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Post by colfoley on Aug 21, 2016 23:09:24 GMT
I missed the post so forgiveme. But Sheridan broke away from Earth and exisisted and was the Captain pre, ISA, how was he always running to an organization he was at war with and another organization that did not even exist yet?
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Post by Vormav on Aug 22, 2016 0:12:41 GMT
Gideon was better leader than Sheridan and Sinclair were and was second only to Lochley in getting shit done without the needing to get Earth or the ISA to bail them out. I don't know about that. Gideon was ok but he was just a generic space captain most of the time. Same with Sheridan and Sinclair, really. Their points of difference and where they became interesting come from outside their job and a lot of it had to do with their backstory. That's not to say they were all exactly the same. Sinclair seemed more about diplomacy and being a people person, while Sheridan was more task oriented and militaristic. Gideon seemed more over his head then the other two to be honest, but he had determination and sheer stubbornness to see him through. Also off the top of my head, both Sheridan and Sinclair got some pretty good strategic Crowning Moments of Awesome; Sinclair using the Rush Act to give the dock workers exactly what they want and Sheridan had a few in battle-wise but also the double bluff in tricking the League of Non Aligned Words to agree to use the White Stars for protection- "absolutely nothing happened here " Speaking of Sheridan, I liked his backstory and how it set him apart from Sinclair. I feel like In the Beginning kinda ruined the Black Star story though. When people spoke of it in the show proper it seemed like a cunning, thought out strategy whereas in the special, it was a desperate, "winging it" move. Kinda cheapens it a little in my opinion. (mostly responding to Cyberstrike here and building on what CrutchCricket was saying) Gideon had a reputation for getting things done, and being apolitical about it, which was why he got the job (as I recall; that, and he was the best of the rest). In the short time that we saw him, however, I don't think he really accomplished all that much. Part of that is due to the fact that Crusade was more of an ensemble piece from the start, so there wasn't as much focus on him as there was on Sinclair in season one of B5. The bigger part is that we only got 13 episodes, so we didn't have much of a chance to see him shine between the lack of focus on him and the number of episodes. B5 was also an ensemble show, to be sure, but there was significant effort put into building up Sinclair so that later events would feel justified (and, to briefly revisit something I had said about him earlier, Sinclair was made out to be nearly perfect, to his and the show's detriment). I can concede that Sheridan and Gideon are comparable based on Sheridan's first 13 episodes (going beyond that might be unfair to Gideon, and certainly would be unfair if we considered events from seasons 3 and 4). Both have backstories that tell us they can get shit done, but I think Sheridan's taking out of the Black Star is more bad-ass than Gideon's winning an Apocalypse Box in a poker game and having the luck to be outside his ship when it's destroyed. (And yes, I completely agree that seeing the Black Star taken out in In the Beginning was a let down). Both were captains before getting their on-screen gigs, and I think being captain of an explorer class ship is more impressive than being captain of an Omega class destroyer (impressive in its own right). Through 13 episodes they both saw roughly as much intrigue and improvised solutions as each other, so to me it comes down to Black Star vs. explorer ship, so I have to give it to Sheridan. Looking ahead, it's entirely likely that Gideon was about to undergo a very Sheridan-like arc, too.... That said, I probably found Gideon to be a more interesting character than Sheridan. As to Lochley, I just don't see a comparison with the others, but I'm open to seeing one made. I didn't dislike her character, I just thought she played a supporting role to Sheridan and crew in season 5 and was just starting to come into her own by the end -- I liked what I saw of her in Crusade. I also fail to see how convincing Earth or the ISA (or the League of Non-Aligned Worlds) to do something that they didn't want to do isn't an accomplishment (CrutchCricket gave one of my favourite examples of this, from "Rumors, Bargains and Lies," I believe).
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Post by CrutchCricket on Aug 22, 2016 3:49:50 GMT
I also fail to see how convincing Earth or the ISA (or the League of Non-Aligned Worlds) to do something that they didn't want to do isn't an accomplishment (CrutchCricket gave one of my favourite examples of this, from "Rumors, Bargains and Lies," I believe). And there was also that time he talked down a Vorlon. If this had been Mass Effect that would've been a blue option for sure. I prefer Sheridan because he's very much the type of hero/leader I like in these situations- competent, brave, loyal, a nice guy, not afraid to crack a joke or listen to your problems (or admit when he has one of his own). But cross that line, mess with his people or with innocents and you'll be very, very sorry. Never start a fight, but always finish it.
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Post by Deleted on Aug 23, 2016 3:09:06 GMT
but also the double bluff in tricking the League of Non Aligned Words to agree to use the White Stars for protection- "absolutely nothing happened here " *Gets in the elevator* "YEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEES!" Hilarious moment. I love it when plans go well.
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Post by Cyberstrike on Aug 23, 2016 19:47:26 GMT
I don't know about that. Gideon was ok but he was just a generic space captain most of the time. Same with Sheridan and Sinclair, really. Their points of difference and where they became interesting come from outside their job and a lot of it had to do with their backstory. That's not to say they were all exactly the same. Sinclair seemed more about diplomacy and being a people person, while Sheridan was more task oriented and militaristic. Gideon seemed more over his head then the other two to be honest, but he had determination and sheer stubbornness to see him through. Also off the top of my head, both Sheridan and Sinclair got some pretty good strategic Crowning Moments of Awesome; Sinclair using the Rush Act to give the dock workers exactly what they want and Sheridan had a few in battle-wise but also the double bluff in tricking the League of Non Aligned Words to agree to use the White Stars for protection- "absolutely nothing happened here " Speaking of Sheridan, I liked his backstory and how it set him apart from Sinclair. I feel like In the Beginning kinda ruined the Black Star story though. When people spoke of it in the show proper it seemed like a cunning, thought out strategy whereas in the special, it was a desperate, "winging it" move. Kinda cheapens it a little in my opinion. (mostly responding to Cyberstrike here and building on what CrutchCricket was saying) Gideon had a reputation for getting things done, and being apolitical about it, which was why he got the job (as I recall; that, and he was the best of the rest). In the short time that we saw him, however, I don't think he really accomplished all that much. Part of that is due to the fact that Crusade was more of an ensemble piece from the start, so there wasn't as much focus on him as there was on Sinclair in season one of B5. The bigger part is that we only got 13 episodes, so we didn't have much of a chance to see him shine between the lack of focus on him and the number of episodes. B5 was also an ensemble show, to be sure, but there was significant effort put into building up Sinclair so that later events would feel justified (and, to briefly revisit something I had said about him earlier, Sinclair was made out to be nearly perfect, to his and the show's detriment). I can concede that Sheridan and Gideon are comparable based on Sheridan's first 13 episodes (going beyond that might be unfair to Gideon, and certainly would be unfair if we considered events from seasons 3 and 4). Both have backstories that tell us they can get shit done, but I think Sheridan's taking out of the Black Star is more bad-ass than Gideon's winning an Apocalypse Box in a poker game and having the luck to be outside his ship when it's destroyed. (And yes, I completely agree that seeing the Black Star taken out in In the Beginning was a let down). Both were captains before getting their on-screen gigs, and I think being captain of an explorer class ship is more impressive than being captain of an Omega class destroyer (impressive in its own right). Through 13 episodes they both saw roughly as much intrigue and improvised solutions as each other, so to me it comes down to Black Star vs. explorer ship, so I have to give it to Sheridan. Looking ahead, it's entirely likely that Gideon was about to undergo a very Sheridan-like arc, too.... That said, I probably found Gideon to be a more interesting character than Sheridan. As to Lochley, I just don't see a comparison with the others, but I'm open to seeing one made. I didn't dislike her character, I just thought she played a supporting role to Sheridan and crew in season 5 and was just starting to come into her own by the end -- I liked what I saw of her in Crusade. I also fail to see how convincing Earth or the ISA (or the League of Non-Aligned Worlds) to do something that they didn't want to do isn't an accomplishment (CrutchCricket gave one of my favourite examples of this, from "Rumors, Bargains and Lies," I believe). When I use the it basically means I was joking.
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Post by Vormav on Aug 23, 2016 20:07:53 GMT
When I use the it basically means I was joking. In that case, your joke got me to reconsider something I had taken for granted. So... well done
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Post by CrutchCricket on Aug 26, 2016 13:22:23 GMT
Well, using the last five minutes of Sleeping in Light as my final post on BSN Prime certainly boosted the feels to 200% over capacity. I just thought it really fitting.
But to the finale itself, never did a series end so perfectly. For me, Deconstruction of Falling Stars was the perfect epilogue of the world itself while Sleeping in Light was the final closure for the characters.
Just... beautiful.
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Post by wintery on Aug 26, 2016 14:02:27 GMT
I just found this thread. Lots of memories here...
A friend and I saw a few minutes in the middle of the pilot and thought... no. Just no.
Then a few months later I guess I saw the preview for "The Coming of Shadows" and it was one of the most intriguing things I'd ever seen. I had to know what was going on there. I did a bit of reading in the Lurker's Guide and discovered it was this long story with huge backstory and the Shadows and all these conspiracies and I'm like "Okay I think I'm in."
My first actual episode was "Hunter, Prey" which... not the best, but I liked the atmosphere and the station and the fun interplay between Garibaldi and Franklin. I started talking about it and some guy at work had the first six episodes of season two on videotape.
I watched them with a friend and halfway through "Points of Departure" she said "Damn, now I'm really into this". Later I showed "The Coming of Shadows" to a couple of friends and they were mocking it in the beginning. By the end they were saying, "Why didn't you bring the next one?"
I remember reading JMS posting about the show and lots of conversations with people. The third and fourth seasons are still some of my favorite TV I've ever seen.
Favorite characters: Delenn, Londo, G'Kar, Ivanova, Morden. I mentioned Delenn, right?
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Post by CrutchCricket on Aug 26, 2016 16:45:00 GMT
Welcome!
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Post by yourfunnyuncle on Aug 26, 2016 20:02:35 GMT
Wintery is a B5 fan? Least surprising thing I've read today. A woman of impeccable taste.
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Post by wintery on Aug 26, 2016 23:13:28 GMT
Wintery is a B5 fan? Least surprising thing I've read today. A woman of impeccable taste. I'm sure my taste is frequently less than impeccable... peccable? I thought we'd talked about B5 before. Maybe I'm thinking of one of the other 34523 B5 conversations I've had online Now I remember that I read the Psi Corps trilogy and, I think, To Dream in the City of Sorrows. But none of the other books.
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Post by yourfunnyuncle on Aug 26, 2016 23:17:13 GMT
Wintery is a B5 fan? Least surprising thing I've read today. A woman of impeccable taste. I'm sure my taste is frequently less than impeccable... peccable? I thought we'd talked about B5 before. Maybe I'm thinking of one of the other 34523 B5 conversations I've had online Now I remember that I read the Psi Corps trilogy and, I think, To Dream in the City of Sorrows. But none of the other books. Most likely we did. We talked about a whole lot of things in the Sera thread and beyond. It probably got lost among the 25476 B5 conversations I've had.
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Post by CrutchCricket on Aug 27, 2016 0:37:13 GMT
Well... all I can say is you two have been damned lucky! For me, finding all the B5 fans here was like getting dunked in a water tower after crossing as desert.
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Post by yourfunnyuncle on Aug 27, 2016 10:24:31 GMT
Well... all I can say is you two have been damned lucky! For me, finding all the B5 fans here was like getting dunked in a water tower after crossing as desert. Whenever talk turns to sci-fi on TV, I always bring it up, be it on Facebook or video game, music or photography fora. Many, like Wintery, were put off initially, and over the years I've convinced a few people that it was worthwhile to give it another try. It's quite satisfying when people thank you for the recommendation.
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Post by CrutchCricket on Aug 29, 2016 19:02:16 GMT
Alright, how about another first impression? This time, Londo Mollari First time I saw Londo I saw not his character, but rather the so-called "90s sci-fi cheese" I've been putting in the footnote of every Babylon 5 recommendation I've made to date. It was a realization (and a bit of resignation) of "oh, it's one of those shows". Blatantly human aliens that talk funny and have all sorts of "grievances". Right... Between him and first season Delenn, a literal Rubber Forehead Alien (though more on her when it's her turn) this smacked hard of Star Trek and its parodies like Galaxy Quest. Londo stood out all the more though, because at least with your more typical Rubber Forehead Aliens the aforementioned rubber at least makes them look weird enough that they can't possibly be normal humans. For Londo and the Centauri though, their alienness apparently began and ended at "hair" (I'll get to their other err... notable feature in a bit). And then the first time you see Londo he's talking with Garibaldi who specifically says humans and Centauri don't have a common ancestor, the only explanation that allow for the loosest handwave of such blatant similarities. Rather than help to accept this character as an alien based on the conventions and tropes of the time, suspend your disbelief and move on, this seemed to willingly point out how silly it is and invite criticism. And then later of course we find out about the Centauri's six... well, six. And I was actually shocked they did that. I'm perfectly fine with some pretty weird shit so the Centauri having tentacles for some reason wouldn't even stand out to me. But in making them perfectly human otherwise and giving them... genticles to borrow a phrase from Futurama, well that's actually kind of creepy. Especially in that episode where Londo uses one to cheat at cards. Good lord, he's been litterally dicking people out of money. I... I don't know how I feel about that. But to bring this around, Londo's true character and value were of course, never on the outside. Both he and G'Kar started out as boisterous and obnoxious, one a warmonger the other a bufoon. But unlike lesser shows where characters might start off one note and become interesting later, the hidden depths were there all along. Right in the pilot, the first memorable speech Londo ever said (even if we didn't know it at the time): Everything you needed to know about the man was right there in front of us the whole time. We just got distracted by the ridiculous exterior. As we were likely meant to, in-universe and out.
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Post by Deleted on Aug 29, 2016 19:13:28 GMT
I've thought the Centauri weren't actually as powerful as they made it sound. They were just more isolated as a whole from the other league races; creating a perspective of strength where it doesn't necessarily exist. Middling fish in a small pond. Combine that with some nostalgia and real government corruption/decay and voila, "the glorious Centauri republic's better days" are really more smoke and shadow than fond memory.
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Post by CrutchCricket on Aug 29, 2016 21:36:04 GMT
I've thought the Centauri weren't actually as powerful as they made it sound. They were just more isolated as a whole from the other league races; creating a perspective of strength where it doesn't necessarily exist. Middling fish in a small pond. Combine that with some nostalgia and real government corruption/decay and voila, "the glorious Centauri republic's better days" are really more smoke and shadow than fond memory. I don't know man. The Centauri at the height of their power were said to be second only to the Minbari. By the time of B5 they're more or less on par with Earth. When they start expanding again most of their attacks on the League are them on their own- the Shadows were only used three times, mostly in sneak attacks against Narn targets. And speak of Narn, they're routed pretty well too, mass driver bombing aside. And the Narn are only the power they are because they reverse engineered Centauri tech and have been building up for a century- which isn't that long on a galactic scale, so the tech must be good enough to compensate. We can also assume that most of the Centauri expansion in the show is masterminded by Refa and his bunch- they're arrogant assholes, but they're not dumb. The Centauri would never attack a target they thought they couldn't defeat. They steer well clear of Minbari and Vorlons, obviously and they sign a non-agression treaty with Earth, the only other power who could challenge them and historically has turned the tide in an alien war before. If you want to be less than charitable you could consider them bullies- and still would that prove their place in the hierarchy of power, since bullies never look for a fair fight. Thus if they challenge League worlds, it means they can take them. The hierarchy in B5 is pretty clear. 1. First Ones and Thirdspace Aliens 2. Minbari and Drakh 3. Earth, Centauri, Narn 4. Dilgar 5. League of Non-Aligned Worlds
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Post by Vormav on Aug 29, 2016 22:15:42 GMT
The hierarchy in B5 is pretty clear. 1. First Ones and Thirdspace Aliens 2. Minbari and Drakh 3. Earth, Centauri, Narn 4. Dilgar 5. League of Non-Aligned Worlds I'll get to my opinion of the Certauri when I've got a bit more time, but I want to get to this while it's still hot: I disagree with your hierarchy on the placement of Earth. Earth is a nascent space-faring world, having only recently encountered alien civilizations. They do not have artificial gravity generation without using rotating sections, and still use relatively primitive weapon systems (missiles and targeting computers come to mind). Humans rate better ff you count involvement in the Rangers or later ISA, but on their own, and certainly at the beginning of the series, humans are at best on par with some of the stronger non-aligned worlds (but probably not as strong as the Drazi, who can apparently hold their own against the Certauri). Remember that the Dilgar were beating the entire League on their own before human intervention, which strongly suggests the Dilgar were superior to any individual element they were up against. Post series, after humans got their hands on Shadow tech... that's likely a much different story.
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Post by Deleted on Aug 29, 2016 22:28:10 GMT
This part here I'd break down further. 3: Centauri 4: Earth 5: Narn The Narns never really were on an equal footing with the Centauri. That felt like bloated arrogance on the Narn's part, or propaganda from the Narn Resistance. When it comes down to it the Narns lost a few times which whittled down their over all-forces, don't have the numbers after their first enslavement, and don't have teeps tyvm Shadows. They got heart, and a few bulky destroyers that seem pretty potent but few in number. *** Earth seems odd put there, but that's roughly where I'd assess their military strength. That part, much like Mass Effect, feels like a bit of a rushed entry into galactic civilization. We go from NASA to the EA being able to stand up to the Centauri in how many years? couple hundred? Sure it's a while but on that scale it's not. It's flattering, me being human and all, but a bit much to take. Mass Effect and the Turian wars felt the same, winning a fight I doubt we'd actually win but putting it in the past as a bridge. ...and this is after getting the shit kicked out of us by the Minbari. Yeah they passed colony worlds to go for the throat but they killed anything in the way and The Line, well... anyone remember the % of losses? IIRC it's tossed around in an episode. The Minbari War felt like what it would really be to fight a superior enemy. The show did that great, but things get a bit muddled as to why/how earth is as strong as it is comparably to other races that have been doing it longer. *** Centauri Let's put it a different way. When the centauri talk about the old days on the show I get the feeling they almost feel they were more powerful than the minbari. Go back to Londo's editing of Vir's first diplomatic report from Minbar. But really, no matter how much they edit, they'd get the crap kicked out of them in a true fight with a united Minbari of a hundred years ago. The only way the Minbari were really taken out of the picture and didn't wipe everything up in the Shadow War was the Shadow-instigated civil war. White Stars seemed pretty OP given two or three of em could put full power to their weapons and kill Shadow vessels with tech literally millions of years old. Which also felt a bit off. Vorlons and Shadows were pretty underpowered for what they represented. I stomach it, but if Shadows are really as advanced as all that, I doubt we'd be able to harm them at all. And what the hell did the Vorlons smoke to make them even consider a joint ship program with the minbari that would eventually allow humans to command them?
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Post by CrutchCricket on Aug 30, 2016 1:23:34 GMT
I'll get to my opinion of the Certauri when I've got a bit more time, but I want to get to this while it's still hot: I disagree with your hierarchy on the placement of Earth. Earth is a nascent space-faring world, having only recently encountered alien civilizations. They do not have artificial gravity generation without using rotating sections, and still use relatively primitive weapon systems (missiles and targeting computers come to mind). Humans rate better ff you count involvement in the Rangers or later ISA, but on their own, and certainly at the beginning of the series, humans are at best on par with some of the stronger non-aligned worlds (but probably not as strong as the Drazi, who can apparently hold their own against the Certauri). Remember that the Dilgar were beating the entire League on their own before human intervention, which strongly suggests the Dilgar were superior to any individual element they were up against. Post series, after humans got their hands on Shadow tech... that's likely a much different story. General note: the races I listed are not in order of strength on their own line i.e. Earth > Narn or Centauri.Otherwise, apart from artificial gravity Earth ships are not quite as behind as you claim. For one thing Earth destroyers are clearly shown using some kind of laser beam weapon more often than they do missiles. Secondly low yield energy weapons and missiles are standard armament for just about every race short of Minbari or First One level advancement. The Minbari are said to specifically use their antigravity to power their engines as well as weapons putting them closer to the Vorlons than anyone else (though still way of their league on that front). Come to think of it the maneuverability of "gravity drives" is one of the largest stated advantages the Minbari and Centauri have over Earth. Centauri armaments are more powerful but not in a whole other class from Earthforce. Centauri fleets also suffer from only really building one type of cruiser that has no fighter bays. They make up for it with a formation for interlocking fields of fire, but still, that could easily be exploited. As for the Dilgar they went from soundly beating the entire League to soundly being beaten once humans got involved. I don't see how that suggests anything other than humans thoroughly outclassing them in combat. From what I remember, it's not quite described as a roflstomp, but it's not by the skin of their teeth either. Finally, ignoring Humans Are Special from our perspective, there's gotta be a reason everybody but the Minbari, Vorlons, Centauri and Narn treat humans with such deference and why Babylon 5 is so important to them. Remember, the aliens believe it's the last best hope for peace (and later victory) as well. They would not do so if humans were weaker than they were, especially the Drazi. The Narns never really were on an equal footing with the Centauri. That felt like bloated arrogance on the Narn's part, or propaganda from the Narn Resistance. When it comes down to it the Narns lost a few times which whittled down their over all-forces, don't have the numbers after their first enslavement, and don't have teeps tyvm Shadows. They got heart, and a few bulky destroyers that seem pretty potent but few in number. Well at the start they kind of were. They had gotten so many Centauri weapons and built up while the Centauri were almost in freefall decline that politically they could go back and forth. Hell the whole series started with the Narn taking over Ragesh 3 and until the Shadows got involved the Narn were so militant you actually thought they would be the aggressors. From a pure technical advancement perspective, yes, Narn still hadn't cracked artificial gravity and the lack of telepaths would've been a weakness in a fair fight. But before the Shadows got involved the Narn were unmistakably on the rise while the Centauri were quite the opposite. It's telling that the Centauri needed the Shadows to spark them up again too. While if they really put their minds to it they probably could've defeated the Narn in fair open combat, they simply didn't have the stomach and tenacity for it- something that's explicitly stated as the cause for the Narn rise. The just wore them out. An adversary who can't maintain the fight will still lose even if they should be the superior side. Humans Are Special- not the first place this trope showed up and Mass Effect won't be the last. That's another reason why I say B5 was ME before ME was a thing. Humanity discovers aliens who jump our tech by a few centuries, largely via gateways that fling you across vast distances of space. We inadvertently step on alien toes and get into a fight early on that's eventually abandoned and now human ingenuity, resourcefulness and tenacity has made us big players on the galactic scene, whether some races want us there or not. But little do we know that forces beyond our understanding are converging in a cycle as they always do and one man will have to unite everybody to fight back and break the cycle, making everyone friends and romancing an exotic alien babe and also something something Jesus metaphor.... guess which franchise I'm talking about "Even at the height of our power we never crossed [the Minbari]"- from In the Beginning. Londo flat out states that no matter how conquest happy the Centauri got they never messed with the Minbari. There's reverence, almost fear there. Remember before the Babylon project, the Minbari kept pretty much to themselves. They weren't quite as isolationist as the Vorlons but there was a similar air of mystery about them all the same. Now flash forward to Vir's report- Londo's already met several Minbari at that point, got drunk and generally made an ass of himself in front of them. It's obvious that earlier reverence has evaporated due to familiarity. Hell you could argue the same thing happens with Kosh even. Everyone's curious but wary of the Vorlons including Sheridan. But the more time he spends with him the bolder he becomes to the point where he even shouts and talk him down. And this is a being that can not only spread him all over the walls with a thought but one that he's been manipulated to regard with almost godlike awe. I'm not sure what the second paragraph is trying to say. The Centauri had barely started exploring the stars when the last Shadow war was moped up- they had nothing to do with it. Are you saying the Minbari could've beaten the Shadows? Because... no. Not at all. The side of light (Minbari, Vorlons and whoever else) had to call in, not just the other First Ones but literally cheat with time travel and a station from a thousand years in the future to win. As for the White Stars they're a mix of Minbari (already OP compared to the rest of the younger races) and Vorlon tech (wtfroflpwn level). It was the probably the latter that made them somewhat able to stand up to Shadow vessels. They couldn't really take a lot of hits from a Shadow ship but as you said, a few of them working together could bring one down. Otherwise, we (the younger races) couldn't harm the Shadows- or the Vorlons. When did you see a Shadow vessel fall to conventional fire? Maybe if an entire fleet all concentrated fire and the Shadow just stood there. But it was both more maneuverable and its attack shredded ships in seconds flat. The only time Shadow vessels were destroyed it was either a one off trap (blowing a jump gate or getting one stuck in Jupiter's gravitational pull) or involved some combination of White Stars, telepaths or Vorlon/ other First One ships. Same with the Vorlons- we never saw Vorlon ships be destroyed. Or even Vorlons themselves. The only way to kill a Vorlon is with Shadows or another Vorlon and freakin Lorien watching. The only way to kill Shadows is with nukes (on a partly Vorlon ship)
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Post by Vormav on Aug 30, 2016 4:24:23 GMT
I don't have time to respond in detail so forgive me for resorting to point form so I can still get to the Centauri. - I freely admit I'm trying to shape my opinion to something I heard/read from JMS, that Earth is a minor power at the start of the series (I'm looking for where that came from... no luck yet). - My assessment of power levels is more guided by how the various parties interact with each other throughout the series, as we're very rarely given any direct comparisons (although, the way Sheridan was training his pilots against Centauri tactics did suggest to me that Centauri fighters were superior, and I do think that lack of anti-gravity and any use of projectile weapons are liabilities). - We know that Earth forces turned the tide in the Dilgar war, but not by how much. From Dr. Franklin's stories it didn't sound like a cake-walk, though. That makes me think that either Earth waited until the League was ready to throw in the towel to enter the fight, having to carry all of the fighting from then on, or it took the combined weight of the League + Earth to win the day. Either way, I'm inclined be believe that the Dilgar would have defeated Earth on its own, without the League to soften them up. - As to the Drazi, they seemed to win at least some of their engagements with (half) the Centauri forces in season 5, which makes me think they're on par with Earth forces (on the assumption that Earth is behind the Centauri). If the Drazi are part of the League, then I'd have to consider the League, as a whole, more powerful than Earth (even if it is clear that Earth is more powerful than, say, the Pak'ma'ra). - Deference to Earth may well be because the Vorlons and Minbari were backing the station. If the two biggest known powers in the galaxy are willing to back it, it'd be worth it to give the station a chance and even humour Earth with a full vote (it's their station, after all). Without direct comparisons it's open to interpretation. I'll try to find that JMS quote, but if it's buried in a commentary this might take me some time. (I also concede that just because an author says something is so after the fact, it doesn't necessarily alter our ability to interpret a work as it exists for ourselves). *** I don't honestly recall my first impression of the Centauri. Not unlike Dalakaar, I've watched the series too many times to count. I think I was well used to the two Star Trek series that came before it, with all their human + superficial tweek = alien, to bat an eye. One of the things I appreciate about the Centauri and Narn, aesthetically, is that JMS seems to have used their appearances to play with our sympathies. In the first episode we see a human-like species being attacked without apparent provocation by a substantially less human-like species, setting us up to side with the Centauri over the Narn. The attitudes of Mollari and G'Kar, as a decadent down-on-his-luck bureaucrat and an aggressive militant/priest, respectively, reinforce this initial stance further. But as the series progresses JMS soon reverses the position of the Centauri and Narn, such that the human-like Centauri become a substantial antagonistic force, and boosting (at least in my case) sympathy for the Narn. So I guess I first saw Londo Mollari and the Centauri as just another sci-fi alien, with an Imperial type flare, perhaps as a person and a culture closer to an end than a beginning. Pretty straight forward, to be honest. The complexity grew over time (and pretty quickly), which is one of the biggest things that keeps me coming back.
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Post by CrutchCricket on Aug 30, 2016 5:20:09 GMT
I don't have time to respond in detail so forgive me for resorting to point form so I can still get to the Centauri. - I freely admit I'm trying to shape my opinion to something I heard/read from JMS, that Earth is a minor power at the start of the series (I'm looking for where that came from... no luck yet). - My assessment of power levels is more guided by how the various parties interact with each other throughout the series, as we're very rarely given any direct comparisons (although, the way Sheridan was training his pilots against Centauri tactics did suggest to me that Centauri fighters were superior, and I do think that lack of anti-gravity and any use of projectile weapons are liabilities). - We know that Earth forces turned the tide in the Dilgar war, but not by how much. From Dr. Franklin's stories it didn't sound like a cake-walk, though. That makes me think that either Earth waited until the League was ready to throw in the towel to enter the fight, having to carry all of the fighting from then on, or it took the combined weight of the League + Earth to win the day. Either way, I'm inclined be believe that the Dilgar would have defeated Earth on its own, without the League to soften them up. - As to the Drazi, they seemed to win at least some of their engagements with (half) the Centauri forces in season 5, which makes me think they're on par with Earth forces (on the assumption that Earth is behind the Centauri). If the Drazi are part of the League, then I'd have to consider the League, as a whole, more powerful than Earth (even if it is clear that Earth is more powerful than, say, the Pak'ma'ra). - Deference to Earth may well be because the Vorlons and Minbari were backing the station. If the two biggest known powers in the galaxy are willing to back it, it'd be worth it to give the station a chance and even humour Earth with a full vote (it's their station, after all). Without direct comparisons it's open to interpretation. I'll try to find that JMS quote, but if it's buried in a commentary this might take me some time. (I also concede that just because an author says something is so after the fact, it doesn't necessarily alter our ability to interpret a work as it exists for ourselves). No worries. That may be the longest post I've written in years lol. Anyway to your points: -I'd say a quote like that would directly counter what happens throughout the show. The B5 council is presided by Earth, Minbar, Narn Centauri Prime and the Vorlons. The League on the other hand are almost always portrayed as the minor, squabbling general assembly. I don't believe they would accept this position if they felt they were equal to any of the races on the council. This speaks to your second point as well. Consider the case of Deathwalker. If some of the League were on par or greater than humans, I don't believe they would've let the situation go on as long as it did, especially since the other major races flatly refused to get involved. Instead we see how a species truly above it all handles that. Likewise we've seen the Narn and Centauri bend or even break the rules but not so much any individual League world, or even all of them together (excluding during wartime of course where everybody can go off the rails). -To the Dilgar, it's possible that they stretched themselves too thin and fought a war on more fronts than they could support. There's probably some RL parallels we could draw that would likely not be coincidental. I can agree there's room for interpretation along these lines. -I'd say careful with season 5. The enemy there might've been packing Centauri firepower but they were Shadow pod driven by Drahk. We don't know how responsive those things truly are and like I said, the way the Centauri build their ships they have to rely on precise formations to cover their weaknesses. It's unclear whether the Drahk knew and utilized these strategies, or even cared, since the goal was ambush and draw blame (and destruction) on Centauri Prime. -My only issue with that is that while the Vorlons and Minbari are powerful, they're not really authoritative (well, for the former, not in a way that's apparent). They don't openly try and sway the other races, on the contrary they're isolationist on the surface. So while they may be respected and/or feared that wouldn't count as an endorsement for humanity in this context. They're not declaring humanity a worthy opponent on the battlefield. Their presence on B5 doesn't give the humans weight I think, it just legitimizes the endeavor itself. And if you're thinking of mentioning the Minbari War and their surrender, while that might sound good on paper, everybody who actually knows more than just the headline knows the Minbari were one step away from completely annihilating Earth. So their surrender to us doesn't elevate us, it just puts another mystery around them.
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Post by wintery on Aug 30, 2016 12:10:55 GMT
Random things:
Refa was a lot of fun. You've got that machiavellian arch-villainy with an actor who is clearly enjoying some quality scenery chewing, and then show how much he delights in evil. Well done, that can always be a lot of fun.
On the other hand, the new Emperor was clearly supposed to be a sort of Caligula, but after John Hurt in I, Claudius I think it would be hard for any actor to bring that.
My early impressions of the ancient races: they really had a good sense of scale and mystery... the lost technology lying around from the ancient precursors, playing on the horror of aliens that are spider and bug and whose ships scream for a reason, the growing dread as secrets are revealed and they begin to act more openly.
It's hard to set up all of that mystery and not have it be a bit disappointing when a lot has been revealed, and now they're being defeated somehow. Then whatever ancients you've set up seem less than they did when they were mostly mystery. And it did feel a bit deflated at the end of that war, although the battle between Kosh and Ulkesh was pretty awe-inspiring.
And what a wonder what the showmakers managed to convey with technology (Amigas, right?) that was at the very beginning of being able to do it. I give a lot of credit to whats-his-name who designed a lot of the early ships, because they were beautiful and inspired and sometimes terrifying. Such wonderful examples of art conveying character and backstory.
- Centauri ships: an antiquated sense of past glories long regretted. - Minbari ships: angelfish, all grace and beauty adrift - Vorlon ships: also sea creatures, but this time we have glowing squids, pretty and fast and unsettling - Shadows: spiders in the dark, all the horrors of a midnight dream, but deadly - Narns: their ships are tattoed, and that's kind of awesome - Humans: blocky and gray and functional. We have no art in our souls, apparently
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Post by Obsidian Gryphon on Aug 30, 2016 13:36:31 GMT
And what a wonder what the showmakers managed to convey with technology (Amigas, right?) that was at the very beginning of being able to do it. I give a lot of credit to whats-his-name who designed a lot of the early ships, because they were beautiful and inspired and sometimes terrifying. Such wonderful examples of art conveying character and backstory. - Centauri ships: an antiquated sense of past glories long regretted. - Minbari ships: angelfish, all grace and beauty adrift - Vorlon ships: also sea creatures, but this time we have glowing squids, pretty and fast and unsettling - Shadows: spiders in the dark, all the horrors of a midnight dream, but deadly - Narns: their ships are tattoed, and that's kind of awesome - Humans: blocky and gray and functional. We have no art in our souls, apparently I guess it's a visual representation of technological advancement and ideals. The further along you are, the more you can do with what you build. You can craft, sculpt, etc. Since humans were just getting into stride, they could only start with the fundamental building blocks.
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yourfunnyuncle
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Post by yourfunnyuncle on Aug 31, 2016 8:22:44 GMT
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