I like the new BSG it gave the series some depth instead of arrive on Earth in Flying Motorcycles.
The original BSG was fine for 13 yr. olds, and the new BSG was all too deep and realistic. It not only presented a situation where utter desperation becomes utter hopelessness. After watching an episode, the emotion sticks with you. It is not logical to invite despair into your life.
I don't look at it that way I look at as hope.There are far more shows on about despair.What I was saying tho is that it is more in depth than the original sure it was fine.You just don't land on new Planet and go around flying motorcycles up the Pacific Coast Hwy.
@Tus the external threat on BSG Happened right at the start.
Tus was referring to SGU, not BSG. How you can find how in the new BSG is completely beyond me. Every episode ended up making me feel sick. An example:
I can't remember her name, but she took her half-Cylon child to the airlock. Just after she unlocked the outer door, a full Cyclon woman takes her child and clubs her. As the mother recovers, she's still in the air-lock, and the Cylon is on the other side of the glass at the controls. The mother looks the Cylon in the eye, just before the Cylon opens the outer door, flushing her into space.
The scene they're referring to was the murder of Callie Tyrol by I think her name was Tory. Also, Callie's baby was not a hybrid. It was later revealed that she was a slut who despite being married had gotten it on with hotdog.
Also, Boomer didn't have a baby. The baby Hera was Athena's daughter. The Colonial's worst enemy Laura Rosilin, faked the child's stillbirth, and gave her to someone else to raise.
The flying motorcycles were from Galacica 1980. The original 1978 BSG had a budget of $1,000,000 per episode. This is the same as Star Trek TNG, and even greater when you take inflation into account. However, the big three networks don't like spending alot on programming, and the show was cancelled after a season. However, it was popular, so they decided to do a spinoff in 1980. To save money, the new series was planet based. It was universally panned.
The re-imagined BSG was the brainchild of Ron D. Moore, a veteran Star Trek writer who had worked on TNG, DS9 and Voyager, and co-wrote Star Trek First Contact.