Archives For Battlestar

The movie event of the summer happened last Thursday, and it wasn’t it theaters.

There was a short moment, during the first few seasons of the Battlestar Gallactica reboot, when it seemed that the SyFy channel had grown up. Here was programming great enough to rival Lost and maybe even some of the stuff HBO was producing. They followed it with the boring and inaccessible Caprica and made BSG Blood and Chrome as a disposable Youtube experiment.

Then, this past week, SyFy created the biggest splash on Twitter since Rick Warren started giving unsolicited advice. #Sharknado is exactly what it sounds like.

Enjoy this. If the success of this piece of camp is any sign things to come, then we can count on SyFy staying out of space for awhile…

Don’t worry, SyFy is airing Sharknado again this week.

Caprica 1.0, part one of the initial season of the Battlestar Gallactica spin-off/prequel, has ended. In great BSG fashion, they’ve put a big ol’ cliffhanger in the middle of the season.  People seem to agree that there really isn’t any problem with Caprica, except that we just really miss BSG.

Ron Moore should be applauded for attempting to draw in old fans, without creating rehash.  He promised that Caprica would be like Dallas with robots.

Whereas BSG exploded from the beginning with the genocide of 12 planets and the countdown of survivors,  Caprica has spent its first few episodes introducing us to the world that was and the interwoven lives of the two families the shown revolves around.

There are no characters like Adama or Rosalin, whose drive and ethics anchored BSG with hope. Caprica is about weak and twisted characters: a mad scientist, an alcoholic wife, a corrupt lawyer and an assassin.  Then there are the kids, a handful of angst ridden teenagers being sucked into online madrassas and terrorism. The weight of the plot is on kids who aren’t old enough to fly a Viper.

Despite its risks, Caprica has a lot of promise.  By being different, it tells its own story and challenges us in new ways. Perhaps even more than BSG, it explores the themes of religious terrorism and extremism, and gives us clues to what our world could become.  And has cool robots.

Check out Caprica at www.hulu.com/caprica.