Meta: "The Hub"
Jun. 10th, 2008 09:44 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Fleet Mom is dying.
We got a brutal, up-close examination of that fact this week. No hybrid baby’s blood to save her this time, no chance of avoiding the inevitable. This week’s episode opened with shots of what apparently will be Roslin’s end one of these days soon in sickbay, a slow, silent, gasping death from cancer. One suspects that it may even be a death accelerated by this unexpected separation from the Fleet and lack of regular access to the Doloxan that Roslin was taking to fight the cancer.
And not only is this death made difficult and ugly to watch by its very nature, we are given an extra layer of ugliness to it, thanks to our latest Head!Person - Elosha. Yes, you heard me right. Elosha, who died in Season 2. (Personally, I’d been hoping for Head!Billy all along, but Elosha is pretty awesome too, and she makes a lot of sense, perhaps even more sense, since she was Roslin’s religious advisor.) Head!Elosha appears here as Roslin’s spiritual guide and turns out to be the toughest cookie of all the Head!People so far, beating out even Head!Baltar and Head!Leoben for the award for Least Likely to Tell their Charges Happy Shiny Things They Want to Hear.
Turns out Elosha has a lot to say about the Roslin we’ve been seeing in the last throes of Season 3 and much of Season 4: In the name of a noble, selfless cause, Roslin’s become disturbingly hard, ruthless, inaccessible. As Elosha puts it, “You don’t love people.”
But Roslin doesn’t seem to learn much from this. She immediately turns around and tells Helo some pretty ruthless things, even after he raises the issue of how dangerous the mission is, how the Cylons are taking as huge a risk as the humans are, and in fact, have more to lose from it, since if it successful, they will forever lose their ability to resurrect. Roslin has no sympathy for them and seems determined to take the first chance to betray them, unable to imagine that the Cylons would act any differently given half the chance. She seems uninterested in examining the deeper implications of these rebel Cylons being willing to open their species to the possibility of extinction in short order (Cylons don’t exactly reproduce easily, lest we forget.) And even the humans are going to have a pretty hard time keeping their species alive with less than 40,000 souls left. So it’s very likely that this move by the rebels heralds the beginning of the end of the Cylon species. (Could this be what the Hybrid meant when she told Starbuck that she is the “harbinger of death” who will “lead them all to their end”? What if all along, the Hybrid meant the end of the Cylons? Additionally frightening to contemplates is how that might fit in with Head!Six’s assertion in Season 2 to Baltar that she’s an angel of God sent to guide him “to the end of the human race.”)
I loved the banter between Roslin and Elosha. But I found it particularly disturbing when Roslin asked her, “Are you saying that humanity died because I did?” and Elosha replies with an answer that seems reassuring on the surface, but contains a potential hidden prophecy slipped right by Roslin (and us) in plain sight. When Elosha answers with a chuckle, “Humanity didn’t die because you did,” notice that she doesn’t actually deny that humanity died. Which leads us to some key moments in the episode:
Are We Worth Saving?
“I did not see a garden. I saw a scar. This island had saved my life and I had done it no service.” These words, which Adama reads to Roslin, (from a story that reads just like a Dashiel Hammett pulp adventure story-Adama enjoys a morally bleak fictional universe, like those of us watching the show) loop back to touch on the issue he raised in the mini-series, and that the show is foregrounding again as it hurtles towards Earth and its conclusion: do we deserve to survive? Are we more than a blight upon the world?
Helo’s Dilemma:
First of all, did anyone else find it sort of odd and slightly disturbing how easily Helo kept falling into subconsciously thinking that the Eight with whom he was working on this basestar was his wife Athena? Roslin was dead on when she chided him, “You’re not married to the entire production line.” And yet, Helo continues to being right on the money, when he tells her that it isn’t honest, and therefore a bad idea to betray the cylons. It neatly parallels the choice Laura faces in letting Baltar live or die: it’s not so much about what they would do, or what they have done in the past, but who she is and what she does, right then and there. A pity Elosha didn’t needle her about this choice, too.
And Speaking of Baltar:
Is Baltar’s scene with the Centurion there to serve an actual purpose, or just to make him seem more of a jackass so that later when Roslin tries to kill him, we have more sympathy for her intentions? Is this going to lead to a new robot uprising, and will the humans and skinjobs have to team up to survive? Are the drone models going to develop a voice? (It’s a telling contrast that the original Cylon models could speak, whereas the new Centurions, the ones that still actually look like ‘walking chrome toasters’, can’t. It’s so much easier for the skinjobs to ignore the will of literally voiceless masses.) Baltar rousing the robot rabble then explosively transitions to Baltar bleeding out in front of Laura.
True Confessions
So, I have to say, James Callis’ acting was pretty amazing in this scene, managing to squeeze moments of gentle humor out of what was a very tense, grisly scene, filled with physical agony and intense confessional: One moment, Baltar is whimpering in agony from what looks like a very painful wound. The next moment, he is half-drunk on morpha, comically confessing to Roslin that he finds her “very pretty,” like a kindergartener with a crush on the teacher (it even seems to throw Roslin for a loop momentarily). Then, without warning, he is giving Roslin everything she has wanted to hear since “Six Degrees of Separation” - an admission of his guilt. She never so much wanted to hear Baltar admit complicity in the Attacks; she probably already has already known since the end of Season 3 that Baltar didn’t betray humanity intentionally. What she’s really wanted to hear is that Baltar feels guilty about it. And she got that this episode. Unlike his implied confession in “Taking A Break From All Your Worries,” here Baltar lays it all out plainly: He admits that he gave the Cylons access to the Colonial defense grid and that he had “soulcrushing guilt” because of it. Pretty heady stuff. And yet, in a moment just as emotional, Baltar is comical: “you need God, Laura,” he says, like he’s offering a bong hit of his primo weed. Mary McDonnell is no slouch either in this scene. One can see her body freeze with predatory anticipation when Baltar first mentions his guilt. She handles the scene perfectly, projecting delicate ruthlessness as Roslin exploits Baltar’s delirium, luring him into revealing his most closely held secret.
Pike: Dead Man Snarking
Wow, Pike the Red Shirt was so annoying me this episode. Every time he opened his mouth I found myself strangely, disturbingly gleeful to know in the back of my mind that he was already dead. I also found it odd that he would have such little sense of military protocol, that he would feel comfortable defying his CAG in front of everyone - both his fellow pilots and the Cylon ones. Of course, Pike has been through quite a bit at this point, what with the hijinks on the Demetrius, I suppose (and he was already complaining even then) to convince him that military protocol is hardly worth the manual it’s printed on. Also, like every other pilot recruited from the Fleet, he’s never been through Basic Training. He hasn’t been indoctrinated to FOLLOW ORDERS, the way the few remaining older pilots have. Maybe, if he’d shut up and listen to the advice of a proven survivor like Helo, his frozen corpse wouldn’t have been floating around in his Raptor for poor Racetrack to find.
Still, in the moment of explaining this critical plan to the troops, any other CAG, say Starbuck, would have seen the need to very visibly put Pike in his place right then and there, and Helo’s heart is just not in it. He’s just never seemed like the ideal guy to put in charge of a bunch of cocky, even arrogant Viper pilots. But it’s fascinating that the not-Athena Eight is far better at whipping Pike, etc. into shape than affable old Karl is.
Adama/Roslin shippers: Ready … Set … SQUEE!
So, Jiminy Elosha gets Roslin back in touch with her own humanity again, largely by showing us how devastated the Adama family (Papadama, Lee & Kara) are at her death bed. She’s unmoved, until she sees Adama crying, almost whimpering, when her heart finally stops. (Can I get an amen for EJO absolutely selling this moment?) And then he puts his wedding ring on her dead hand. And that’s when the President’s heart went from three sizes too small to two sizes too big. Flashing back to reality, and Laura is suddenly desperate to save Gaius, a man she has wanted dead for months if not years. Leading to the beautiful moment when Adama and Roslin see each other again. Either your heart warms to see such a touching scene, or you are dead inside. What a great ending to a roller-coaster episode. Now RDM and company just have to bring Lee and Kara together, and most of BSG ship-dom can die happy.
D'Anna Returns:
I know some people don't, but I actually always liked D'Anna as a character. I've always thought she totally kicked ass, didn't take bullshit, and was kind of the Cylons counterpart to Roslin, although a little more on the "morality lite" side of things. So it was pretty cool to see the two of them face off. And D'Anna totally pwned Laura, and they both seemed to know it. I loved how she messed with Laura, totally for the lulz of it, no other reason. It was great to have her back, the stirrer-upper. She should be a barrel of laughs once she gets on Galactica. I wonder what Athena will make of her. And what D'Anna will make of Hera. And what will happen when Gaius recovers and returns back to his Cylon God-worshipping cult? Will D'Anna be even more sympathetic/interested in Gaius now that he's worshipping her god? Or having seen the Final Five, will she be like, "You've got it all wrong, Gaius." Will she get involved with Gaius' cult? She'd be like the ultimate prize, if she is claiming to have seen anything godly in the Temple of Five.
Speaking of which, I liked too how one of the first things D'Anna reacted to when she got in the room with the President was not Roslin, but in fact Gaius. I'd kind of forgotten that she'd left Gaius on pretty good terms, since she hadn't actually been able to see him in the Temple after she passed out, essentially berating her not to die (at least not until she could manage to get out whether or not he was a Cylon.) So she has positive associations with him, and her running straight to Gaius in a panic at seeing him mortally injured was a great reminder of all that history between them. I totally give the writers kudos for remembering that after all this time.
Next week:
One can’t, and shouldn’t, judge an episode by its previews, but I’ll venture this prediction: they make it to Earth. Which means that they’ll have TEN episodes of making sense of what they find. I have no idea how they’ll do that, but I definitely would never have predicted it at any time over the past four years.
(Oh, and thanks to![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
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Date: 2008-06-11 02:43 am (UTC)And I'm not even a big A/R shipper (though it and their fans have grown on me), but I totally was like "OMG HOW ADORABLE!" when she was all like "I love you." and he was totally Han Solo suave with the "About time!"
It made me go all jelly inside. :)
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Date: 2008-06-11 02:55 am (UTC)I just am not certain that its going to pay off. I know, I know, I am just a bitter "early adopter" as some people call it... but I didn't sign onto a show that was all about... forgive me, really hateful mean people surviving while all the good people die. After a while? I think I get enough of that in real life.
And I am not all that sympathetic to Helo. I like the big lug, I do, but really, if the cylons are so great, then why hasn't Helo put Sharon and Hera in a Raptor and gone to join them?
Oh right - because at best he'd be locked in a cell and possibly experiemented on and rarely allowed access to his child. That's if the Cylons didn't kill him out right. And that scenario is exactly what the humans have done.
no subject
Date: 2008-06-11 04:50 am (UTC)Being dead, she also missed the part where he *nudged her body out of the way with his foot*. Snerk.
"Predatory" and also "delicate ruthlessness" are nice terms for Roslin in That scene. I couldn't find a word for the way she says "What was your guilt about?" like she's batting her eyelashes with her voice. They both rocked this episode so hard.
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Date: 2008-06-11 06:23 pm (UTC)Hah! I'm so glad you put that quote in, I kept hearing, "This cylon had saved my life.."
I liked too how one of the first things D'Anna reacted to when she got in the room with the President was not Roslin, but in fact Gaius.
Yes, it was good to be reminded that they had a connection before now. A really weird connection, but one with mostly-positive memories for D'Anna. (I wonder if she ever thinks about that first time they met, when he was hoping to be interviewed by her as a reporter?)
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Date: 2008-07-03 11:54 pm (UTC)Did you know that the most recent podcast revealed that they'd planned for it to be HeadBilly? It just didn't work out with the actor's schedule. Aww. I'd always hoped for a HeadBilly too.
But Roslin doesn’t seem to learn much from this. She immediately turns around and tells Helo some pretty ruthless things, even after he raises the issue of how dangerous the mission is, how the Cylons are taking as huge a risk as the humans are, and in fact, have more to lose from it, since if it successful, they will forever lose their ability to resurrect.
Oh, I agree entirely. I found that moment so frustrating. It made me wonder if she'd learned everything she was supposed to learn. (And, no surprise, it backfired spectactularly.)
Some amazing meta here! Would you mind if I friended you? I think we have a lot more than Galacticrack in common. :)
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Date: 2008-07-04 04:41 am (UTC)Thanks for the nice words. Of course you can friend me. I'll friend you back!
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Date: 2008-11-13 02:47 am (UTC)I know some people don't, but I actually always liked D'Anna as a character. I've always thought she totally kicked ass, didn't take bullshit, and was kind of the Cylons counterpart to Roslin
YES! Completely. Well hello there, kick-ass women on spiritual journeys who really don't take crap from anyone, you guys should totally hang out. Anyway. . . :)
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Date: 2008-11-13 06:08 pm (UTC)They were so awesome together in this ep, weren't they? Hurray! A fellow D'Anna lover! Really, D'Anna's been the only Cylon who had the right combination of cynicism and chutzpah to beat Roslin at her own game. Leoben and Natalie may have tried, but they both ended up dead one way or another when they messed with Roslin.
I'm so glad you friended me. Can I friend you back? And yes, I will be continuing BSG meta for Season 4.5. I was actually doing it for a BSG blog on Wordpress that a friend of my owns (with certain insanely squeeful sections that appeared on my LJ version cut out for general consumption) I really enjoyed thinking about BSG in this way. I'm glad you liked it too. Can't wait for Season 4.5!
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Date: 2008-11-14 01:09 am (UTC)Can I friend you back?
Of course! Please do! I'm kind of vidding centric lately but I'm trying to branch back out. :)