bluefall: (last best hope)
an autumn shade of azure ([personal profile] bluefall) wrote in [community profile] last_best_hope2010-06-18 09:35 pm
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Discussion Post - 1x01 "Midnight on the Firing Line"

It's Friday night, it must be time for a discussion post! This week's offering:


1x01: Midnight on the Firing Line

When the Narn attack a Centauri colony, Londo and G'Kar nearly come to blows. Meanwhile, raiders are attacking transport ships near the station.



Vital Stats
Production number: 103
Written by J. Michael Straczynski
Directed by Richard Compton

Original air date: January 26, 1994

Arc Notes / Story Points of Interest
- This season's intro narration, along with the emphasis of this story on the Narn/Centauri conflict and the role of the B5 staff in the Council, sets the stage for the primary five-season theme of war and peace among the stars. More subtle is the apparently "flavor" information about the presidential elections back on Earth. Sinclair's waning attention at Santiago's winning platform is an especially sneaky touch.
- The fate of Sophie Ivanova, though rather harder to miss, is likewise subtle in that it seems to be merely a combination of character detail and "this is how telepathy works here" Psi Corps exposition.
- The most deft moment has got to be Sinclair's conversation with Kosh. It's astonishing how much more sense the Vorlons make once the series is over.

Trivia
- The episode title comes from a song by Harry Chapin, specifically the lyrics
and if our future lies on the firing line
are we brave enough to see the signals and the signs


JMS also picked the name for somewhat meta reasons, referring to his belief that the show would come under fire and his decision to be cool with that.

- Part of the purpose of putting Sinclair in a Starfury was to prove that Babylon 5 "isn't Star Trek," since of course you'd never see Picard flying around shooting shit in a fighter craft. You may speculate amongst yourselves as to how JMS factored Kirk into this equation.

- It had been a while since the pilot movie was filmed, and most of the returning actors took a while to get back into character and remember their various motivations and secrets and tics and whatnot. Apparently Peter Jurasik just stood up straight and yelled "MISter GariBALdi!" and boom, just like that he was Londo.


Our story begins here, guys. So exciting! What were your first impressions? Your favorite characters out of the gate? Your questions and speculations? How'd you feel about the sets and costuming and special effects?

A reminder: not everyone playing along has seen the series before, so please be considerate about major spoilers. Vagueness, warnings and/or spoiler tags are appreciated.
01d55: Jigglypuff (Default)

Comment written during view

[personal profile] 01d55 2010-06-19 04:29 am (UTC)(link)
Someone thought that CG would look better than what Star Trek and Star Wars had been doing.

They were wrong.

The WB stream keeps track of which ads you've seen so you can rewind without having to rewatch an ad! BETTER THAN YOUTUBE OMG.

Everyone who isn't green is white.

Centauri ambassador is way too honest when it comes to admitting how unqualified he is for his job.

Woah wait he gets clever when he's drunk.

"YOU WANT ME" ahahahahaaha.

Not as clever as Naarn. Damn that was smooth.

BUT: owned by evidence.
01d55: Jigglypuff (Default)

That thing with that Vorlon

[personal profile] 01d55 2010-06-19 06:19 am (UTC)(link)
I'm going to have to take your word on him making more sense later.

Am disappointed that a pair of supposedly experienced diplomats fell for the old logical or misunderstanding.
rahxepheon: (Default)

[personal profile] rahxepheon 2010-06-19 07:49 am (UTC)(link)
I haven’t seen the series before, so I was curious as to why the human race is (or seems to be) in charge of Babylon 5, and if the crew becomes more diverse as the series continues? Also, is there a reason for Londo having a significantly different accent from the rest of the Centauri we have seen, particularly when compared to his nephew?
galateus: David Xanatos looking satisfied with his awesomeness. (Xanatos1)

[personal profile] galateus 2010-06-19 02:39 pm (UTC)(link)
Yeah a lot of early scenes were really awkward and made it hard to forget they were on a set and were waiting for prompts instead of having an organic conversation.

Talia Winters was getting kinda slashy at the end in the bar scene. "I just wanted to know if it was me" sounds like an awkward breakup line.

I did notice that Delenn's Minbari-head looked waaay cheaper than in the pilot. And I loled heartily at the space-CGI, considering the first season of ReBoot was airing about that time.

This Sinclair guy is still incredibly boring and annoying and needs to die yesterday. I was kinda hoping in my ignorance that he was just a pilot character who'd get replaced like with Ivanova, but no. (Is the pilot in continuity? Confusingly TheWB.com put up the wrong summary for this episode so I thought it'd be a retelling at first.)

And this is kinda par for the sci-fi course, but it seemed really incongruous to have on the one hand, blatant foreshadowing of a speciesist human supremacist political plotline, and on the other, blatant generalizations about how Narns all sell out to the highest bidder and Minbari are all "honorable" and would never use sneak-attacks (...except for that sneaky assassin that tried to start a war by framing the commander for murder?), and the narrative just presents those as basic facts that the whole plot hinged on.

G'Kar is so awesome, I don't even know.
aulayan: (Default)

[personal profile] aulayan 2010-06-20 10:25 am (UTC)(link)
The main thing I loved about this episode after I saw it the first time (which was well into season 3, if not season 4...I was a latecomer) was the political asides.

It was rather nice to see that there were elections going on, and people were talking about them. It made the world feel more real, right there in the first episode.

Also they set up the Londo/G'kar stuff immediately. Because, hands down, the two best actors on the show.

Other than that, I was meh to the episode for the most part, and still am. Season 1 was rather clunky, but had a few really decent points. JMS was still trying to find his legs, and of course, other people were still writing episodes. (He later becomes a control freak and writes all of season 3, 4 and most of 5 excepting a Gaiman-penned episode).

Also I so need to check my dreamwidth account more often. Totally forgot about this until just now, eep.