Galactica 1980
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- This article is about the 1980 television series; for related topics, see the main Battlestar Galactica page or Battlestar Galactica (disambiguation).
Image:Gal80.jpg Galactica 1980 is a science-fiction television series, and a spin-off from the 1978-1979 series Battlestar Galactica. It was first broadcast on the ABC network in the United States from January 27, 1980 to May 4, 1980.
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Synopsis
Set during the year 1980, and a generation after the original series, the Galactica and its fleet of 220 civilian ships have finally discovered Earth, only to find that the planet cannot defend itself against the Cylons as originally hoped. Therefore, teams of Colonial warriors are covertly sent to the planet to work incognito with various members of the scientific community, hoping to advance Earth's technology.
Commander Adama and Colonel Boomer—now second-in-command in place of Colonel Tigh— on the advice of a mysterious teenager named Doctor Zee who serves as Adama's advisor, sends Captain "Boxey" Troy, who is the adopted son of Adama's own son Apollo, and Lt. Dillon to North America, where they become entangled with TV journalist Jamie Hamilton. After an initial, epic time travel adventure to Nazi Germany in the 1940s (to stop a rebel Galactican trying to change the future to improve's Earth technology level), the three friends devise ways to help Earth's scientists and outwit the Cylons in the present day. Meanwhile, Adama sends a group of children from the Galactica fleet to Earth in order to begin the process of integrating with the population; due to differences in gravity and physiology, however, the children also have to learn to deal with the fact they have near-superhuman powers on Earth.
The fate of several characters from the original series are indicated during the course of the series. Apollo is apparently dead (cause unknown), Starbuck's fate (marooned on a deserted planet) would be revealed at the end of the series, Boxey is revealed to be Captain Troy, and Lt. Boomer is now Adama's second in command. In particular the episode detailing Starbuck's fate is one of the highlights of Galactica 1980 and indeed is one of the best episodes ever made when Battlestar Galactica episodes are considered as a whole - it has a very moving plot and we finally see some character development from Starbuck (played by Dirk Benedict).The fate of several other characters - Adama's daughter Athena, Colonel Tigh, Starbuck's girlfriend Cassiopeia, and the evil Count Baltar - are not revealed, and all four characters are absent from the series.
Cast
- Lorne Greene - Commander Adama
- Robyn Douglass - Jamie Hamilton
- Herb Jefferson Jr. - Colonel Boomer
- Richard Lynch - Xavier
- Kent McCord - Captain Troy
- Allan Miller - Colonel Sydell
- James Patrick Stuart - Doctor Zee
- Robbie Rist - Doctor Zee
- Barry Van Dyke - Lieutenant Dillon
Greene (Adama) and Jefferson (Boomer) were the only major cast members of the original series to return, with Richard Hatch and Dirk Benedict both unable to return due to commitments to other projects, although as noted below, Benedict did appear in an episode using previously unscreened footage from the original program.
Short life
The series had a promising start with a three-hour adventure that saw Troy, Dillon and Jamie sent back in time to Nazi Germany to save the future, but the series could not sustain this momentum. For example, the next two episodes, "The Super Scouts" story, were widely ridiculed; many fans regarded the "aliens acquire super powers because of gravitational differences" aspect of the story as a rather blatant "borrowing" from Superman. Fans were also curious as to why these super powers had not been noticed by any of the characters during the first three episodes.
The show was unceremoniously cancelled after only ten episodes, many of which were multi-part stories, or what would be referred to now as arcs. The final episode featured unscreened footage of Dirk Benedict as Lt. Starbuck from the original series in a flashback episode; despite its popularity with fans, it was not enough to save the series. ("Return of Starbuck" was popular enough that Glen Larson had written a sequel episode entitled "The Wheel of Fire", but the series was cancelled before it could be filmed.[1].
Many fans do not consider Galactica 1980 to be canonical with the original series (save perhaps for the Starbuck flashback episode); many cite Galactica 1980 as one of the worst shows in science fiction history. Furthermore, the books written based on the series conflict with Galactica 1980 in many respects, most prominently the death of Adama in the books.
Syndication and beyond
The ten Galactica 1980 episodes were rolled into the television syndication package for Battlestar Galactica and were given the same title as its parent program.
A feature called Conquest of the Earth was released on home video only. This feature was stitched together from sections of the three "Galactica Discovers Earth" episodes and the two "The Night the Cylons Landed" episodes. A scene of John Colicos, playing Baltar, was also spliced in to this release. The latter footage was actually taken from an episode of the original series - Baltar makes no appearance in any Galactica 1980 episode - and is partially dubbed, so as to make the speech sound relevant to the Galactica's new situation. Several early scenes involving Adama and Dr Zee are also partially dubbed, to add more explanatory detail. In all cases, the dubbing is of a low technical standard.
Episode list
- "Galactica Discovers Earth" (aka "Galactica 1980"), Part 1 – January 27, 1980
- "Galactica Discovers Earth" (aka "Galactica 1980"), Part 2 – February 3, 1980
- "Galactica Discovers Earth" (aka "Galactica 1980"), Part 3 – February 10, 1980
- "The Super Scouts", Part 1 – March 16, 1980
- "The Super Scouts", Part 2 – March 23, 1980
- "Spaceball" – March 30, 1980
- "The Night the Cylons Landed", Part 1 – April 13, 1980 (guest-starring Wolfman Jack)
- "The Night the Cylons Landed", Part 2 – April 20, 1980 (guest-starring Wolfman Jack)
- "Space Croppers" – April 27, 1980
- "The Return of Starbuck" – May 4, 1980
- "The Day they Kidnapped Cleopatra" had begun shooting when the series was cancelled.
- "The Wheel of Fire" was an unproduced script
See also
- Battlestar Galactica (2003), the 2003 miniseries and following regular series
- Battlestar Galactica, the video game
External links
- UGO Galactica 1980 site
- {{{2|{{{title|Galactica 1980}}}}}} at The Internet Movie Database
- Battlestar Galactica Wikials:Kampfstern Galactica
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