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Thursday, 5 August 2021

Babylon 5: In the Beginning - Part 1

Babylon 5 In the Beginning title logo
Written By: J. Michael Straczynski | Directed By: Mike Vejar | Release Date: 1998

Great news! Sci-Fi Adventures is back for another two months and I'm getting right back into Babylon 5. I've finally reached the fifth and final season... though before I carry on to the end I have to first go back to the beginning.

Babylon 5 had been on shaky ground for its whole run, renewal was never guaranteed, and in its fourth year that ground collapsed entirely due to their network getting cancelled. Fortunately cable network TNT stepped in to give its first four seasons a new home and asked for a couple of new B5 TV movies (In the Beginning and Thirdspace) to stir up some interest. So the show went from losing its final year, to getting bonus content that creator jms had never planned for. In fact TNT decided they'd do one better than that and paid for a complete fifth season!

This was around the same time that Star Wars was gearing up to be a movie franchise again, with the original trilogy getting a theatrically released Special Edition in 1997 and the upcoming prequel (The Phantom Menace) generating huge amounts of hype, so I'm not surprised TNT wanted a bit of that for themselves. They decided to kick off their B5 run with a movie double-bill: the new prequel, In the Beginning, followed by a special edition re-edit of the original pilot The Gathering. This led straight into a season 1 rerun and, a couple of weeks later, the brand new season 5 stories.

Man this would've been confusing for new viewers.

In the Beginning can function as a new introduction to the series, but it's got pretty massive SPOILERS for all the way up to the end of season 4 and jms is happy leaving it to viewers to decide for themselves where it should be watched. Either way, I definitely wouldn't recommend reading this review until after season 4.

Wednesday, 2 June 2021

Star Trek: Discovery - Season 3, Part 4

Today on Sci-Fi Adventures, it's the final part of my Star Trek: Discovery season 3 reviews, covering the last three episodes:
  • 3-11 - Su'Kal
  • 3-12 - There is a Tide…
  • 3-13 - That Hope is You, Part 2
Weirdly all three episodes were known by different titles at first, as we heard that they were going to be called The Citadel, The Good of the People and Outside. I don't know what happened there.

I wrote the first draft of these reviews mere moments after watching the episodes for the first time so you get to see me being authentically unaware of where the story's going to go. You'll also get to see BIG SPOILERS.

Tuesday, 1 June 2021

Star Trek: Discovery - Season 3, Part 3

Today on Sci-Fi Adventures, I'm continuing through Discovery's third season. This time I'm covering episodes 8 to 10:
  • 3-08 - The Sanctuary
  • 3-09 - Terra Firma, Part 1
  • 3-10 - Terra Firma, Part 2
Have some more Disco trivia: the season was meant to be released before Lower Decks season one, but COVID-19 screwed up their schedule. They managed to finish filming days before the lockdown, but the post-production and soundtrack had to be completed remotely. That means all the visual effects this year were done from home and every instrument was recorded individually. It's amazing that the quality hasn't suffered at all, but it did take longer to finish.

These reviews were written back when I first watched the episodes so I'm not pretending that I don't know what happens next, I really didn't know at the time. There'll still be GIANT SPOILERS for the story so far though.

Monday, 31 May 2021

Star Trek: Discovery - Season 3, Part 2

Today on Sci-Fi Adventures, I'm still writing about Discovery's third season. This time I'm covering episodes 5 to 7:
  • 3-05 - Die Trying
  • 3-06 - Scavengers
  • 3-07 - Unification III
Here's some trivia for Discovery's third year: it's the first season of the series to be run by the same showrunner from start to finish, with limited writers' room drama. Season one was started by Bryan Fuller and finished by Gretchen Berg and Aaron Harberts. They stayed for season two but were fired after episode 5 and replaced by executive producer Alex Kurtzman, who handed the series over to Michelle Paradise this year. This is actually fairly normal for Trek, but the series tend to get much better when someone finally sticks around for a while.

Alright, I already said this before but these reviews are basically from right after I watched the episodes, so I genuinely didn't know where the story was going. Beware of MASSIVE SPOILERS.

Sunday, 30 May 2021

Star Trek: Discovery - Season 3, Part 1

This week on Sci-Fi Adventures, I'm writing some words about the third season of Star Trek: Discovery. And by 'some' I mean 'lots'. In fact I'm going to have to split this up into four articles, with this first part covering the first four episodes:
  • 3-01 - That Hope is You, Part 1
  • 3-02 - Far From Home
  • 3-03 - People of Earth
  • 3-04 - Forget Me Not
Here's a fun fact about this season: they've changed the logo! Star Trek series do change their openings a bit sometimes, Enterprise even added the words 'Star Trek' to its title sequence a few episodes into the third year, but I can't think of a series ever changing its title font like this before. It's a good change I reckon and it fits the theme of this season being a fresh start, but then I like it when series have a different opening each season so of course I would say that.

This is one of those times where I already wrote these reviews right after watching the episodes, so was genuinely clueless about what was going to happen next, aside from the glimpses in the trailer after each episode. Well okay to be honest I wrote a first draft, these have been rewritten a bit since then, but I'm not exactly editing in correct guesses to make me seem like the best at Star Trek.

There will be HUGE SPOILERS for every episode this season, plus earlier episodes too. I mean I can't even mention the season's premise without spoiling the end of season 2.

Wednesday, 19 May 2021

Babylon 5: Season 4 - No Surrender, No Retreat Review

Today on Sci-Fi Adventures I'll be writing a bit about the fourth season of Babylon 5, titled No Surrender, No Retreat. TV seasons don't often get titles, but this one did.

You know what else the season got this year? A proper HD Remaster! That's one thing Deep Space Nine doesn't have. Unfortunately my reviews are missing out on all those beautiful high-resolution shots as my screencaps came from the old DVDs. No one's going to stumble across my reviews by clicking on one of my pictures in a Google image search ever again, it's a tragedy.

Anyway, this is going to contain giant SPOILERS for everything in season 4 from The Hour of the Wolf to The Deconstruction of Falling Stars, but I won't spoil anything about season 5 or the movies. Or Crusade. Or Legend of the Rangers. Or The Lost Tales.

Tuesday, 18 May 2021

Babylon 5 4-22: The Deconstruction of Falling Stars

Episode:88|Writer:J. Michael Straczynski|Director:Stephen Furst|Air Date:27-Oct-1997

This week on Sci-Fi Adventures, it's the Babylon 5 season 4 finale: The Deconstruction of Falling Stars! There's a proper pretentious title for you, it's great.

Babylon 5 was intended from the start to be a five year long novel for television, so it was a bit awkward when their network, PTEN, was set to be shut down after year four. Showrunner jms figured that the best they could do was to accelerate the major arcs so that we reached the original s4 finale, Intersections in Real Time, four episodes early. That way the series had time to reach some kind of closure before the episodes ran out, and they were able to film a replacement s4 finale called Sleeping in Light to wrap it all up properly. Babylon 5 was done. And then the producers made a deal with TNT to get their fifth season after all.

This was great news, but the trouble they had now was that Sleeping in Light was an emotional and unambiguous conclusion to the entire saga, and not the ideal way to launch the story into a new chapter. Fortunately the series was blessed with a huge four month break between the airing of ep 18 (Intersections in Real Time) and ep 19 (Between the Darkness and the Light), giving the production crew the time they needed to film a replacement ep 22... which is the episode I'm writing about now.

tl;dr: Season four was originally intended to end with Intersections in Real Time, which got moved up four episodes and replaced with Sleeping in Light, then after filming they changed it again to Deconstruction of Falling Stars.

SPOILER WARNING: This review is for people who've been watching the series at least up to this episode, as it's going to spoil everything that happens in it, along with the events that led up to it. I won't spoil a thing about season 5 though... well, except for the things that the episode itself spoils.

Also if you've got the DVD commentary, you should maybe hang onto that until you've seen the whole series. It's a bit spoilery too.