Helena Cain
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- For information on this character's Original Series counterpart, see Cain (TOS).
Helena Cain | ||
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Name |
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Age | ||
Colony | Tauron | |
Birth place | {{{birthplace}}} | |
Birth Name | Helena Cain | |
Birth Date | {{{birthdate}}} | |
Callsign | ||
Nickname | {{{nickname}}} | |
Introduced | Pegasus | |
Death | Shot by Gina Inviere aboard Pegasus, in Cain's quarters (Resurrection Ship, Part II). | |
Parents | Parents killed in the first Cylon War [1] | |
Siblings | Lucy Cain† (killed in the first Cylon War) | |
Children | ||
Marital Status | Relationship with Gina Inviere | |
Family Tree | View | |
Role | Commanding Officer, battlestar Pegasus | |
Rank | Rear Admiral | |
Serial Number | {{{serial}}} | |
Portrayed by | Michelle Forbes Kyra Scott (young Cain) | |
Helena Cain is a Cylon | ||
Helena Cain is a Final Five Cylon | ||
Helena Cain is a Human/Cylon Hybrid | ||
Helena Cain is an Original Series Cylon | ||
Related Media | ||
@ BW Media | ||
Additional Information | ||
[[Image:|200px|Helena Cain]] |
Admiral Helena Cain hails from the colony Tauron, and is the commanding officer of the Mercury class battlestar Pegasus at the time of the Fall of the Twelve Colonies. She is a hard woman, unafraid of making difficult decisions and unflinching in her will to do what she sees as right. These traits sometimes compel her to feel that she has been left no choice but to take controversial, unpopular and morally questionable choices.
Biography
Childhood
Helena Cain was born during the first Cylon War. On the last day of the war, Tauron was under attack by Cylon basestars and Centurion ground forces. Her sister Lucy Cain and her father were pinned down in a building under heavy fire. When her father was injured trying to escape, he told Helena to get Lucy to a shelter, before dying. The two made it out of the building, but outside Helena panicked, left Lucy in a field of rubble and ran away to hide in a container. When Cain came out again after the Cylons retreated, she found only her sister's doll on the ground ("Razor", extended version). These traumatic events were formative for her future.
Cylon attack and guerrilla warfare
When Pegasus is scheduled for an extensive overhaul at the Scorpion Fleet Shipyards, Cain has regular meetings with Gina Inviere, a civilian contractor working for the Ministry of Defense, to work out the details of the retrofit. The two eventually become romantically involved.
Shortly before the Cylon attack, Lieutenant Kendra Shaw is assigned to the battlestar as Cain's personal aide. When the lieutenant fails to make it to CIC immediately after her arrival, Cain chews her out in front of the crew, but breaks into laughter after Shaw leaves, showing that she isn't always as hard as she appears to be.
When the Cylons attack the shipyards, Cain is in her quarters, working out and going over efficiency reports. She makes it to CIC and immediately orders the battlestar unmoored. When the navigational computer is discovered to be offline and nuclear missiles are inbound, Cain orders a blind jump to escape certain destruction. With many of her crew dead and the destruction of the Twelve Colonies confirmed, she holds a speech vowing to take revenge on the Cylons. However, in a private dinner with her XO Jurgen Belzen, Jack Fisk, Inviere and Shaw, she promises that she has no intention to unnecessarily waste lives or resources in an emotional quest for revenge.
Shortly later, a Cylon communications relay is detected, which the crew believes to be an easy target. On arrival however, it turns out the target is a Cylon staging area, filled with 15 squadrons of Raiders. Belzen urges Cain to recover their Vipers and retreat, but instead she seemingly forgets her earlier promise and orders the launch of all remaining fighters, which Belzen refuses to do in the face of such odds. Cain asks the XO for his side arm, and shoots him in the head in front of the crew. She then turned to Fisk and orders him to launch the Vipers, which he does. At the same time, Inviere allows a group of Cylon Centurions to board the ship, causing many deaths. Shaw reveals her as a Cylon agent in CIC and Cain orders her arrest. Pegasus manages to win the battle, but with staggering losses.
Cain is deeply stung by Inviere's betrayal, her feelings toward her erstwhile lover turned into hatred and scorn. She gives Alastair Thorne free rein in interrogating her for information, suggesting "pain ... degradation, fear, shame." This sets the tone for the interrogations, ultimately leading to measures such as gang rape.
When Pegasus happens upon a small civilian fleet, Admiral Cain decides to strip it of resources and personnel, including their FTL drives. The civilians, however, refuse the cooperate. Resistance is particularly high on the Scylla. When a boarding team led by Shaw and Fisk fails to make the civilians cooperate, Cain orders to shoot the families of every conscript who refuses to obey. Shaw fires the first shot and eventually 10 people are killed, thus breaking the resistance. Cain is very impressed by Shaw's actions in the civilian standoff and promotes her to the rank of captain, explaining that Shaw has the qualities of a "razor"; someone who is able to shut down all emotions and inhibitions in battle in order to survive.
Despite the impossible odds, Cain intends to sustain a campaign of guerrilla warfare against the occupying Cylon forces. She then led the battlestar away from the Twelve Colonies, following a Cylon fleet that trails what they discovered as the fellow battlestar Galactica ("Razor", "Pegasus").
Galactica
Upon meeting up with Commander William Adama's Fleet six months later, she assumes command and transfers personnel from Galactica to Pegasus, including Lee Adama and Kara Thrace, indicating that Adama has let military discipline become too lax. Cain is more interested in fighting the Cylons, seemingly oblivious to the point that she and the ships around her are all that was left of the human race, whose survival is more paramount than offensive assaults. While Adama initially welcomes such attacks against a mysterious Cylon force that followed the Fleet (to stop it from following them), his attitude begins to cool about Cain's very strict and unmerciful leadership.
Cain's actions also raise concerns with President Laura Roslin. Cain recognizes Roslin and her former role as Secretary of Education. After the Fleet command transfer from Adama to Cain, Roslin makes several attempts to call Cain to request supplies for the civilian fleet, but all of Roslin's calls are ignored.
Court-martial, standoff
After the suspect fatal assault of one of her crew members, Lieutenant Thorne, Cain arrests Chief Tyrol and Lieutenant Karl Agathon and has them flown to Pegasus, under Adama's protest, since traditionally a trial is held on the ship where an incident has occurred. Cain uses Galactica's log against Adama when he asks for a tribunal; Cain notes that Adama dismissed the last council unilaterally when the verdict did not suit him. Cain summarily court-martials the prisoners herself in a matter of hours, sentencing them to death. Commander Adama is far from pleased, and orders an assault crew to head for Pegasus to bring his men back. Cain responds by deploying her squadrons of advanced Viper Mark VIIs against Adama's museum collection of Viper Mark IIs in a tense standoff (Pegasus).
The tense game of chicken that begins is ended by Starbuck, flying the Blackbird as she returns from her unofficial recon mission on the unknown Cylon ship. Starbuck transmits the pictures she took of the Resurrection Ship back to Pegasus's CIC. Upon Thrace's return to Pegasus, Cain is so impressed with her performance that she promotes Thrace to Captain and Pegasus CAG, replacing the competent but uncreative and inflexible Captain Taylor. Cain tasks Starbuck with planning the joint strike on the Resurrection Ship.
Attack on the Resurrection Ship, and assassination
After Captain Thrace briefs both Adama, Apollo, and Cain on her plan to attack the Resurrection Ship, Adama pulls Starbuck aside and outlines a plan to assassinate Cain following the attack. At the same time, Cain instructs Jack Fisk to lead a detachment of marines to "terminate Adama's command" after the battle (Resurrection Ship, Part I).
When the moment arrives, neither commander decides to send their execution orders, leaving Thrace and Fisk visibly relieved. Cain survives Adama's plan, ironically, because Adama solicits advice from the second copy of Sharon Valerii, who reminds him of his decommissioning speech that asked whether humanity asked itself if it deserved to survive (Miniseries). That is, Adama's actions in assassinating Cain would be a good example of why humanity deserved what the Cylons dealt to them so many months ago. Although it may have been due to realizing Adama's value as a commander during the battle, the reasons for Cain staying her hand were never revealed, and remain a topic of debate among fans.
Unfortunately for Cain, shortly after Adama's window to assassinate Cain had passed, Baltar helps Inviere escape from the brig. Inviere makes her way to Cain's quarters and shoots Cain at point blank range. A soldier to the last, Cain's final words are "Frak you."
Cain's funeral is given full military honors, with Fisk and Thrace giving eulogies. Though Thrace only knew Cain briefly, she obviously admired the woman, stating "We were safer with her than we are without." (Resurrection Ship, Part II). Several months later, Adama tells his son that he can't find any faults in Cain's tactical decisions, and refuses to pass judgment on her, because he has people to keep him in check when he is in danger of going down a similar path, and never had to go through Cain's situation in the first place (Razor).
Notes
- Helena Cain is inspired by the character of Commander Cain from the original Battlestar Galactica, portrayed by the late Lloyd Bridges.
- Unlike Commander Cain in the Original Series, Admiral Cain is a superior officer to Commander William Adama. The Original Series character of Adama held a higher rank than Cain, relieving him of command for a time in the two part episode, "The Living Legend".
- Actress Michelle Forbes said on her character, "She’s lost perspective. People ask, ‘Is she insane? Is she psychotic?’ I hope that’s not how she came across because that was never the intention. I think some individuals can appear to be that way, but this is a woman who did what she had to do in order to survive during some very brutal conflicts. Along the way, Cain lost her sense of judgment as well as her sense of reason and rationale. That was all very interesting for me to play. Usually in TV you’re given one characteristic and you dare not stray from that, so it was neat to have such a difficult, fascinating woman to play. In "Resurrection Ship" it really comes to light the path of sadism that these people have gone down and we’re fully able to see exactly what happened to this group aboard the Pegasus. There were some pretty difficult choices they had to make, too, in regard to the Cylon prisoner Gina and that whole dynamic." [1]
- Forbes guest starred as Dara Timicin in the Star Trek: The Next Generation episode "Half a Life" and had a recurring role as Ensign Ro Laren during the last three seasons of Star Trek: The Next Generation. Battlestar Galactica executive producer Ronald D. Moore, also a TNG veteran, wrote for her character in the episodes "Disaster" and "The Next Phase".
- Cain's first name, Helena, was not spoken in dialogue but was posted in episode summaries on Scifi.com. Later, her first name is spoken by Colonel Jurgen Belzen in "Razor".
- Cain's habit of expediting meetings by conducting them without chairs is borrowed from UN Ambassador John R. Bolton (Source: Podcast:Pegasus). Within the show, the lack of chairs is said to stem from her preference to stand because of her back problems (Resurrection Ship, Part II).
- Cain's surname may be a reference to the Cain of biblical mythology, who killed his brother Abel and was subsequently marked by God; Helena Cain's hesitatation to rescue Lucy on Tauron likely led to her sister's death, and her chin bears a prominent mole.
References
- ↑ Ryan, Maureen (20 November 2007). 'Battlestar Galactica: Razor' cuts to the heart of the matter (backup available on Archive.org) (in ). Retrieved on 22 November 2007.