BSG 4.05 The road less travelled
May. 3rd, 2008 10:23 pmI’ve been having this brainworm about last week's episode that the Gaius parts could have ben some kind of later day “Judgement of Paris.” The part where Paris has to decide who of Athena, Hera and Aphrodite is the fairest and by choosing Aphrodite and her offer of Helen’s love sets off the whole Trojan War.
In Escape Velocity Gaius is visited by three women, Tory, Roslin and Six and they each want something from him (even though it’s probably not the same thing). It’s easy to align Six with Aphrodite, goddess of love, and Laura with Hera, Queen of Olympus. Tory as Athena is trickier; she’s not the wisest but as a Cylon she has sprung direct from the mind of her creator and the pain-pleasure she offers is scientifically calibrated. Gaius rejects it and Tory/Athena with it despite having embraced the whole pain=pleasure equation with a fervour back in S3. Then, however, it wasn’t a game and had the added ingredient of real fear. He’s not afraid of Roslin/Hera either and although she plays him beautifully, leaving him visibly gagging for more, it has no lasting effect. Roslin, I think, doesn’t get Baltar. She’s afraid of him because his unlikely political successes suggest someone who is either very lucky or very smart at getting power and once he has it will hand humanity over to its enemies in a heartbeat but she doesn’t know about the Six factor. Gaius/Paris chooses not Roslin but Six who offers him real pain and through it love, the grace to be loved in spite of his transgression, even because of them. She inspires a sermon close enough to certain strains of Christian mysticism that even in the real world Jacob at TWOP falls for it hook, line and sinker. However, when Gaius says somebody in the universe loves him he’s not being mystical – he’s staring right at her. While she looks at Tory, which is interesting. Also interesting that her power seems to be growing tangible, a side effect of worship maybe. Whatever the case Gaius’s choice seems unlikely to launch 1000 ships since there probably aren’t that many left in the universe but it could still end badly.
This week I agree with
no subject
Date: 2008-05-04 06:36 pm (UTC)Yeah - though I have to say I don't see why Chief suddenly decided, after New Caprica, that Baltar was not so bad after all. So Baltar first crosses the line with him, trying to exploit him, then makes a sincere apology - which is somewhat new territory for Baltar, except that in the interim Chief has gotten no less useful - and all of a sudden
Chief reconciles and shakes his hand.
One can't even say that Baltar is the first person to reach out to Chief, since Adama did in the previous episode, but Chief was intent on alienating him because he didn't want to be put in a position to wreck equipment subconsciously anymore. Still, this is not enough, IMO, to turn him into an acolyte. Though I suppose chief and Callie and Baltar did share that moment down on whichever planet where Baltar shot Crashdown and saved Callie's life.
However, it seems like the writers are relying on a really short attention span of the audience to forget the horror that was New Caprica and the fact that Chief plotted over and over to help kill Baltar by suicide bombs and other ways.
As far Kara, oh I think the project of finding earth is important to her. I just don't think that brooding in her room while letting the crew continue to feel mutinous for days and weeks is such an intelligent way to go about command. I can't recall if we have seen her in command before unsupported by the military structure and away from Galactica. I'm not remembering it if we have. She seems far more of an effective lone operative to me than a command leader. She and Helo were on Caprica together - but she wasn't in command. I think she is not so effective at leading.
-but I think that pitch would be difficult even for a natural politician
Well, Adama did it in the mini-series, didn't he. Claimed Earth as the destination.
She knew but she hadn't the leadership skills to win a skeptical crew over to trusting her blind intuition -but I think that pitch would be difficult even for a natural politician.
I think the problem is the thread of the intuition is lost - so there's nothing to lead them with - she has to wait,
passively, until it resumes. Though I don't understand why she didn't jump backwards, duplicating the pathway that Galactica took to places where she had felt it more strongly. All that shrieking and hollering about going the wrong way, and now her internal compass has become demagnetized, so to speak.
no subject
Date: 2008-05-04 07:04 pm (UTC)All that shrieking and hollering about going the wrong way, and now her internal compass has become demagnetized, so to speak.
I wonder if it works more like chemosensitivity than magnetism - it can tell her if she's 'warmer' or 'colder' by trial and error but can't compute a direction from a single point. Also the target may not be Earth but her infamous Destiny- it lead her to Lebonen not to the Solar system.