B7: A Race Through Dark Places
Airdates: 25
January 1995 (US), 21 March 1995 (UK)
Written by J. Michael Straczynski
Directed by Jim Johnston
Cast: Bester (Walter Koenig), Rick (Brian
Cousins), Lurker (Gianin Loffler), Man (Eddie Allan), Bartender
(Kathryn Cressida), Psi Cop (Judy Levitt), Shooter (Christopher
Michael), Telepath 1 (Apesanahkwat), Telepath 2 (Diane Dilascio),
Jason Ironheart (William Allan Young)
Date: 13
March 2259.
Plot: At Psi
Corps’ secret base at Syria Planum, Mars, a rogue telepath is interrogated by
Psi Cop Bester (last seen in A6). Bester knows there is an “underground
railroad” of rogue telepaths being shuttled through an unknown sorting area
before they are sent on to neutral space. He kills the rogue telepath whilst
tearing the information from his brain but it doesn’t matter: he knows the
sorting centre is on Babylon 5. He leaves for the station immediately.
On B5 Ambassador Delenn arranges to have dinner with
Sheridan. She is intrigued by human social customs and wants to learn more
about them. Despite the lack of a common frame of reference, they quickly
become friends and Sheridan starts to appreciate her intriguing view on the
universe.
Bester arrives on Babylon 5 to a less than warm welcome from
the command staff, but Bester invokes his authority to have Garibaldi and Talia
Winters help him track down the rogues. The rogues, knowing the danger he
represents, try to kill Bester but he manages to escape. Talia, however, is
captured and taken to their secret hide-out in Downbelow. There they tell her
why they are running from Psi Corps and tell her all about the illegal experiments
run on them, the abuse of their basic human rights and the deaths of many of
their friends due to Psi Corps’ willingness to expend lives as long as it
serves the “greater good”. After hearing their stories - and scanning many of
them to confirm they are telling the truth - she agrees to help them. Sheridan
receives word that the rogue telepaths are willing to talk to him and he goes
to meet their representative, but is shocked to find it is Dr. Franklin.
Franklin explains that the clinic he set up last year in Downbelow (A21)
is a cover to help rogue telepaths escape from Psi Corps. Sheridan is forced by
law to report the rogues’ presence, but Talia points out that if Psi Corps
stopped their search than Sheridan wouldn’t have to report the matter and could
allow them to leave peacefully. Sheridan agrees and Talia and the telepaths use
their combined mental powers to create an illusion in Bester’s mind of him and
Talia killing all the rogues. The leader of the rogue telepaths used to be a
friend of Jason Ironheart’s and realises he did something to Talia: a normal P5
shouldn’t have been able to deceive a Psi Cop like that. Bester leaves the
station, none the wiser, and the rogues leave the station peacefully.
Earthforce orders Ivanova and Sheridan to being paying rent
on their quarters since they need the extra money and their quarters are bigger
than necessary. Furious, Sheridan uses money from the combat readiness budget
to pay the rent, on the logic that he cannot be ready for combat without a good
night’s sleep beforehand.
MORE AFTER THE JUMP
Dating the Episode: A
title card at the start of the episode gives the date.
The Arc: The main plot follows the build-up of
disturbing evidence regarding Psi Corps’ activities. This continues in episodes
B19 and C6. Bester next appears in episode C6.
The leader of the rogue telepaths (he is credited as
“lurker”) previously appeared in episode A22 as a friend of Stephen
Petrov’s. He also knew Jason Ironheart, from episode A6. There are
flashbacks to that episode as well. We discover that Talia Winters has gained
the ability to shield her mind from even considerably more powerful telepaths.
The secret Psi Corps base on Syria Planum was last
referenced in episode A18. This is the first time we see scenes set on
the Mars colony in the series.
Talia Winters seems to be able to confide in Ivanova at the
end of the episode. This is followed up on in episode B19.
Talia’s growing distrust of Psi Corps is part of a
three-episode mini-arc begun in B6
and concluded in B8.
Dr. Franklin’s connection with the underground railroad of
telepaths resurfaces in episode C19.
Background: An
unofficial rule in Earhart’s means that no on-duty business can be conducted.
Anyone caught flouting the rule must buy everyone present a drink.
In Earhart’s there
is a collection of ship logos visible behind the bar, collected from ships that
have visited Babylon 5. The emblem of the EAS Cortez (from B4) can be seen amongst the other logos.
If a telepath is
measured above rating P11, they are automatically inducted into the Psi Cops.
During the dinner
scene, Sheridan drinks wine but Delenn only has water, a nod at the revelation
in A21 the Minbari cannot drink alcohol without turning violently
psychotic.
There has been a 15%
drop in Babylon 5’s revenue for the first two months of 2259, blamed on
Earthforce convoys taking up commercial docking space.
References: Dr.
Franklin quotes Patrick Henry (“Give me liberty or give me death!”) and James
Otis (“No taxation without representation”, which is a misquote) whilst
extolling the virtues of Sheridan’s resistance to Earthforce. Interestingly, he
points out that Sheridan’s cause is hopeless and doomed to failure, but
Sheridan succeeds, just like the American Revolution did. This might be reading
a little too much into things, however.
Unanswered Questions:
What became of Talia’s psychic superpowers?
Mistakes, Retcons and
Lamentations: This episode was written and filmed when Straczynski had a
very clear plan in mind for Talia Winters’ development. These plans were thrown
out the window a short period of time later by events outside his control, and
forced him to write episode B19 to
compensate. The result of all of this is that this episode – and to some extent
the events of A6 and A9 as well – is rendered considerably
less significant on rewatches than it felt on original broadcast.
In the scene where Delenn and Sheridan agree to go for
dinner, the edge of the boom mike can just be seen for an instant.
Behind the Scenes: This episode and B8 were flipped from
production order for transmission. This episode required more post-production
work, especially the huge number of PPG blasts in the final shoot-out. Although
it sort of works that way around, the general feeling was that Talia’s much
greater distrust of Psi Corps in B8 makes far more sense coming after this episode, not before.
Bruce Boxleitner had trouble with the dialogue during
Sheridan and Delenn’s dinner scene, since he didn’t believe two people would
talk in that manner. Straczynski pointed out that this was an extremely awkward
encounter between two people who’d previously interacted in only a highly
professional manner, not to mention the weirdness of Delenn’s transformation
and the lack of shared cultural context for such a meeting. Boxleitner was then
able to play the scene more naturally.
Mira Furlan wanted to play the scene a little more for
comedy, since Delenn wouldn’t know what to do with chopsticks or how to dress
appropriately. Straczynski reigned in that tendency as he wanted to play the
relationship between the two characters rather than treating the situation for
laughs.
Straczynski received a letter after the episode aired from
an officer in the United States Army, confirming that the sort of bureaucratic
insanity that sees Sheridan and Ivanova locked out of their quarters can happen
in the real military.
Straczynski decided to bring back Walter Koenig because he
got on very well with the cast and he also wanted a familiar face on the opposing
side.
It was Walter Koenig’s idea that he stop and take one last
quizzical look at Talia before leaving, as if he’s not entirely buying what’s
happened. Koenig was concerned that the menace of Bester would be lost if he
constantly showed up on B5 just to be thwarted by the crew and leave muttering
darkly. This informed Straczynski’s writing decisions when bringing him back
again (the next time, in C6).
Andrea Thompson made a rare decision to question the script.
In the final scene, when Talia talks to Ivanova in her quarters, she takes off
her badge but leaves her gloves on. Thompson wanted Talia to take off her
gloves as a sign of her growing trust in Ivanova (since telepaths can pick up unintended
thoughts and emotions more easily through physical contact) as well as
emphasising the characters’ growing ease and intimacy, which Christian and
Thompson both wanted to develop. Director Jim Johnston knew that going
off-script was a major no-no, but called in Straczynski. After listening to
Thompson’s argument he agreed to do the scene with the gloves off.
Some fans speculated that Ivanova and Talia became an item
after this episode, but Straczynski later clarified that they didn’t and
episode B19 would be the next time
their relationship took a step forwards.
Familiar Faces: Kathryn
Cressida returns from episode A18 as
B5’s resident bartender Kat. She’s gone up in the world, moving from working a
bar on the Zocalo to apparently managing Earhart’s.
The second Psi Cop on Mars at the start of the episode is
played by Judy Levitt, Walter Koenig’s real-life wife. She reappears in episode
C6.
Review: Walter
Koenig is always great value for money and this episode shows him and Garibaldi
working well together (something explored further in episode C6 and
especially Season 4), which given Garibaldi’s hatred of him is extremely
effective. Overall this is a strong episode with some good performances, but it’s
all undercut by later revelations that make it feel like it’s setting up a lot
of significant events which simply never happen. ***½
Garibaldi: “It’s damn ironic, isn’t it? The Corps got
started because we were afraid of telepaths. Now they’re the victims of our
fears. We took away every right they had and shoved it in a big black box
called Psi Corps.”
Delenn: “No race can be truly intelligent without
humour.”
B8: Soul Mates
Working Title: Pestilence,
Famine and Death
Airdates: 14
December 1994 (US), 28 March 1995 (UK)
Written by Peter David
Directed by John C. Flinn III
Cast: Matthew Stoner (Keith Szarabajka), Daggair
(Lois Nettleson), Mariel (Blair Valk), Timov (Jane Carr), Sergeant
Lou Welch (David L. Crowley), Trader (Carel Struycken), Man (Brian
Michael McGuire)
Plot: It is
the 30th anniversary of Londo’s “Day of Ascension” and the Centauri Emperor has
granted Londo a special boon, namely any one favour he can grant. Londo choses
to divorce his three wives, but is told he must keep one of them for ceremonial
occasions. He summons all three - the shrewish Daggair, the beautiful but
scheming Mariel and the short-tempered and brutally honest Timov - to Babylon 5
to make his selection, much to their disgust. At the celebration Londo is
injured by a Narn booby trap hidden inside a Centauri statue bought for him by
Daggair and Mariel. Londo starts to die and can only be saved by a blood
transfusion. Timov, reluctantly, confirms she has the same blood type as Londo
and agrees to the transfusion on the condition that Londo never learns she
saved him. He recovers and decides that he will never be able to trust Daggair
or Mariel whilst Timov, for all her faults, is at least always honest with him.
Before she leaves, Mariel is told by G’Kar that he knows she was responsible
for the attack (so she would get one-third of his estate) but will not tell
Londo, apparently due to some prior relationship.
Trader Matt Stoner arrives on Babylon 5 and is implicated in
Londo’s poisoning (it was he who sold the statue to Mariel). Talia Winters is
horrified he is here and admits that she was once married to him as part of a
Psi Corps genetic match-up. The marriage was annulled. Stoner tells Talia that
Psi Corps botched an experiment on him and have removed his psi-abilities. If
she is really serious about her doubts regarding Psi Corps (see last episode)
then he can replicate the effects and get her out of Psi Corps as well.
Garibaldi notices people acting oddly around Stoner and realises that Psi Corps
actually increased his powers, giving him the ability to control and
influence other people round to his way of thinking. He knocks Stoner out and
he and Sheridan throw him off the station. Sheridan thinks Psi Corps wanted
Stoner and Talia to breed a new race of telepaths with his superior mental
powers. This increases Talia’s ambivalence towards Psi Corps.
Delenn is having problems adapting to her new status as a
half-human, namely with washing her hair. Ivanova agrees to help her out, but
is lost for words when Delenn starts asking about these odd cramps she has just
started having...
The Arc: Psi Corps’ dubious practices are confirmed
once more. Talia is now seriously considering leaving the Corps after
discovering their true colours (in episode B7).
Both Timov and Mariel return in Peter David’s Legions of Fire novel trilogy (NOV13-15), which picks up on events on
Centauri Prime after the end of the series, and both have significant parts of
play (and also explain Timov’s absence from the rest of the series).
Background: Minbari secrete a fluid during their
sleep which adheres to the skin and cleanses them before evaporating, removing
the need for washing. Delenn no longer enjoys the full benefits of this ability
due to her transformation and even if she did it would not help her hair.
Londo and Timov have been married for twenty years by the
time of this episode.
Medlab has problems synthesising Centauri blood, a problem
it doesn’t seem to have with human or Minbari (after episode A2) blood.
There is an abandoned Centauri colony in Sector 127 that has
since been taken over the Narns.
References: Londo
previously called his three wives “Pestilence, Famine and Death” after three of
the four Horsemen of the Apocalypse, and that was the working title for this
episode as well as the inspiration for their characters. According to Peter
David, Daggair is Pestilence, Timov is Famine and Mariel is Death. Of course,
this means that Londo himself must be War.
Struggling to find character names, Peter David decide to
reverse “vomit” to come up with Timov’s name. Actress Jane Carr only realised
this halfway through filming and came up to David to tell him off for the joke.
Timov is the daughter of Alghul (or Ghoul), which means “The
Demon”. Given both David and Straczynski’s love of comics, it may be a nod to
Ra’s Al-Ghul (“Head of the Demon”) from Batman,
most notably the fact that Ra’s daughter Talia (!) spent time as Bruce Wayne’s
lover and bore him a child.
Unanswered Questions:
How do G’Kar and Mariel know one another?
Mistakes, Retcons and Lamentations: If we want to get really picky, the three actresses in
this episode do not resemble the three wives in the photo on Londo’s desk in episode
A7.
The Matt Stoner/Talia storyline
doesn’t make a lot of sense, given that Psi Corps could just recall Talia to
Earth at any time or, based on episode B19,
take further action still (although Straczynski hadn’t considered that storyline
when this episode was being written).
G’Kar and Mariel seem to be
flirting. This may be cover on G’Kar’s part, given his undying hatred of all
Centauri, or it might confirm that his dislike of the Centauri as a whole can
be suspended for individual Centauri who earn his genuine respect.
Behind the Scenes: Straczynski
wanted a writer who could 1) handle dialogue, 2) handle humour and 3) was nuts,
so called in Peter David, who was all three.
David watched the movie The
Women on the advice of Harlan Ellison on how to develop the three wives’
personalities.
According to Peter Jurasik, the ludicrously massive portrait
of Londo was hung on the prop department wall and they would occasionally
invite him around to satisfy his ego. Jurasik’s wife refused him permission to
bring it home and put it up in their house.
In one scene Bruce Boxleitner answered his link with, “This
is Sinclair,” causing both cast and crew to break down in laughter.
In two scenes cut for time, Talia dramatically kisses
Garibaldi in front of Stoner and later on hints that they could meet up
socially. Although Jerry Doyle was in favour (as he and Andrea Thompson were
now in a relationship in real life) and writer Larry DiTillio was keen, Straczynski
found the budding relationship between Ivanova and Talia more interesting and
wasn’t keen on either creating a love triangle or giving Garibaldi another
doomed romance (since his long-term plan was to bring back Lise Hampton). As a result,
the two scenes hit the cutting room floor. Doyle was unhappy with this, since
it made Garibaldi look more like a sap, constantly chasing the woman who has no
interest in him.
Mira Furlan was unhappy with Delenn getting in a tangle with
her hair, feeling it demystified the character. Both Straczynski and David
spoke to her, instead emphasising the fact that it was humanising Delenn and
making her a more relatable and human character, which Furlan eventually
accepted. However, she was less keen on the final “joke” that Delenn was having
cramps, dismissing it as schoolboy humour. This line was kept because it hinted
at a more important story point, that Delenn might now be genetically
compatible with humans.
During the confrontations between Garibaldi and Stoner, the
actors successfully got under one another’s skins and the result was some very
intense shooting scenes. After filming one shot in which they really looked like
they were going to kill one another, director (and regular B5 DP) John Flinn yelled “GOD THAT WAS GREAT!” instead of “CUT!”,
to everyone’s confusion.
Familiar Faces: Writer
Peter David is widely-regarded as the best Star
Trek writer to have never written an actual episode of Star Trek, instead penning several of the franchise’s best and best-known
novels (including the brilliant Borg novel Vendetta,
as well as Imzadi) and comics. He was
praised for bringing elements of humour into the sometimes po-faced franchise.
He is arguably best-known for creating the New
Frontier spin-off novel series. Outside of Star Trek he is best-known for a respected twelve-year run writing The Incredible Hulk and several other
comic series, and for creating the TV series Space Cases with Babylon 5
actor Bill Mumy. David briefly appears in the episode, talking to Delenn and
Lennier at the party scene.
Jane Carr (Timov) is a Royal Shakespearean actress. Almost
all of her roles have been on stage, but she has occasionally appeared on
screen (in films such as The Prime of
Miss Jean Brodie and Hannah Montana:
The Movie) and voice acting in films such as Postman Pat: The Movie. Peter Jurasik enjoyed sparring with her
enormously, as they’d previously worked together on the series Dear John. Carr had worked extensively
with Patrick Stewart and noted that they had now both played “bald SF icons”.
Lois Nettleton (Daggair) was a mainstay of Hollywood from her
screen debut in 1946, at the age of nineteen. Her film career was short, but he
TV career was extensive, appearing in everything from Dr. Kildare and The Twilight
Zone to Hawaii Five-O and Murder, She Wrote. She sadly died of lung cancer in 2008.
Keith Szarabajka (Matt Stoner) has had a long and successful
career in Hollywood, with recurring roles on The Equalizer and Law &
Order. He later had a recurring role on Angel as the vengeful Daniel Holtz. Although still an occasional physical
actor, he has mostly switched to voice acting and has extensive credits on
animated series such as Avatar: The Last
Airbender, Young Justice and Star Wars: Rebels, as well as too many
video games to easily recount here (but including major roles on BioShock Infinite and LA Noir, which also features his
likeness).
Carel Struycken (Trader) is a very well-known Dutch actor,
probably most famous for playing the deadpan Mr. Homn, valet to Lwaxana Troi,
on six episodes of Star Trek: The Next
Generation and three of Deep Space
Nine. He also played Lurch in the films The
Addams Family, Addams Family Values
and Addams Family Reunion. He also
appeared on Twin Peaks, St. Elsewhere and Star Trek: Voyager (but not as Mr. Homn). He remains active, having
recently appeared in Twin Peaks: The
Return and the Stephen King movie Gerald’s
Game.
Review: Very
much an episode of two halves. The Londo stuff is all fine, with some biting
humour and surprisingly ruthless character work: Timov is really not that nice
a person, for all she ends up being the wife we (kind of) root for. The Talia
storyline feels undercooked. Stoner’s motivations are not very convincing and
there isn’t really much point to his story. This is a waste of a very good
actor with Keith Szarabajka and his tension with Jerry Doyle is palpable, but
it doesn’t really go anywhere. ***
Timov: “The secret of our marriage’s success,
Londo, is our lack of communication. You have jeopardised that success and I
would know why!”
Mariel: “Wearing shoes, Ambassador G’Kar?”
Daggair: “You are aware of the level of insult that
represents?”
G’Kar (beaming): “Indeed!”
G’Kar: “If I were married to Londo Mollari, I’d be
concerned.”
Mariel: “G’Kar, if you were married to Londo
Mollari, we’d all be concerned.”
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