In
The Magnificent Warriors we find writer/creator
Glen A. Larson still lifting elements from popular movies, and in this caIn episode
The Lost Warrior
we had Apollo filling the shoes of Alan Ladd as he was forced to stand
up to a Cylon gunfighter, but in this episode we have Apollo, Starbuck,
Boomer and Commander Adama stepping in for Steve McQueen, Charles
Bronson and Yul Brynner. The result is not pleasant to say the least.
A
Cylon attack on the fleet destroys two of the three “Agro Ships” and
the remaining one’s airlock was damaged resulting in the destruction of
the crops. (
Note: The shots of the agro ships is clearly footage from the science fiction classic
Silent Running.) With the loss of those ships and the crops needed to feed the fleet things look really bad.
Bruce Dern will be writing a sternly worded letter to the Cylons.
Commander Adama (
Lorne Greene) is informed by Colonel Tigh (
Terry Carter)
that though the remaining agro ship can be repaired they need new seed
to begin growing replacement crops. They are in luck as Apollo (
Richard Hatch)
and his advance scout team discovered a nearby human agricultural
settlement and that they should be able to trade an “old energizer” for
new seed. Once again we are left wondering, just where do all these
“human settlements” fit into the Cylon’s plans for the destruction of
humanity? Adama wants to use an energizer that can’t be traced to the
Twleve Colonies so that if the Cylon show up here they won’t know the
Galactica had just been by. That’s great for the Galactica and friends
but not so great for the settlements who one must assume are going to be
blasted into space dust by the human hating Cylons. Or do the Cylons
only have a bug up their collective asses about the humans from the
Twelve Colonies and don’t care about the numerous human settlements we
keep running into throughout the series?
Cylons, the very inconsistent racists.
They find a perfect energizer to barter with, but there is just one wrinkle, the owner Siress Belloby (
Brett Somers)
will not give it up. Colonel Tigh makes the obvious point that the
health and safety of the fleet supersedes any one person’s need and
that, “
You just order her to give it up.” But he is told that, “
You don’t order Siress Belloby to do anything.”
Turns out that she will make a deal but only with Adama himself, and
thus this episodes “comedy” kicks into gear. Her one stipulation to
handing over her energizer is that Adama must agree to “court her”, and
so our silver haired commander picks up some flowers, heads over to her
ship, and takes one for the team.
“Is that a pistol in your pocket, or are you just happy to see me?”
So
with the every man, woman and child in the fleet under the threat of
starvation this woman decides to blackmail sex from the commander of a
Battlestar. This is a horrible character and is painful to watch in
every scene she is in. If you are a fan of
Star Trek: The Next Generation
you’ll be use to this kind of horror as it reminded me a lot of Majel
Barrett’s character Lwaxana Troi and her relationship with Captain
Picard. On the plus side, Siress Belloby only appears in this one
episode and is never seen again unlike a certain Betazoid.
It’s clear she’s an old flame of Adama’s but didn’t he just lose his wife during the Cylon attack?
Of
course the siren call of Siress Belloby is not the only drama in this
episode, thank god, but the human settlement that has the much needed
seed is under constant threat of extinction by a race of piglike trolls
called Borays. On every full moon these creatures ride into the town of
Serenity to steal grain and women with only the town’s sheriff to stand
in their way. The Borays are of a herd mentality so that if you scare
off the leader the rest will follow, and that is the job of the sheriff,
to stand in the street and shoot at the leader. This plan seems to work
but alas it does also result in a dead sheriff, and apparently every
single time. This makes finding a replacement sheriff difficult and the
mayor of Serenity Bogan (
Barry Nelson) is forced to trick strangers and drifters into taking the job.
“You say this job comes with a free gun and almost instant death? I’ll take it!”
Adama
decides he’s been cooped up aboard the Galactica too long and wants to
go on the mission; of course his real reason is that he doesn’t want to
be left alone with Belloby. Because a civilian is coming along Apollo
decides that means it must be safe enough to bring his idiot kid Boxey (
Noah Hathaway) and his dumb robot dog. Boxey adds nothing to the story as he stays with the shuttle where poor Jolly (
Tony Swartz)
is forced to babysit him. So the away team for this crucial mission
consists of Commander Adama, his girlfriend, Apollo, Starbuck, Boomer,
Jolly, and Boxey.
There is nothing magnificent about this seven.
Starbuck (
Dirk Benedict) and Boomer (
Herbert Jefferson Jr.)
dress up as undercover as farmers and drive into town with the
energizer to hopefully find someone to trade with. Bogan refuses to
trade their seed for the energizer because he needs a sucker to play
sheriff more than he needs a new power supply. A dejected Starbuck and
Boomer are later ambushed on the drive back to the shuttle and both
their rover and the energizer is stolen. This episode has very few
shining moments for our heroes. Boomer continues on foot to the shuttle
to inform the group what has gone down while Starbuck goes back to town
to try and figure out who robbed them. Things go as well as can be
expected and by that I mean Starbuck screws up and accidentally wins the
Sheriff badge in a card game.
Strange how backward outposts of humanity play the exact same card games as the Colonies.
Note: Money in science fiction can be tricky business. In
Star Trek we are told the Federation operates within a moneyless "New World Economy" but when you get to
Deep Space Nine
we find out that many worlds use gold-pressed latinum for currency, yet
it’s never explained how people in the Federation who work in moneyless
economy get hold of such currency. In this episode of
Battlestar Galactica
we see Starbuck trying to pay for the grain with a bag full of currency
from various worlds including the Colonies, but wouldn’t the complete
destruction of the Colonies mean that their currency would be completely
worthless? Sure this backwater planet may be unaware of this fact, but
without some kind of central bank how is any currency’s value monitored?
Bogan
places Starbuck’s currency on some kind of computer scanner that
tallies the worth of the coins, but where exactly is that computer
getting its updates from? This world’s technology is completely
inconsistent; the people of Serenity have breach loaded rifles that are
shown to be almost useless against the Borays, the Borays themselves
ride camels and throws spears, so who in the hell brought that very
advanced money scanner into town?
And yet somehow our laser pistol toting heroes have a problem with the locals.
When
the Borays attack the town our newly appointed sucker…I mean Sheriff
Starbuck, along with Adama, Apollo and Boomer, face off against the
marauding horde of pig people and fail…somehow. You may wonder how men
armed with laser weapons could lose against savages wielding spears and
the answer is simple, our heroes are apparently pacifist idiots. When
faced with a charging gang of murdering thieves they fire their blasters
into the ground and then into the air. We are given no explanation as
to why they didn’t just mop the floor with these pig snouted assholes.
Is there some kind of Colonial Prime Directive that I’m unaware of? The
Galactica could clearly have taken what they wanted from these backwater
morons, but not being space bullies, and wanting to keep a low profile,
they took the high road and tried to purchase the seeds, but once
things went to shit why in the hell are they still turning the other
cheek?
Come on, these guys make Ewoks look fierce.
To
add insult to injury Belloboy is captured by the Borays and our
“heroes” have to mount a rescue. I myself thought this gave Adama the
perfect out, but I guess he’s more noble than I am. With the help of the
robot daggitt they track the Borays back to their cave and Adama goes
to negotiate with their leader. He fails because the leader of the
Borays is a self-centered lazy bastard, but upon hearing this very
"similar" description, Starbuck asks if
he can give
negotiations a try, and where Adama failed by using reason and logic
Starbuck succeeds because he is better at reading character. The big
“surprise” reveal at the end is that Starbuck gave the Boray chieftain
his sheriff’s badge, and so the pigmen will go back to farming for
themselves while their chieftain sits in office getting paid for sitting
on his ass. Sounds about right.
Another happy ending brought to you by greed and stupidity.
The
level of lazy writing reached in this episode is staggering and clearly
shows that Glen A. Larson has given no thought to the worlds he’s
created. Eight episodes in and we’ve already had two “Space Westerns”
and an episode that ripped off three different war movies. No real sense
of continuity holds these episodes together, with only Baltar randomly
popping up to be villainous between encounters with space Irish and
space cowboys. The only positive side to this complete lack of
continuity is that Adama’s love affair with Siress Belloby is
immediately forgotten and she is never seen again.
se it’s back to westerns with a lame rip-off of
The Magnificent Seven.
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