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Downloaded

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Revision as of 15:26, 15 March 2007 by Spencerian (talk | contribs) (→‎On Caprica: -Conventioning and concising.)
Downloaded
"Downloaded"
An episode of the Re-imagined Series
Episode No. Season 2, Episode 18
Writer(s) Bradley Thompson
David Weddle
Story by
Director Jeff Woolnough
Assistant Director
Special guest(s) Lucy Lawless as Number Three
Production No. 218
Nielsen Rating 1.8
US airdate USA 2006-02-24
CAN airdate CAN {{{CAN airdate}}}
UK airdate UK 2006-05-02
DVD release 19 September 2006 US
28 August 2006 UK
Population 49,579 survivors (Population decline. 5)
Additional Info
Episode Chronology
Previous Next
The Captain's Hand Downloaded Lay Down Your Burdens, Part I
Related Information
Official Summary
R&D SkitView
Podcast TranscriptView
Continuity Errors PresentView
[[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[edit]

Cylon society is revealed when a Cylon's consciousness is downloaded into a new body following her death. The conquerors of occupied Caprica hail two "heroes of the Cylon," who both resist their new celebrity status.

Summary[edit]

Teaser[edit]

  • The episode begins with a flashback scene entitled, "Nine months ago - Caprica".
  • The scene recalls Baltar's house being destroyed in the Cylon attack as the mysterious blonde he dated for two years tries to shield him from the blast (Miniseries).
  • The scene reforms to show the Cylon's consciousness is downloaded and reborn in a resurrection tank. Surrounding the tank are other humanoid Cylon models who act as midwives to this Number Six's "rebirth."
  • One face that the Six sees is very unexpected. Someone that appears to be Gaius Baltar is at the edge of the tank, but before Six can talk to him, this Baltar warns that he is not really there: He is someone only she can see and hear and tells her not to reveal his "presence".
  • Still in the Cylon version of birth trauma, Six attempts to relax as the other Cylons comfort her and answer her questions about Gaius Baltar's fate.
  • The scenes shifts to another flashback: "Ten weeks later". The scene shows a busy hallway on Galactica as Cally Henderson shoots and kills the traitorous Cylon agent, Sharon Valerii (Resistance)
  • The scene follows Valerii's point of view as she also downloads, waking up totally disoriented in a resurrection tank.
  • A Number Three comes to comfort her. As Valerii sees a copy of herself, reminding her once more of her true nature as a Cylon, she screams.

Act 1[edit]

  • On Caprica, present day, the Cylons are rebuilding the city of Delphi for their own use, including gardens. A Three sits down to talk with the recently downloaded Six.
  • Six continues to be "haunted" by the virtual Baltar, who gives scathing retorts on the Cylon's progress of inhabiting their city after their genocide of the human race.
  • The Three congratulates Six, who is considered a "Hero of the Cylon" for her work as the prime agent that was personally responsible for gaining the information that allowed the virtual destruction of the Colonial Fleet. The Three tells Six that her celebrity has given her a specific name: "Caprica".
  • Three asks Caprica-Six to visit another recently downloaded Hero of the Cylon that is having trouble adapting: A Number Eight that still refuses to think of herself as anything but her human alias, Sharon Valerii.
  • Three warns that if Valerii cannot be fixed, there is talk of "boxing" her.
  • Caprica-Six visits Valerii's apartment. Valerii refuses Caprica's courtesies, denying the Cylon God or his "love," noting that the only real love she had was with the Galactica crew.
  • Valerii expresses intense guilt at betraying them. Caprica-Six starts to manipulate her by trying to empathize with her, saying that she loved a man too — Gaius Baltar. Startled, Valerii says that Baltar is not dead, but is the new Vice President of the Colonies.

Act 2[edit]

  • Moving their conversation to a cafe on the ground floor of Valerii's apartment, Caprica-Six and Valerii wonder why Number Three never told Caprica-Six that Baltar was alive.
  • Caprica-Six (through conversation with her virtual Baltar) realizes that Number Three manipulated her by hoping that her interaction with another Cylon with strong (and, to the Cylon collective, undesired) emotional ties with humanity would cause her distress sufficient enough to justify having them both boxed.
  • Elsewhere, outside the building, Samuel Anders and two other members of the human resistance movement reconnoiter the apartment building as they plan to demolish the building with explosives.
  • While the team realizes that the Cylons will not permanently die, Anders believes that. based on the insight of a benevolent Eight, that Cylons remember their horrifically painful memories of being killed, which may show them that nowhere on Caprica is safe and that leaving Caprica is their only option.
  • Number Three shows up at the cafe. Realizing Three's deception, Caprica-Six lies, telling Three that Valerii will move out of her apartment and start adapting back to Cylon life. Valerii follows Six's lead.
  • Visibly disappointed, but not showing it through her speech, Number Three offers to help her move out right now. After a moment's hesitation, the three Cylons leave the cafe for Valerii's apartment.
  • The resistance members arm the bomb in the underground garage, where many abandoned cars sit, gathering dust. Anders is preparing to leave when a patrolling Cylon Centurion arrives, blocking Anders' exit.
  • When the Centurion sees the bomb, Anders shoots it to distract long enough for the bomb's cigarette fuse to drop, creating a massive explosion that levels the entire building. Anders manages to take cover under a car.

Act 3[edit]

  • Caprica-Six, Three, and Valerii survive the blast as the stairwell protected them on the higher floor. Caprica-Six is injured and buried under some rubble. When Three insists that Caprica-Six is dead, Caprica-Six speaks in the negative and calls for help.
  • Six's knee is dislocated, and Three again suggests that it would be easier, if Six wanted, to just kill her so she'll be reborn. Realizing Three is trying to have her boxed, she declines the "offer."
  • The Cylons find someone else under some rubble, and Number Three clears it off to discover Anders. She takes his gun away and prepares to kill him, but Valerii protests. Caprica-Six agrees, but to avoid suspicion from Number Three, claims pragmatically that they shouldn't kill him to he can be interrogated.
  • Valerii notices that Anders is wearing Kara Thrace's dog tags. Number Three explains that she was on the planet a few weeks ago. Valerii realizes Anders is someone important to her former comrade.
  • Number Three cruelly toys with Anders, putting his gun on the ground and daring him to take it. When Valerii asks her to stop, Number Three retorts that Valerii is a broken machine that thinks she's human, but isn't.
  • Valerii states she has a conscience, but Three counters that Valerii is a murderer.
  • Caprica-Six realizes that murder and the genocide of the human race cannot be the path of their loving God.

Act 4[edit]

  • Caprica-Six realizes why Number Three wanted her and Valerii boxed: they are celebrities in a culture based on uniformity. Three knew that their heroes had a different perspective on the war. Due to their celebrity status as Cylon heroes, they could actually cause a change the Cylons view about their conflict with the humans, upsetting the status quo which Number Three upholds.
  • Number Three says that Six and Valerii are a waste, corrupted by their experiences. Caprica-Six explains to Valerii that that is why Three wanted to get rid of them, because Six and Valerii understand that murder, vengeance, and genocide are sins in the eyes of God. Valerii realizes that their knowledge could convince other Cylons that the slaughter of mankind was a mistake.
  • The rubble of the building shifts as Cylons outside try to clear their way to any survivors inside.
  • Anders grabs his gun and tries to escape, shooting at Number Three before Valerii knocks the gun out of his hands.
  • The gun lands near Three. As she is about to shoot Anders, Caprica-Six hits her over the head with a large rock of stone, then bashes Three into her head again, killing her.
  • Caprica-Six tells Anders to leave, and gives him back Starbuck's dog tags. Valerii gives him back his gun as he leaves, alive but confused at the Cylons' benevolence.
  • Six realizes that with all of the Cylons dead in the cafe, it should be at least 36 hours before Number Three is resurrected and tells the others what happened.
  • Caprica-Six and Valerii believe that there is sufficient time to start a new beginning for the Cylons: A way to live in God's love, without hate or lies. Together, the two Heroes of the Cylons agree to a new plan as their rescuers arrive.

On Galactica[edit]

  • Caprica-Sharon has gone into labor; she passed out and her placenta detached, and Dr. Cottle delivers the baby by C-section. It is premature and its lungs aren't fully developed as a result, so it has to be put in an oxygen-incubator. As Caprica-Sharon predicted, it is a girl. Helo and Caprica-Sharon adore it together, and name her "Hera".
  • Meanwhile, President Roslin, Baltar, Admiral Adama, and Col. Tigh debate what to do with it. Baltar points out that it is half-human. Adama realizes the Cylons want it, and that the Cylons still hiding in the Fleet will try to make a move for it if they know about it.
  • President Roslin has decided to hide Hera to protect her, so she has Cottle convince Helo and Caprica-Sharon that their baby has died (using a fake). Caprica-Sharon goes into hysterics and nearly chokes Cottle before breaking down, sobbing.
  • In fact, Roslin has given her to a woman named Maya, who lost her baby in the Cylon attack. Maya adopts Hera, thinking she is a normal human child from a Pegasus officer.
  • Helo, helped by Chief Tyrol, spreads the "ashes" of Hera (actually faked) out the back of a Raptor into open space.
  • Number Six is devastated that Baltar "let" this happen and could not protect "their baby", though he says he did all he could. Number Six says that God's will was that Hera survive, that God's will was that "she would lead the next generation of God's children." In a rage, she says that Gaius has committed a sin, and his entire race will suffer God's vengeance.

Questions[edit]

  • What will Number Three do when she is re-embodied? (Answer)
  • Were the Cylon Model numbers revealed so far (Three (D'Anna), Five (Doral), Six, Eight (Boomer)) numbered at random, or was there some underlying reason to why they were each assigned these specific numbers by the writers?
  • Based on reports of Lucy Lawless being asked if she wanted to "be God" and her current command behavior, could Number Three be based on a Count Iblis type character? (Answer)
  • What model numbers are "Simon" and "Leoben Conoy" ?
  • Based on information mentioned in the Analysis section, could the Cylons be patterning a gerontocratic form of leadership structure?
  • Given that Baltar's home was destroyed and Caprica-Six "died" in a nuclear explosion, how did Baltar survive?
  • This episode raises new questions about the nature of Baltar-Six. Is she (merely) a projection from Baltar's subconscious mind, has she somehow been implanted into his psyche by the Cylons, or is she actually an angel (as she claims) or a demoness (as befits her personality)? It has already been established by the brainscan performed by Dr. Cottle that there is no cybernetic implant in Baltar's brain, at least none that is detectable by human technology. Also, in Ron Moore's podcast he seems to indicate that she is no more than a hallucination, produced by Baltar's subconsciousness. Her actions, however, do seem to be aimed at advancing a Cylon agenda.
  • Does death hold any meaning to the Cylons? If they can just be reborn then perhaps they don't truly understand murder and genocide? However, episodes like "Flesh and Bone" and "Resurrection Ship, Part I" indicate that they fear permanent death, when resurrection isn't possible.

Analysis[edit]

  • Interestingly, the Baltar in Caprica-Six's head seems to be rather sharper-tongued, more cynical, and more harshly moralistic than the actual Baltar. He spends most of the episode playing conscience to Caprica-Six.
  • In the Miniseries, Leoben claimed to Adama that Cylons were superior to primitive humans, who were only "one step above beating each other to death with clubs". Ironically, Caprica-Six savagely beat Number Three to death "primitively" with a rock.
  • Apparently the documentary broadcast from the Fleet in "Final Cut" was not made widely available, since if Caprica-Six had seen it, she would have already known about Baltar's survival.
  • In the scene where Galactica-Sharon is downloaded into her new body, when another Sharon smiles and says "we love you Sharon", this mirrors how another Sharon said the same thing to her on the basestar in "Kobol's Last Gleaming, Part II", at which point she also freaked out.
  • There does not appear to be any pattern to the numbering scheme of the 12 Cylon models: Three (D'anna), Five (Doral), Six (Shelley Godfrey/Gina), Eight (Sharon), i.e. not all females are an even number, males an odd number.
    • However, these models do seem to get progressively younger the higher (perhaps, "most recent") their Number is: Three is eldest and has the number closest to one, while Eight is youngest and has the highest number out of these four. The older models also tend to have more authority.
    • Following that pattern, would Numbers Nine through Twelve be modeled after teenagers or children?
  • Cylon society on Caprica appears to consist of mostly mimicking human behavior — clothing, apartments, cafés, parks for relaxation, etc. In essence, the Cylons are merely trying to be what they have just exterminated — humans.
    • They have established previously that they consider humans to be more "real" and closer to God than they are ("this form brings us closer to God..."); they think that humans are more "real" and that if they wish to be real, they should adopt some aspects of what humanity is, but this doesn't necessarily stop them from being quite different from humanity.
  • Cylons appear to lead asexual lives — no Cylon "couples" were observed, or even any obvious signs of friendship between Cylons. While frequently talking about, and concerned with, love, Cylons might be celibate except when interacting with humans.
    • There really isn't any evidence that Cylons don't have sex with each other. Absence of evidence is not evidence of absence. This would be like walking in to a Starbucks and because you don't see anyone kissing concluding that humans are asexual beings that don't reproduce.
      • Sharon said in "The Farm" that Cylons have tried reproducing on their own, but failed, so then experimented with human-Cylon hybridization. This implies that they tried sexual relations between male and female Cylon models. It is unknown whether all such activities stopped once it became clear it was a literally fruitless effort, or how Cylon society would feel about such behavior.
  • As Caprica-Six and Galactica-Sharon pointed out, the Cylons' claim that they are superior to humans because humans still kill because of greed and jealousy, etc. is hypocritical. They point out the logical disconnect of conducting genocide and murder in the name of an all-loving God. Further, Number Three's plan to "box" Caprica-Six and Galactica-Sharon, which would in effect be murdering them, also makes her a murderer like the humans she claims to be better than.
  • At various points in the series, Baltar's internal Number Six has been seen manipulating physical objects: a test-tube in "Tigh Me Up, Tigh Me Down", a chair in "Home, Part II", etc., which has led to the question of whether this is a continuity error, or if she is more real than she claims to be. In this episode, we seem to get an answer to this: Caprica-Six's hallucinatory Baltar makes a drink while in Galactica-Boomer's apartment and hands it to her...only for the camera to shift angles, the hallucination-Baltar to be gone, and to show that Caprica-Six is actually grasping at air. Thus it can be inferred that this is just a stylistic choice by the production team: whenever Number Six appears to be manipulating a physical object on Galactica, Baltar is hallucinating that she is doing this, and the camera is showing things that aren't "really" happening, from Baltar's perspective.
  • The Cylons did not expect their initial attack to be anywhere near as successful as it was. This would explain the apparently large number of Cylon military vessels showing up everywhere as the Cylons expected to fight a more protracted war against a larger surviving human military force.
    • That the Cylons felt it so necessary to sabotage the Colonial Fleet through Caprica-Six implies that they felt attacking without that advantage would have at best cost them many ships, and at worst resulted in defeat. The placing of the backdoor in the CNP was high risk; if the Colonials had discovered it before the Cylons attacked, they would have been forewarned of the coming assault, and could even have surprised the Cylons by acting as if they were unaware of the problem while secretly disabling the backdoor on all military spacecraft.
  • Hera's being hidden away soon after her birth in order to protect her fits her messiah-status, as other messiah figures have often also been hidden after their birth in similar fashion, such as Jesus, Moses, Harry Potter, Superman, Aragorn, Luke Skywalker, etc.
  • It's strange that Roslin included Colonel Saul Tigh in the conversation about Hera's fate, but not Commander Lee Adama, who now outranks him.
    • It is likely that Commander Lee Adama was busy adjusting to his duties as the new CO of Pegasus and was briefed separately.
  • "At least forty" Humanoid Cylons were killed in the cafe bombing. When Three was killed by Caprica-Six, she said it would take "at least 36 hours" for Three's consciousness to be downloaded to a new body. This implies perhaps a sequential (as opposed to parallel) processing of the download process. Why can't they handle more at the same time? Is it a technical limitation, or perhaps a religious one (i.e. they always try to treat the process with reverence)? That seems kind of inefficient though. In any case, it appears to take a little less than an hour per download assuming sequential downloading.
    • It is likely that additional forty downloads exceeds the short term capability of the hardware that was emplaced on Caprica. Resources are not infinite, and the current hardware is most likely what is deemed sufficient for routine work based on normal usage.
    • There has to be some kind of buffer system in place to hold the Cylons' consciousnesses in their layover between their physical death and rebirth if a large number of them die all at once.
  • While it was not explicitly known in this episode, Admiral Adama was kept in the dark about Roslin's decision to fake Hera's death. The only people who knew the complete truth were the President herself and Doctor Cottle. The episode "The Eye of Jupiter" later confirms this fact.
  • We see Tyrol accompanying Helo to his and Sharon's daughter's "funeral", but who exactly was he there in support of, Helo or Sharon? The easy answer is "both", but it seems likely that his presence was there more on Helo's behalf. Having been effectively marginalized in Sharon's eyes ("Resurrection Ship, Part II"), and his later fears of being a Cylon, his feelings for her are probably on the downswing.

Notes[edit]

  • Anders refers to humanoid Cylons as "Skin Jobs" in this episode, another reference to Blade Runner by the Re-Imagined Series (which Edward James Olmos also co-starred in). The Cylon Centurions are being referred to as "Bullet Heads".
    • When episode writer Bradley Thompson was asked by Battlestar Wiki how it was decided to incorporate this referrence into the episode, he said:
"There was no real "decision" as such. We were writing "Downloaded". Barolay and Anders were on the roof and we needed a quick way to categorize. We remembered the term from Blade Runner and put it in. The drafts went through the usual pathways of approval and nobody shot it down. So now there are skin jobs along with metal jobs, clankers, and bulletheads (that last is credited to Gary Hutzel)."
  • The vision of Number Six that Baltar sees all the time is not the same person as the woman he was sleeping with on Caprica who used him to lower Colonial defenses: Caprica-Six's consciousness was downloaded into a new body. Chip-Six might be a duplicate, or something else.
  • Apollo and Starbuck do not appear in this episode. This is the first episode of the season in which Apollo has not appeared, and the third episode of the season in which Starbuck has not appeared (after "Fragged" and "Black Market").
    • In the first season, Apollo did not appear in "Litmus".
    • As of this episode, the only characters that have appeared in every episode of the Re-Imagined Series are President Laura Roslin, Admiral William Adama, and Colonel Saul Tigh. Michael Hogan (Col. Tigh) is actually not one of the seven "regular" cast members, but he has still been in every episode to date.
  • Rick Worthy (Simon) and Callum Keith Rennie (Leoben Conoy) do not actually appear in this episode. In several brief shots, body doubles dressed as their characters are seen from behind or in the distance, but these actors did not return for the episode. Ron Moore noted in his podcast of the episode that body doubles were used because the production team felt it would just be a waste of Worthy's and Rennie's time having them only appear in the background of shots and not have any dialog.
  • We learn a lot of Cylon names in this episode: out of the twelve models of humanoid Cylons, besides the already-known "Number Six", the one who posed as human reporter "D'anna Biers" is model Number Three, the one who posed as PR representative "Aaron Doral" is model Number Five, and the one who infiltrated Galactica posing as the pilot "Sharon 'Boomer' Valerii" is model Number Eight.
  • A longstanding question has been answered: What do the Cylons call each other amongst themselves? They actually don't use the names of any human personas they might have infiltrated the Colonies with. "Number Six" is actually called "Number Six" in dialog for the first time in this episode (in the Miniseries, we were left with the cryptic "There are twelve models, I am number six"). It is revealed that Cylons just call and think of themselves as "Number Three" or "Three", etc. It was speculated that individual copies might be distinguished by using a serial number or other ID, but apparently Cylon society is based so much on the idea of unity and lack of individuality that they simply do not have designations for individual units. When Number Three refers to Galactica-Sharon, she just refers to her as "an Eight", etc. "Caprica-Six" is a makeshift nickname that was made up for the individual "celebrity" Number Six (probably because the Cylons had never developed a formal convention for naming individual units). Caprica-Six is sometimes called "Caprica" for short.
  • This gets a little confusing, because even though all of the Number Six copies on Caprica look identical and many (though not all) wear the same outifit as Caprica-Six, Humanoid Cylons that Caprica-Six walks by still recognize who she is.
  • "Caprica-Six" appears to be a take on the ad hoc naming convention developed by fans for telling the different Cylon copies apart: review sites and message boards over time started distinguishing the copy of Boomer on Galactica and the copy of Boomer on Caprica as "Galactica-Sharon" and "Caprica-Sharon" for convenience. This loosely developed system then spread to other Cylons as they appeared ("Pegasus-Six", "Caprica-Doral", "Caprica-D'anna", etc.), though it isn't based on any official material (Battlestar Wiki eventually adopted these terms of convenience as well). When Number Three remarks to "Caprica-Six" that her nickname is a little funny, because she's only one of hundreds of copies of "Number Six" on Caprica, this might be a small joke by the writers at the expense of fans.
  • Sharon showed difficulty in performing chin ups, but later showed no problem in moving pieces of concrete weighing at least 100 pounds.
    • She could have just been angry, and not actually appearing strained because it was physically hard.
    • One of the consistent features of both Galactica-Sharon and Caprica-Sharon has been the conflict between her "natural" Cylon Number Eight personality and her human Sharon personality. While probably intended that the two personalities should remain separate, with the Number Eight personality primary, it never worked out that way. In "Water", for example, Sharon reasserts herself before Number Eight can finish planting the charges. At this point, both Galactica-Sharon/Eight and Caprica-Sharon/Eight have their personalities all jumbled up, with the Sharon personality exerting the stronger influence but retaining knowledge of being a Cylon and being Number Eight. Anyway: the Sharon "code" would have to include imposed limitations on what she believes her own strength and physical abilities to be, or she'd be found out much, much more easily. Inconsistencies in her apparent physical abilities can therefore be explained along with inconsistencies of her mixed but not really integrated personalities.
    • Humanoid Cylons most likely have something similar to adrenaline, given that they would need to in order to pass as humans. Their greater physical abilities could be, partly, attributed to a greater ability to control their adrenaline.
  • Number Three appears to have some command functions based on her actions and behavior. These apparently include determining final disposition of other Cylon personalities.
  • Lucy Lawless once again uses her native New Zealand accent for D'anna Biers, even though at the end of "Final Cut" it was implied that her character normally doesn't.
  • Galactica-Sharon's old apartment number on Caprica was "502"
  • Much of the dialog in the episode recap is entirely new, and dubbed in to better summarize the segment.
  • According to RDM's podcast, there was an entire subplot in this episode in which Lucy Lawless's character "D'anna Biers" would interview President Roslin about rumors that the pregnant Cylon prisoner's baby had been born. Then "Galactica-Three" would try to kidnap the baby off of Galactica in collusion with Gina (Pegasus-Six). The subplot was cut for time (they wanted to spend more time focusing on events on Caprica), and also because they felt it made the episode very confusing; cutting between many different Cylon copies both on Caprica and Galactica. These scenes were filmed then cut; they are provided as deleted scenes on the Season 2.5 DVD sets.
  • Sharon has a pair of hand carved, wood or stone, decorative elephants in her apartment. Caprica-Six asks her if they are from "Ithaca", which on Earth is an island off the coast of Greece and is the home of Odysseus in Homer's Odyssey. She states that they were a gift from her mother for her graduation.
    • RDM went to Cornell, which is in Ithaca, NY. This is most likely the source of this name.
  • Caprica-Six assumed residence on Caprica two years prior to the cylon attack, which matches both the beginning of her relationship with Baltar (Miniseries) and the date that Sharon Valerii (Galactica copy) was assigned to Galactica (The Farm).
  • There are three cars in the underground garage. One clearly visible is a Citroën DS. When the Cylon enters the garage, the car on the right appears to be a Rover P6. The car on the left with a central headlamp appears to be a 1930s Tatra 87.
    • The license plate on the front of the car crushed in Anders' bomb attack reads SEXYMOM, and has a "C-Bucs Rule" bumper sticker (for the Caprica Buccaneers, the core of Ander's resistance group).
  • Whenever Baltar's internal (possibly hallucinatory) Number Six appears on Galactica during the series, Number Six's distinct soundtrack theme is played (plunking staccato notes on a xylophone, accompanied by violins). There is a subtle twist on this for this episode with Caprica-Six's internal Baltar (who is definitely a hallucination): whenever Six's hallucinatory Baltar appears, the normal "Number Six theme" is played in reverse. The xylophone notes are played in reverse order, though the violin overlay is still played "forwards".
  • Different music plays during the two downloads at the beginning of the episode. A variation on the "Number Six theme" is heard during Caprica'-Six's flashbacks, while Boomer's flashbacks are accompanied by a more militaristic tune.

Noteworthy Dialogue[edit]

  • Caprica-Sharon has gone into premature labor with her Hybrid baby:
Cottle: I find it absolutely amazing you people went to all the trouble to appear human, and didn't upgrade the plumbing.
  • "Caprica-Six" and a Number Three-copy walk past a crowd of other Cylons of various models, and they all keep turning their heads to look at Caprica-Six:
Caprica-Six: I still can't get used to this.
Three: Well you're a Hero of the Cylon now. You're our first celebrity!
Caprica-Six: Oh, I'm just another Six.
Three: You're too modest. I'm just another Three... and they're Fives (motions at a Doral-model)... and Eights (motions at a Sharon-model). But you, everyone calls you "Caprica-Six"... like you're the only Six on the planet!
  • President Roslin, Baltar, Admiral Adama and Col. Tigh discuss what to do with the Hybrid baby:
Roslin: If the baby does survive, the question is — what do we do with it?
Baltar: Do? What are you suggesting? That we throw it out of an airlock?
Roslin: I don't make suggestions Mr. Baltar, if I want to toss a baby out of an airlock, I'd say so.
Three: Humans don't respect life the way we do. (loads pistol)
  • Anders' gun is knocked out of his hands, and it miraculously lands near Number Three, who picks it up, stands over Anders and gets ready to execute him:
Number Three: God loves me. (Caprica-Six pops up behind Number Three and bashes her over the head with a big rock of debris)
Caprica-Six: See you again soon! (Caprica-Six bashes her head with the rock a second time, killing her current body, while her consciousness will soon download into another)
  • Boomer picks up a photograph of the Galactica crew to make a point to Caprica-Six about love:
"This is love. These people love me. I love them. I didn't pretend to feel something so I could screw people over. I loved them. And then I betrayed them! I shot a man I love, screwed over another man, ruined his life, and why? Because I'm a lying machine! I'm a frakking Cylon!"
  • Caprica-Six's internal Baltar recites verse
Life is short, but the next one's not
Let your heart adrift, and your soul will get caught
Believe the lies, ignore the truth
Listen to me, I will show you the proof.
Speak from your heart: say the things you know to be true

Official Statements[edit]

  • David Eick's video blog shows the crew preparation for filming the Cylon rebirthing scene for this episode.

Guest Stars[edit]