A13: Signs and Portents
Airdates: 18
May 1994 (US), 8 August 1994 (UK)
Working Title: Raiding
Party
Written by J. Michael Straczynski
Directed by Janet Greek
Cast: Lord Kiro (Gerrit Graham), Lady
Ladira (Fredi Olster), Morden (Ed Wasser), Reno (Robert
Silver), Ambassador Kosh (Ardwight Chamberlain), Raider (Whip
Hubley), Customs Guard (Lynn Red Williams), Freighter Pilot (Hector
Mercado), Man (Garry Kluger), Pilot 1 (Lee Methis), Pilot 2 (Douglas
E. McCoy), Station One (Marianne Robertson), Station Two (Joshua
Cox), Station Three (Anita Brabec)
Date: Wednesday
3 August 2258. It is now closer to eleven years than ten since the Battle of
the Line.
Plot: Lord
Kiro and his aunt, the Lady Ladira, arrive from Centauri Prime to see
Ambassador Londo Mollari. Londo has recently brokered a deal with a dubious
merchant, Reno, to recover the Eye, an ancient Centauri artefact possessed by
the very first Emperor of the Republic. The Eye has been lost for a century. The
Centauri have paid a huge amount of money to recover the Eye and Kiro and
Ladira are to take it back home. Ladira is a seer who has prescient flashes of
the future, once telling Kiro that he would be killed by “shadows”. She finds
Babylon 5 unnerving and keeps seeing an image of the station under attack by
strange forces in the future. Kiro tells Londo that he, and many other nobles,
bitterly resent the loss of the Republic’s prestige and power in the Galaxy and
wonder when the Centauri lost their will to rule.
A human arrives on the station. Going only by the name
Morden, he arranges meetings with Ambassadors G’Kar, Delenn and Londo. He asks
each of them a simple question: “What do you want?” G’Kar tells him he wants
revenge on the Centauri, to blacken their skies and burn their cities, to kill
their parents whilst the children watch and to utterly destroy them, as the
Centauri broke the Narn a century and a half ago. However, G’Kar’s ambitions do
not extend beyond that. He has no wish to see the Narn rule other races or conquer
the Galaxy. Delenn ponders Morden’s question, but suddenly the sigil of the
Grey Council appears on her forehead. As she watches, Morden becomes engulfed
by darkness. She throws him out of her quarters, horrified at what she has
seen: “They are here.” Londo tells Morden that he, like Kiro, despairs of what
the Centauri have become and wants a renaissance of power, for the Centauri to
be restored to their rightful position as rulers of a huge empire. Morden seems
most pleased by this answer.
Sinclair tells Garibaldi about his recent experiences with
flashbacks to the Battle of the Line (episode A8). He asks Garibaldi for
help and he agrees. Garibaldi quickly comes up with something odd: the Minbari
Federation co-funded Babylon 5 on the condition that they could veto the Earth
Alliance choice for command. They vetoed everyone but Sinclair, who was way down
the list. The reason is unknown.
The Raiders are mounting a major series of attacks on cargo
ships headed for the station and Sinclair is determined to wipe them out once
and for all, although he is puzzled at how the Raiders are getting in and out
of hyperspace so fast when their attacks are taking place hours away from the
nearest jump gates. The Achilles, a cargo ship from Earth, reports an
attack and Ivanova takes out Delta Wing to investigate. Sinclair notes that the
Achilles is two further sectors away than the other attacks and realises
it is a diversion. He recalls Delta Wing and prepares Alpha Wing for launch
under Garibaldi. A Raider operative on board makes his move, taking Kiro and
the Eye hostage and commandeering the Centauri vessel. Sinclair shuts down the
jump gate so they can’t escape, but a Raider command carrier – large enough to
generate its own jump points – jumps in and launches a large number of fighters
at the station. A full-scale battle erupts, but the Raider fighters are
decimated when Alpha and Delta wings catch them in a crossfire with Babylon 5’s
own defence grid. The Raider carrier jumps out with Kiro and the Eye on board.
On the station Morden bumps into Ambassador Kosh, who tells him in no uncertain
terms that he must leave at once. The time is not yet right and the lesser
races are not ready as yet. Morden doesn’t answer and Kosh becomes more
insistent and threatening.
The Raider ship re-emerges in open space and Kiro
congratulates the Raider captain on a job well done. However, Kiro’s plans to
use the Eye as a rallying symbol to topple the Emperor are ruined when the
Raiders plan to just ransom the Eye and Kiro back to the Republic for an
immense profit, enough to replace their lost fighters and buy two or three more
command vessels. Suddenly an immense alien ship appears out of nowhere and
destroys the carrier, precisely dismantling it with massive cutting beams. Kiro
and his “friends” die. Ladira feels her nephew’s death back on Babylon 5 thanks
to her prescient abilities.
Londo feels dejected, thinking he will be lucky if he isn’t
stripped of all rank for this fiasco. Morden appears with the Eye, telling
Londo that he has associates who sometimes do him favours. Morden leaves,
promising to call back one day. Ladira also takes her leave of Sinclair, but
before she goes she leaves Sinclair an image of her vision, showing Babylon 5
being destroyed by unknown forces. She tells him it is only a possible future.
MORE AFTER THE JUMP
Dating the Episode: Ivanova’s
wake-up alarm gives the date and even time that the episode begins: 0430 hours.
The Arc: A continuation of the Centauri feeling they
have lost their way, first aired by Londo in episode A1, but also
setting up virtually the entire series to come. Morden turns up to see Londo
again in episode A22, when the main story arc really gets moving.
Morden claims that he has been doing some exploring out on
the “Rim” for the last couple of years. This is expanded upon in episodes B2 and B17, among others.
The future Ladira sees for Babylon 5 is most directly tied into
the events of episodes A20, C16 and C17, although some
have speculated it is also a vision of episode E22.
The Raiders cease to be a problem from this episode
forwards, although they are occasionally mentioned. They don’t turn up again
for another three years, until episode TVM2.
Sinclair was the only person the Minbari wanted to command
Babylon 5, for reasons unknown although it is possibly tied in to what we
learned in episode A8 (about Sinclair being taken by the Grey Council
and scanned at the Battle of the Line). Episode A16 shows that this
point hasn’t gone unnoticed back on Earth, fuelling the idea that Sinclair is a
Minbari agent. We find out what the Minbari are up to and why they want
Sinclair where they can keep an eye on him in episodes B1, C17
and TVM1.
Delenn seems to sense what Morden is, or at least whom he
represents. The Vorlons definitely know what he is up to and aren’t happy about
it. We get a full and total explanation of the ties between the Minbari,
Vorlons and Morden’s unseen allies in episode B17. The triangle on
Delenn’s forehead previously appeared in episode A8.
Kosh and Morden confront one another again in episode C15.
According to Straczynski, Morden was under orders not to
approach Sinclair or any Earth Alliance representative. Episode C1 goes some way to explaining why.
The current Centauri
Emperor has not been seen in public for almost a year, leaving the Prime
Minister to lead in his stead. We later learn this is in grief following the
death of his son and heir. We meet both the Emperor and Prime Minister in episode
B9.
Kosh’s ship docks in
Bay 13, which becomes important in (appropriately) episode B13.
Background: Babylon
5 contains stand-up urinals. People clean their hands afterwards with blasts of
germ-killing radiation from what appear to be UV emitters.
The Eye is the
oldest symbol of Centauri nobility. It was crafted for the first Emperor of the
Centauri Republic over a thousand years ago, who was then of Lord Kiro’s
family. The Eye was lost over one century ago at the Battle of Nu’Shok.
There is a famine on
Narn’s southern frontier (continent?). G’Kar notes that the Centauri strip-mined
the planet over generations, which has left the planet in dire straits. Londo
also notes that the Narn have continued to exploit their planet’s natural
resources.
Councillor Tu’Bar is a member of the First Circle of the Kha’Ri,
the Narn ruling body. He authorised Morden’s meeting with G’Kar.
According to Straczynski, this episode was meant to confirm
that Sinclair was serving as both Babylon 5’s military governor and commander,
and also the Earth Alliance ambassador, at the request of the Minbari.
Otherwise there would be a separate Earth Alliance representative on board.
The next-nearest jump gate to Babylon 5 is six light-months
from the Epsilon Eridani system.
There are at least nine cannon arrays in Babylon 5’s defence
grid, capable of firing at least out to 5km from the station.
References: “Morden”
is a nod to Prince Mordred of the Arthurian legends (something noted in episode
C13), as well as Mordor, the stronghold
of the Dark Lord Sauron (sometimes called the Shadow) in Tolkien’s The Lord of the Rings.
An Earth transport is named the Mary Celeste, which is named after a ship whose crew vanished
without a trace at sea in 1872, which may be reflected in the Raider carrier
which, if it wasn’t for Ladira’s vision, would have simply vanished without trace.
Another Earth transport is named for Baruch Spinoza, a Dutch
philosopher of the 17th Century noted for his influence on the Enlightenment.
“The Shadows” are a reference to the Jungian notion of the
Shadow, the part of the brain that is rooted in desire and destruction.
The Raider agent on the station – “Six” – was named as
another brief homage to The Prisoner.
This episode’s title – which is also the title of the entire
season – is a nod to Norman Corwin, particularly his radio drama On a Note of Triumph, celebrating the
end of World War II: “Signs and portents! It was no furtive tapping on the
window sill at night, but clamorous pounding in the public square.”
Lt. David Corwin is also named for Noman Corwin. Oddly,
Corwin first appears in this episode, but he is not given a name until episode B15.
The space battle features a nod to the original 1970s Battlestar Galactica: a B5 gun battery
fires three times, missing a Raider twice before anticipating and hitting with
the third hit. This was a frequently-used (over-used, as BSG’s effects were incredibly expensive) shot from BSG, with Galactica’s turrets missing twice before hitting a Cylon Raider
with a third hit.
Unanswered Questions:
Why did the Narn and Centauri governments authorise Morden to speak to
their ambassadors?
Mistakes, Retcons and
Lamentations: 3 August 2258 won’t be a Wednesday. Straczynski probably missed
a leap year somewhere in counting up the days (or just guessed). Or perhaps
there is a calendar realignment somewhere between now and 2258.
During the battle sequences, memory limitations meant that
keeping the full, massive-poly B5 model, the Starfuries and Raider fighters all
in shot at once became very difficult. A lower-poly, less-detailed model – effectively
a “smaller” version of the main station model – was utilised during the battle
sequences. Unfortunately, at several points it’s clear that the station is out
of its normal scale: the Starfuries are clearly bigger than they should be when
they fly out from behind the station. On the true widescreen edition of the
show (it’s less visible on the cropped DVD release), you can also see very big
Starfury shadows passing over B5 at the end of the battle, which are clearly a
mistake.
Delta Wing consists of eight fighters, but only seven return
to B5 at the end of the episode; the eighth presumably was left behind to escort
Transport Achilles home. However, “Delta
9” is reported destroyed in the battle. It might be that another Delta Wing
fighter was down for repairs during the battle and did not fly, reducing the
number of fighters available for the battle. Episode B22 suggests that Alpha and Delta Wings consisted of older fighters
that were frequently down for repairs, whilst Zeta Wing’s fighters are more
state-of-the-art.
When Delta Wing spin around to head home, you can see that
the engine exhaust elements are not fully integrated into the engines.
Sinclair tells Garibaldi to ignore the fighters and hit the
carrier. Garibaldi acknowledges, but immediately engages the fighters in a
dogfight. It feels there was a line cut here where Garibaldi had to switch to
engaging the fighters instead.
Behind the Scenes: Shortly
after this episode aired, Ed Wasser was recognised by a florist whose shop he
was in. The florist kept asking Wasser, “What do you want?”, briefly confusing Wasser until he realised the
reference and was flattered. Unfortunately, the florist thought it was from an
episode of Deep Space Nine.
Straczynski noted a discrepancy in this episode’s depiction
of Morden and Kosh and the audience’s reaction. Morden is nice, polite, leaves
Delenn’s quarters when asked, helps Londo avoid embarrassment and political
censure, destroys a potential future enemy and restores some of the Centauri’s
lost pride. However, the viewer is left with the feeling that Morden is a “bad
guy”. Kosh terrorises Talia Winters for no apparent reason, withholds vital
information from our heroes and blows away Deathwalker, but the viewer is left feeling
that he is a “good guy”.
According to Straczynski, who studied psychology, “What do
you want?” is a powerful question, as is its companion question, “Who are you?”
Both are important questions on Babylon
5, and their replies are even more important.
The scene with Londo and G’Kar arguing over the head of the
human bystander in the corridor was meant as an allegory for the Centauri and
Narns arguing with one another with the Earth Alliance caught in the middle,
which happens several times in the first season.
Most of Babylon 5’s
sets were fully-enclosed spaces, designed to be shot from any angle. Director
Janet Greek takes advantage of this at one point to have a 360° shot of
Sinclair walking around the briefing room in a circle whilst talking to
Garibaldi.
Ladira’s vision (as well as the “flash-forwards” in episode A20) was originally of the final
episode of the entire series. Between Seasons 1 and 2, Straczynski radically
reconceptualise the story arc which meant that this event never happened.
Episodes C16 and C17 were later written to give a new reason
for the vision (to a questionable degree of success).
Garibaldi’s Starfury launching vertically, flipping and
nailing the Raider with a single shot was one of Thornton’s favourite shots and
one he’d been planning for a while.
Familiar Faces: Ed
Wasser had worked behind the scenes on the pilot feeding lines for the actor auditions.
J. Michael Straczynski was impressed by his verbal cadence and gave him the
role of Lt. Guerra, one of the observation dome techs. Feeling he was up to a
bigger role, Straczynski created the role of Morden specifically for him.
Gerrit Graham (Kiro) later appeared as a member of the Q
Continuum in the Voyager episode Death Wish.
Fredi Olster (Ladira) later had a recurring role as Judge
Winters on Walker, Texas Ranger.
Whip Hubley, the less-than-impressive “Raider Six”, actually
ended up having a stronger career than most of his co-stars on this episode,
playing recurring roles on More Tales of
the City, Flipper, The District, Further Tales of the City. His numerous guest star roles include
episodes of CSI: Miami and Homeland.
Robert Silver (Mr. Reno) later appears in episode B13 as a merchant in Downbelow. It is
unclear if he is supposed to be the same character, but if so he clearly fell
on hard times in the year or so between episodes.
This episode marks the first appearance of Joshua Cox as a
dome technician. His young-but-determined performance won the approval of
Straczynski. When Marianne Robertson’s “Station One” technician left at the end
of the season, Cox was promoted in her stead. He was given a name, Lt. David
Corwin, in episode B15 and was given
his own storyline in episode C7.
Review: Signs and Portents is one of the best episodes of the first
season of Babylon 5. Up until this point Babylon 5 appeared to be
an episodic, Star Trek-ish show with the recurring mystery of the Battle
of the Line. In this episode Straczynski fires the gun on the main story arc.
Morden and the Shadows first appear, there’s a kick-ass space battle,
intriguing Centauri politics and a threatening prophecy of the future
destruction of the B5 station. It’s with this episode that Babylon 5
goes from being a small story to a big one, with hints of galaxy-spanning
consequences. This is spoiled a bit by cheesy guest star performances, but it
remains an effective episode, rooted in the charming performance of Ed Wasser
as Morden and in Peter Jurasik’s fantastic speech which has such apocalyptic
consequences. ****½
Londo: “I want my people to
reclaim their rightful place in the Galaxy. I want to see the Centauri stretch
for their hand again and command the stars. I want a rebirth of glory, a
renaissance of power. I want to stop running through my life like a man late
for an appointment, afraid to look back or look forward. I want us to be what
we used to be. I want it all back the way it was.”
Kosh: “Leave this place. They are not for you. Go.
Leave. Now.”
Ladira: “The Shadows have come for Lord Kiro. The
Shadows have come for us all.”
A14: T.K.O.
Airdates: 25
May 1994 (US), 21 January 1995 (UK)
Written by Lawrence G. DiTillio
Directed by John C. Flinn III
Cast: Walker Smith (Greg McKinney), The
Muta-Do (Soon-Tech Oh), Caliban (Don Stroud), Rabbi Koslov (Theodore
Bikel), Gyco (James Jude Courtney), Andrei Ivanov (Robert
Phalen), Migo (Michael McKenzie), ISN Reporter (Lenore Kasdorf), Station
One (Marianne Robertson)
Plot: The
League of Non-aligned Worlds is holding a fighting event known as the Mutai on
the station and disgraced Earth boxer Walker Smith decides to participate,
helped out in training by Garibaldi, an old friend, and an alien named Caliban,
who is motiveless. Smith eventually triumphs in the arena and returns to Earth
a hero.
Meanwhile, Rabbi Koslov arrives on the station to help
Ivanova get over her father’s recent death (in episode A3) by arranging
for her to sit shiva. After initially deciding not to, due to her struggles
with her father’s lack of love for her during life, Ivanova eventually decides
to do so, and is able to process the experience of his death.
The Arc: Not a lot, apart from Smith’s “Watch your
back” line to Garibaldi, a clear piece of foreshadowing to episode A22.
Background: Boxing is still a popular sport in the 23rd
Century.
The Ivanovas have been living in Russia since the late 19th Century.
The Minbari don’t take part in the Mutai as it “ain’t their
thing”, according to Straczynski.
A treel is a type of Centauri fish.
References: “Walker
Smith” is the real name of Sugar Ray Robinson, one of the United States’ most
famous boxers.
The Harlan Ellison book Ivanova is reading is entitled Working Without a Net. It is Ellison’s
planned (but as yet unwritten) autobiography. Apparently, Ellison himself made
off with the mock-up of the book after the episode was made.
“Caliban” is the name of the monstrous slave of Prospero in The Tempest, although there’s no real
connection with the character in this episode.
Unanswered Questions:
What is Caliban’s deal? Do any
other humans do well in the Mutai?
Mistakes, Retcons and
Lamentations: Not an in-series one, but one about production. TKO was supposed to be the penultimate
episode of the season (coming between Babylon
Squared and Chrysalis) and Quality of Mercy was supposed to air 14th
in the series, but Warner Brothers accidentally flipped the two around when it
sent its scheduling information to TV
Guide magazine. Rather than let TV
Guide be wrong (and TV Guide,
especially at the time, was the American public’s Bible for watching
television; it giving out wrong information would probably trigger mass
rioting, property damage, etc.), Warner Brothers just flipped the episodes as
well.
Behind the Scenes: T.K.O.
was proposed by Larry DiTillio who wanted to do an episode about sport
on the station, and also wanted to follow up on Ivanova’s father’s death in
episode A3. Straczynski initially
shot the idea down, but director Jim Johnston and producer Doug Netter decided
they could make it look good. Johnston later had to bow out due to his duties
on episode A20, so Babylon 5’s Director of Photography John
C. Flinn III took over instead.
Straczynski was not keen on the kick-boxing element of the
episode at all, but felt the scenes with Ivanova contributed to her character
growth a lot.
T.K.O. was not
aired during the original run of the series on Channel 4 in the UK. At the time
UK television had a strong proscription against any series featuring martial
arts, “ninjas” or lots of simulated hand-to-hand combat. This was the same
proscription that resulted in Teenage
Mutant Ninja Turtles being renamed Teenage
Mutant Hero Turtles in the UK. The episode was instead aired during a
late-night special run of programming about violent TV shows and films that
could not be aired before the watershed, part of a season of programming that
also included the movie Akira.
Needless to say, most viewers were baffled given the relatively tame levels of
violence in the episode.
Familiar Faces: Theodore
Bikel is a well-recognised face on American television and film, having debuted
in the 1950s. Amongst genre audiences he is probably best-known for his
portrayal of Lt. Worf’s adopted human father in Star Trek: The Next Generation.
Don Stroud, who plays Caliban, played the villainous Heller
in the James Bond movie Licence to Kill (1989). He also returns
to Babylon 5 in episode C11.
Soon-Tech Oh, who plays the Muta-do, is a veteran Korean-American
actor with a long list of credits stretching back to the 1960s, including The Invaders, Logan’s Run, Airwolf and
Highlander: The Series, as well as
the James Bond film The Man with the Golden Gun.
Greg McKinney, who played Walker Smith, had a history of
playing action roles in Hollywood, appearing in movies such as Mortal Kombat, Eraser and Beverly Hills Cop
III. Tragically, McKinney died at just the age of 41 from a brain aneurysm.
Review: A
very mixed bag: Ivanova confronting the death of her father and dealing with
unresolved issues is handled superbly by guest star Theodore Bikel and Claudia
Christian, but the entire Mutai story is bafflingly pointless, despite a
reasonable performance by Greg McKinney. The only high note is that the fight
scenes are, for once, pretty decent, with McKinney and his opponent actually
doing most of their fight scenes for real. But mostly, a forgettable and meaningless
episode. **½
Walker: “One of these days, Garibaldi, you’re going
to learn to watch your back.”
Thank you for reading The Wertzone. To help me provide better content, please consider contributing to my Patreon page and other funding methods, which will also get you exclusive content weeks before it goes live on my blogs. The Cities of Fantasy series is debuting on my Patreon feed and you can read it there one month before being published on the Wertzone.
No comments:
Post a Comment