Daybreak (Battlestar Galactica)

Daybreak (Battlestar Galactica)
"Daybreak"
Battlestar Galactica episode
DaybreakPart1.jpg
The Galactica crew members and civilians divide themselves between those joining the rescue attempt, and those staying behind with the fleet.
Episode no. Season 4
Episode 21 and 22
Directed by Michael Rymer
Written by Ronald D. Moore
Original air date March 13, 2009 (Part 1)
March 20, 2009 (Parts 2 & 3)
Guest stars
Episode chronology
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"Daybreak" is the three-part series finale of the reimagined science fiction television series Battlestar Galactica, and are the 74th and 75th episodes overall. The episodes aired on the U.S. Sci Fi Channel and SPACE in Canada respectively on March 13 and March 20, 2009. The second part of the episode was double-length. The episodes were written by Ronald D. Moore, and directed by Michael Rymer. The Season 4.5 DVD and Blu-ray releases for Region 1 feature an extended version of the finale, which not only combines both parts as a single episode, but also integrates it with new scenes not seen in the aired version of either part. The survivor count shown in the title sequence for Part 1 is 39,516. The survivor count shown in the title sequence for Part 3 is 39,406. At the end of Part 3, Admiral Adama announces the survivor population at approximately 38,000.

The episodes portray the Galactica launching a rescue mission to retrieve Hera Agathon from the "colony", a heavily armed and defended Cylon base located near a black hole. They manage to rescue Hera, and in the end, the fleet finds a new planet to settle on, which they come to call Earth (revealed to be our Earth). The final episodes gave Battlestar Galactica the strongest ratings since its second season, though they received mixed reviews.

Contents

Plot

Part 1

The flashback sequences during the course of the first part take place a few years before the Cylon attack on Caprica. William Adama (Edward James Olmos) is reluctant to undergo a lie detector test in preparation for a civilian desk job. Elsewhere, Gaius Baltar (James Callis) is getting tired of his father, Julian, who is abusive to his nurse. However, Caprica Six (Tricia Helfer) soon informs Baltar that she took his father into a care home, where he will be happier. Roslin is living happily with her two sisters, one of whom is pregnant. But later, Roslin receives distressing news that both her sisters and father were killed in a car accident. Three months after, she is set up for a blind date and is encouraged to join Mayor Adar's presidential campaign. Lee Adama (Jamie Bamber) meets Kara Thrace (Katee Sackhoff) for the first time while she is seeing his brother, Zak (Tobias Mehler). When Lee arrives home drunk, he notices a pigeon in his house, and he chases it away. Lastly, the flashbacks focus on Anders (Michael Trucco), who is interviewed during his sporting career, where he admits to playing for the joy of the pursuit of perfection rather than the winning.

Back in the present, Galactica is being stripped for parts to be used on other ships, while the military will be transferred to control the Rebel Basestar. The pictures of the fallen in the memorial hallway are also taken down. Baltar decides for he and his people to have a seat on the quorum, but Lee refuses. Admiral Adama later decides to give amnesty to those who took part in the attempted coup d'état,[1] including Tyrol (Aaron Douglas), who is in the brig for helping Boomer (Grace Park) escape,[2] to take part in a mission to retrieve Hera (Iliana Gomez-Martinez), who is being studied by the Cylons to determine how Cylons can reproduce. However, Adama doesn't allow Cottle (Donnelly Rhodes) to join in, as he says that the fleet cannot afford to lose a doctor. Several others join in the operation, including the original Cylon models, and a weakened Roslin. A Raptor is dispatched to the possible location of the "Colony", only to find it located very close to a black hole, but despite the circumstance, Adama orders an attack to begin.

Parts 2 & 3

In flashback sequences, William Adama and Saul Tigh (Michael Hogan) celebrate their upcoming retirement, where Tigh convinces Adama to take his new job. Later, as Adama is questioned in an interview, he complains that no job is worth questioning his loyalty and decides to rejoin the military. Lee has dinner with Zak and Starbuck again. When Zak passes out, drunk, the sexual tension between Kara and Lee nearly erupts before they are interrupted by a stirring Zak. Back home, Lee again encounters the pigeon, but this time he does not chase it. Roslin meets her blind date, who happens to be a former student of hers. After they go back to her apartment, she has second thoughts and ends the date; she then calls Adar's campaign, informing them of her intention to join it. Boomer meets Adama and Tigh for the first time, where she is warned that she is on the verge of ending her career due to her inability to land a Raptor. Given one last chance, Boomer gratefully tells the two that unlike other pilots, she will repay Adama one day. Meanwhile, Baltar, believing that Caprica Six is a corporate spy, allows her access to the military defense mainframe. He says that he is not doing this for her employers, but for her.

Back in the present of the series, Baltar decides to join the mission with Caprica Six at the last minute; she later admits to being proud of him for the first time. It is later revealed that Baltar's Inner Six, and Six's Inner Baltar are aware of each other, and the two real-life counterparts can see both of them. Romo Lampkin (Mark Sheppard) becomes the new president, and Hoshi (Brad Dryborough) is given command of the fleet while Adama and Galactica set off to rescue Hera. Galactica jumps right next to the colony, where they are immediately fired upon. Some of the Raptors, which are armed with nuclear weapons, make a short jump into the debris field and fly toward the back of the colony; in the process, Racetrack (Leah Cairns) and Skulls (Collin Lawrence) are killed by an asteroid. Anders has been installed into the CIC computers, and disables the Hybrids (Tiffany Lyndall-Knight). Galactica rams straight into the colony, where a strike team led by Starbuck searches for Hera. Hera is rescued by Boomer, who kills Simon (Rick Worthy) and finds Starbuck's team. Boomer hands Hera over to Athena (Grace Park) and tells her to, "tell the Admiral I owed him one." After her daughter is returned, Athena kills Boomer.

However, after Hera is returned, Galactica must also contend with numerous Cylon boarding parties. Hera is split off from her parents. She is spotted by Roslin, who takes a break from assisting with a triage, and is able to hide her from the Cylons, until she disappears again. While Roslin gives chase, Baltar and Caprica also spot Hera and give chase as well. The chase parallels the Opera House vision shared between Athena, Roslin and Caprica.[3] The chase ends in the CIC, where Cavil (Dean Stockwell) holds her hostage. Inner Six and Inner Baltar again appear jointly to Baltar, inspiring him to make a speech saying, among other things, that he sees angels[4] and convincing Cavil to end the war. The Cylon representatives agree that Cavil will give Hera back and let them leave if the Final Five give Cavil the technology for resurrection.

The Final Five begin the download of the technology for resurrection, with Saul and Ellen Tigh (Kate Vernon), Tory Foster (Rekha Sharma) and Galen Tyrol (Aaron Douglas) dipping their hands into Samuel Anders' (Michael Trucco) amniotic fluid to transfer the data to the Colony. But as they download the info, they can see each other's memories. Tyrol is made aware that Tory murdered his wife, Cally, and kills her in revenge before the downloading is complete. Feeling betrayed, the Cylons resume fighting; after the other Cylons in CIC are killed, Cavil commits suicide. In the debris field, a chance rock strike causes Racetrack's hand to fall on the launch button for her Raptor's nuclear weapons; the missiles strike directly into the colony, knocking it out of orbit. With Galactica being dragged toward the singularity along with the colony, Adama orders Starbuck to jump the ship away, anywhere. Starbuck finds herself entering coordinates into the computer as if she were playing a song, using the notes which Hera had written. Galactica jumps away and out of danger, leaving the colony to inevitably fall to its destruction within the black hole.[5]

Galactica arrives at Kara's mysterious coordinates, its final destination - the damage caused in the battle has rendered the ship incapable of surviving any further jumps - in orbit around a miraculously habitable world... our own Earth.

Hours later, the rest of the fleet has been summoned. Lee makes the unorthodox suggestion that they abandon their technology and start afresh, while Adama and others discover primitive humans already occupying the planet. The survivors - Galactica's crew, the remaining inhabitants of the fleet, and the Cylon Twos, Sixes and Eights - take basic supplies and spread out across the planet to colonize it, leaving Anders to fly the fleet into the Sun. The Rebel Cylons decide that their Centurions have earned their freedom, and give them control of the Basestar, which jumps away to parts unknown. Starbuck, her mission completed, vanishes without a trace after saying goodbye to Lee.

Baltar and Caprica are visited by their Inner messengers, who inform them that their destinies - to save Hera - have been fulfilled, and the two decide to live out the rest of their lives together. Lee expresses his desire to venture off and explore the planet. Tyrol decides to settle by himself on a remote northern island (implied to be the Scottish highlands). Helo (Tahmoh Penikett), Athena and Hera are reunited as a family. Tigh and Ellen stay with the rest of the survivors. Adama leaves with Roslin, but while admiring the wildlife and looking for a place to build a cabin for them, Roslin dies peacefully. Adama finds the place where he will build the cabin, and buries Laura on a nearby hillside.

Epilogue

New York City, 150,000 years later: humanity has reached the early 21st century, and the development of robotics and computerization continues unabated. Inner Baltar and Inner Six (no longer tied to the long-deceased Gaius Baltar and Caprica Six)[6] comment on the recent discovery of what is believed to be "mitochondrial Eve" in Tanzania... the remains of Hera Agathon, progenitor of modern day humanity. Inner Six disagrees with her counterpart about humanity's next future: when a complex system repeats, something new is bound to happen, and this Earth - descendant of devastated planets Kobol, Caprica and the original Earth - may escape the vicious circle of technology, all part of God's plan. "You know it doesn't like that name," Inner Baltar replies, as the two stroll away.

Production

An Actroid at the Expo 2005 in Aichi, Japan. Footage from the Expo was featured in the episode's epilogue.

In the episode's podcast, Moore and his wife Terri commented that they had trouble scouring for robot footage and clearing rights issues. They also described one of the robots as the "most disturbing" of the robots. "She's freaky. She's a Six in the making".[5]

Several chords of Stu Phillips' original Battlestar Galactica theme are heard at several junctions in the show,[7] including when Adama flies the last Viper off the Galactica and when Anders flies the fleet into the sun.[8][9] The final shot of the fleet leaving Earth's orbit is an exact recreation of the fleet stock shot from the original series.[9] D'Anna Biers (played by Lucy Lawless) is the only Cylon not to appear in this episode,[10] as her character had stayed on Earth at the end of "Sometimes a Great Notion."

Before entering coordinates on the FTL-drive control console, Starbuck says 'there must be some kind of way out of here' which is the opening lyric of Bob Dylan's song "All Along the Watchtower". The coordinates she enters are revealed through flashbacks to be the numerical representation of the opening notes of that same tune. The song is a recurring theme throughout the fourth season and the version sung by Jimi Hendrix is played at the end of the episode.[8]

The episode was partially shot in the area of Kamloops, British Columbia.[11]

Reception

"Daybreak (Part 2)" was watched by 2.4 million total viewers, a 56% surge from the season three finale and the series' best numbers since the season 2.5 premiere, "Resurrection Ship, Part 1."[12][13] This led to a 1.7 household rating.[13] The series finale also drew 1.5 million viewers in the key 18-to-49-year-old demographic, and 1.6 million viewers aged 25-to-54, the best in each demographic since "Resurrection Ship, Part 2."[13] The numbers do not take into account timeshifting via digital video recorders, which typically adds another 700,000 Battlestar Galactica viewers per episode.[12][13]

Critical reception of the finale varied. Mark Perigard of the Boston Herald concluded that "The desire to wrap everything up in a neat package–which is so contrary to the spirit of this show–hobbled the series creators."[14] while Alan Sepinwall of The Star Ledger opined that "so the amazing four-year journey of Battlestar Galactica comes to an end, and I feel very, very good about it–even as I suspect others may not."[8] Mother Jones magazine noted that the finale did little to genuinely resolve many plotlines and subplots, and pondered the implications for the industry.[15] Time Magazine noted that it seemed hard to believe that an advanced culture would discard all of its technology.[16]

Salon Magazine contrasted the finale with the rest of the series noting that the episode finished with "40 minutes of speeches about lessons learned and the need to "break the cycle", the naiveté of which did indeed feel like a break–from the knowing, worldly stoicism that made "Battlestar Galactica" so refreshing to begin with."[17] A reviewer at Blend Magazine wrote an article entitled "Why The Battlestar Galactica Finale Is A Huge Cop Out And It Doesn't Matter;" noting that the final resolution lacked credibility, but that the simple drama of the episode was one reason to view it positively.[18]

Renowned fantasy author George R.R. Martin expressed his extreme disgust with the series' writers for producing this ending, saying on his livejournal: "Battlestar Galactica ends with 'God Did It.' Looks like somebody skipped Writing 101, when you learn that a deus ex machina is a crappy way to end a story...Yeah, yeah, sometimes the journey is its own reward. I certainly enjoyed much of the journey with BSG...but damn it, doesn't anybody know how to write an ending any more? Writing 101, kids. Adam and Eve, God Did It, It Was All a Dream? I've seen Clarion students left stunned and bleeding for turning in stories with those endings."[19]

References

  1. ^ "Blood on the Scales". Wayne Rose, Writ. Michael Angeli. Battlestar Galactica. Sci Fi Channel. No. 16, season 4.
  2. ^ "Someone to Watch Over Me". Michael Nankin, Writ. Bradley Thompson & David Weddle. Battlestar Galactica. Sci Fi Channel. No. 19, season 4.
  3. ^ "Crossroads". Michael Rymer, Writ. Michael Taylor. Battlestar Galactica. Sci Fi Channel. No. 19, season 3.
  4. ^ "Do You Believe in Angels?". Scifi.com. http://www.scifi.com/battlestar/?clip=10. Retrieved 2009-03-21. 
  5. ^ a b Ronald D Moore. Podcast for "Daybreak" (56.3 MB) Podcast downloads. Scifi.com. Podcast accessed on 2009-04-27
  6. ^ This is consistent with Ronald D. Moore's statement in Battlestar Galactica: The Last Frakkin' Special that they are "... messenger(s) of a higher power"
  7. ^ Closing credits, "Daybreak (Battlestar Galactica)". Battlestar Galactica. Sci Fi Channel. 2009-03-20. No. 22, season 4.
  8. ^ a b c Sepinwall, Alan (2009-03-20). "Battlestar Galactica, "Daybreak, Part 2": There must be some kind of way out of here". The Star Ledger. http://www.nj.com/entertainment/tv/index.ssf/2009/03/battlestar_galactica_daybreak_1.html. Retrieved 2009-04-01. 
  9. ^ a b Bear McCreary, BSG music composer (2009-03-21). "Bear's Battlestar Blog". Bear's Battlestar Blog. BearMcCreary.com. http://www.bearmccreary.com/blog/?p=1760. Retrieved 2009-04-14. 
  10. ^ Fox, Erin (2009-03-20). "Battlestar Galactica Episode Recap: "Daybreak – Part 2"". TV Guide. http://www.tvguide.com/episode-recaps/battlestar-galactica/battlestar-galactica-episode-1004259.aspx. Retrieved 2009-04-14. 
  11. ^ http://www.tnrdfilm.com/past-productions?p=bsgfinal
  12. ^ a b Mitovich, Matt (2009-03-21). "Ratings: How Many Went Along for Galactica's Final Trip?". Seattle Post-Intelligencer. http://www.seattlepi.com/tvguide/404108_tvgif21.html. 
  13. ^ a b c d Weprin, Alex (2009-03-21). "'Battlestar Galactica' Finale Delivers Most Viewers In Three Years". Broadcasting & Cable. http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/190429-_Battlestar_Galactica_Finale_Delivers_Most_Viewers_In_Three_Years.php. Retrieved 2011-10-17. 
  14. ^ Perigard, Mark (2009-03-21). "'Battlestar': The final blow". Boston Herald. http://www.bostonherald.com/blogs/entertainment/love_that_tv/?p=100&srvc=home&position=recent. Retrieved 2009-04-01. 
  15. ^ Party, Ben (2009-03-23). "Is the Galactica Finale Bad News for Lost?". Mother Jones. http://www.motherjones.com/riff/2009/03/galactica-finale-bad-news-lost. Retrieved 2011-10-17. 
  16. ^ Poniewozik, James (2009-03-20). "BSG Watch: A Long Time Ago, In a Galaxy Far, Far Away". Tuned In (Time). http://tunedin.blogs.time.com/2009/03/20/bsg-watch-a-long-time-ago-in-a-galaxy-far-far-away/. Retrieved 2011-10-17. 
  17. ^ Miller, Laura (2009-03-21). "Goodbye, “Galactica”". Salon.com. http://www.salon.com/ent/tv/feature/2009/03/21/battlestar_galactica/. Retrieved 2011-10-17. 
  18. ^ Tyler, Josh (2009-03-20). "Why The Battlestar Galactica Finale Is A Huge Cop Out And It Doesn’t Matter". Television Blend. http://cinemablend.com/television/Why-The-Battlestar-Galactica-Finale-Is-A-Huge-Copout-And-It-Doesn-t-Matter-16337.html. Retrieved 2011-10-17. 
  19. ^ Martin, George R.R. (April 5th, 2009). "Writing 101". LiveJournal. http://grrm.livejournal.com/82239.html. 

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