Battlestar Galactica: Starbuck 3
From Battlestar Wiki, the free, open content Battlestar Galactica encyclopedia and episode guide
More actions
| |||||
Battlestar Galactica: Starbuck #3 An issue of the Dynamite series. | ||
---|---|---|
Issue No. | 3 | |
Writer(s) | Tony Lee | |
Illustrator(s) | {{{illustrator}}} | |
Penciller(s) | ||
Inker(s) | Eman Casallos | |
Colorist(s) | Davi Correia (pages); Adriano Lucas (cover) | |
Letterer(s) | Joshua Cozine | |
Editor(s) | ||
Collection Design | {{{designer}}} | |
Cover Artist(s) | Sean Chen | |
Adaptation of | ||
Published | January 2014 | |
Collects | ||
Collected in | Battlestar Galactica: Starbuck | |
Reprints | ||
Reprinted as | ||
Pages | {{{pages}}} | |
ISBN | 725130209306 | |
Population | 0 Survivors | |
Special | {{{special}}} | |
Chronology | ||
Previous | Next | |
Battlestar Galactica: Starbuck 2 | Battlestar Galactica: Starbuck #3 | Battlestar Galactica: Starbuck 4 |
Purchase | ||
Available at BOOKSAMILLION.COM - Purchase | ||
Available at Amazon.com – [[amazon:{{{amazon}}}|Purchase]] | ||
Available at Amazon.co.uk – Purchase | ||
Available at Things From Another World - Purchase |
Summary
Plot
- As with the previous installment, this issue is set entirely two yahrens before the attack at Cimtar.
- Onboard Galactica, while Starbuck tells a tall-tale during a pyramid game with Flight Sergeant Jolly, two Council Security officers arrest Starbuck.
- The Council Security officers inform Starbuck that he is charged with not only threatening Councilor Osiris while under the influence, but also with the murder of Kandi Trieste in the Erin Dream casino.
- Starbuck decries this charge, but is informed that DNA on a whiskey glass and a half-smoked fumerello state otherwise.
- Aboard the Aerian Administration Hub, Apollo visits Starbuck. Starbuck pities himself, blaming himself for being too cocky and being responsible for Kandi's death, even though it was a set-up. Starbuck seeks the only comfort that Osiris hasn't acquired McKintosh's pendant, which he had left aboard his Viper.
- Apollo tells Starbuck to not lose hope, for Adama is speaking to the Quorum of Twelve, aiming to have Starbuck transferred to Galactica's holding cells.
- Starbuck also tells Apollo to not trust Osiris's daughter, claiming that there's something "off about her."
- In Osiris's chambers, Colonel Adama tries to make his case. Osiris sticks to his story that Starbuck threatened him, and then proceeded to kill his ex-girlfriend in a fit of rage.
- Adama fails to get Starbuck transferred to Galactica, and Osiris makes a point to threaten Adama by telling the Quorum how Adama "tried to intimidate a fellow council member."
- Infuriated at the "insufferable fool," Adama leaves and informs Apollo that Starbuck may be in deeper trouble than they realize.
- After Adama leaves to return to Galactica, Apollo is approached by Baltar. Baltar couldn't "help overhearing" their "troubles with Osiris," and claims that he may be of service to ameliorate them.
- Baltar informs Apollo that his profession of tylium dealing lead to recent dealings with Osiris, but noted certain "things that make me think that he's up to no good." Baltar further elaborates that Osiris's friends "are a little more robotic than we'd like," and that because Starbuck's attentions to Osiris's plans, Osiris will likely move Starbuck "somewhere deep, dark... and forgettable."
- Baltar plants the idea that Apollo will need a friend with a container ship "big enough for a couple of Vipers—and a reason to visit Aeries."
Notes
Nods
- This is the "first" time that Starbuck would be set up for a murder to protect the misdeeds of a Cylon traitor by their aide. The "second" time would occur during the events of "Murder on the Rising Star," wherein Karibdis (yet another aide) set up Starbuck in the hopes of evading detection as a traitor. In both instances, a certain someone would be the one to assist Starbuck in clearing his name.
- The story told by Starbuck at the beginning of this installment is a direct nod to the pivotal scene from the first Star Wars film where Luke Skywalker manually fires proton torpedoes to destroy the Death Star.
Errata
- As with other entries in the Dynamite Entertainment comics, a mix of Re-Imagined Series and Original Series terminologies occurs:
- The backgrounds of the Viper bay on battlestar Galactica are those of the hangar deck from the Re-imagined Series.
- The Warrior uniforms feature shoulder patches on both shoulders, but it should only appear on the right shoulder on Warrior uniforms.
- The Vipers depicted are visually more in line with the Re-imagined Series Mark II Viper than the Original Series counterpart.
- Civilians wear contemporary clothing (modern suits with ties, vests, tank tops, red dresses, t-shirts) as opposed to the distinct Egyptian-esque clothing designed by Jean-Pierre Dorleac.
- When the blackshirts arrest Starbuck, he is drawn with McKintosh's pendant around his neck. However, following his incarceration in the Aeries detention cells, he tells Apollo that he left the pendant in his Viper—even though it is still around his neck in the last panel of page 3.
- As established in "Murder on the Rising Star," murder trials are to be held 10 centars following the entry of the accused's plea. This does not occur here.
Analysis
- Starbuck's drunken bouts of self-pity and gregarious womanizing recur many times in the course of this comic, which only serve to cause problems for him later on. This is in keeping with the character's depiction in the series proper, including "Murder on the Rising Star" (where Starbuck is framed for the murder of a rival) and "Take the Celestra" (where Starbuck is foiled by a mutinous ex-girlfriend).
- The Colonial Military continues its poor discipline standards, and nepotism abounds with the same family unit serving aboard one battlestar—Zac, Apollo, and Athena, all under the command of their father, Adama.
- Apollo and Adama's preferential treatment of Starbuck—particularly when other pilots would have been drummed out of the service for similar derelictions of duty—clearly lead to degradation of operational discipline and military effectiveness.
- The treasonous motives of both Osiris and Diana are not in any way fleshed out, in keeping with the tradition of established story telling in the series proper. There is a vague insinuation of power acquisition, and perhaps it could be argued that the Cylons also agreed to spare Osiris' colony of Aeries (assuming that the Cylons gave them the same deal as the one they gave Baltar), but is is paper-thin as motivation.
- McKintosh's data chip and corresponding pendant, first featured in Battlestar Galactica: Starbuck 1, serve as either a continual McGuffin or a Chekhov's Gun. In fact, one could say that the name of "McKintosh" is a nod to that particular point.
Questions
- Why would anyone betray their homeworlds to the Cylons?
- Were either Osiris or Diana involved with future sneak attacks, such as those that took the lives of Starbuck's foster parents?
Noteworthy Dialogue
Gallery
-
Colorized cover.
-
Page 1
-
Page 2
-
Page 3
-
Page 4
-
Page 5
External links
- Battlestar Galactica: Starbuck #3 at Dynamite Entertainment
References
- ↑ BATTLESTAR GALACTICA: STARBUCK #3 (OF 4) (backup available on Archive.org) (in ). Retrieved on 26 May 2019.