To avoid spoilers, I'll just say that Moore and company are going to have a tough time topping last night's episode. I think "Exodus, Part II" may have been the best episode I've seen since "33".
The episode opens with some character development: Apollo and Dualla discussing the futility of Galactica's mission to save the colonists left behind on New Caprica and Tigh discussing what is to be done about his wife's betrayal with Anders. Anders tells Tigh that his wife has to die for what she did, and that it would be best if Tigh did it, a rather disturbing suggestion, particularly since she will have no opportunity to repeat the error until and unless the escape from New Caprica fails. Nonetheless, in one of the most brutal scenes I've seen on television, Tigh poisons his wife, telling her he loves her even as she dies in his arms, taking a piece of him with her. Kate Vernon's performance as Ellen Tigh is a tour de force; she will be missed.
We cut to Colonial One, where Baltar is lecturing the Cylons on their arrogance in assuming that humanity would accept their help after what they did to the colonies. D'Anna explains the Cylons' motives very clearly: they fear that if humanity is allowed to develop without the influence of the Cylons, eventually they will attempt to get revenge for the near-genocide of humanity. To which Baltar responds, "Blood for blood. It has to stop somewhere." Their argument is interrupted by a series of explosions outside: the raids intended to distract the Cylons long enough to get the colonists out have begun.
Things now happen very quickly. Maia and Hera are dispatched to their ship with two armed guards. Anders leads a rescue attempt on the detention center. Galactica spoofs the Cylon sensors with drones designed to present the appearance of two battlestars, drawing off the Cylon raiders. Baltar gives in to despair on Colonial One. Leoben cold-cocks Starbuck to keep her in dentention while he goes out to help with the insurgent attacks. And Roslyn heads for 'her ship': Colonial One. Roslyn's determination to leave on Colonial One is a great moment, reminding us of the strength she has as a leader.
With the Raiders drawn after the feint, Galactica drops directly into New Caprica's atmosphere, launching Vipers very low in the atmosphere before jumping back into orbit, a courageous move that inflicts major damage on Galactica but adds the Vipers' considerable firepower to the insurgency and effectively wipes out the Cylons' ability to fight back. Anders finds Starbuck in the detention center, but she goes back in after Casey.
Galactica is badly damaged, the spoof has been discovered, and two additional base ships jump into orbit around New Caprica, too many base ships for Galactica to stand up against for long. With her jump drive damaged, Galactica appears doomed. Adama looks about CIC and tells his crew, "It's been an honor."
And in a surprise move that everyone knew was going to happen, Pegasus jumps in-system, drawing the base ships off Galactica to give Galactica time to get her jump engines back on line. Apollo orders his ship to square off with the base ships, a rather illogical move as it dooms the Pegasus.
On New Caprica, the Cylons abandon the planet, leaving D'Anna behind to detonate a nuclear device to destroy the settlement. Why they would bother, since the colonists are already mostly away, is not explained, making it appear more a ploy to generate suspense than a real problem. The Cylons offer to take Baltar with them, admitting that he was right about the humans and that they were wrong. Baltar instead stays behind, only to be faced by Gaeta, who has come to kill Baltar for his role in nearly destroying humanity. Baltar tells Gaeta that he is the only one who can stop D'Anna from detonating the nuke, then begs Gaeta to kill him, pressing Gaeta's weapon to his head. Gaeta lowers his pistol, telling Baltar he has a chance to redeem himself, and Baltar runs off with Number Six in search of D'Anna.
Galactica pulls in her fighters and prepares to jump back to the fleet, while Apollo orders Pegasus to abandon ship, putting her on a course to ram one of the base ships. While it's a dramatic scene, Apollo's insistence on going straight up against the Cylon base ships has destroyed half of the Colonials' firepower. Again, it's dramatic, but from a military perspective it's a very bad decision.
Starbuck returns to her cell in the detention center to find Leoben holding Casey's hand. He insists that she tell him she loves him in order to get Casey back, then kisses her several times. She returns his kisses before stabbing him to death, taking Casey's hand and fleeing.
Baltar finds Maia's body with those of her guards, killed while trying to escape. By some miracle, Hera has survived, and D'Anna arrives to see Baltar holding the child. She asks Baltar to let her hold the child, and while she is holding the child, Baltar lifts his pistol to kill her. Number Six tells him that he needn't bother, that D'Anna will not detonate the nuke now.
Roslyn lifts off in Colonial One, having reclaimed the mantle of president, ending the human presence on New Caprica and closing out the insurgency arc way too soon for my personal preference. Starbuck returns to Galactica where a woman almost immediately sees her and takes possession of Casey, saying that the girl is her daughter, having been taken by the Cylons several weeks before. That certainly makes sense, as Casey was clearly too old to have been Starbuck's child, but the experience has clearly marked Starbuck. Adama and Apollo meet up on the hangar deck, with Apollo explaining that he disobeyed his orders because "I never could read your handwriting." Tigh is back as well, and he is clearly still devastated from killing his wife, speaking briefly with Adama before walking away alone while Adama is lifted up on the crew's shoulders and feted for having successfully rescued the people of New Caprica. Roslyn learns that Hera and Maia did not escape, her aide tearfully apologizing for having failed. And the story ends with Adama shaving his mustache, a symbolic end to the New Caprica storyline.
All in all, the story was very strong, with some good character development for Tigh and lots of action. While the Pegasus making like the cavalry in an old western was predictable (as Amanda and I were watching, I actually counted down 3...2...1 and it appeared on screen), it still was pretty well done, although the decision to destroy Pegasus, as I noted above, was terribly reckless by Apollo. Granted, they were pretty much guaranteed to lose a battlestar, but Pegasus was the more modern ship and his tactics ensured they would lose one and could have lost another had Galactica failed to fix her jump drives. An understandable decision from an emotional standpoint, but a terrible one from a military standpoint.
Now the question is, what do they do next? I am disappointed that they closed out the insurgency arc so quickly, as I really think it had a lot of potential, although I suppose it was the only way they could really go on without abandoning the fleet for long stretches of time, making Adama and Apollo marginal characters in the series. Still, they appeared to have lost much of their strength in making fleet episodes by the end of season two; if they haven't improved markedly, season three could fall off drastically the rest of the way.
For now, however, it should be noted that they've started off on a very high note. I look forward to next week's episode.
Yay! I was wondering whether you'd continue. Now I have to actually read the post ;)
Posted by: hilzoy | October 22, 2006 at 01:58 PM
in full agreement that the occupation storyline had the potential to fill ½ the season - so think that they ended it a bit soon. however, next week's trial of collaborators looks good as well.
wanna bet gaeta is not eexcuted?
oh, watched the louis XV episode of doctor who afterwards - a worthy sucessor to the old series.
Posted by: tarylcabot | October 22, 2006 at 02:11 PM
Yes, just finished watching the episode off TiVo - one their best, IMHO: yeah, a bit predictable in places, but the pace of the directing (nothing like explosions, jarring cameras and "Move, Move, Move!!!" to fill in the time), and a well-paced script (for a change) overcame that one flaw - and like you, I'm going miss Ellen Tigh as the Sleazy Relief. Too bad.
Posted by: Jay C | October 22, 2006 at 02:36 PM
I'm very impressed by the development of Tigh's character. The indecisive drunk who struggled to face his responsibilities as a commander in the first season has plausibly transformed into a hard but flawed leader---and though he's still a bastard, an though I disagree with most of the hard choices he makes, I'm starting to find him one of the most sympathetic characters on the show.
Posted by: mss | October 22, 2006 at 03:11 PM
They very nearly lost me with the premiere – they went a long way towards convincing me to stick around with this one.
SF fan all my life – and yes I did see the original as new episodes aired. Why can’t stuff like this survive on the networks? It is a shame you have to pay the exorbitant price of cable to get decent TV.
Posted by: OCSteve | October 22, 2006 at 05:18 PM
I thought the Pegasus sacrifice was supposed to be unavoidable under the circumstances. Someone at Henley's blog pointed out that if they had just gone in with the two ships and all the Vipers (instead of leaving the Pegasus Vipers behind to guard the other human ships) the sacrifice might not have been necessary.
And yeah, superb episode though as a newcomer I find myself not knowing most of the history of the characters.. I wish they'd extended the occupation/insurgency story for half the season--there might have been some way to give the characters on the fleet their own problems and their own episodes fighting off Cylons before coming back for the rescue mission.
Posted by: Donald Johnson | October 22, 2006 at 06:07 PM
Here's the problem: Baltar is still the legitimately elected President of the colonies. It looks like he didn't make the trip (will he now be like the Original Series version, pursuing humanity alongside the Cylons?) and if I remember rightly, Tom Zarek was his vice-president. So unless they have something gimmicked up that we will see in flashback, I don't see how Laura Roslin has any claim on the Presidency. More to the point, I don't see Adama allowing very much power for any elected government, given how well things have worked out so far - Kobol, New Caprica, etc etc.
Basically, we're back where we started at the beginning of Season 1, only with even fewer people, even more stress, and all the complexities of settlement and the occupation (I don't think all the problems of "what did you do on New Caprica, daddy?" will be resolved in the next episode). I think there are still a lot of places they can go just closing the book on things before they have to start coming up with new material...
Posted by: Jon | October 22, 2006 at 11:09 PM
In re the sacrifice of the Pegasus, there's supposedly either a deleted scene or a remark in a podcast that explains that Pegasus, being the more modern ship with greater automation, can be run with a far smaller crew (1/4 full capacity, IIRC) than Galactica. The sacrifice of the Pegasus makes sense then, not in terms of resources per se but in terms of personnel: fewer people died this way than would have if they'd sacrificed the Galactica. Not a huge strategic deal in a normal war -- there are generally trained personnel sufficient to replace the losses from a battleship or carrier, no matter the moral or personal cost -- but with humanity squeezed this thin I'd say it's a much more valid decision.
Of course, it might not have been necessary had Adama brought both Battlestars to New Caprica in the first place but that's a completely different issue...
Posted by: Anarch | October 22, 2006 at 11:48 PM
Well. Wow. I've watched this episode 3 times in full so far, plus rewatching selected highlights more times.
I had some good-natured argument with freinds on the weekend about it, and I'm going to stake out some turf about this episode: it is, for me, particularly satisfying because it so thoroughly blends sci-fi conventions with the very intense drama. The moments to cheer at meant more because they're anchored in dark and deep development of the people involved, and the agony that so many of the characters have gone through stands out in richer relief because it's illuminated by the bright adventure moments.
Posted by: Bruce Baugh | October 23, 2006 at 10:29 AM
Part of the reason they had to sacrifice a ship was just manpower. I mean, half the recurring cast had moved down to New Caprica, both battlestars were run with near skeleton crews.
Everything around New Caprica has been about spreading out, and then reduction and joining back together. The fleet now has fewer ships, fewer people.
The next episode will require a line about how they need to keep every remaining human alive that they can. Someone will bring up "survival at any cost" as an argument for why they "collaborated". It will still be accomplished in a very effective manner.
Posted by: kellandros | October 23, 2006 at 11:53 AM
The previews of this weeks episode implied that the insurgency storyline has not been abandoned, but rather has moved into the entirely more claustrophobic confines of Galactica, as Tigh (hovering darkly in the background) presides over a secret extrajudicial star chamber that kidnaps and executes New Caprica collaborators without sanction from Adama (thus the investigations into the mysterious "disappearances" hinted at in the preview). Tigh no doubt feels that if his collaborator wife has to die for what she did out of love, Jammer and his ilk deserve a bullet ever so much more richly for collaborating out of fear. Leading, of course, to Gaeta on his knees in front of a gun-clutching Chief.
I don't see New Caprica as a closed book, allowing a reset of the show to Season 1, at all - it's a major turning point in the series for all involved, especially for Tigh, whom (as noted above) has evolved into perhaps the most interesting character on the show. A weak and indecisive born subordinate in the opening episodes, is there anybody who would willingly f**k with him now?
Posted by: st | October 23, 2006 at 01:11 PM
I thought it was a great episode, but I really feel like the show is going way too fast. It seemed like they had plot pacing perfectly in the beginning (miniseries/33/etc.) but for some reason they've decided to kick it up several notches.
I watched the extended version of "Pegasus" on DVD and it worked ten times better than the cut version that aired. The original version played like a bunch of obnoxious people came out of nowhere just to ruin the show; the extended actually made you fully sympathize with both sides, which I find is the best way to build suspense.
But this is me being a bitchy perfectionist. It's still the most exciting TV on, in my opinion.
Posted by: Jonas Cord | October 23, 2006 at 05:03 PM
Without reading the comments, since I still have to see the S3 episodes (very busy schedule at the moment) I'd like to link to the cylon pumpkin for real geeks :)
Posted by: dutchmarbel | October 24, 2006 at 09:13 PM
I thought that this episode was the best one yet. Seeing Galactica drop in the atmosphere was awesome, in fact I posted a clip of it at:
http://www.ewebtvworld.com/videos/bsggag.html
Posted by: Jordan | October 25, 2006 at 12:26 PM