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Editing User:Galactica1981/Galactica 1981 Reviews

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This story is different from any other Galactica story thus far because we see a clash of philosophies within the ranks of the military. Cain wants to wage an all-out war against Gamoray, and Adama simply wants to capture the much-needed fuel and escape. The earlier episodes were extremely simplistic in their portaryal of good versus evil. The Colonials are good. The Cylons are evil. Simple as that. Since the good guys are all in the military, the military is always portrayed as being right. Adama, Starbuck, and Apollo had very few moral dilemnas to deal with, which would have made the stories so much more interesting.  
This story is different from any other Galactica story thus far because we see a clash of philosophies within the ranks of the military. Cain wants to wage an all-out war against Gamoray, and Adama simply wants to capture the much-needed fuel and escape. The earlier episodes were extremely simplistic in their portaryal of good versus evil. The Colonials are good. The Cylons are evil. Simple as that. Since the good guys are all in the military, the military is always portrayed as being right. Adama, Starbuck, and Apollo had very few moral dilemnas to deal with, which would have made the stories so much more interesting.  


Baltar personally leading the attack on the Galactica makes the battle much more intense and exciting, mostly because the battle has a storyline. Most of the Galactica space battles are nothing more than a confusing jumble of stock shots haphazardly thrown together with nothing in terms of a flow or climax. (One of the bigger flaws of Return Of The Jedi was that the Battle of Endor had nothing in terms of a storyline.) This time it is different. The Pegasus closing in on Baltar at the end of part one is the best cliff hanger of the series. It is rather fitting that Baltar's forces are taken by surprise, since it was Baltar who caused the colonial warfleet to be taken by surprise in the pilot.
Baltar personally leading the attack on the Galactica makes the battle much more intense and exciting, mostly because the battle has a storyline. Most of the Galactica space battles are nothing more than a confusing jumble of stock shots haphazardly thrown together with nothing in terms of a flow or climax. (One of the bigger flaws of Return Of The Jedi was that the Battle of Endor had nothing in terms of a storyline.) This time it is different. The Pegasus closing in on Baltar at the end of part one is the best cliff hanger of the series. It is rather fitting that Baltar's forces are taken by surprise, since it was Baltar who caused the colonial warfleet to be taken by surprise in the pilot.  


The scene between Adama and Apollo right before the mission to capture the Cylon tankers is very powerful. It shows how, despite being father and son, each of their respective positions forces a distance between them personally. What is especially impressive is that this is done without words. Richard Hatch and Lorne Greene manage to convey more with a facial expression than most actors do with a page of dialogue.
When you put the story under scrutiny, there are some serious flaws. Why are viper pilots sent on a ground mission? Wouldn't the Galactica have specialized teams for that sort of thing? It is also a bit difficult to believe that Sheba could have found a way to go on the mission to Gamoray without permission. It is even more difficult to believe that Cassiopea would have been allowed to just hop on the shuttle. Was she given a crash course on parachuting during the shuttle ride? How could the Colonial warriors have known exactly which building in Gamoray contained the main communications center? And are we to believe that destroying one small communications center would disable the entire city's defense system? If, like me, you can overlook these flaws, this is still a great episode.  
 
 
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*Glen Larson wrote the character of Sheba specifically for Anne Lockhart. She was offered to play a role in the pilot episode (rumored to be Athena, but not verified), but she refused because she didn't care for the character. When Larson sent her the first 25 pages of The Living Legend script, she immediately said yes to play Sheba.
 
*This story is based on an earlier one-episode script called ''The Last Legend'' written by Jim Carlson and Terrence McDonnell.  


Boxey really starts to get on the nerves at this point. Nothing against Noah Hathaway, but Boxey is a character all too typical of standard television. He is an ultra-cute TV kid doing ultra-cute things, yet usually has little or no bearing on the plot. These kinds of characters (most notably the Super Scouts from Galactica 1980) only serve to hurt a show's ratings.
*According to Anne Lockhart, this episode was to end with the Pegasus destroyed but ABC objected, so the fate of the ship was left ambiguous. Had there been a second season, Cain and the Pegasus would likely have returned. (See [[Battlestar Galactica: Year Two proposal]])


When you put the story under scrutiny, there are some serious flaws. Why are viper pilots sent on a ground mission? Wouldn't the Galactica have specialized teams for that sort of thing? It is also a bit difficult to believe that Sheba could have found a way to go on the mission to Gamoray without permission. It is even more difficult to believe that Cassiopea would have been allowed to just hop on the shuttle. Was she given a crash course on parachuting during the shuttle ride? How could the Colonial warriors have known exactly which building in Gamoray contained the main communications center? And are we to believe that destroying one small communications center would disable the entire city's defense system? If, like me, you can overlook these flaws, this is still a great episode.  
*A different Cylon race is seen for the first time in part two.
 
*The original script contains action and dialogue left out of the final cut. To see them, click [[List_of_Deleted_Scenes_(TOS)#The_Living_Legend|here.]]
 
*The scene between Adama and Apollo right before the mission to capture the Cylon tankers is very powerful. It shows how, despite being father and son, each of their respective positions forces a distance between them personally. What is especially impressive is that this is done without words. Richard Hatch and Lorne Greene manage to convey more with a facial expression than most actors do with a page of dialogue.
 
*A funny incident occurred during the shooting of this episode. Universal came up with a unique plan to help deal with the burgeoning production costs of the show: The actors were suddenly forced to pay for coffee and donuts! The cast was in an outrage over it, and Lorne Greene and Lloyd Bridges (both in costume) sternly marched out of the studio and went up into the tall Universal building next to the lot. 15 minutes later, someone quietly removed the price sign from the coffee and donuts table, and that was the end of it.
 
*Boxey really starts to get on the nerves at this point. Nothing against Noah Hathaway, but Boxey is a character all too typical of standard television. He is an ultra-cute TV kid doing ultra-cute things, yet usually has little or no bearing on the plot. These kinds of characters (most notably the Super Scouts from Galactica 1980) only serve to hurt a show's ratings.
 
*To read a review of the Berkely novelization of this episode, click [[The Living Legend (book)|here]].
 
*When Starbuck goes to tell Cassiopeia about Cain's return, why hasn't she already heard about it? Surely news of the arrival of a second battlestar would have swept like wildfire throughout the fleet.
 
*In the pilots' barracks, shortly before the ground assault team heads for the shuttle, Starbuck comes on to Sheba, proposing they make a sexual bet as to whether the mission will succeed. She smilingly tells him it's a bad idea; she wouldn't want to risk having to blow the mission just to avoid living up to the terms of the bet. This is not a missing scene, but it has been cut from the version that occasionally airs on the Sci-Fi channel, so many fans may not be aware of it. It's funny, though a little awkward since Starbuck supposedly has such strong feelings for Cassiopea.
 
*Many viewers are probably confused when Bojay asks Apollo, "You've shot down one Cylon patrol ship in a secton?" For the record, a secton is a week. When Sheba says the assault team will only have millicentons to get out of Gamoray, a millicenton is probably supposed to be a minute given the way she uses it. Of course, this contradicts the way units of time are used in other episodes.
 
*Anne Lockhart has said she did not sign her contract until five years after the show ended.
 
*Lloyd Bridges was Gene Roddenbury's first choice to play Captain Kirk in the original Star Trek series, but he turned it down due to having appeared in a poor science fiction movie called Rocketship X-M (1950).
 
*Anne Lockhart is also well-known for a guest appearance as Buck Roger's long-lost love in the Buck Rogers episode ''A Dream Of Jennifer''.
 
*This episode and Fire In Space were later combined to form the horrid Galactica theatrical movie [[Mission Galactica: The Cylon Attack]].


This episode and Fire In Space were later combined to form the horrid Galactica theatrical movie [[Mission Galactica: The Cylon Attack]].


===[[Fire in Space]]===
===[[Fire in Space]]===

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