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Galactica Discovers Earth, Part I: Difference between revisions

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* The dialogue between Dr. [[Zee]] and Adama regarding Earth's present state of development runs longer. Adama notes Zee's age (14) and after being told to send out the patrol beyond its usual range, issues a coded battle order to Troy and Dillon. This is called "Operation Caprica", and color-coded. Using turbo-thrusters, Troy and Dillon run into two Cylon [[Raider (TOS)|Raiders]], which they destroy before the Cylons can report that they've been compromised. Dillon and Troy return to the Fleet.<ref>''Ibid.'', pgs. 5-8</ref>
* The dialogue between Dr. [[Zee]] and Adama regarding Earth's present state of development runs longer. Adama notes Zee's age (14) and after being told to send out the patrol beyond its usual range, issues a coded battle order to Troy and Dillon. This is called "Operation Caprica", and color-coded. Using turbo-thrusters, Troy and Dillon run into two Cylon [[Raider (TOS)|Raiders]], which they destroy before the Cylons can report that they've been compromised. Dillon and Troy return to the Fleet.<ref>''Ibid.'', pgs. 5-8</ref>
* After the two Air Force jets launch missiles at Troy and Dillon's [[Viper (1980)|Viper]]s, they avoid this by using their invisibility shield (referred to at this point in the script as a "force shield).<ref>''Ibid.'', p. 18</ref>
* After the two Air Force jets launch missiles at Troy and Dillon's [[Viper (1980)|Viper]]s, they avoid this by using their invisibility shield (referred to at this point in the script as a "force shield).<ref>''Ibid.'', p. 18</ref>
* Pilot #2 makes a crack about [[w:McDonnell Douglas|McDonell (sic) Douglas]] and [[w:Sperry Corporation|Sperry Rand|]], two US defense contractors.<ref name="p19">''Ibid.'', p. 19</ref>
* Pilot #2 makes a crack about [[w:McDonnell Douglas|McDonell (sic) Douglas]] and [[w:Sperry Corporation|Sperry Rand]], two US defense contractors.<ref name="p19">''Ibid.'', p. 19</ref>
* The [[turbocycle]]s as written are "something on the order of a motorcycle, but instead of wheels, it seems to be suspended on some kind of force field".<ref name="p19"/> This is what drives the cycles, which prompt the interest of [[Donzo]] and [[Willy]].<ref>''Ibid.'', p. 22-23</ref>
* The [[turbocycle]]s as written are "something on the order of a motorcycle, but instead of wheels, it seems to be suspended on some kind of force field".<ref name="p19"/> This is what drives the cycles, which prompt the interest of [[Donzo]] and [[Willy]].<ref>''Ibid.'', p. 22-23</ref>
* [[Dorothy Carlyle]] gives [[Donald Mortinson]] a neck massage; Mortinson agrees with the protesters on the fact that they've advanced their technology too fast.<ref>''Ibid.'', p. 20-22</ref>
* [[Dorothy Carlyle]] gives [[Donald Mortinson]] a neck massage; Mortinson agrees with the protesters on the fact that they've advanced their technology too fast.<ref>''Ibid.'', p. 20-22</ref>

Revision as of 23:10, 11 July 2008

Galactica Discovers Earth, Part 1
"Galactica Discovers Earth, Part 1"
An episode of the Galactica 1980 series
Episode No. Season 1, Episode 1
Writer(s) Glen A. Larson
Story by
Director Sidney Hayers
Assistant Director
Special guest(s) {{{guests}}}
Production No. 85510
Nielsen Rating
US airdate USA 1980-01-27
CAN airdate CAN {{{CAN airdate}}}
UK airdate UK
DVD release
Population survivors
Additional Info Script available on BattlestarPegasus.com
Episode Chronology
Previous Next
The Original Series Galactica Discovers Earth, Part 1 Galactica Discovers Earth, Part II
[[IMDB:tt{{{imdb}}}|IMDb entry]]
Listing of props for this episode
Related Media
@ BW Media
Promotional Materials
Online Purchasing
Amazon: Standard Definition | High Definition
iTunes: [{{{itunes}}} USA]


Overview

The battlestar Galactica and the Colonial fleet reach the planet Earth, but soon realize that the Cylon fleet, long thought to be gone, has trailed them to the fabled planet, and will stop at nothing to extinguish all human life.

Summary

  • Adama and Doctor Zee, a child genius that advises the Commander, discover that they have arrived at Earth in 1980, but the planet's inhabitants, descendants of the Thirteenth Tribe, are at a low level of cultural and technological development in comparison to the remnants of the Twelve Colonies of Man.
  • Dr. Zee informs Adama that the Fleet cannot land on Earth. When Adama objects, Zee notes that the Cylons have followed them to Earth. When Adama reminds him that the Cylons had not been seen in a "billion star miles"[2], Zee notes that their enemies have chosen not to be seen to allow the Fleet to find Earth for them.[3]
  • To make his point further, Zee shows the leaders of the Fleet a video simulating a Cylon attack on Los Angeles. The conclusion is clear: at its present level of technology, the Earth will be of no assistance to defending the Fleet against the approaching Cylons.
  • Dismayed by his ignorance in leading the Cylons to Earth, Adama orders pairs of warriors to contact key scientists with the various nations on Earth, to help them speed up the planet's technological capabilities.
  • Two of the Colonials to be dispatched are Adama's grandson Captain Troy and Lieutenant Dillon, who are tasked with contacting scientists in the United States. Dillion asks about Troy's nickname, and Troy tells more about his late father and mother as Troy shows Dillon a picture of his family when Troy was a child.
  • Adama briefs a gathering of what appear to be senior representatives of the Fleet about Earth, its solar system and habitable surface, including Quorum member Xaviar, who looks dismayed. The presentation, later led by Dr. Zee, discusses the Earth's comparatively limited technology as well as environmental problems. Throughout the presentation, Troy and Dillion quip about the strange things they see, unaware of Earth's serious limits. Dr. Zee shows the group his simulated Cylon attack, which greatly agitates the gathering.
  • Xavier challenges Doctor Zee's conclusions on avoiding habitation of Earth by moving the Fleet away and hopefully drawing the Cylon's full attention from Earth as well. Zee proposes a slow approach to encourage introduction of Colonial technology through Earth scientists willing to work surreptitiously.
  • Doctor Zee provides a team of Colonial Warriors with some gadgets to assist their infiltration efforts. One of the gadgets is an invisibility cloak that can render the warriors and their vehicles unseen. The warriors will be able to use motorcycles to get around on the surface, which are also able to fly, as well as stun weapons to incapacitate Earth humans without killing them.
  • It is also noted that, in the lighter gravity of Earth, the Colonials will have the ability to leap to great heights.
  • Each team will be spread about Earth's world populations to begin their mission. Troy and Dillon are headed for the United States, specifically, the Los Angeles area. Dillon laments that they didn't get Kip's pick to visit the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics as it sounded more enticing from a carousing perspective.
  • Descending to the Earth in their Vipers, the U.S. Air Force detects the strange aircraft. Troy and Dillon are intercepted by Air Force fighters. As the fighters fire on the Vipers, they pull away easily and make a hasty landing in a field near Los Angeles.
  • Hiding their ships with the invisibility screens, they take to their motorcycles, and shortly thereafter have a run in with a biker gang, which they escape through use of their motorcycle's flying capabilities.
  • Changing into contemporary clothes, Troy and Dillon stop at a service station to make a call to the scientist they are to contact, Dr. Donald Mortinson at the Pacific Institute of Technology.
  • While attempting to use the phone, they run into Jamie Hamilton, who's on her way to L.A. for a job interview with the UBC television network. Hamilton watches the two try to gain currency to use the pay phone when she catches them in the act.
  • When she learns that the duo is on their way to see the controversial Dr. Mortinson, who has developed a new form of nuclear technology, Hamilton offers to give them a lift to the Pacific Institute of Technology.
  • Doctor Mortinson questions himself with his aide on whether the angry mob is truly ready or willing to accept the advanced technology. When the mobs start to throw rocks, Mortinson leaves to get someone to clean the mess.
  • Pushing past anti-nuclear protesters at the campus and stunning a guard, Troy and Dillon reach Dr. Mortinson's lab. Mortinson is not present. His aide is incredulous at their supposed ability to comprehend his formulas. The aide secretly instructs the security guards by phone to arrive and soon arrest the two intruders.
  • Before being hauled away by security, Troy and Dillon leave a complex math equation on Dr. Mortinson's computer as a way of verifying they are visitors from an advanced culture.[4]
  • Troy and Dillon are hauled off to jail.
  • When Dr. Mortinson returns to his computer, astonished by what Troy and Dillon left there, he realizes that the only people capable of producing the modified formula he finds on the screen must be as important to mankind as "the coming of the Messiah".
  • Hamilton, with her career at first looking dim, is contacted by Dr. Mortinson, who asks her to help him find Troy and Dillon. Spurred on by a job offer from the network producer, Brooks, Hamilton heads off to find Mortinson, who despises the media.
  • During booking, Dobin cannot make fingerprint records for the Warriors as they have no fingerprints. Other people are interested in the two, who are returned to their cell.
  • Using their invisibility devices, Troy and Dillon activate their invisibility shields, causing another in the cell, Moran, to think he's losing his mind. As the cell is opened by Sergeant James, the two make their escape.
  • Meanwhile, back in the field where they first arrived, the two Vipers suddenly shimmer back into view. A young boy, Willy Griffin is playing in the field with his dog, Skipper, when he stumbles upon the ships, which have run out of power to maintain their invisibility. He runs to inform his parents.

From Script to Screen

In the December 13, 1979 revision of the script for this episode, there are several noted differences:

  • In Adama's opening monologue, during his mention of "too many of our sons and daughters" having not survived the journey, a mural of Apollo, Athena, Zac and Ila is called for, thus confirming that Athena is also dead.[5]
  • The first scene between Troy and Dillon is in the form of a day-down patrol, where both reflect on it being their last patrol. Further, Troy echoes the words from his late father made to the people on Terra in "Experiment in Terra": "The opposite of war isn't always peace. More often it's slavery."[6]
  • The dialogue between Dr. Zee and Adama regarding Earth's present state of development runs longer. Adama notes Zee's age (14) and after being told to send out the patrol beyond its usual range, issues a coded battle order to Troy and Dillon. This is called "Operation Caprica", and color-coded. Using turbo-thrusters, Troy and Dillon run into two Cylon Raiders, which they destroy before the Cylons can report that they've been compromised. Dillon and Troy return to the Fleet.[7]
  • After the two Air Force jets launch missiles at Troy and Dillon's Vipers, they avoid this by using their invisibility shield (referred to at this point in the script as a "force shield).[8]
  • Pilot #2 makes a crack about McDonell (sic) Douglas and Sperry Rand, two US defense contractors.[9]
  • The turbocycles as written are "something on the order of a motorcycle, but instead of wheels, it seems to be suspended on some kind of force field".[9] This is what drives the cycles, which prompt the interest of Donzo and Willy.[10]
  • Dorothy Carlyle gives Donald Mortinson a neck massage; Mortinson agrees with the protesters on the fact that they've advanced their technology too fast.[11]
  • Dillon and Troy make it a point to hide their boots by pulling their pants over them.[12]
  • What later becomes the Pacific Institute of Technology is called the California Institute of Technology (Cal-Tech) in the script.[13]
  • Also, what is later called the United Broadcasting Company is called the Trans-World Broadcasting Company.[14]
  • Jamie Hamilton's conversation with Brooks's secretary shows us that the secretary is more amicable and understanding.[15]
  • Adama and Xaviar's conversation regarding time travel notes Xaviar's position on it more clearly, which Adama appears to respond more positively to. Xaviar posits that time travel doesn't adversely affect history.[16] In his words:
    How do we know it works that way? Maybe history isn't really changed. Maybe it all comes out the very same. Take, for example, the chance of birth. Whether your parents decide to journey from one place to another only dictates the environment in which you are born. The fact remains that you live. What difference whether we introduce marvels of science to primitive Earth...the same people will live to use them...only the quality of their lives will have changed.[17]

Notes

  • Dr. Zee's video screens show a series of shots from unusual public domain sources and from other Universal properties. This is supposed to resemble a smattering of US television images, and is a decidedly strange sequence, complete with eerie sound effects, which sets an odd tone early in the program. Among the images seen is Rod Serling in an introduction to the series Night Gallery, in addition to Woody Woodpecker.
  • In Adama's speech to the Quorum of Twelve, he notes that Earth is the third planet of a system of nine planets. When the episode was written, the celestial body of Pluto was considered a full-fledged planet, but was reclassified in 2007. This same "mistake" is made in "The Long Patrol" and in countless other science fiction series of the past and present. As of this writing, the solar system is comprised of eight planets, 166 moons, and three dwarf planets, including Pluto.
Dr. Zee's simulation of a Cylon Attack on Los Angeles.
  • The simulated Cylon attack on Earth reuses footage from the movie Earthquake which was released by Universal Pictures in 1974, and also starred Lorne Greene (Commander Adama).
  • When Troy and Dillon first take their Vipers into the Earth's atmosphere at the beginning of the episode, stock footage is used from "The Gun on Ice Planet Zero, Part I". As the Vipers fly by, a mountain is seen and the glare reflection off of the Ravashol pulsar is visible.
  • According to publications at the time, the original airing of "Galactica Discovers Earth" had some of the highest ratings in the history of the franchise. The premiere episode, which aired Sunday, January 27th, 1980, ranked 30th for the week. The second and third episodes (aired February 3rd and 10th) also did well. [1]. According to The "World Almanac and Book of Facts 1980", overall for the period that it was aired, Galactica 1980 ranked 20th out of 100 series in the Nielsen ratings.
  • The song playing in Jamie Hamilton's car when pulling up to the gas station is Billy Joel's "My Life", which makes a brief reappearance in "The Night the Cylons Landed, Part II".
  • This episode featured the last appearance of two robotic Muffit II-style daggits in the Original Series continuity, still apparently used as pets in the Fleet.
  • The low-toned sounds coming from the computer monitor as Donald Mortinson turns it back on are the exact same sounds that are made when information is printed on the screens in a Viper's cockpit or on the bridge.

Analysis

  • It is clearly apparent that neither Adama nor anyone else in the Fleet considered the ramifications of their flight to Earth: particularly when it concerns their essentially leading the Cylons to this planet.
  • This episode directly deals with the (now proven incorrect) assumption that Earth is capable of repelling the Cylons. It should be noted that the Re-imagined Series also faces the same story flaw, which it has yet to address.
  • Adama's comment that Earth's "proximity to the sun provides the only climate in the galaxy[18] comfortably able to support life as we know it" is technically correct, in so far as the audience is concerned. In the story, however, this claim establishes that:
    1. The Colonials are from outside the Milky Way and thus have some form of faster-than-light drive never fully shown in the series.
    2. That the Milky Way Galaxy itself has no other planets that are capable of supporting human life, in so far as the Galacticans know it. However, this claim is contradicted by the presence of the planets of Paradeen and Terra, which is outside the Colonials' home galaxy[19] and is in the Milky Way[20].
  • Adama's indication that the polar ice caps and the deserts could "easily be reclaimed by our technology" points to the Colonials possessing some form of terra-forming technology.

Questions

  • For all his intelligence, why didn't Doctor Zee forewarn Adama that he may be leading the Cylons to Earth before ever reaching it?
  • What specifically happened to the characters of Apollo, Athena, and Sheba?
  • Didn't Mortinson or his workers keep backups of their work in the event they were lost or vandalized?

Noteworthy Dialogue

Dillon: What's that odd-looking brown haze hanging over the city?
Troy: (shrugs) Must be some sort of defense shield.
  • Troy and Dillon make a comment about the automobiles:
Dillon: Those automobiles sure don't move very fast.
Troy: No, but it's a nice, neat formation. It must require a lot of practice and discipline.
  • Adama talks to Troy about Earth's government:
Adama: Boxey, the cold, hard truth is that there is no central government on Earth. There's no single leader with whom we can make contact or negotiate.
Troy: Well, that's impossible. Then how do they get together for their common good?
Adama: They don't, as far as we can tell.

Guest Stars

References

  1. Adama uses the term "years" in the series, which is known in the Original Series by the term yahren.
  2. The use of the term "miles" rather than the Original Series's parsecs, sectars and the like is one of many continuity errors in the short span of the show.
  3. The Re-imagined Series, by design or coincidence, has their versions of Cylon using the humans in its universe to find its mythical Earth in a similar manner in season 3.
  4. This addition to the script was likely inspired by a scene from the classic SF motion picture, The Day the Earth Stood Still, where an alien on Earth on a first-contact mission visits a scientist's office and leaves a highly-complex scientific formula as a calling card as well.
  5. Script for "Galactica Discovers Earth, Part I", p. 2
  6. Ibid., p. 3
  7. Ibid., pgs. 5-8
  8. Ibid., p. 18
  9. 9.0 9.1 Ibid., p. 19
  10. Ibid., p. 22-23
  11. Ibid., p. 20-22
  12. Ibid., p. 24
  13. Ibid., p. 25
  14. Ibid., p. 26
  15. Ibid., p. 28
  16. Ibid., pgs. 36-38
  17. Ibid., p.37
  18. This emphasis is Battlestar Wiki's, not Adama's.
  19. As confirmed by the events depicted in "The Long Patrol", "Greetings from Earth", and "Experiment in Terra"
  20. As established by the Gamma frequency transmission Apollo receives in "The Hand of God"
  21. This is deduced by the subtitles, as the wingman who talks to McNally is referred to as "Pilot 1".