Editing Talk:Battlestar Galactica: The Final Five 1/Archive 1
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::::(That, plus his resulting lament aboard the sub-FTL Resurrection ship about "better" people other than him deserving to survive, due to his homelessness, was moving, and added some much-needed depth and texture to Sam's character.) | ::::(That, plus his resulting lament aboard the sub-FTL Resurrection ship about "better" people other than him deserving to survive, due to his homelessness, was moving, and added some much-needed depth and texture to Sam's character.) | ||
::::As for ''The Plan'' potentially contradicting this historical series -- I highly doubt it, personally, since it's mainly going to be focusing upon Cavil's control over the skinjobs immediately leading up to the war, and showing the first season's events from his POV. There probably won't be much, if any, room there to work in references to the comic series, supportive or contradictory | ::::As for ''The Plan'' potentially contradicting this historical series -- I highly doubt it, personally, since it's mainly going to be focusing upon Cavil's control over the skinjobs immediately leading up to the war, and showing the first season's events from his POV. There probably won't be much, if any, room there to work in references to the comic series, supportive or contradictory. ''Caprica'', though, could be another story, but that all depends, too. | ||
::::There are several big examples in recent genre SF of certain non-filmic works being the definitive "canonical" statement on a particular continuity issue or other (''Babylon 5'' and ''Highlander'' having canonical novels and comics both spring immediately to mind), and given the seeming lack of storyline-opportunity for works like ''The Plan'' to take a stance on this ancient history one way or another, I think we'll be seeing this comic series being fairly well-regarded in the years to come. --[[User:The Bandsaw Vigilante|The Bandsaw Vigilante]] 23:59, 12 August 2009 (UTC) | ::::There are several big examples in recent genre SF of certain non-filmic works being the definitive "canonical" statement on a particular continuity issue or other (''Babylon 5'' and ''Highlander'' having canonical novels and comics both spring immediately to mind), and given the seeming lack of storyline-opportunity for works like ''The Plan'' to take a stance on this ancient history one way or another, I think we'll be seeing this comic series being fairly well-regarded in the years to come. --[[User:The Bandsaw Vigilante|The Bandsaw Vigilante]] 23:59, 12 August 2009 (UTC) | ||