO manage to squoosh some
in--just a bit, right at the beginning. The scene with
Londo running afoul of the Narn security guard was
delightful, and I think it marks probably the ONLY time
you'll catch me laughing WITH a Narn at a Centauri's
expense, but you gotta admit--Londo REALLY had it coming to
him, yes?
I leave you now with this public service announcment:
Friends don't let friends fly Starfuries drunk.
Valtoo!
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