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The Night the Cylons Landed, Part I

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Revision as of 03:17, 6 January 2008 by Joe Beaudoin Jr. (talk | contribs) (→‎Overview: tweak)
The Night the Cylons Landed, Part I
"The Night the Cylons Landed, Part I"
An episode of the Galactica 1980 series
Episode No. Season 1, Episode 7
Writer(s) Glen A. Larson
Story by
Director Sigmund Neufeld Jr.
Assistant Director
Special guest(s) Wolfman Jack as Himself
Roger Davis as Andromus
Production No. 1.7
Nielsen Rating
US airdate USA 1980-04-13
CAN airdate CAN {{{CAN airdate}}}
UK airdate UK
DVD release
Population survivors
Additional Info
Episode Chronology
Previous Next
Spaceball The Night the Cylons Landed, Part I The Night the Cylons Landed, 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[edit]

After a renegade Cylon fighter crash-lands on Earth, Troy and Dillon rush to New York believing the craft is of Galactican nature. What they find is far worse and must stop the surviving Cylons from using radio equipment to contact the rest of the Cylon fleet.

Summary[edit]

  • Recon Delta, which consists of a two-man Viper crewed by Captain Kanon and Lieutenant Britton, is on patrol when it picks up readings of an advanced Cylon fighter.
  • Suddenly, a previously unseen Cylon Raider appears and fires at them.
  • The warbook brings back a readout of the occupants: the Raider crew appear to be human.
  • Kanon decides on a desperate strategy and rams the ship, damaging both craft.
  • The huge Cylon fighter tumbles towards Earth, and Britton is injured.
File:Warbook.jpg
The advanced Cylon 'A-B' Fighter displayed in the Warbook
  • Aboard the Cylon 'A-B' craft, Humanoid Cylon Andromus is in command, another humanoid named Andromidus as his second, with three Centurions rounding out the crew.
  • Having lost their communications they cannot call for help, but Andromus soon realizes the planet they are plummeting toward is the mythic human colony of Earth.
  • Troy's communicator chirps with a message from Adama. Galactica has lost contact with its recon patrol and is believed to be headed to Earth.
  • Troy and Dillon are ordered to meet the stricken Viper at the point it is likely to come down, which is predicted to be in the area of New York City.
  • As the United States Air Force has been detecting Vipers lately, Troy and Dillon elect to take a plane to New York. The kids are ferried to Griffith Observatory and left in the charge of Jamie Hamilton.
  • Once aboard the plane, and in flight to New York, Troy and Dillon are surprised that a terrorist attempts to take control and orders the pilot to divert to Cuba.
  • Troy and Dillon drop him with a joint round of stun gun fire. Later, after activating their invisibility screens in the toilets, Troy and Dillon hustle off the plane as soon as it lands.
  • Troy and Dillon grab a cab and direct the driver north - toward the crash site.
A-B Raider
  • On Galactica, the recon fighter has managed to return, but have reported information about the humanoid Cylons they believe are now headed to Earth.
  • The expected landing zone of the Cylon warship is narrowed down to 'sixty miles north of New York City', and the Air Force, now under the command of Colonel Briggs is also aware.
  • Troy and Dillon race to reach the crash site before the USAF.
  • The A-B craft comes down north of New York, and crashes.
  • Andromus and a single Centurion, Centuri, survive the crash of the A-B craft.
  • Centuri frees Andromus from the wreckage and leaves the area, having activated a self-destruct mechanism on the ship.
  • Andromus surmises that they can find a transmitter in nearby New York City and the two begin their search to find a place from which they can signal a Cylon basestar.
Andromus and Centuri ride with Norman and Shirley
  • Reaching a nearby highway, the two Cylons are mistaken for hitchhikers by a couple dressed for Halloween. Getting into the car, the Cylons meet Norman and Shirley, who are on their way to a party where Wolfman Jack, a radio personality, will be present.
  • Andromus realizes that Wolfman Jack may be able to help him find a transmitter, and agrees to attend the party.
  • Gazing at Centuri in the back seat, Shirley compliments him on having such a great costume.

Notes[edit]

Analysis[edit]

  • In a twist of irony, Troy (played by Kent McCord) is driving a stolen police car; McCord previously portrayed a cop in Adam 12.
  • The point where Dillon and Troy discuss hijacking is for educational purposes, however the way it is played off is unintentionally humorous at worst -- at best it is inaccurate. The general theme of their dialogue indicates that they don't know why anyone would want to hijack a flying craft; however, there are notable instances in the Fleet's history (from the Original Series) where ships have been hijacked:
    1. In the episode "Baltar's Escape", Baltar, the Borellian Nomen, and the Eastern Alliance enforcers attempt to hijack Galactica. In addition, they hijack a Colonial shuttle from Sheba and Boomer, using it to sneak aboard Galactica unawares.
    2. In "Murder on the Rising Star", Karibdis hijacks a shuttle piloted by Captain Apollo in order to kill Baltar, who is the only person in the Fleet of survivors that can identify him; he is subsequently thwarted by Baltar himself, as an act of self-preservation on his part.
  • An interesting aspect of this episode is the cross-dressing hijacker, particularly given the sentiments of the 1970s and, more importantly, the "kiddie-hour" timeslot the show aired in.

Official Statements[edit]

  • Chris Bunch discusses the censorship that the series faced:
Chris Bunch: [T]he censor, an utterly braindead woman named Susan Futterman, questioned a line that said there were more than X number of stars in our galaxy (this was in a planetarium sequence, and one of the kids heard the lecturer say this, and she giggled and said, boy is he full of hamhocks. Dumb little joke, very dumb, very little). She called and said where did we get the facts. We said, the new edition of the Britannica which we’d just sprung for a week earlier (true). She said, ‘that’s not good enough.’ Now, ignoring the fact that the Britannica does, indeed, contain some whoppers, we tried to restrain Major Hilarity and asked her if she minded putting that in writing. She may be dumb, but she wasn’t THAT dumb. We could’ve had such a nifty thing to frame….[1]
  • Bunch discusses the meatball jokes:
Bunch: Another neat [Susan] Futterman story--[Glen] Larson dumped a REALLY dumb joke about meatballs into [this] episode. Futterman swore it was dirty. It wasn’t. She said the show won’t get on the air unless that line’s out. Larson put in THREE MORE meatball jokes, even stupider (they’re in the episode the way it aired) and said it goes like this or it doesn’t go. Since he’d delivered the edit TWENTY MINUTES before it went up to the bird from Universal to New York and then on the air, it went out….[1]
  • Allan Cole discusses the shooting of the observatory scene in this episode:
Allan Cole: Do you recall the episode where all the kids from the mother ship troop into the Observatory? That was shot at night. And the only thing harder and more expensive than shooting at night (except for water, never, never do a water show) is shooting at night with children. They can only work a few hours at a time as it is. And night is golden time when it comes to wages -- for both them, the teachers, and, obviously the rest of the cast and crew. This also means you can't shoot anything early the next morning. So if you don't have enough night stuff in your script to warrant another setup the following evening, you lose a whole day. The only way around it is to shoot on Saturday night, which gives you a natural Sunday "break."
In this case, because of the craziness on the show, neither option was open. Plus the kids were either all sleepy, or hyper -- laughing hysterically or weeping; no inbetween. Or getting lost and you had to track them down again. Driving the planetarium staff out of their gourds.[2]

Noteworthy Dialogue[edit]

  • Troy looks up the term hijacking:
Troy: The act of seizing a vehicle for illegal purposes.
Dillon: Heh. I wonder what someone would do with an aircraft once they'd seized it.
Troy: Strange place. It's going to take a lot of getting used to.
  • The Warriors give their tickets to another ticket master:
Ticket Master: Smoking or non-smoking?
Troy: I beg your pardon?
Ticket Master: Would you prefer smoking or non-smoking?
Dillon: (shrugs) Which way does the plane run best?
Shirley: Aren't they [ Andromus and Centuri ] cute? Mildred and Arnie are just going to love this.
Norman: Well, I hope they feel the same way after Arnie forces a couple of his famous meatballs down their throats.
Shirley: Now Norman, don't get started on those meatballs again this year!
Norman: They are to the digestive tract what Vida Blue is to the San Francisco Giants: a stopper.
  • Norman offers a warning to the two Cylons:
Norman: The only thing I can tell you fellas, be on guard. Between Arnie's food and his sister's romantic malnutrition you could be in for the night of your life.
Andromus: You don't need to be concerned, we're quite capable of defending ourselves. Right Centuri?
Centuri: By your command.

Guest Stars[edit]

References[edit]

  1. 1.0 1.1 Paxton, Susan J.. Battlestar Zone Interview: Chris Bunch (backup available on Archive.org) (in ). Retrieved on 11 August 2007.
  2. Larocque, John (28 Feburary 2005). Interview with Galactica 1980 story editor Allan Cole (backup available on Archive.org) (in ). Retrieved on 11 August 2007.