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Babylon 5

Welcome to the Babylon 5 section of the web site. The main presentation here is the EarthForce Rank Insignia presentation. This presentation is neither approved, nor canonical. It is, however, as accurate I can make it, based on the insignia that actually appeared in the show. You can view the presentation, in Shockwave Flash 8 format, by clicking here.

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I don't watch TV much. Most of it is complete crap. There are a few exceptions, of course. I think the new Battlestar Galactica is one of the best shows on TV. It's often uneven, and it's very dark, but it can also be very entertaining, and often explores complex moral issues. I watch NCIS, mainly because I like Mark Harmon. And, despite the fact that it can become a transparent mouthpiece for whatever liberal pieties are current, I enjoy Law & Order a lot, too.

But there is one TV show I absolutely adore, even though it's been off the air for several years now. It is also the only television show for which I've bought every episode on DVD. That show is Babylon 5, or as I'll call it for convenience, B5.

B5 is a science fiction TV show, and sci-fi is usually a genre that TV doesn't handle well. There have really been only five or six successful Sci-fi franchises on TV: Star Trek, BSG, Stargate, and maybe Firefly and Farscape...and B5. And BSG wasn't really a success in its initial incarnation.

Briefly, B5 is the story of the Babylon 5 space station in the years 2258-2263. This five-year period becomes a turning point in human history, ushering in the dawn of the Third Age of Mankind. Under the command of Commander Jeffrey Sinclair, and, later, Captain John Sheridan the station become the central locus of the events that change the galaxy forever. And, unlike the original Star Trek, B5 completes its five-year mission, giving you the whole story from beginning to end.

There is something different about B5. A couple of different things actually.

First, B5 is the only series that was conceived from the very beginning as having a 5-year story arc. Most television is episodic, with very few b-plots that stick around from week to week. B5 on the other hand, tells a single story that stretches across five year. There are events that occur in Season 1 that aren't resolved until Season 4 or 5. Most television operates under the assumption that the viewers aren't patient enough to follow a multi-week story line, much less a multi-year one. But B5 is the show that proves that an audience can have the patient for long-term payoffs.

Second, unlike most television shows, you have no assurance whatsoever that the main characters will survive the episode. B5 regularly killed off regular characters throughout its run, and did so intentionally. Every single character on B5 was written with a trap-door, to allow them to be jettisoned as necessary. Although usually—though not always—the characters are jettisoned at the end of the season, rather than mid-season.

Third, B5 often defies the standard conventions of episode writing. For instance, in the first season, an assassination plot against the President is discovered. Usually, the TV convention is for the heroes to foil the plot at the lat minute. In B5, the President gets whacked. There's a reason for that, of course, but you don't learn it until well into the next season.

Don't get me wrong. B5 isn't perfect. Budget constraints required the use of CGI animation, rather than model miniatures, and in 1994, when B5 started, some of the CGI was...iffy, although it improves quite a lot as the show progresses. Indeed, by the end of Season 4, B5 produced the most complex CGI shots ever done up to that time, with combat sequences that include literally hundreds of ships in frame.

The pace of Season 1 is also a bit slow, and frankly, some of the Season 1 episodes are eminently forgettable. After having seen the entire series before—although it's been a few years—the whole process of being re-introduced to familiar characters and establishing the story's universe during the first season is a bit laborious.

Also, there's the problem of Londo's hair. They didn't get it right until Season 2. In Season 1, it's just atrocious.

At the same time, some of the Season 1 shows are fantastically entertaining and thought provoking. For instance, there is one Season 1 episode where the station's doctor wants to save a dying alien child by performing a medical procedure that deeply offends the religious and cultural beliefs of the parents. The conflict—and anti-TV ending—that follows is pure gold.

B5 has some very bright spots in the acting, in that two of the main characters were played by veteran American character actors, Andreas Katsulas and Peter Jurasik, and a third is played by Yugoslavian film and TV actress Mira Furlan, all of whom turn in outstanding performances.

B5 is proof that television can produce exciting, entertaining, complex drama. During its five years on television, first on the short-lived Prime Time Entertainment Network, then on TNT, B5 won several awards, including three Hugos. And, even though the whole series cost $90 million to shoot, DVD sales alone have raked in $500 million.

If you are looking for something unusual, compelling, exciting, and thought provoking, I heartily encourage you to log on to Netflix or Blockbuster and add Babylon 5 to your queue. Be advised, you really need to start with Season 1, and watch the episodes in order.

Once agin, click here to view the EarthForce Rank Insignia presentation.

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