Earthforce One, clearly inspired by the real-life Air Force One and almost certainly the inspiration for Battlestar Galactica's Colonial One (which was designed by some of the same people).
A11: Survivors
Airdates: 4
May 1994 (US), 25 July 1994 (UK)
Working Title: A
Knife in the Shadows
Written by Mark Scott Zicree
Directed by Jim Johnston
Cast: Lianna Kemmer (Elaine Thomas), Cutter
(Tom Donaldson), Sergeant Lou Welch (David Crowley), Nolan (Jose
Rosario), General Netter (Rod Perry), Young Lianna (Robin Wake), Special
Agent (David Austin Cook), ISN Reporter (Maggie Egan), Alien (Mark
Hendrickson), Station One (Marianne Robertson)
Plot: Earth
Alliance President Luis Santiago is due to pay a visit to Babylon 5 to
congratulate Sinclair on a job well done and also to present the station with a
brand new fighter squadron, Zeta Wing. However, whilst preparing the Cobra Bays
to receive the new fighters, a massive explosion rips along the docking arm,
killing several workers. Earthforce special intelligence operatives arrive
ahead of the President to investigate, one of whom, Lianna Kemmer, is the
daughter of an old friend of Garibaldi’s who was killed on Europa when he
refused to go on the take. Garibaldi slipped into alcoholism and Lianna’s
idealised view of “Uncle Mike” was shattered. Kemmer angrily blames Garibaldi
for not helping her father and is quick to pounce on any evidence that
Garibaldi himself might be involved in the bombing.
One of the survivors of the blast, Nolan, dies whilst
claiming that Garibaldi planted the bomb and a search of Garibaldi’s quarters
turns up both a diagram of the Cobra Bay and Centauri ducats, a neutral hard
currency (cash) which is untraceable, perfect for paying off assassins.
Garibaldi goes on the run to clear his name and receives help from G’Kar and
Londo. He is eventually captured by Kemmer after falling back on the bottle,
but Sinclair searches Nolan’s quarters and turns up Homeguard propaganda and
bomb-making equipment. Nolan must have set the bomb and inadvertently blown
himself and the bay up ahead of schedule. Realising that Kemmer’s
second-in-command, Cutter, must have planted the evidence in his quarters,
Garibaldi manages to convince Kemmer to confront him. Cutter turns out to be
behind the attack and has rigged the other Cobra Bays to explode when the B5
fighters launch as an honour guard for the President. Garibaldi manages to get
Ivanova to stop the launch and knocks Cutter out himself. Kemmer heads back to
Earth, her faith in Garibaldi restored.
MORE AFTER THE JUMP:
The Arc: Though grievously hurt by the loss of many
important members following the events of episode A7 and the arrest of their leader, Jacob Lester
(as related in the newspaper article in A8), Homeguard remains a
powerful, potent force. They despise President Santiago for his policy of peace
and mutual trade with alien races and want him dead to stop his pro-alien
policies. This idea is followed up on in episodes A22 and B2.
We learn some more about Garibaldi and his past in this
episode. Much of Season 5’s major subplots are devoted to what happens when
Garibaldi again hits rock bottom, in episode E11 in particular.
Zeta Wing makes its debut appearance in this episode.
Episode B22 indicates that the other
fighter pilots are annoyed that Zeta Wing has brand new ships whilst theirs are
old and battered due to spare parts deficiencies. Episode B4 reveals that Zeta Wing is commanded by Lt. Commander Ray Galus.
Londo and Garibaldi form a bond in this episode, which is
referenced in episode B12.
This episode could almost have been called The Very Long Night of Michael Garibaldi.
Background: Seventeen years ago (in 2241) Garibaldi
used to serve on Europa, one of Jupiter’s moons, where most of the security
force was on the take. Garibaldi and his friend Frank Kemmer refused to join
them, so Frank was killed. Garibaldi was so shaken he hit the bottle and
remained on it for years, becoming a wreck and wastrel in the process. After
this he served on Orion IV and Mars, where he met Sinclair in 2253 (DC5, C8).
Garibaldi is 37 years old in this episode (which likely
takes place in June or July 2258), so was born in 2220 or 2221, two to three
years after Sinclair but nine to ten years before Ivanova. Kemmer appears to be
in her mid-to-late 20s, which is quite young for her rank and position.
The rank structure of Earthforce is not always clear, but
this episode seems to confirm that a Lt. Commander and Commander outrank a
Major (also reinforced in A20, C10 and the fact that B5’s
third-in-command is the never-seen Major Atumbe, who is subservient to Ivanova).
Ilarus is the Centauri Goddess of Fortune.
Apparently, the meaning of the word “wing” (as in fighter
wing) has changed since the 20th Century. A squadron is a number of
fighters, usually no less than eight and no more than fourteen (twelve is the
most common number). A wing is a collection of squadrons working together.
Throughout Babylon 5 the words
“squadron” and “wing” are used interchangeably.
The President’s personal starship is called Earthforce One. It shares some similarities
to the Asimov-style starliner, but is
more streamlined and elegant in its appearance, as well as being coloured
Earthforce blue.
The Vree, one of the League races, is noted for being a
species of unpleasant eaters, at least by Narn standards.
References: General
Netter is named for Douglas Netter, Babylon
5’s executive producer.
“Kemmer” is a reference to Ed Kemmer, the lead actor on early
American SF show Space Patrol.
Earthforce One is
clearly modelled after Air Force One,
the United States President’s personal aircraft.
There’s a 3D holographic game featuring knights fighting one
another that is popular in the Casino. It may be a nod at The New Twilight Zone, which featured a memorable battle involving
a CG knight.
Unanswered Questions:
What was Lianna Kemmer’s eventual fate?
Mistakes, Retcons and
Lamentations: Garibaldi uses Cutter’s link to contact Ivanova. Episode C7 suggests that links are
biogenetically keyed to one person and can’t be used by other people. It might
be that Garibaldi, and possibly all Earthforce Security Chiefs, can
automatically use any link, or that Cutter’s link was a generic one usable by
anyone assigned to him when he arrived on Babylon 5.
Zeta Wing appears to only have seven fighters in it when it
reaches the station. Alpha and Delta Wings are shown to have nine Starfuries or
more in other episodes.
On Garibaldi’s wanted poster, he is called a “Terren”.
Behind the Scenes: The
final scene in Survivors, where Kemmer
boards the transport, features Babylon 5’s
first attempted at a near-100% virtual set. The only real things in the shot
are Kemmer and the ladder leading up to the ship. Everything else is fake.
J. Michael Straczynski noted that his family had alcohol
problems going back four generations, and this inspired Garibaldi’s character.
Some viewers had issues with how the backstory to the episode
unfolded. According to Straczynski, Nolan blamed Garibaldi on the spur of the
moment to get him in trouble, not realising he was dying. Cutter seized on
that, and Kemmer’s distrust of Garibaldi, to frame him.
Jerry Doyle drew on his background on Wall Street for the
scenes of Garibaldi hitting the bottle, recalling too many ill-advised nights
with tequila.
This episode marked a change in the perception of Jerry
Doyle as an actor by some castmembers, with Peter Jurasik noting that Doyle had
an instinctive, emotional style that was very different to the classical
training some of the other actors had, but was just as effective. Jim Johnston
was also impressed, noting that Doyle was one of the actors on the show who
responded well he was given material that stretched and challenged him.
For the scene where Garibaldi makes a drunk speech in the
Downbelow bar, Doyle spent several minutes spinning on the shot before shooting
started, meaning he didn’t have to fake his stumbling around the set blindly.
The episode's ending takes on a slightly different note when you realise that Major Kemmer was almost certainly still on Earthforce One during the events of the season finale.
Familiar Faces: Writer
Marc Scott Zicree was one of the main creative forces behind the TV series Captain Power and the Soldiers of the
Future, giving Straczynski and Larry DiTillio a shot at writing episodes for
that series. He also worked with Straczynski on The Real Ghostbusters and He-Man
and the Masters of the Universe. His other credits include Forever
Knight, Animorphs, Sliders and both Star Trek: The Next Generation and Deep Space Nine.
Straczynski’s original plan was that the viewer would hear
about President Luis Santiago but never see him. When it became necessary to
show an image of him, he picked a picture of Douglas Netter, Babylon 5’s executive producer, and had
Netter do a voice-over. However, when this episode came along Straczynski
realised they really needed to see him. Netter refused to appear on-camera, so
Straczynski nixed the scenes where Santiago comes on board. However, keeping
Santiago off-screen does add to the mystique of the character.
This episode marks the first appearance of David L. Crowley
as Sergeant Lou Welch. The Lebanese-born, British actor appears in several more
episodes in the first two seasons.
Review: This episode
features some extremely painful dialogue, has some moments that are so
contrived they are quite painful to watch and puts a lot of weight on the
shoulders of one of the least-experienced castmembers. Fortunately, Doyle rises
to the occasion and there’s some excellent character development, both of Garibaldi
and his relationship with other characters (particularly Londo). The result is
an episode that feels like it’s not firing on all thrusters, but at least makes
a game attempt to rise above its stock premise. ***
Garibaldi: “Nothing the government does surprises me.”
Ivanova: “That’s a very Russian attitude. I commend
you.”
Garibaldi: “I need a drink. Water, straight.”
Sinclair: “Lt. Commander Ivanova, escort Major Kemmer
off the Observation Dome.”
Ivanova: “With pleasure. You are going to resist, I
hope?”
G’Kar: “The universe is run by the complex
interweaving of three elements: energy, matter and enlightened self-interest.”
A12: By Any Means Necessary
Airdates: 11
May 1994 (US), 1 August 1994 (UK)
Working Title: Backlash
Written by Kathryn M. Drennan
Directed by Jim Johnston
Cast: Neeoma Connolly (Katy Boyer), Orin
Zento (John Snyder), Senator Hidoshi (Aki Aleong), Mary Ann
Cramer (Patricia Healy), Narn Captain (Michael McKenzie), Eduardos
Delvientos (José Ray), Worker 1 (Floyd Vaughn), Worker 2 (Ricardo
Martinez), Station One (Marianne Robertson)
Plot: A Narn
cargo ship is docking with Babylon 5 when the docking computer malfunctions and
lifts another ship into the access tunnel just as the Narn ship pulls through.
The Narn captain panics, although the other ship isn’t moving yet, and tries to
back out, ramming the docking tunnel in the process and blowing up its engines.
The resulting fireball consumes most of the docking bay and kills a dock
worker. The Docker’s Guild is incensed by the malfunction, complaining of poor
maintenance and unfulfilled promises of pay rises. Unable to go on strike
because of Earth labour laws, the dockers start calling in sick.
Negotiator Orin Zento arrives from Earth to mediate, but his
hardline stance aggravates the situation. A full-scale strike is declared and
Zento invokes the Rush Act, giving the local governor - Sinclair - the means to
end the strike by any means necessary, suggesting the use of force. Sinclair
instead transfers 1.3 million credits from the station’s military budget to
help pay for new workers and equipment. Senator Hidoshi, Sinclair’s liaison to
the Babylon 5 Senate Oversight Committee, is impressed by Sinclair’s
originality, but warns him he has made important enemies back home by
embarrassing Zento.
Meanwhile, G’Kar is horror-stricken when he learns an
important plant he needs to help celebrate a religious ceremony – the G’Quan
Eth – was destroyed in the docking accident. There is not enough time to get
another from the Narn homeworld before the ceremony must take place (when the
sun crests the mountains on the Narn homeworld). G’Kar learns that Londo has a
G’Quan Eth plant of his own and attempts to do everything possible to gain it,
from bargaining to even pleading and threatening to destroy Centauri religious
icons if he doesn’t get the plant. Sinclair intervenes, pointing out that
G’Quan Eth plants are contraband, only useable for religious or medical
grounds. Londo turns it over, pointing out that they have missed the deadline
and it is no longer necessary to keep it. Sinclair suggests using the argument
that the light from ten years ago which crested the mountains on Narn is about
to reach Babylon 5 so the ceremony can still go ahead and G’Kar agrees.
The Arc: Londo is still angry at the Narn for the
Ragesh III incident (in episode A1) and holding the plant from G’Kar is
just part of his petty revenge.
G’Kar follows the teaching of the prophet G’Quan, whilst
Na’Toth’s family (but not Na’Toth herself) follow the prophet G’Lan. Episodes B22,
C6 and C14 reveal that G’Quan was a Narn prophet who lived a
thousand human years ago on the Narn homeworld. He was apparently a mortal
Narn. G’Lan, on the other hand, is sometimes depicted as a being of light (as
we learn in episode B22).
The Book of G’Quan
becomes, surprisingly, a major plot point in later episodes of the series, most
notably C1, C9 and C14.
There are growing tensions between the Earth Alliance
government and the “little people”. Episodes A16, A22, B17 and a fair bit of the rest of the series
explore events unfolding on Earth and how they impact on the situation on
Babylon 5.
Background: The Narn homeworld is located 12.2
light-years from Babylon 5. By the Narn calendar (which is longer than Earth’s)
that’s just over 10 light-years.
Prior to this episode the Rush Act was last invoked at the
Ganymede colony (on Jupiter’s largest moon) in 2237. Another strike took place
at New California, presumably another Earth Alliance colony world.
There’s over a thousand dock workers on Babylon 5. Episode B15 suggests this number is closer to
1,500. Many of the dock workers originally helped build the station.
There is a spacedock called New Kobe, possibly in Earth
orbit.
This episode marks the first appearance of a Narn light
freighter, which is shown in a combat situation in episode B15.
There is an observation chamber located at the end of each
of the Cobra Bay arms the docking sphere to the main carousel. These chambers,
which have unusually impressive vistas of space for the mostly-closed-off
station, can be used for religious ceremonies and diplomatic functions.
G’Quan lived at a time known as the “Dawn of All Mornings”.
The Earth Alliance is suffering a major recession during the
events of this episode and indeed this season, which helps explain a few things
about how angry people are on Earth that so much money is being spent in space.
Routarian is yet another Centauri god.
References: The
Matawan labour dispute mentioned by Neeoma Connelly is a real event, taking
place in Matawan, West Virginia in 1920. It saw a showdown between coal miners,
townspeople and police and was a noted event in the evolution of the American
labour movement.
“McAuliffe Computation” is a company listed on Sinclair’s
computer as working on Babylon 5. This is the first of two nods in the series
to Sharon McAuliffe, one of the astronauts killed in the Challenger disaster of 1986.
The “Rush Act” is a nod of the act to American talk show
host Rush Limbaugh, noted for his right-wing views and occasional SF
credentials (later playing himself in the Family
Guy tribute to Star Wars, Blue Harvest).
Babylon 5 has a fine history of top-tier guest actor talent. This guy isn't one of them.
Unanswered Questions: Sinclair's decision would seem to set a dangerous precedent for other labour disputes. Was this precedent ever cited in other industrial clashes elsewhere in the Earth Alliance?
Mistakes, Retcons and
Lamentations: This episode shows that Babylon 5 does not have as much
automation or automated cargo handling as you’d expect, with a lot of work
still being done by hand by grunts. Later episodes confirm that there is no
major AI technology in the Earth Alliance (apparently being outlawed at some
point in the past). This stretches the credulity that Babylon 5 was built from scratch in about eighteen months way
past breaking point, if most of it had to be built by people in spacesuits.
Behind the Scenes: Straczynski
decided not to show a Narn religious ceremony in episode A5, knowing that this episode would deal quite heavily with Narn
religious issues.
Michael O’Hare started filming this episode having caught
the red eye back from New York City at the weekend. Johnston noted that O’Hare
was tired and beat and played that into the character, having him stay up late
and not shave for the week of filming.
Although this was one of the most physically demanding
episodes for him to shoot, it emerged as one of O’Hare’s favourites. He particularly
enjoyed Drennan’s dialogue.
Katsulas appreciated the extra depth given to G’Kar by
showing him to be a man of religious conviction and faith.
The observation chamber scene at the end of the episode is
another virtual set: the floor is real but everything else was created in a
computer. Straczynski was so impressed that he used the location for several
other seminal episodes (most notably B9).
Familiar Faces: John
Snyder previously played the second Soul Hunter – the relatively sane one – in episode
A2. He was a lot better in that
episode.
Macaulay Bruton returns as Garibaldi’s aide, Jack, but doesn’t
get any lines or a credit.
The dock worker yelling “Strike!” is director Jim Johnston.
Quite a few of the dockworkers are actually behind-the-scenes and set crew from
Babylon 5, given a chance to appear
in front of the camera for once.
Writer Kathryn Drennan was married to J. Michael Straczynski
from 1983 to 2004. To avoid charges of nepotism, her script had to be approved
by Larry DiTillio, John Copeland and Douglas Netter, and signed off by Warner
Brothers themselves, something unnecessary for the rest of the scripts in the
series. Drennan would later writer novel C9,
To Dream in the City of Sorrows.
Actress Kate Boyer (Neeoma Connolly) had numerous big and
small screen roles in Hollywood in the 1980s and 1990s, including Beauty and the Beast, Angel, The X-Files, NCIS, Sliders, Millennium and the movies The Lost World: Jurassic Park and Minority Report.
Review: This
is quite an interesting episode which suggests that labour disputes, hard
workers getting trodden on by the government and other baggage of human history
will accompany humanity into space. It would have been nice to have seen a more
thorough explanation of why AI and robots aren’t doing this job (even if it was
a nod at Red Dwarf’s fine explanation: “The only reason they don’t give
this job to the service robots is that they have a better union than us”), but
it gives us one of the busier and messier episodes of the season, with Sinclair’s
smug solution coming back to bite him on the backside pretty quickly. The G’Kar/Londo
subplot is also sublime, particularly Katsulas and Jurasik’s sparring which has
reached new levels of invective. The episode’s biggest weakness is John Snyder’s
performance as Orin Zento, which is frankly embarrassing. ***½
Londo: “If there is anything I can do to be of
assistance, you will let me know, won’t you?”
G’Kar: “No.”
G’Kar: “Why does the universe hate me?”
Na’Toth: *
sympathetic but unhelpful shoulder clasp *
Hidoshi: “The Senate has decided to let your decision
on the strike stand without comment.”
Sinclair: “I’m glad they see it my way.”
Hidoshi: “They do not.”
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