JLTucker wrote:Batman wrote:Here's a hint-some of us want SciFi shows to be about ships in space and awesome battles and shooting things down, not heavy-handed social commentary or dysfunctional characters getting on each other's nerves. It's a TV show. Its purpose is to entertain me. If it doesn't do so, it failed, at least as far as I'm concerned. I suggest you reread the threat title. 'For those who feel nuGalactica failed'. That's not a blanket statement that nBSG objectively undisputably stunk, it's asking for people's personal opinions. Yours is no more correct than mine or jollyreapers.
And personally, I feel he was overly generous. I was rooting for the Cylons halfway through s1 and the stupid religion angle sure as hell wasn't an improvement to the series.
I want to thank you for outlining that all of our opinions are subjective. I had no idea that was the case and from here on out I will preface my views with "In my opinion" and other such variants.
In my opinion, the religious angle is quite interesting because it too shows that in the face of tragedy, millions opt toward religion. Baltar had a hard time reconciling his role in the attacks and sought religion for peace of mind. Roslin did that too with her desperate attempt to save the fleet. It's not unheard of. And this brings me to Stark mentioning The Wire. It successfully blended two subjects (politics and law enforcement) for its first few seasons. I am of the opinion that BSG acted as a hybrid with many of its different subjects in a satisfying manner as well. The religious themes are an example. The political aspects are another.
The religious themes were fine when they were ambiguous, but then we started getting weird mysterious shit that had to be real, the writers then had to have a reason. But they didn't. It's one thing for Roslin to be religious, that provided conflict and movement, but for the universe to be with little explanation for the copouts was a bit disappointing.
Its easy to understand many of the criticisms; after all, I considered the mini series so fucking stupid I couldn't stomach even starting the show itself. People who changed view partway often appear to do so because while there were enough flashing lights and tactical grimdark they could just ignore how retarded and awful the plot was. Obviously toward the end the plot had to come to the fore, and this sadly forced people to internalise that it was a hat full of shit.
Just curious: what did you find so stupid about the miniseries?
Where it failed is not where I lost interest mind you, I watched for other aspects of the show. I ws pretty pissed about Cain being shot at the end of Pegasus, because I was expecting a few more episodes of tension, and maybe the Pegasus trucking off because the fleet wouldn't play ball, Cain hardly needed the fleet, and maybe Adama could have reached her over time.
Yeah, I liked the drama that Cain provided. Instead she was quickly cut out so that things could go back to normal. Of course, not until they'd made a statement about humanity and all.
Season 3 should have been "Robots Win, now what?" instead the Cylons were handed an idiot ball and told to run with it as far and as long as they could go. And they never put it down even up to and including the end of the series.
They definitely shouldn't have written themselves into the hole with the spaceships but I do think that Season Three showed the idiocy of the Cylons on purpose. Basically they have a failed society. A society where the words of two war heroes can overturn an entire war effort is a failed society. Even worse a society that cannot withstand two people going outside of it without having those two people turn it inside out is going to fail. Basically Cylons that interact with humans tend to come back with very radical ideas. Too radical. And because they expect homogeneity (one cylon votes for everyone else) this fucks them. NEw Caprica was about Boomer and Caprica Six's pipe dream of living together with humans. If it wasn't, they would have followed Cavil's advice and bombed the humans back to a manageable number like 3000. Or gotten rid of them altogether.
It would have been interesting to see a long ass occupation but I think that would have moved too far away from space ships pew pew.They could have stayed longer though, it would have been more interesting.
Dualla's death was a stunt. They decided on the spur of the moment that they needed consequences for the Earth fallout and decided she should suicide. Now of course in real life we don't have access to inner monologue. What we see as out of character could be us not knowing the person. But fiction has to make send or else we don't buy it. There's no resonance.
How does this not make sense. The promise of Earth was what was driving some people. The promise was false so those people had to confront the fact that it was all PERMANENTLY fucked up. These people weren't driven by the knowledge that they'd have to restart the human race they were driven by the hope that they could find the rest of humanity.