The Babylon Podcast is back after the holidays

The last month the Babylon Podcast has been off, ok, they had a few holiday gifts, so we did not miss it all together.

The editor of the podcast has compiled a set of filk episodes, some good fun with B5 as the subject.

Tim has selected some fine moments from the 2008 Babylon Podcast, with a few mixups etc.

The first Live feed recording on January 7th was canceled, and so was the one on the 14th, the recording was made in the Los Angeles studio, and could not be heard live.

Waiting for the edited podcast was well worth it, however. The news of Majel Barrett Roddenberry’s departure from this world was honored, including an amusing anecdote from Jeffrey Willerth.

We had a beautiful interview with Ed Wasser who plays the mysterious, evil Mr. Morden. He was close to unstoppable in his enthusiasm and has obviously had a great experience with B5.

A Somewhat SciFi-ish holiday

I am now well back from my holidays, having celebrated Christmas and New Year with family and friends.

Apart from getting to see the people “back home” I and a needed restful day or two, I also got to see my oldest friend one I have known since 1969 – so this year will see our 40th anniversary of friendship. I spent some days there watching a fair amount of Scifi:

Jekyll :
A modern continuation, set in the present day, of the classic story by Robert Louis Stephenson. I liked it already, and the renewed viewing even improved on my impression. Link to a review from the earlier viewing.

Dr Who Season 4 :
A lovely season with rather good episodes, only “The Doctor’s Daughter” is a little weak, but not really bad. Reviews of single episodes will follow later.

Dr Who S1 The Beginning :
I recently got the box “The beginning” with the first Doctor, played by William Hartnell. We watched the first two stories of the series, “An unearthly Child” and the very first “Dalek” story. I am surprised how well written the stories are, nicely acted, the early Doctor Who has more of the “mystery sense” than the modern ones, even if the special effects are not up to modern standards. The story becomes more important than “big explosions” etc. More detailed reviews later.

Babylon 5 :
We remembered Majel Barrett Roddenberry by watching the episode “Point of No Return” where she plays Lady Morella, third wife of the late Emperor Turhan, and a seer. Wonderful performance from the “First Lady of Star Trek”.

Having seen that a few more of Season 3 episodes was what we wanted, so we ‘watches some selected ones finishing with “Z’Ha’Dum”. It is always good to rewatch Babylon 5, so a worthy way of finishing the visit (sort of a “2 person mini convention”)

Finally I found some time to be alone and read Kevin J. Anderson’s “Last Days of Krypton”. It is a good read, the disparate elements of the legend have been weaved well into a single story, linking The Phantom Zone, Jor-El’s science -experiments, the Jor-El and Lara story, General Zod and his companions, the folly of the Council, the fate of Kandor, and finally the fate of the planet Krypton itself. There is a nice surprise in what finally causes the destruction of Krypton.

Now for some more reading : I am a member of the Live Journal group hp_in_depth (Harry Potter), and we just started reading, two chapters per week, “The Goblet of Fire”, so I will be busy reading some evenings of the week.

The 11th Doctor will be announced tomorrow.

Tomorrow, in a special “Doctor Who Confidential” at 5.35 p.m. BST it will be announced who will take over from David Tennant as The Doctor after the specials in 2009, according to the BBC.

The Internet is abuzz with excitement – at least among Doctor Who fans.

I will be visiting a friend without Internet at the time of the announcement, I hope my mobile internet will work there – I am not going to guess – I leave that to others.

Majel Barrett Roddenberry has passed beyond “The Rim”

I have been off the net for a few days, so here is my entry on this : Majel Barrett was the widow of Gene Roddenberry of Star Trek fame, and passed away on December 18 at the age of 76. Her family was there with her. More details at the official homepage.

For me Star Trek was a breakthrough in Science Fiction on TV and gave rise to a new trend – stating social issues in SF on TV. Actually, it was, at the time, the only way of tackling issues as racism, discrimination etc in TV series, by disguising it as “alien versus human” encounters. Majel is best known by SF fans from a multitude of roles in the Star Trek universe, and a single beautiful role in Babylon 5.

While it is sad to see someone pass beyond the Rim we should also remember the things she gave to us , in Star Trek : “Number One” from the original pilot, Nurse Chapel from the original series, Lwaxana Troi in The Next Generation, and the computer voice in all the “new” series, and from Babylon 5 the Lady Morella, seer and a wife of the deceased Emperor of the Centauri Republic.

With Starstuff I will quote the wonderful line she was given by Babylon 5 creator J. Michael Straczynski : “There is always choice. We say there is no choice only to comfort ourselves with the decision we have already made. If you understand that, there’s hope. If not ..” – Lady Morella, Babylon 5, »Point of no return«

Rest in peace Majel Barrett, and may you meet your Gene in a place where no shadows fall.

My thoughts on the film “Changeling” [***spoilers***]

Background :

You may ask “where is the science fiction in this film?”. Well, there is none. The film does, however have a connection with SF in that the script is written by the creator of the science fiction series “Babylon 5”, J. Michael Straczynski (jms), his first-ever script to be filmed for the big screen.

JMS has been interested in the case of Christine Collins for a while, but never got to tell the story, until a friend alerted alerted him to the fact that the archives on the case were to be destroyed. Before that could happen he studied the case in great detail and started writing the script.

This is one of the true stories that is rather incredible. The film is heavily based on newspaper articles, court room proceedings etc. A lot of the dialogue comes directly from these sources. In order to make a story viewable on film some shortcuts have to be done, but it feels like the essence of the story is there.

The film was presented at the Cannes Film festival and quite well received, apparently the reception in the US has been more mixed.

The script was published by Universal in connection with a possible Oscar nomination, and I have downloaded it, but did not read it prior to watching the film. I had heard enough to know the general story, but still some details were a bit of a surprise. Now may be the time to read the script.

The script has been transferred very well to a big screen experience that will stay with me for longer than most.

Some have complained that this could not have happened – it is just too incredible. This might be true if the story had been set in the present, but in 1928, where the story begins, the situation was quite different.

People involved :

Writer : J. Michael Straczynski

Director : Clint Eastwood

Christine Collins : Angelina Jolie

Rev. Briegleb : John Malkovic

and many more …

Summary of the story [***spoilers***] :

Christine Collins, a single (and working) mother in Los Angeles comes home one day and finds her son Walter, 9 years old, has disappeared.

The police is very slow to react and cannot find the boy. Six months later the police, in need of a success story, announces that they have found Walter and arranges a public meeting at the train station. When she is presented with the boy she realizes that this is not Walter and initially refuses to receive him. When pressured she accepts to bring him home on a trial basis.

When she uncovers more evidence that this is not her son and confronts the police she is ignored, harassed and finally arrested and sent to an asylum. She has become an “inconvenience” for the corrupt police and “needs to be eliminated”.

Through all this she has one strong ally in Reverend Briegleb, a radio preacher working to expose the corruption and help the victims, and the only authority figure believing in her.

About the same time the suspicion is growing that a mass murderer lives nearby. On a visit to the ranch of Gordon Stewart Northcott one of the officers catches a boy who appears to be just an illegal immigrant from Canada. But it turns out he has a terrible secret : Northcott has forced him to participate in a series of brutal murders on children from the neighbourhood. When this appears in the news Rev. Briegleb takes action and gets her out of the asylum.

What follows is the hunt for, and trial of Northcott, and revelations of the grave misconduct – by the corrupt LAPD Collins aided by Rev. Briegleb and a lawyer offering his services for free.

[***end spoilers***]

Acting and other “technical aspects:

Angelina Jolie’s acting was spot on – the desperate mother with persistence and inner strength, yet with some very good emotional moments.

The actor playing Gordon Northcott relayed the deranged psyche of the character so well that it was plain creepy to me. Kudos

Most of the other cast was well played as well, but I will give a special mention to the two boys, one playing the “illegal immigrant” – he looked plain scared in the scenes, and the final one who escaped from the ranch.

The use of somewhat washed out background is interesting, illustrating that this is a historical drama – somehow the images look like film footage from the 1920’s. Even the colours of the background has faded colours, while the persons in the foreground are in focus.

Themes in the film :

This is a story of a single person having an effect on society. Collins did not just accept the words and deeds of authority figures when they were wrong. She must been incredibly tough, in the sense of having the inner strength to withstand the pressure. It makes me wonder how many people really have that strength when it is so much easier to give in.

She made choices to go through with the resistance in spite of warnings from reasonable people like Rev Briegleb that the police top was ruthless in their corrupt ways, choosing to act and live with the consequences. Little did she know. The saying “never start a fight, but always finish it” was her wisdom given to her son, and she lived by it.

I appreciate the bitter irony of the corrupt police officer Jones accusing Collins of neglecting her obligations as a mother, knowing perfectly well that *he* was doing just that in *his* work. It must have been infuriating.

The scenes from the asylum are chilling, the way someone could be “eliminated” by declaring them “mentally unstable” and locking them up. In our modern days this may not happen regularly, but even in my time it was a known practise in communist countries – not so long ago. The perception (by men) in 1928 that women were “mentally unstable and illogical” made it very difficult to assert yourself as a woman.

I will call this “the psychiatrist’s game” the way everything she said and did was twisted by the “doctor” as Collins being either mentally unstable if she protested, or emotionally non-functional when she took things calmly. There was just no way out. Oh yes – there was a way out : telling everyone that you were wrong – or a liar – thereby absolving the wrong-doers of any blame.

One person can make a difference. True, but there are some requirements: you have to be able to rely on other people’s assistance, and more importantly: You must be the right person in the right place at the right time. This seems to be the case for Christine Collins. People were mortally afraid of the corrupt police force (with good reason) and fed up with the situation. On the other hand, they just needed a spark in order to burst into fire and protest. Christine Collins was that spark, she became a symbol.

Faith and hope. The Reverend symbolizes one kind of faith – the religious one, whereas Collins represents faith in yourself and other people. At end of the film we get a glimmer of hope.

Final thoughts:

I enjoyed the film, not in the sense of the actions in it, but in the telling of the story. I would recommend it. Go see it.

I will be getting the DVD when it comes out, and, maybe, make a comparative “study” of “Changeling” and “Babylon 5”. I initially see many common themes, but I will have to watch the film in more detail.

Film (not yet review)

I went to see the film “Changeling” tonight. I still need to collect my thoughts about it. For now I will just say it was well worth the effort, and I will get the DVD when it becomes available.

Changeling is *not* a science fiction or fantasy film, the only connection is that the script is written by someone who is better known for the science fiction series “Babylon 5” J. MIchael Straczynski.

Babylon 5 : 10 years since the final episode aired.

Exactly 10 years ago, November 25th 1998 the final episode of “Babylon 5”, “Sleeping in Light” was aired for the first time, completing the epic story.

Interesting is that just a few days ago the ISS had its 10th anniversary, too (the first module Zarya was launched). An imaginary space station was decommissioned and a the building of a real life space station was initiated.

B5 is a show I have watched several times by now, and one of the few shows (scifi or otherwise) that I recommend to lots of people. One of the things is that every single time I have seen it, there is something new – a new connection inside the story, a detail that has gone unnoticed before etc.

I have introduced it to a few people, watching it together with them and seen them come to love the show as I do. Not many shows can do that, and none other has done this for me.

Doctor Who (new) Season 4 box set, Disc one

In the week end I have been rewatching the Children in Need special “Time Crash” and “Voyage of the Damned”.

“Time Crash” is a short special, in short the TARDIS runs Amok and the fifth Doctor (Peter Davison) appears. Quite fun and the “You were *my* Doctor” is a nice tribute.

One of the highlights in “Voyage of the Damned” for me was seeing, for the first time, Bernard Cribbins’ character Wilf – the alien hunter and amateur astronomer in the middle of a deserted London. A nice bit of continuity, even if that is not known at the first viewing, later we learn that he is Donna’s Grandpa. I generally enjoyed the story, even if it was not the greatest of Doctor Who.

The Babylon Podcast

As a fan of Babylon 5 I have also become a fan of the Babylon Podcast.

I started listening to podcasts in 2006, and due to an accident late June that year I had some more time than usual at hand, so I started to look for more particular podcasts. Imagine my delight when I found that there was indeed a podcast about my favourite show. They had, at the time, “aired” about 40 shows. I downloaded the first few and listened, found it delightful and downloaded the rest, and listened to the first 42 (!) Babylon Podcasts in about two weeks.

Episode 1, a longer introductory episode “aired” in February 2006, with the hosts Summer and Tim telling why they were drawn to B5 and what kept them hooked, and Jeffrey telling about guests that could be expected to be featured on the podcast.

Show #2 had the first guest interview with Stephen Furst (“Vir Cotto”). He was a blast to both the hosts and to me to listen to, so the first hook was there …

Not just the Stars (actors) were interviewed, many of the crew as well. #3 brought us Bear Burge, the Master Prop Fabricator, and the first episode discussion on “Midnight on the Firing Line” (episode 1). Later this episode discussion segment got the title “Deep Geeking”, with it own “jingle”.

Many people have been interviewed on the podcast, a few names worth mentioning : Patricia Tallman, Bruce Boxleitner, Wayne Alexander (“The Inquisitor”, “Lorien” and a few other roles), John Iacovelli, Walter Koenig (one of my absolute favourite bad guys, the Psi Cop “Alfred Bester”), Producer John Copeland in a two part interview, the list is not endless, but quite long. Almost all of those interviews have been a joy to listen to, enriching the experience of the series.

A segment of feedback, at times *very* amusing, also brought out a “spin off” of the Babylon Podcast, called the “Three Edged Sword”. It all started as an in-joke between three of the most active feedback’ers, who finally agreed to make a story line out of their contributions. More about “Three Edged Sword” in a later post.

In the latest “Deep Geeking” (ep. #135), “No Surrender, No, Retreat” was discussed how Sheridan’s approach to the conflict was entirely different from the end of the Shadow War.

This week’s episode (#136) had an interview with the Babylon 5 script team members “Captain” Jaclyn and Jan, telling a part of the story of publishing the scrips for every single Babylon 5 episode, and the approach to doing it. Jaclyn stressed that J. Michael Stracynski had stated “It’s all about the fans!”

Of course, it is well known to many fans that the customer service of the scripts team has been legendary, more about the script books and the scripts team later

In addition to the compliments from the fans, Jaclyn had compliments to the fans and their behaviour when dealing with the scripts team.

For me one of the highlights was when Jaclyn who came into this as a business – a specialist in “print-on demand” books with no interest in SciFi – telling about her experience of watching B5. In short, she was blown away by the story. She told that she was surprised how much she could be moved by 1) a piece of art, 2) a television series, and finally 3) a SciFi series. High praise indeed.

link :
The Babylon Podcast