Episode: | 71 | | | Writer: | J. Michael Straczynski | | | Director: | John Lafia | | | Air Date: | 27-Jan-1997 |
This week on
Sci-Fi Adventures I'm writing words about
Babylon 5 episode
The Long Night, and if you're struggling to remember exactly which one that is, I think I have an idea why. Seems that showrunner Joe Straczynski had a fondness for combining the word 'long' with a word related to night in his titles. We've already had
The Long Dark and
The Long, Twilight Struggle and there's a
Very Long Night yet to come in season 5. There's also
The Long Road in the spin-off series
Crusade, but that's only halfway there.
They got another new director for this one: John Lafia, who directed the movies
Child's Play 2 and
Man's Best Friend, and the live-action video game
Corpse Killer. I can see why they thought 'this is the guy we need to direct our serious science fiction drama series'. He'd go on to direct just two more episodes of season four and then after that he was gone. The thing is though, they're both bloody good episodes, and maybe this will be too!
Oh by the way, this was the first
Babylon 5 episode to air in 1997. The series had been up against two
Star Trek shows for a while by this point, and by 1997
Deep Space Nine was halfway through its fifth season and
Voyager was halfway through season three. Meanwhile
The X-Files was starting season four and
Red Dwarf had returned after a long absence for its disappointing series seven. Plus two massive cult sci-fi shows were about to start:
Buffy the Vampire Slayer and
Stargate: SG-1 (
Buffy had a robot in its first season, it totally counts as sci-fi). There were a few other sci-fi series starting this year as well, such as
Deepwater Black,
Gene Roddenberry's Earth: Final Conflict and the legendary
Lexx. Oh, also two time travelling cop shows:
Crime Traveller and
Timecop... which both only lasted one season.
Warning: there will be
SPOILERS beyond this point for this episode and earlier stories, but if you're watching the series for the first time you don't have to worry about me spoiling anything that happens later.