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Television Media Sci-Fi

A Battlestar Galactica Prequel Series on the Way 221

kumasame writes "The Sci Fi Channel has announced it will create a prequel to Battlestar Galactica, as the series enters its final season. The two-hour pilot for the production, called Caprica, is expected to be shot in Vancouver this spring with shooting for the series to follow. The first episodes are expected to air this fall. In a Q&A session held yesterday, the creators and stars of the show revealed a number of tidbits of information about the new show and last season of BSG."
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A Battlestar Galactica Prequel Series on the Way

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  • by Shivetya ( 243324 ) on Thursday March 20, 2008 @09:43AM (#22805720) Homepage Journal
    because the show jumped the shark in the third season killing off Starbuck only to show her coming back next season.

    Really, I was enjoying the show very well until deep into the third we had four lead character singing that damn song and Starbuck dieing and coming back.

    Caprica - subtitled "Oops, sorry 'bout that"
  • by Ngarrang ( 1023425 ) on Thursday March 20, 2008 @09:52AM (#22805802) Journal

    because the show jumped the shark in the third season killing off Starbuck only to show her coming back next season.

    Really, I was enjoying the show very well until deep into the third we had four lead character singing that damn song and Starbuck dieing and coming back.

    Caprica - subtitled "Oops, sorry 'bout that"
    Okay, Karma be damned, but I have to say it. This new show jumped the shark when the idiot producer made the changes he did from the actual Battlestar Galactica show. This new show was never BSG, only a poser. There was nothing wrong with the original series, except for being a product of its time. But, change the genders of the most loved character? Bah! Heresy, I say! This show deserves its death. Name the show anything else and it might have had a higher standing in my eyes, but to degrade a classic in such an insipid way?
  • by magarity ( 164372 ) on Thursday March 20, 2008 @10:05AM (#22805928)
    and Starbuck dieing and coming back.
     
    There wasn't a body - she just disappeared. So whether she was killed or not is left to your imagination. Maybe she fell into a trans-warp dimensional flux rift in spacetime or somesuch Star Trekish thing.
     
    Also, remember the prophesy the priest revealed way back when they were still at Kobol: a renegade demon will lead the way to Earth. Has everyone just assumed that referred to a Sharon?
     
    Personally, I'm still holding out for Ellen to be the final Cylon. She was too much of a mess otherwise.
  • by kalirion ( 728907 ) on Thursday March 20, 2008 @10:07AM (#22805944)
    I never understood myself how they made the connection from having a song stuck in their head to being cylons.
  • by BlackSnake112 ( 912158 ) on Thursday March 20, 2008 @10:48AM (#22806354)
    One other thing that I've been wondering about. If the Chief is a cylon, is his new wife a cylon? If not then they also have a cylon/human hybrid.

    And also, who tipped off that there were 12 models?

    But...
    Remember how the cylons keep saying that all this has happened before? Maybe the cylons are trying to figure out what happened/ where they could have done better and this is all a cylon simulation. Everything. The cylons recreated people from the past (all cylon) programed to be those real people. So the entire series is a simulation of past events.

    I gonna get so flamed for this...

  • by jedidiah ( 1196 ) on Thursday March 20, 2008 @10:58AM (#22806500) Homepage
    Good point. This whole "they are among us" hysteria isn't just limited to 9-11.

    People in general (especially teenagers) just tend to be self centered and
    think that they are the only people since the beginning of time that have
    ever "suffered" in the same way. As far as the WWII connection goes, there
    were concentration camps set up in the US to deal with the whole "they are
    among us" hysteria. Just ask George Takei.

    We need a spoof where communist pod people start replacing Cylons...
  • by tmalone ( 534172 ) on Thursday March 20, 2008 @12:13PM (#22807484)
    I think the unsettling part of BSG's dealings with religion lie in the context of the show. Religion on B5 never seemed as nefarious as is does on BSG. It was more of quirky thing, to give each race character. In BSG you have a full blown clash of the civilizations: monotheists versus heathens. That can get pretty touchy and hit a little too close to home. In many ways that makes the show more effective, because the religion aspect is a lot more touchy. In B5 you never got the feeling that the Vorlons and Shadows were fighting for their God's, or because of any real differences other than this ancient conflict between "good" and "evil", "chaos" and "order". With BSG I can't help but be a little creeped out when the cylons ramble on about God's will. B5 was a great show, but I think it dealt with religion and prophesy in a fundamentally different, and safer, way.
  • by Culture20 ( 968837 ) on Thursday March 20, 2008 @12:54PM (#22808080)
    I've been thinking that since the mini-series. I can't wait until the end of this series to see if they rebuild Caprica again.
    I'm hoping that the end-goal of the hypothetical simulation is to find earth. Lets say that maybe this series _does_ have a tie into the original series: The humans in the original series escaped and found earth, but only a few Cylons followed. Now, the Cylons don't know how to get to Earth, so they decide to make similar cylon-humans to try and do it for them (then fake-chase them to make them desire to reach Earth).
  • by nine-times ( 778537 ) <nine.times@gmail.com> on Thursday March 20, 2008 @04:38PM (#22811526) Homepage

    (Season 3 spoilers follow): The return of Bulldog and revelations about corruption and warmongering in the admiralty. That went nowhere. The killing of Sagittarons? Swept under the rug and forgotten. The unhappiness and emerging classism in the fleet? 10 second resolution at the end, and not a peep since.

    Yes, but then again, is this far from real life? Warmongering goes on, and the warmongers don't get punished. Ethnic cleansing gets swept under the rug. The inequity of classes goes ignored, unnoticed, and unresolved.

    On the other hand, I think the series was at its best when it wasn't dealing with the Cylons and science-fiction sorts of things, but rather when it was dealing specifically with social problems within the fleet. I remember early on there was a conflict regarding a girl who wanted an abortion. Beyond our normal social conflicts about this, there was the additional complication that there are only 50,000 humans left in existence. They've done this sort of thing repeatedly, dealing with crime and the black market, terrorism, and other problems that really have nothing to do with robots pretending to be human.

    This is what has made the show great, and it's exactly what good science fiction should do, i.e. depicting real-life (and often controversial) issues in a fantastic setting that allows for the audience to gain a new perspective. I think the more they stray from those sorts of episodes, the worse the show gets.

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