C3: A Day in the Strife
Airdates: 20
November 1995 (US), 28 April 1996 (UK)
Written by J. Michael Straczynski
Directed by David J. Eagle
Cast: Na’Far (Stephen Macht), Ta’Lon (Marshall
Teague), Dr. Gonzales (Anne
Betancourt), Lt. David Corwin (Joshua
Cox), G’Dok (Michael Bailey Smith), Narn #1 (Neil Bradley), Narn #2 (Mark Hendrickson), MedTech (Larita Shelby), Troublemaker (John Saint Ryan)
Plot: Na’Far,
the new, Centauri-approved Narn Ambassador to Babylon 5, arrives at the station
to take over from G’Kar as leader of the local Narn population. He tells G’Kar
that unless G’Kar hands himself over to the Centauri, the families of the Narn
still on Babylon 5 will be imprisoned and harassed. G’Kar resolves himself to
his fate, but Na’Far’s bodyguard, Ta’Lon (the same Narn befriended by Sheridan
in B11), convinces both G’Kar and the local Narn population that G’Kar
can do more good for their world here on Babylon 5. Na’Far realises he will
never be accepted as the Narn leader and returns to Narn. Ta’Lon decides to
stay behind to assist G’Kar.
Londo is becoming concerned that Vir may be swept up in the
troubles that he feels are coming. He calls in the favour Delenn owes him (A19) and has Vir assigned to Minbar as
the first Centauri ambassador granted permission to live there for several
years. Vir departs for the Minbari homeworld.
Garibaldi is becoming concerned that Dr. Franklin is relying
too much on stimulants to stay awake and work extra hours. Franklin assures him
he has the situation under control, but Garibaldi doesn’t know if he can believe
him.
A robotic alien probe arrives at the station. It offers to
give the inhabitants of Babylon 5 new technology, including medical advances
and weapons, after determining whether or not they are worthy. If they fail to
answer its 600-odd questions on physics and chemistry, it will explode and
destroy the entire station. The answers are gathered, but Sheridan ponders why
the aliens are using an all-or-nothing approach. He suddenly realises that if
they answer all the questions then the aliens will realise they are advanced
enough to be a threat and then the bomb will explode. Sheridan withholds
the answers and the alien probe, convinced Babylon 5 isn’t a threat, leaves
peacefully. Sheridan waits until it is well out of range and transmits the
answers anyway, which causes the probe to explode and removing it as a threat
from other races.
The Arc: The Centauri are still keen to get their
hands on G’Kar. We find out the lengths they are prepared to go to in episode C20.
Although Vir heads off to Minbar in this episode, we still
see him on a regular basis, in episodes C6, C9 and C12. C12 also explains why there hasn’t been
a Centauri ambassador to Minbar for several years.
Londo mentions a favour Delenn owes him. This is in return
for him taking Draal and Delenn to Epsilon III through the middle of a
firefight in episode A19.
Franklin’s use of stims was first seen in episodes B17
and B18. It becomes important to the plot of episode C15.
Garibaldi visits G’Kar to ask him not to leave the station.
This triggers an unlikely friendship between the two characters that is
developed further across the rest of the season.
Background: A
katok is a Narn sword. It can only be
returned to the sheath once it has drawn blood.
Babylon 5's computer can decode an alien language from scratch in 2-3 hours. This is considered "slow".
References: The alien
probe is called a “beserker”. This is a reference to Fred Saberhagen’s science
fiction Beserker novel series, about
a war between humanity and a race of alien machines left behind by an ancient
civilisation.
The episode was inspired by a 1970s report from the US House
Science Sub-Committee which recommended that, in the event of an alien probe
arriving in our Solar system, the people of Earth should not respond to any
reports in case it was a beserker. However, the general scientific consensus is
that this would be useless given the vast amounts of data and transmissions pouring
out from our planet as a result of everyday human activity.
Unanswered Questions:
Who built the probe?
Why didn’t the probe turn around and fly back to B5 before
detonating? It seems a bit dumb for it to just blow up in open space.
Why didn’t Londo get a replacement attaché from Centauri
Prime? Did Londo not just trust anyone to do the job?
Mistakes, Retcons and
Lamentations: Several times we’ve seen Station Security confiscating knives
and blades from visitors to the station. Ta’Lon is allowed to wander around
with his sword freely. It might be permissible for this episode due to
diplomatic immunity, but it is not the case in later episodes when he is
working as a self-employed bodyguard and assistant to G’Kar.
This episode’s original UK broadcast featured an awful edit
where the camera cut away from Franklin injecting himself with stims and cut
back to him closing the drawer. This was due to UK broadcast regulations which
prohibited scenes of drug use before the 9pm watershed. This resulted in a
completely different interpretation of the scene, where it looked like Franklin
was going to inject the stims and then changed his mind, whilst the uncut
version confirms he did take the stims and his problem is getting worse.
Neil Bradley is one of Babylon
5’s “alien rep”, a group of actors who were very comfortable acting in prosthetics
and usually played minor roles as a Minbari, Narn, Drazi, Markab etc. However,
he has a distinctive slim build and a very distinctive voice, leading to the
conclusion that the Narn he is playing in this episode is Kha’Mak, the Narn liaison
with the Kha’Ri that G’Kar reported to in episodes B9 and B20 whom Bradley
also played. This does not appear to be the case. Similarly, but less immediately
notably, Mark Hendrickson previously played the commander of the Narn fighter
squadron defending Quadrant 37 in episode A22
where he was killed by the Shadows. Clearly these are both different
characters.
Ivanova sends out a recovery time to search for debris from the probe. It should be noted that a 500,000 megaton nuclear explosion (which is 2.5 million times more powerful than the bomb dropped on Hiroshima) would atomise the casing it was held in an and everything around it. There would be no debris to recover.
Behind the Scenes: This
is the first episode where Joshua Cox’s character is officially credited as “David
Corwin”. Previously he’d been credited as “Tech 1”, “Tech 2” etc even after his
character was named for the first time in B15.
This is the episode where Stephen Furst left the show to
star in a sitcom called Misery Loves
Company. Originally, he was going to only make guest appearances, but the
producers made a deal which allowed them continue using Furst on a sporadic basis.
However, the sitcom was cancelled after six episodes and Furst returned to Babylon 5 full-time.
Straczynski contacted Richard Biggs before filming began on
the season to discuss the idea of giving Franklin an addiction storyline. Once
Biggs was satisfied that the story was not going to descend into the usual clichés,
he was happy to pursue the storyline. He researched the phases of drug
addiction and noted the first phase was denial, which he played in this
episode.
Familiar Faces: Nelson
Drake reprises his role as Ta’Lon from episode B15. He also played Nelson Drake in episode A4.
Stephen Macht (Ta’Lon) is a highly experienced American
actor. He had recurring roles on Knots
Landing and Cagney and Lacey, as
well as appearing in three of the Trancer
films. In 1987 he was nearly cast as Captain Jean-Luc Picard in Star Trek: The Next Generation and was Gene
Roddenberry’s main choice for the role. However, Roddenberry was overruled by
Paramount and co-producer Rick Berman, who preferred Patrick Stewart.
John Saint Ryan (the tall troublemaker at the Transport Association
meeting) is an English actor but has specialised in playing American roles. Active
in both the UK and US acting scenes, he is arguably still best-known for playing
the charismatic Charlie Whelan on Coronation
Street in 1994 (a love interest for Bet Gilroy). Amongst many other roles, he
would return to the Babylon 5
universe a few years later when he was cast as a Technomage on Crusade.
Review: A
minor and slightly boring episode. The Narn stuff is excellent (Katsulas is
great as usual, Stephen Macht does a lot with a small role) but the alien probe
storyline feels so rote and Star Trek-ish
that no-one seems to engage with it with any enthusiasm. ***
Ivanova: "I don't want to get killed because of a typo. It'd be embarrassing."
C4: Passing Through Gethsemane
Airdates: 27 November 1995 (US), 5 May 1996 (UK)
Written by J. Michael Straczynski
Directed by Adam Nimoy
Cast: Lyta Alexander (Patricia Tallman), Brother
Edward (Brad Dourif), Brother Theo (Louis Turenne), Malcolm (Robert
Keith), Centauri Telepath (Mark Folger), Ambassador Kosh (Ardwight Chamberlain), Business Person (Natalie Brunt), News Anchor #1 (Steve Gonzales), News Anchor #2 (Lynn Blades)
Plot: Brother
Edward - one of the monks who came aboard a few weeks ago (episode C2) -
is troubled by a series of strange events. He sees writing on walls, has horrible
nightmares and strange visions. By looking through the station news archive he
discovers that he actually used to be a brutal serial killer who was captured
and mindwiped for his crimes. He is sickened and goes to Brother Theo for help,
but Theo is at a loss as to what he can do for him.
Lyta Alexander returns to Babylon 5 after an absence of
about three months. She tells Sheridan and Ivanova that after leaving the
station last time she paid a transport captain to take her to the edge of
Vorlon space. She bailed out in a lifepod and waited, transmitting telepathic
signals in all directions, until the Vorlons came for her. She has spent most
of the time since on the Vorlon homeworld being...retrained. She has now
returned and is to serve as Ambassador Kosh’s aide. Garibaldi is investigating
the situation with Brother Edward and discovers that a Centauri telepath has
been used to trigger his hidden memories. Lyta takes the information she needs
from the telepath’s mind and Garibaldi goes to rescue Edward, but it is too
late: one of the brothers of his victims has murdered him. In a shocking irony,
the murderer himself is mindwiped and joins Theo’s group of monks.
Meanwhile, Lyta prepares to leave on her first assignment
for Kosh. Before she goes, strange beams of light arc between her and Kosh’s
encounter suit...
The Arc: We find out what the strange energy streams
linking Kosh and Lyta are in episodes D1, D3 and D4.
Lennier says that Valen was a “Minbari not born of Minbari” and
that he appeared out of nowhere 1,000 years ago to found the Grey Council. We
find out more about this in episode C17.
Background: This
episode reinforces the idea that the various governments have embassies
directly on each other’s homeworlds as well as on Babylon 5.
Lyta Alexander now has gill implants to allow her to breath
the Vorlon atmosphere. We see that G’Kar had these implants in episode PM. Interestingly, the implants did not
show up on Franklin’s examinations. The Vorlons have also “fixed” a number of
minor health issues for Lyta.
There is an “Earth Colony 3” in the Orion system. This might
be a reference to either Orion IV or Orion VII, or a city on one of those
planets, which are confirmed member worlds of the Earth Alliance.
References: The
title refers to the Garden of Gethsemane, an olive tree garden in Jerusalem
where, in the Bible, Jesus was arrested by the Romans and taken to his eventual
execution.
Brad Dourif’s character was originally called “Charles”,
which in the United States is frequently rendered as “Chuck”. This is likely a
nod to Dourif’s longest-running role, voicing the possessed doll in the Chucky series of horror comedies since
1988.
When Garibaldi says he believes in “an eye for an eye”,
Delenn responds that this would lead to everyone being blind. This is a
reference to Gandhi’s saying, “An eye for an eye leaves the whole world blind.”
Unanswered Questions:
What is the Vorlon homeworld like?
Mistakes, Retcons and
Lamentations: According to Lyta Alexander, it’s been about a month since
she left Babylon 5 in episode B19.
However, the events of episode C2
would place this episode in very late January or (more realistically) February
2260, whilst Lyta’s visit to B5 most likely took place in October or (at the
latest) November 2259. It might be that Lyta’s experiences with the Vorlons
resulted in a “lost time” phenomenon (a side-effect in many stories of alien
abduction), but if so it is odd that none of the rest of the crew correct her.
This episode identifies a huge number of problems with the
logic behind the “death of personality” as a punishment for crimes. Unless
accompanied by extensive plastic surgery, the perpetrator of the crime can
still be identified. It also seems to be a pointless punishment for
high-profile criminals whose crimes were heinous and they can still be
identified years later.
Behind the Scenes: Straczynski
originally wrote this episode for Season 2, but whilst he was developing it a
fan suggested a similar idea on a Babylon
5 message board Straczynski frequented. Straczynski had to delay the
episode whilst he got a legal waiver from the fan to confirm that he hadn’t
ripped off the idea, delaying the episode (to Straczynski’s frustration).
This episode and C5
were filmed in the reverse order and swapped when the CG work on C5 proved more extensive than first
expected.
Straczynski wanted this episode to be his Twilight Zone homage in the Babylon 5 universe. Straczynski worked
briefly on The New Twilight Zone in
the 1980s alongside Harlan Ellison.
According to Straczynski, there was a convent in Chicago
where the nuns would watch the show every week and discuss its theological and
spiritual implications afterwards. He sent them a signed copy of this episode.
Familiar Faces: Director
Adam Nimoy is the son of Star Trek
actor Leonard Nimoy (Mr. Spock).
Brad Dourif is arguably best-known for playing the role of Grima
Wormtongue in the Lord of the Rings
movies The Two Towers and The Return of the King. He also played
Doc Cochrane in Deadwood, Billy
Bibbit in One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest,
Piter De Vries in David Lynch’s version of Dune
and, of course, has voiced the character of Chucky in the horror comedy series of the same name since 1988.
Review: An
interesting episode with some intriguing moral questions, but the overall
effectiveness of the episode is weakened because the whole mindwipe idea,
although clever, runs into massive problems of credibility when any kind of
logic is applied to it (is it really that easy to discover your true
identity?). This mars an otherwise fine piece of drama, rooted in an absolutely
outstanding guest performance by Brad Dourif. ***½
Delenn: "The soul is a non-localised phenomenon."
Delenn: "We are the universe, trying to understand itself."
Theo: "Forgiveness is a hard thing, but something to ever strive for."
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1 comment:
Hi,
I've been enjoying your rewatches as I'm rewatching the series myself, and I learned a lot of very interesting stuff so far from your blog, so thanks for the excellent work!
I'd like to point out one small thing in Episode 3, after the sub-title "Familiar Faces": Marshall Teague played Ta'Lon (you wrote the name Nelson Drake twice). - I wouldn't have noticed, if I wasn't looking for the name actually, because I was surprised to find ONE Narn that could be considered quite handsome despite the prostetics and all. :P I was curious, how the human underneath looked (surprisingly less handsome :D ).
Also I'd definitely include Ivanova's remark in the Quotes section, about her surviving the job without losing her mind would be of Biblical proportions (and Corwin says some snarky thing afterwards too), I thought it was pretty funny :)
Keep up with the good work! Now, off to watch Episode 4! ^^
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