Bear in mind Galactica was 50 years old at the start of the series, lacked most of the addon armour plating, was partially decommissioned and her structural integrity was actually lower than intended from the start because her designers skimped material in order to expedite her construction. Yet she soldiered on. She survived a direct nuclear strike, countless missile impacts, a shockwave from a Raptor jump, atmospheric reentry and several years of attrition with virtually no overhauls or refits. And even after all of this, she managed to hold together after ramming the Cylon colony and jumping away with extended flight pods. She broke her back, but stayed mobile, and even her scuttling was done under her own power. What a grand old lady. Now imagine how sturdy must have Galactica been in her peak during the First Cylon War.
Not to mention a lack of sufficient repairs even before the attack, as she was due for decommissioning. Add that to the "pain" she endured during and after the attacks; she was breaking even during the raid on New Caprica and still soldiered through the re-entry from the "Adama Maneuver". She was hurting and still she didn't give in. She was the dying leader throughout the show, who saw her people to the promised home.
It makes sense once you look back at the time of her construction and her intended mission: a capital ship to go head on against early tougher basestars, usually outnumbered, and survive to fight another day. That's why I shake my head anytime Pegasus fans say she's superior in every way. I really like the Peggy, but her value was strategical dut to her Viper facilities. As a warship, nothing beats a Jupiter class.
@@moteroargentino7944 And this is why Kane was such a poor officer, as when brought up against older officers in older battlestars she lost every time. The only way she made it to Admiralty was through political connections.
You watch, the way she wiggles and shakes after that last jump. She's completely broken. She's only holding her skin together, with great effort, to protect her humans. Thats a warship. She's done what she was supposed to do, what she was built to do, she's saved humanity. And now she's done it. So much combat, so many victories and escapes. She's done it. And now, finally, she's done. My God, who could ask for a better ship? And then she turns her engines back on.
@@carlsvrd1098 you do not get how lucky they are to have survived the jump the ships done yes but it could have been worse she could have been badly ripped apart during that last jump and had major losses but they didn't people could have been impaled by beams shooting off like rail gun rounds but didn't think about the violence of the scene and how they pretty much came out of it without out a scratch or nose bleed they got so lucky do you not see that one
I also have to say...I think one of the biggest reasons she took so much damage from this final jump, not just because of how beaten up she is, but does anybody notice they never retracted the flight pods into the ship before she jumps? That alone reduces Galactica's structural rigidity by quite a bit. If the flight pods had been retracted, she might not have broken her back, and might have been able to survive one or two more jumps had they needed to. I think this was intentional as well, not some oversight by the show's creators. She didn't have time to prep for the jump, and because of this, her final jump was fatal. RIP Galactica, you were always the main character of this show, and we'll always love you. :'(
OR.... the jump was so FAR across the galaxy, that the extended distance crippled her systems as jumps that far I can guarantee we're not normal. Think about it. For how long were they searching for earth? And then they jump from one end of our galaxy to the other. Remember, the cylons pushed man to the far reaches of their galaxy in trying to escape them, after so many years, so many jumps, but with destiny on their side, the jump was successful, fatal, but successful.+no more cylons!!! (Atleast reproductively speaking.
It also fits both the prophecy and the fact that galactica was an old workhorse, dying of a degenerative disease from the start. She was never meant to make it longer than she did.
@@tsugumorihoney2288 If the writers had more balls they would have destroyed galactica and moved the flag to Pegasus. The sacrifice of that ship made absolutely zero sense and was the first point where the show started falling apart at the seams for me. In no world does it make sense to ram the Pegasus through the entire bastestar fleet like that.
It's pretty wonderful how they stole the design of the mothership of the cylons from Babylon 5 spider ships design Edward James olmos ain't got no no creativity stealing the copyright from Babylon 5
Like comparing a 1980 Lincoln town car to a 2019 newer car yeah there's Bette things on board but in a collision the older car would prolly hold up better
I find it funny that they think corners were cut, I think it has more to do with the ship fought in the first Cylon war and is 50 years, was already stripped to make a museum out of her(most of her armor plating had been removed) and has been fighting under heavy conditions the ENTIRE exodus with out a shipyards available every repair has the "make do" with what the fleet had. Galactica fought dam for a ship that wasn't ment to fight anymore.
It real says something about the resilience of the Galactica that after all the fighting she's seen, and all the punishment she's taken, that the Cylons couldn't bring her down. In the end it took the power of a star to end her.
@@grigss3027 You miss the point. Galactica was a tough ship. She endured more than anyone could possibly ever ask her to, and then some. And so did all who sailed in her.
Watching the ship rip and contort like that had to be one of the tensest scenes in the whole show. I was expecting her to rip in half, Titanic-style. I cannot explain the relief I felt seeing those sublight engines come back online.
First time I saw this, I teared up when Tigh said, "She broke her back... she'll never jump again." I don't know why, but it made me sad to think of the Galactica as essentially on her death bed. It's just a ship, how did I come to love it so much?
Battlestar Galactica is the star of the show... a show called "Battlestar Galactica." If you don't love the ship, you're not doing fandom right. As a Trekkie, I can attest the I am in love with 3 ships called Enterprise (1701, 1701-A, 1701-D).
FUCK THIS ENDING THEY COULD MAKE A SEQUEL STORY PLOT THE OLD HUMANS BUILD A MOON BASE AND LIVE THE KNOWLEGED AND GALACTICA TO SLEEP UNTIL WAS DISCOVER BY THE NEW HUMANS THE GOOD CYLONS HELP THE HUMANS BUILD A THE MOON BASE AND THE CENTIRUES WATCH OVER THE EARTH AND THE SHIP AND THEY WAIT FOR THE NEW HUMANS .
I don't know what scene was sadder, hearing that line from Saul about the ship's condition, or seeing the old girl on her way towards the Sun to be scuttled. She was a fine ship, so say we all.
so say we all! Quoted after Adm./Cmdr. William "Husker" Adama last Commanding Officer Battlestar Strike Group 75 Capital ship "GALACTICA" the first response at the funeral scene/ last scene of the miniseries as a tone reference
In looking at BSG all over again I have to say Galactica itself was the dying leader. It wasn't Roslyn the reason why is because Galactica didn't give up and no knew she was dying the whole time. From the very start she was going to be mothballed but they had no choice but to use her to save the colonies. It only makes sense if you think of it in those terms.
Ironically... whenever the Cylons used their bio-tech to repair and enhance Galactica... it actually became more alive...like a low tech pirate version of the hi-Tech Basestars and their Hybrids... with Anderson being a stand in for the latter.
"And the lords anointed a leader to guide the Caravan of the Heavens to their new homeland. The new leader suffered a wasting disease and would not live to enter the new land'' - Galactica is the leader, not Roslin. Roslin entered the new land, Galactica did not.
so say we all! Quoted after Adm./Cmdr. William "Husker" Adama last Commanding Officer Battlestar Strike Group 75 Capital ship "GALACTICA" the first response at the funeral scene/ last scene of the miniseries as a tone reference
@@mrz80 Exactly. They made too much of a deal of the supposed "design flaw" in previous episodes. But what REALLY happened was a jump with the flight pods extended. This is exactly why they repeatedly stressed retracting the flight pods before jumping.
@@Dave-gu3zj Every time they jumped for the entire four-year run of the series, they retracted the flight pods before jumping. This is the one time they did not.
I stared watching Battlestar when I was just 9 years old and was devastated by the original series' failure to end properly....I waited over half a life time to see this scene...I cried. By far, one of the most wonderful and beautiful TV scenes in history. it was worth the 35+ year wait for it to be done right....Thank you Moore for doing this. Paul A. Rossi, Mountville, PA
this is probably my favourite scene in the entire show, the fact that all along the watchtower, a song, was an integral part to the show's plot, science and religion being intertwined, kara being an angel, the quest to find earth, all perfectly wrapped up in this one scene. ngl watching her yell "jump" while the final riff plays will always give me goosebumps, it's just too good
One thing the show did well was to make Galactica feel like a character; the retiring veteran now the protector of humanity, asked to function way beyond her design, her condition deteriorating the whole time from damage, age, lack of dock yard refit time, and constant patch-job repairs, and more and more being held together by hopes, dreams and duct-tape, but still managing to make that one final jump, sacrificing herself to get her crew to their new home. The fact she was still able move under her own power despite having broke her back is a testament to tough she was. A ship truly deserving of the name “Grand Old Lady”.
The Galactica had served her purpose. Other than the Pegasus, the only Battlestar to survive the attack on the colonies. She protected the remnants of humanity throughout the exodus. Kind of cool that, according to the mythos of the show, we're the descendents of the colonial remnant. As far as the negative comments, I also grew up with the original 1970s show. This one was a little different, but different doesn't mean bad. The basic superstructure of the original show was present. I was just happy to have the show on the air again. And the original series will always live on in the DVD set. RIP Richard Hatch.
Kara's words "There must be some kind of way out of here" has stuck with me for all the years since this series ended. All along the watchtower was the perfect song to base the theme of the show around.
Broke her back? Give me a Scotsman, two bottles of something green, and some duct tape and we'll have her back to normal before the end of the episode!
@@lumberluc .. Oh, such a defeatist attitude. Forget solar systems. Forget galaxies. This is the UNIVERSE of television. If they can bring people back to life, have dead people walking around, travel the stars, and patch Galactica up episode after episode up to this point, they can bring the Galactica back to life, polished & new, for at least several more seasons. Lol.
@@CoyoteSeven .. Hell, the most interesting part of Voyager was species 8472. They kicked everyone's butt, until the the writers completely changed their tactics (no quick shock & awe attacks, etc) so Janeway could easily get them.
I waited a lifetime to see a proper ending to the Battlestar Galactica series...this is pure art. One of the best things about this ending is that it tracks with the voice-over opening to the original Battlestar Galactica opening: "There are those who believe that life here, began out there, far across the Universe with tribes of humans who may have been the forefathers of the Egyptians, ot the Tolteks or the Myans." Moore is brilliant. Why did the original serires forget this important part of the BG story.
Honestly, as much as I do love the original series, this reboot did a much better job running with the original premise than the original series did. After the pilot episode the original BSG became basically a Star Trek/Star Wars hybrid.
@@freighttrain7143 so say we all! Quoted after Adm./Cmdr. William "Husker" Adama last Commanding Officer Battlestar Strike Group 75 Capital ship "GALACTICA"
FTL jumps are based on the departure location and destination being taken into consideration .The fact that a song from Karas childhood would have the coordinates to Earth in that moment where they needed it most at a base she would otherwise not have know even existed is a sign of divine intervention in the show.
Gelactica wasn’t just a ship. She was a character. She was the mother hen of the refugee fleet. When she finally snapped her back you can see that she was still trying. Many of her crew likely died in her aft sections.
That show was the best, it will always be my favorite series - as a teen it made me believe that there's a greater reason for all of us and its awesome story will always be a part of my disillusioned self ^^
“She’s broke her back; she’ll never jump again.” Still one of the coolest lines from any science fiction TV show. RIP mighty Galactica! Job well-done. 👍🏻
What i love about the last shot is the different emotions it sends to my brain. In the first microseconds you think"oh gods(,-) ) A desolate wasteland of a planet". Then it pans out and in the next second, you hear the sad start of the beautifull song, and you start to recognize the colors and the shape of the craters..."is this..?" and then you see earth, and i always had tears in my eyes.
"The great ship, Galactica, majestic and loving, strong and protecting. Our home for these many years we have endured the wilderness of space..." I remember that line as a child back in the early 1980s, and its quite upsetting when Tigh says "She's broke her back...she'll never jump again.".
The ship was, at her heart, a warship. Many warships end up as razor blades. The lucky few get to serve their purpose and end their lives (Yes, ships are alive. They have souls.) doing what they were designed to do, fight. To have an ending such as this in which she gives her all for her crew, her children, is the most noble ending a warship can ever have.
think of all the sailors who''s ships have gone down.... I had 4, one is still afloat(mothballed into a museum) but the rest have succumbed to the seafloor. it still breaks me up thinking of them going down. 2 due to weapons fire and one due to spite( no breakers yard for her) dammit! she was not going to become something else and be lost to the world...SHE IS STILL A WARSHIP! Gotta love that Dammed old Adams class Destroyer!
Hold on, are you talking about the Benjamin Stoddert as the "one due to spite?" Where it was being towed to be scrapped, and then sunk on the way to the scrap yard? Why am I getting the distinct impression from your statement that one of her crew might have helped her on her way to becoming an unintended artificial reef?
Heartbreaking death of a proud ship of the Line at the uttermost end of her strength. She did what she was born to, alone of all the fleet.... she kept her people alive and brought them home.
I found it on Netflix. And i grew up on the original. Took time to get use to it. I was off work because of a heart attack. So i binged watch it all loved it
Enterprise: Come with me Galactica You have served your purpose, Now let's go to were our space faring sisters are waiting for us Galactica: Thank you sister Enterprise, So say we all Enterprise: To boldly go where none have gone before.
Star Trek Voyager reaches home in perfect condition. Battlestar Galactica reaches home falling to pieces and scarred to fuck. Guess which series had better scriptwriters?
Scarred, burned, nuked, held together by duck tape and general self belief, with already before this damaged internal structure from constant jumps and 4 decades of combat. one ship is alot more emotional making it home than the other.
wrong! voyager reaches home in a monage that glosses over what might have been some of the most interesting moments of the show, followed by a poorly thought through paradox of a time travel plot!
As I recall, Galactica was not only an ancient tub that had forgone maintenance for 4 FRAKKING YEARS, but also only had one flight pod, about 1/2-1/4 (I'm guessing) of it's preholocaust main battery, reduced CIWS batteries, and a partial Viper wing. The fact that the Cylons couldn't kill her before she literally CAME APART AT THE SEAMS is just damned impressive.
0:26 Damn, Racetrack was a badass. Took out the Cylons from beyond the grave. The thing that really bothered me about the ending, next to no thought was given to those who gave their lives for the larger group. Even to those like Racetrack who had died only hours before and was left adrift in space. In fact, it looks like many fighters were left behind, and the pilots weren't dead!
I always thought most of the fighters were withdrawn to galactica during the cease fire period where there was the waiting for the final 5 in the command room to download the stuff. Both sides withdrew their forces. Only the fighters and Raptors that could manouver anymore were well....left for dead. But there wasnt exactly time in a scenario where everything could go to shit any second and they might have to jump any second to launch rescue teams
@@noobster4779 I know why Galactica jumped away, that's not what I'm talking about. I'm talking about the complete lack of thought given to those left behind after the fact.
Yeah right, i never noticed that she was already dead...i always thought that hit had woken her up and she fired those nukes, but nope, it was a cosmic level of "luck" or rather divine intervention....and not the only one that day!
Watched this in a room full of about 50 other fans. We all gasped when she started falling apart. Probably the toughest death in the series was Galactica finally giving up after taking her people home.
God what a great show. Thanks to the people who made it possible. Years later and I am still loving it. If it werent for the old good stuff all the new bad stuff would be that much worse. These are dark times of propaganda and social engineering by assholes. Stories like these are a ray of light until we can overcome the dorks.
The Galactica's lateral structure and main frame was on the verge of breaking, due to the amount of weapons fire inflicted during her arrival and eventual FTL jump. 2nd, there is also the question of vipers and Raptors still in flight between the lull in fighting and the FTL jump. 3rd the structure of the Cylon base was by the looks of it fairly intact condition after the Raptor fired those mini nukes.
I wish the series had ended right here. I don't MIND the canon ending, but I like to think it ended right here. Got the ships together, and Galactica ends up staying in a high orbit for the rest of her days, watching over the growing colony below.
Seeing Galactica like that knowing that her life had come to a end was a hard one to watch but she did accomplish her mission...she got the human and rebel cylon races to their new home. She deserved to go out in style.
Galactica is THE most badass Sci-Fi ship ever it took a shit load of crap (atmosphere jump, alot of nukes) and it survived that long with a dock to repair it fuck all other ships against the Galactica they are but twigs SO SAY WE ALL!!
Adama knew Starbuck had the coordinates for Earth in her subconscious and that they'd surface at the right time. That's why he told HER to jump the ship.
The most frightening part is not that they had to attempt a random jump, but that despite astronomical odds, Kara managed to jump a nearly mile long Battlestar from basically a cold start and no calculations to the Sol System. And we have NO idea how far a jump it was. Also remember, the Galactica was "upgraded" with Cylon FTL technology. So it could have been a few light years, it could have been thousands. But Kara also proved one essential thing about FTL navigation. That anywhere and everywhere in the known universe can be distilled to a coordinate suitable for jumping. So had the colonies not fallen, and humanity had actually embraced and worked with the Cylons, any part of the galaxy, the galaxy itself, and other galaxies become accessible. Jumps of tens of thousands of light years or even intergalactic jumps could perhaps be done with a navigator similar in concept to Frank Herbert's "Guild Navigators" of Dune. A Cylon navigator, a Battlestar configured for long term colonization, and with time, Earth would have been discovered eventually. I kind of wished though that Kara Thrace has been allowed to remain with the rest of the Humans and Rebel Cylons. But she did complete her journey, and hopefully she was rewarded for her efforts.
So... All this time I assumed the last jump broke her because of all the hell she's gone thru up to that point... Now, though I think that is part of it, I think it's not the actual reason... Her flight pods... They didn't have time to retract them before jumping... That's what crippled her o.o
For a ship as big as Galactica, you can actually see why the pods have to be retracted to make the jump. they're literal structural supports for the design, especially when the the pod arms and beams go right through her central spine. If they at full extension, the torque load would probably exceed maximum designed load, even if it could so and emerge only partially scathed. Couple in the battle damage, the age, structural fatigue, inability to repair in any significant margin; even if the maximum designed load could be exceeded prior in the show, since they kept the damage so consistent through the show, this jump is accumulation the entire series. Look at how the pods just swing and torque their arms through the vessel. if they wanted to kill a ship believably, they picked the best way to do it without explosions.
I thought so to as to me the the fight pods were needed in the retracted pisition to add structural rigidity to the frame. I felt bad for all the people manning the topside gun batteries as the top side seems to have taken the brunt of the explosions after the jump. They almost made it yo Earth but not Quite.
Steve Wismark They would be fine, since the individual gun pods would be in one piece. Plus they were running a skeleton crew, and had no need for the pods to be crewed, since they would have been killed by the colony’s defenses.
It's well established that in the distant history of the series, we have humans on one planet, they build cylons, they fight, they split up, etc, over and over and over. There have been other Kobals, other Earths, other Twelve-Colonies, and the same thing keeps happening. On that thought, those "angels" could be ancient Cylon survivors from many cycles back, Kara's dad being one of them. Biologically perfect human duplicates, but still not. They know the future because they've seen it before.
@@insideoutsideupsidedown2218 I don't think I've ever seen a series that was perfect but this one, even with its mystical and religious flaws, came close and is still one of the best series ever made.
@@cesarcueto1995 the first 2 seasons showed so much promise. Then it was like the writers got lazy or just didn't care. They could have done several beautiful story arcs, it just became predictable and vain. It was like they were writing scripts on Friday at 230 in the afternoon. A great series easily goes 5 seasons, this one went 4 and it shows.
The first time I saw that specific scene I thought exactly as you do. A few of those pieces had to have found their way to the moon surface. But that's a big surface, and who knows if 150,000 years of dust would have covered the debris. Who knows? But yeah, that would be a massive discovery.
Well, that’s why they decided to scuttle her, and “go native”. First time I heard of the series’ end, everyone was bitching about “Why’d they have to do that?!” When a ship’s “back” is broken, it’s only good for making a new coral reef. Sad, but damn fine ending for the Galactica.
I loved the ending. Thought it was perfect. The clean slate thing took me by complete surprise and it made me feel new again in a way I can't explain. I think the world is headed to the end soon anyway, nice if we had some say in how and when
I watched this series first, then recommended (ie forced, coerced, bothered her until she finally gave in) my wife to sit through it again with me. About season 3 she started bugging me for hints to the final five and what happens at the end. My only response was "Let me say this. WE, you and I, are not really living on Earth right now."
Galactica was built indeed to take a beating but those bastards at fleetyard that cut cornners during her construction were the worst foe she ever faced
Imagine the story ended with them leaving the Galactica orbiting in space. In a perfect Orbit that would never degrade....and it survived through time. Until one person looked up in the sky, with a tube and glass.....
@@blade913 I always disagreed with the ending. To me, it would have made perfect sense for Galactic to have arrived about 700 BC, give or take. The Colonials built a city which in legend becomes Mt. Olympus of Greek mythology. It's where the legends of Atlantis are born and how Earth absorbs parts of Colonial culture-- why modern Earth resembles Colonial civilization at its height. Maybe some of the Colonials spread out and helped or became founders of other Earth civilizations. As for Galactica, I always liked the idea of her jumping from orbit to a place on the planet. Her jumping again in space would lead to her being torn apart due to the structural damage...but if she could jump to a prepared place on the planet, solid ground, that would account for her staying intact more or less. Again, the Colonials found Olympus with Galactica standing watch over them. The basis for the myth and the Greek Gods. Much more sense than the ending they came up with...
@@Hal09i I just like the idea of something like Galactica staying in space. Then being left there, perfectly preserved. Reactors still on even if only a little. Until sometime in the vast far future, it's found again. It'd put our existence into perspective, as the only ruins we find are of less advanced civilizations.
Mary McDonnell who plays Roslin is currently one of the main characters on my favorite crime drama Major Crimes. Last season the guy who played Apollo guest starred but he played a scumbag so their characters were at odds there.
Bear in mind Galactica was 50 years old at the start of the series, lacked most of the addon armour plating, was partially decommissioned and her structural integrity was actually lower than intended from the start because her designers skimped material in order to expedite her construction.
Yet she soldiered on. She survived a direct nuclear strike, countless missile impacts, a shockwave from a Raptor jump, atmospheric reentry and several years of attrition with virtually no overhauls or refits.
And even after all of this, she managed to hold together after ramming the Cylon colony and jumping away with extended flight pods. She broke her back, but stayed mobile, and even her scuttling was done under her own power. What a grand old lady.
Now imagine how sturdy must have Galactica been in her peak during the First Cylon War.
i feel like galactica would of survived in better shape solely if the flightpods werent extended
You could say that it was divine intervention.
Not to mention a lack of sufficient repairs even before the attack, as she was due for decommissioning. Add that to the "pain" she endured during and after the attacks; she was breaking even during the raid on New Caprica and still soldiered through the re-entry from the "Adama Maneuver". She was hurting and still she didn't give in. She was the dying leader throughout the show, who saw her people to the promised home.
It makes sense once you look back at the time of her construction and her intended mission: a capital ship to go head on against early tougher basestars, usually outnumbered, and survive to fight another day.
That's why I shake my head anytime Pegasus fans say she's superior in every way. I really like the Peggy, but her value was strategical dut to her Viper facilities. As a warship, nothing beats a Jupiter class.
@@moteroargentino7944 And this is why Kane was such a poor officer, as when brought up against older officers in older battlestars she lost every time. The only way she made it to Admiralty was through political connections.
You watch, the way she wiggles and shakes after that last jump. She's completely broken. She's only holding her skin together, with great effort, to protect her humans. Thats a warship. She's done what she was supposed to do, what she was built to do, she's saved humanity. And now she's done it. So much combat, so many victories and escapes. She's done it. And now, finally, she's done. My God, who could ask for a better ship?
And then she turns her engines back on.
you that means she's done she can't do that again not without killing everyone on board🤣🤣🤣
@@SaraMorgan-ym6ue i don't understand your comment at all. The ship is dead. This is a tragic scene. Why the laugh emojis?
@@carlsvrd1098 you do not get how lucky they are to have survived the jump the ships done yes but it could have been worse she could have been badly ripped apart during that last jump and had major losses but they didn't people could have been impaled by beams shooting off like rail gun rounds but didn't think about the violence of the scene and how they pretty much came out of it without out a scratch or nose bleed they got so lucky do you not see that one
"She's broke her back. She'll never jump again." I still cry every time I watch this scene.
that is probably one of my favorite lines in the entire series.
I also have to say...I think one of the biggest reasons she took so much damage from this final jump, not just because of how beaten up she is, but does anybody notice they never retracted the flight pods into the ship before she jumps? That alone reduces Galactica's structural rigidity by quite a bit. If the flight pods had been retracted, she might not have broken her back, and might have been able to survive one or two more jumps had they needed to. I think this was intentional as well, not some oversight by the show's creators. She didn't have time to prep for the jump, and because of this, her final jump was fatal. RIP Galactica, you were always the main character of this show, and we'll always love you. :'(
As we see, retracting the fligh pods take a few seconds, seconds they didn't have. R.I.P. Galactica, So Say We All.
OR.... the jump was so FAR across the galaxy, that the extended distance crippled her systems as jumps that far I can guarantee we're not normal. Think about it. For how long were they searching for earth? And then they jump from one end of our galaxy to the other. Remember, the cylons pushed man to the far reaches of their galaxy in trying to escape them, after so many years, so many jumps, but with destiny on their side, the jump was successful, fatal, but successful.+no more cylons!!! (Atleast reproductively speaking.
It also fits both the prophecy and the fact that galactica was an old workhorse, dying of a degenerative disease from the start. She was never meant to make it longer than she did.
that is why i never understood decision to use pegasus for ramming cylon battlestar instead of galactica
@@tsugumorihoney2288 If the writers had more balls they would have destroyed galactica and moved the flag to Pegasus. The sacrifice of that ship made absolutely zero sense and was the first point where the show started falling apart at the seams for me. In no world does it make sense to ram the Pegasus through the entire bastestar fleet like that.
It says a lot when Galactica has taken THAT much damage and can still operate, she's a tough old girl.
For a ship that they discovered the engineers "cut corners" on... it held up pretty good.
It's pretty wonderful how they stole the design of the mothership of the cylons from Babylon 5 spider ships design Edward James olmos ain't got no no creativity stealing the copyright from Babylon 5
Like comparing a 1980 Lincoln town car to a 2019 newer car yeah there's Bette things on board but in a collision the older car would prolly hold up better
Best ship in the fleet...
I find it funny that they think corners were cut, I think it has more to do with the ship fought in the first Cylon war and is 50 years, was already stripped to make a museum out of her(most of her armor plating had been removed) and has been fighting under heavy conditions the ENTIRE exodus with out a shipyards available every repair has the "make do" with what the fleet had. Galactica fought dam for a ship that wasn't ment to fight anymore.
It real says something about the resilience of the Galactica that after all the fighting she's seen, and all the punishment she's taken, that the Cylons couldn't bring her down. In the end it took the power of a star to end her.
You sure she aint cruising around in the core, vibing in there?
@@grigss3027 You miss the point. Galactica was a tough ship. She endured more than anyone could possibly ever ask her to, and then some. And so did all who sailed in her.
@@stephenbyrne2170 i am not missing the point stephen i am just joking. the galacticas a tough old gal and her crew - veterans. may she rest in peace
So say we all!
No joke though. Galactica was one of the smallest Battlestars.
Watching the ship rip and contort like that had to be one of the tensest scenes in the whole show. I was expecting her to rip in half, Titanic-style. I cannot explain the relief I felt seeing those sublight engines come back online.
If you've ever watched Bismarck or Yamato going down... That's how I felt about Galactica.
First time I saw this, I teared up when Tigh said, "She broke her back... she'll never jump again."
I don't know why, but it made me sad to think of the Galactica as essentially on her death bed. It's just a ship, how did I come to love it so much?
Battlestar Galactica is the star of the show... a show called "Battlestar Galactica." If you don't love the ship, you're not doing fandom right. As a Trekkie, I can attest the I am in love with 3 ships called Enterprise (1701, 1701-A, 1701-D).
Ships protects us, keeps us alive in deadly space....almost like a morher.
For several seasons Galactic was our home. So say we all?
FUCK THIS ENDING THEY COULD MAKE A SEQUEL
STORY PLOT
THE OLD HUMANS BUILD A MOON BASE AND LIVE THE KNOWLEGED AND GALACTICA TO SLEEP UNTIL WAS DISCOVER BY THE NEW HUMANS
THE GOOD CYLONS HELP THE HUMANS BUILD A THE MOON BASE AND
THE CENTIRUES WATCH OVER THE EARTH AND THE SHIP AND THEY WAIT FOR THE NEW HUMANS .
I did the same thing when Babylon 5 was scuttled. The ships are as much a character as the people are.
She broke her back, but she brought them home. Adama was right. She did not fail them. Rest in Peace Galactica. Best ship in the fleet. So say we all.
If you watch the scene showing the flight pods, you'll see several viper fall out of it
So say we all
So say we all
So say we all
I don't know what scene was sadder, hearing that line from Saul about the ship's condition, or seeing the old girl on her way towards the Sun to be scuttled. She was a fine ship, so say we all.
So say we all!
Waste of resources.
a viking funeral
so say we all!
Quoted after Adm./Cmdr. William "Husker" Adama last Commanding Officer Battlestar Strike Group 75 Capital ship "GALACTICA"
the first response at the funeral scene/ last scene of the miniseries as a tone reference
No-one will argue that.
In looking at BSG all over again I have to say Galactica itself was the dying leader. It wasn't Roslyn the reason why is because Galactica didn't give up and no knew she was dying the whole time. From the very start she was going to be mothballed but they had no choice but to use her to save the colonies. It only makes sense if you think of it in those terms.
Well, when they say, "They don't build 'em like they used to," they were referring to the Battlestar Galactica.
Ironically... whenever the Cylons used their bio-tech to repair and enhance Galactica... it actually became more alive...like a low tech pirate version of the hi-Tech Basestars and their Hybrids... with Anderson being a stand in for the latter.
"And the lords anointed a leader to guide the Caravan of the Heavens to their new homeland.
The new leader suffered a wasting disease and would not live to enter the new land'' - Galactica is the leader, not Roslin. Roslin entered the new land, Galactica did not.
@@overriderss galactica suffered from old ass sub par construction. i believe that qualifies as a wasting disease
@@overriderss Also Galactica was 10,000x more likable than Roslin
"She's broke her back...she'll never jump again..." :(
gets me every time.
The part where Admiral Adama breaks in fury , frustration and sadness to hear that her ship is falling apart is what got me before..
That was frakking heartbreaking
so say we all!
Quoted after Adm./Cmdr. William "Husker" Adama last Commanding Officer Battlestar Strike Group 75 Capital ship "GALACTICA"
the first response at the funeral scene/ last scene of the miniseries as a tone reference
seeing her superstructure warp and shake like that really unnerved me, a beautiful ship like that doesn’t deserve such punishment....
Zeropiano /Zero Network , she brought them home.
Galactica that is. She did her job, so I mattered anyway.
She jumped with hanger deck pods extended; put too much strain on the frame.
@@mrz80 Exactly. They made too much of a deal of the supposed "design flaw" in previous episodes. But what REALLY happened was a jump with the flight pods extended. This is exactly why they repeatedly stressed retracting the flight pods before jumping.
@@Dave-gu3zj Every time they jumped for the entire four-year run of the series, they retracted the flight pods before jumping. This is the one time they did not.
That last jump is, by far, one of the best and most intense scenes of television history.... or film history for that matter.
not as Intence as USS Voyager return to Earth.
I still think the kickoff of the assault on New Caprica is one of the best action scenes in all sci-fi, both TV and movies.
@Solid Snake - SEZ you , when Seven of Nine appeared , I was a Young Teenager, and had to Explain why I was wearing a sock watching VOYAGER...….LOL.
@@markplott4820 in what way was it more intense
I stared watching Battlestar when I was just 9 years old and was devastated by the original series' failure to end properly....I waited over half a life time to see this scene...I cried. By far, one of the most wonderful and beautiful TV scenes in history. it was worth the 35+ year wait for it to be done right....Thank you Moore for doing this. Paul A. Rossi, Mountville, PA
this is probably my favourite scene in the entire show, the fact that all along the watchtower, a song, was an integral part to the show's plot, science and religion being intertwined, kara being an angel, the quest to find earth, all perfectly wrapped up in this one scene. ngl watching her yell "jump" while the final riff plays will always give me goosebumps, it's just too good
All of the experiences she went through prepared her for "that one destined moment" in their history. Brilliant! And a great life lesson for us all.
Full circle in the end the cylons and humans wiped out their civilizations, no one won, everyone lost everything
One thing the show did well was to make Galactica feel like a character; the retiring veteran now the protector of humanity, asked to function way beyond her design, her condition deteriorating the whole time from damage, age, lack of dock yard refit time, and constant patch-job repairs, and more and more being held together by hopes, dreams and duct-tape, but still managing to make that one final jump, sacrificing herself to get her crew to their new home. The fact she was still able move under her own power despite having broke her back is a testament to tough she was.
A ship truly deserving of the name “Grand Old Lady”.
broke my heart a little when he says "she broke her back. she'll never jump again."
The Galactica had served her purpose. Other than the Pegasus, the only Battlestar to survive the attack on the colonies. She protected the remnants of humanity throughout the exodus. Kind of cool that, according to the mythos of the show, we're the descendents of the colonial remnant.
As far as the negative comments, I also grew up with the original 1970s show. This one was a little different, but different doesn't mean bad. The basic superstructure of the original show was present. I was just happy to have the show on the air again. And the original series will always live on in the DVD set.
RIP Richard Hatch.
No matter how many times I watch that scene, I always get a chill down my spine as the Galactica passes over the moon and the Earth comes into view.
Kara's words "There must be some kind of way out of here" has stuck with me for all the years since this series ended. All along the watchtower was the perfect song to base the theme of the show around.
I frakkin loved this show then and I still frakkin love it now.
It's sad they are trying to reboot this show with a pc agenda.
@@jcfra420 no they aren't
@@jcfra420 the new show will maintain RDM continuity
So say we all
So say we all !
Broke her back? Give me a Scotsman, two bottles of something green, and some duct tape and we'll have her back to normal before the end of the episode!
Damn right. Can fix anything with duct tape. Galactica wouldn't even need that much of it, but might as well use up the roll.
Fried FTL Jump Drive? Sorry, the Galactica is finished. The best she could do now, with falling structures, is land, one last time.
@@lumberluc .. Oh, such a defeatist attitude. Forget solar systems. Forget galaxies. This is the UNIVERSE of television. If they can bring people back to life, have dead people walking around, travel the stars, and patch Galactica up episode after episode up to this point, they can bring the Galactica back to life, polished & new, for at least several more seasons. Lol.
@@dwightstewart7181 Listen, if you wanted to watch Star Trek: Voyager then why don't you?
@@CoyoteSeven .. Hell, the most interesting part of Voyager was species 8472. They kicked everyone's butt, until the the writers completely changed their tactics (no quick shock & awe attacks, etc) so Janeway could easily get them.
I waited a lifetime to see a proper ending to the Battlestar Galactica series...this is pure art. One of the best things about this ending is that it tracks with the voice-over opening to the original Battlestar Galactica opening: "There are those who believe that life here, began out there, far across the Universe with tribes of humans who may have been the forefathers of the Egyptians, ot the Tolteks or the Myans." Moore is brilliant. Why did the original serires forget this important part of the BG story.
Honestly, as much as I do love the original series, this reboot did a much better job running with the original premise than the original series did. After the pilot episode the original BSG became basically a Star Trek/Star Wars hybrid.
Seeing the ship we followed and loved for 4 seasons so damaged is heartbreaking.
I watched this with my Kids. There where tears all round.
I’m a big Star Trek fan, but I have to admit, that last jump scene was epic!
Ted, no reason you can't be a fan of both (along with B5, Farscape, and Stargate SG1).
There's no reason for the BUT in this sentence. You don't have to choose a side.
@@freighttrain7143 so say we all!
Quoted after Adm./Cmdr. William "Husker" Adama last Commanding Officer Battlestar Strike Group 75 Capital ship "GALACTICA"
FTL jumps are based on the departure location and destination being taken into consideration .The fact that a song from Karas childhood would have the coordinates to Earth in that moment where they needed it most at a base she would otherwise not have know even existed is a sign of divine intervention in the show.
"well If this is the work of a higher power, they have one hell of a sense of humor."
Gelactica wasn’t just a ship. She was a character. She was the mother hen of the refugee fleet.
When she finally snapped her back you can see that she was still trying. Many of her crew likely died in her aft sections.
There is no spot quite like 1123 6536 5321
davyt0247 because for us is 0 spot
And so say we all...
There must be some kind of way out of here...
Its a XYZ coordinates.
Maybe this place is a Reset for humanity, and we'll gladly take it.
Actually - its a relative jump coordinate in regards to current possition of the ship which should be 0.
That show was the best, it will always be my favorite series - as a teen it made me believe that there's a greater reason for all of us and its awesome story will always be a part of my disillusioned self ^^
“She’s broke her back; she’ll never jump again.” Still one of the coolest lines from any science fiction TV show. RIP mighty Galactica! Job well-done. 👍🏻
Illustrates the crew's 'intimacy' with the ship
“Treat her like a lady, and she’ll always bring you home.”
What i love about the last shot is the different emotions it sends to my brain. In the first microseconds you think"oh gods(,-) ) A desolate wasteland of a planet". Then it pans out and in the next second, you hear the sad start of the beautifull song, and you start to recognize the colors and the shape of the craters..."is this..?" and then you see earth, and i always had tears in my eyes.
"The great ship, Galactica, majestic and loving, strong and protecting. Our home for these many years we have endured the wilderness of space..."
I remember that line as a child back in the early 1980s, and its quite upsetting when Tigh says "She's broke her back...she'll never jump again.".
The pain I felt of her back breaking all those years ago, is still real now, dammit.
One of the best and most underrated shows ever
The ship was, at her heart, a warship. Many warships end up as razor blades. The lucky few get to serve their purpose and end their lives (Yes, ships are alive. They have souls.) doing what they were designed to do, fight. To have an ending such as this in which she gives her all for her crew, her children, is the most noble ending a warship can ever have.
think of all the sailors who''s ships have gone down.... I had 4, one is still afloat(mothballed into a museum) but the rest have succumbed to the seafloor. it still breaks me up thinking of them going down. 2 due to weapons fire and one due to spite( no breakers yard for her) dammit! she was not going to become something else and be lost to the world...SHE IS STILL A WARSHIP! Gotta love that Dammed old Adams class Destroyer!
Hold on, are you talking about the Benjamin Stoddert as the "one due to spite?" Where it was being towed to be scrapped, and then sunk on the way to the scrap yard? Why am I getting the distinct impression from your statement that one of her crew might have helped her on her way to becoming an unintended artificial reef?
Heartbreaking death of a proud ship of the Line at the uttermost end of her strength. She did what she was born to, alone of all the fleet.... she kept her people alive and brought them home.
I found it on Netflix. And i grew up on the original. Took time to get use to it. I was off work because of a heart attack. So i binged watch it all loved it
Who remembers that later in this episode they play some of the original 1978 Galactica theme?
Enterprise: Come with me Galactica You have served your purpose, Now let's go to were our space faring sisters are waiting for us
Galactica: Thank you sister Enterprise, So say we all
Enterprise: To boldly go where none have gone before.
This scene still gives me goosebumps.
From the first battlestar constructed to the last of her kind, Galactica been through a lot and it show all the damages she have taken over the years!
2023, so say we all.
Star Trek Voyager reaches home in perfect condition. Battlestar Galactica reaches home falling to pieces and scarred to fuck.
Guess which series had better scriptwriters?
Scarred, burned, nuked, held together by duck tape and general self belief, with already before this damaged internal structure from constant jumps and 4 decades of combat.
one ship is alot more emotional making it home than the other.
wrong! voyager reaches home in a monage that glosses over what might have been some of the most interesting moments of the show, followed by a poorly thought through paradox of a time travel plot!
Scarred to frak you mean
The biggest difference is Voyager is brand new Ship
Meanwhile Galactica... IT'S BELONGS TO THE MUSEUM OR BUCKET OF BOLT 😂
As I recall, Galactica was not only an ancient tub that had forgone maintenance for 4 FRAKKING YEARS, but also only had one flight pod, about 1/2-1/4 (I'm guessing) of it's preholocaust main battery, reduced CIWS batteries, and a partial Viper wing. The fact that the Cylons couldn't kill her before she literally CAME APART AT THE SEAMS is just damned impressive.
0:26 Damn, Racetrack was a badass. Took out the Cylons from beyond the grave. The thing that really bothered me about the ending, next to no thought was given to those who gave their lives for the larger group. Even to those like Racetrack who had died only hours before and was left adrift in space. In fact, it looks like many fighters were left behind, and the pilots weren't dead!
I always thought most of the fighters were withdrawn to galactica during the cease fire period where there was the waiting for the final 5 in the command room to download the stuff. Both sides withdrew their forces. Only the fighters and Raptors that could manouver anymore were well....left for dead. But there wasnt exactly time in a scenario where everything could go to shit any second and they might have to jump any second to launch rescue teams
@@noobster4779 I know why Galactica jumped away, that's not what I'm talking about. I'm talking about the complete lack of thought given to those left behind after the fact.
Yeah right, i never noticed that she was already dead...i always thought that hit had woken her up and she fired those nukes, but nope, it was a cosmic level of "luck" or rather divine intervention....and not the only one that day!
@@prince-solomon Yep, even in death, she was meant to take them out.
Brought a tear when the fleet moved out toward the sun to the original series theme song.
Thanks for posting this Galactica is one of the bad assed motherfrakin' ships in scifi history
Watched this in a room full of about 50 other fans. We all gasped when she started falling apart. Probably the toughest death in the series was Galactica finally giving up after taking her people home.
God what a great show. Thanks to the people who made it possible. Years later and I am still loving it.
If it werent for the old good stuff all the new bad stuff would be that much worse.
These are dark times of propaganda and social engineering by assholes. Stories like these are a ray of light until we can overcome the dorks.
The Galactica's lateral structure and main frame was on the verge of breaking, due to the amount of weapons fire inflicted during her arrival and eventual FTL jump. 2nd, there is also the question of vipers and Raptors still in flight between the lull in fighting and the FTL jump. 3rd the structure of the Cylon base was by the looks of it fairly intact condition after the Raptor fired those mini nukes.
All along the Watchtower gives me goosebumps all over my body after this series.
The look on the face of the Chief...Dissapointment...No one trustworthy...No human or cylon...
Poor old girl, with a broken back she brought them to the end.
I wish the series had ended right here. I don't MIND the canon ending, but I like to think it ended right here. Got the ships together, and Galactica ends up staying in a high orbit for the rest of her days, watching over the growing colony below.
Seeing Galactica like that knowing that her life had come to a end was a hard one to watch but she did accomplish her mission...she got the human and rebel cylon races to their new home. She deserved to go out in style.
watching the Old Girl get done like that....man, it was just as upsetting as seeing Babylon 5 blow up in the final ep of said series.
Galactica is THE most badass Sci-Fi ship ever it took a shit load of crap (atmosphere jump, alot of nukes) and it survived that long with a dock to repair it fuck all other ships against the Galactica they are but twigs
SO SAY WE ALL!!
*SO SAY WE ALL!!!! NOW AND FOREVERMORE!!!!!!!!!!! HAIL!!!!!*
I look forward to seeing this show every Friday night makes me sad to think that I’ll probably never see any series This good ever again
"The Expanse"
You are welcome
What a ship she was... rest in pieces old girl...
Can't believe its been that long since it ended. Miss this show.
amen
Adama knew Starbuck had the coordinates for Earth in her subconscious and that they'd surface at the right time. That's why he told HER to jump the ship.
The most frightening part is not that they had to attempt a random jump, but that despite astronomical odds, Kara managed to jump a nearly mile long Battlestar from basically a cold start and no calculations to the Sol System. And we have NO idea how far a jump it was. Also remember, the Galactica was "upgraded" with Cylon FTL technology. So it could have been a few light years, it could have been thousands.
But Kara also proved one essential thing about FTL navigation. That anywhere and everywhere in the known universe can be distilled to a coordinate suitable for jumping. So had the colonies not fallen, and humanity had actually embraced and worked with the Cylons, any part of the galaxy, the galaxy itself, and other galaxies become accessible. Jumps of tens of thousands of light years or even intergalactic jumps could perhaps be done with a navigator similar in concept to Frank Herbert's "Guild Navigators" of Dune. A Cylon navigator, a Battlestar configured for long term colonization, and with time, Earth would have been discovered eventually. I kind of wished though that Kara Thrace has been allowed to remain with the rest of the Humans and Rebel Cylons. But she did complete her journey, and hopefully she was rewarded for her efforts.
idk how many years has past this moment always will bring tears to my eyes
So... All this time I assumed the last jump broke her because of all the hell she's gone thru up to that point... Now, though I think that is part of it, I think it's not the actual reason... Her flight pods... They didn't have time to retract them before jumping... That's what crippled her o.o
For a ship as big as Galactica, you can actually see why the pods have to be retracted to make the jump. they're literal structural supports for the design, especially when the the pod arms and beams go right through her central spine. If they at full extension, the torque load would probably exceed maximum designed load, even if it could so and emerge only partially scathed. Couple in the battle damage, the age, structural fatigue, inability to repair in any significant margin; even if the maximum designed load could be exceeded prior in the show, since they kept the damage so consistent through the show, this jump is accumulation the entire series. Look at how the pods just swing and torque their arms through the vessel. if they wanted to kill a ship believably, they picked the best way to do it without explosions.
I thought so to as to me the the fight pods were needed in the retracted pisition to add structural rigidity to the frame. I felt bad for all the people manning the topside gun batteries as the top side seems to have taken the brunt of the explosions after the jump. They almost made it yo Earth but not Quite.
Steve Wismark They would be fine, since the individual gun pods would be in one piece. Plus they were running a skeleton crew, and had no need for the pods to be crewed, since they would have been killed by the colony’s defenses.
When a moon, and then Earth came into view, this was the moment my jaw dropped.
It's well established that in the distant history of the series, we have humans on one planet, they build cylons, they fight, they split up, etc, over and over and over. There have been other Kobals, other Earths, other Twelve-Colonies, and the same thing keeps happening. On that thought, those "angels" could be ancient Cylon survivors from many cycles back, Kara's dad being one of them. Biologically perfect human duplicates, but still not. They know the future because they've seen it before.
They were in their mind. They were unseen by all but two people. How would ancient cylons do that? Cloaking technology? No, they were angels
Yeah, the weird crappy part of the series, man did they screw this up
@@insideoutsideupsidedown2218 I don't think I've ever seen a series that was perfect but this one, even with its mystical and religious flaws, came close and is still one of the best series ever made.
@@cesarcueto1995 the first 2 seasons showed so much promise. Then it was like the writers got lazy or just didn't care. They could have done several beautiful story arcs, it just became predictable and vain. It was like they were writing scripts on Friday at 230 in the afternoon. A great series easily goes 5 seasons, this one went 4 and it shows.
I always thought Kara’s dad was the last 7
The only thing that could ever kill her was herself, saving her souls on board. Best damn ship in the fleet indeed.
One of the greatest sifi scenes. All the previous seasons build to this. Fantastic.
So, are there still pieces of Galactica's hull plating on the moon? That'd be a find ranking up there with Mitochondrial Eve.
The first time I saw that specific scene I thought exactly as you do. A few of those pieces had to have found their way to the moon surface. But that's a big surface, and who knows if 150,000 years of dust would have covered the debris.
Who knows? But yeah, that would be a massive discovery.
How the Galactica buckles, twists and moans. Brilliant series.
it really shows the stress the ship went through for that final jump
Well, that’s why they decided to scuttle her, and “go native”. First time I heard of the series’ end, everyone was bitching about “Why’d they have to do that?!”
When a ship’s “back” is broken, it’s only good for making a new coral reef.
Sad, but damn fine ending for the Galactica.
Doesn't explain why they didn't stick it in a parking orbit somewhere to be found by descendents
@@sawyernorthrop4078 Because Lee "Crash-'em" Adama wanted to break the cycle (like a moron).
And thus ensuring the cycle would continue. The frakking idiot
@@PhoenixT70 could've been used as a warning about AI really.
Firestorm Axactly
I missed this when it was on,and this is the first time im watching it! Amazing! Good job! ❤❤❤
I love the idea that Earth isn’t humanities’ home world, and that this has happened many times before. Perhaps we are just another cycle.
Voyager could have had that level of damage fixed by next week's episode.
God, this was such a damn good show, I wished it had many more seasons!
Aye I think 2 more would have been perfect.
Of Gaius Baltar mating with the natives.
I loved the ending. Thought it was perfect. The clean slate thing took me by complete surprise and it made me feel new again in a way I can't explain. I think the world is headed to the end soon anyway, nice if we had some say in how and when
as the first hybrid among others said :
It has happened before, and it will happen again
again
again
The only reasons why galactica didnt break apart was because of the cylon glue shit they stock on it.
The best sci fi series ever
@xellossaxon And that's where you are wrong kiddo
@xellossaxon so why do you think that Star Trek is better than Babylon 5?
I watched this series first, then recommended (ie forced, coerced, bothered her until she finally gave in) my wife to sit through it again with me. About season 3 she started bugging me for hints to the final five and what happens at the end. My only response was "Let me say this. WE, you and I, are not really living on Earth right now."
Well done, my friend, well done.
The old girl is like a wounded animal as she groans from her injuries after her final jump. But like a living being, she pushes to continue.
Such strength is enough to bring a tear to one's eye is it not.
Damn I loved that show.
The Battlestar Galactica and The Going Merry are the only two ships I’ve ever cried for
Ulfric, You started this war, now the Empires going to put you down.
-General Taulius.
This scene and the scene of sending her on her final flight into the sun give me chills everytime.
One of the best SYFY series finale ever and emotionally as well.
That last jump brought them home to earth.
does anyone here not notice the statement "life here began out there" reflects a statement carl sagan made.
jeff vaughn that was glen a larson and his mormon beliefs intertwined into the show arc
I remember watching this scene for the first time and me and my brother both saying oh shit out loud as the ship warped and twisted after the jump
Still my favorite series of all time.
Very sad seeing Galactica make it's last jump
Galactica was built indeed to take a beating but those bastards at fleetyard that cut cornners during her construction were the worst foe she ever faced
Adama: They cut corners?
Me translating: "If those frakkers are still alive I'm going to kill them"
Imagine the story ended with them leaving the Galactica orbiting in space. In a perfect Orbit that would never degrade....and it survived through time. Until one person looked up in the sky, with a tube and glass.....
there was alternate ending that humans found the Galactica in rocks 100,000 years later. I like better than it flying it to the sun.
@@sophiawilson8696 In rocks how? Like a mountain range? Or asteroids?
@@blade913 I always disagreed with the ending. To me, it would have made perfect sense for Galactic to have arrived about 700 BC, give or take. The Colonials built a city which in legend becomes Mt. Olympus of Greek mythology. It's where the legends of Atlantis are born and how Earth absorbs parts of Colonial culture-- why modern Earth resembles Colonial civilization at its height. Maybe some of the Colonials spread out and helped or became founders of other Earth civilizations. As for Galactica, I always liked the idea of her jumping from orbit to a place on the planet. Her jumping again in space would lead to her being torn apart due to the structural damage...but if she could jump to a prepared place on the planet, solid ground, that would account for her staying intact more or less. Again, the Colonials found Olympus with Galactica standing watch over them. The basis for the myth and the Greek Gods. Much more sense than the ending they came up with...
@@Hal09i I just like the idea of something like Galactica staying in space. Then being left there, perfectly preserved. Reactors still on even if only a little. Until sometime in the vast far future, it's found again. It'd put our existence into perspective, as the only ruins we find are of less advanced civilizations.
Mary McDonnell who plays Roslin is currently one of the main characters on my favorite crime drama Major Crimes. Last season the guy who played Apollo guest starred but he played a scumbag so their characters were at odds there.
How is (was?) that show? I enjoyed its cast in the "Closer".
when Galactica jumped and you see her groaning and twisting I was hissing with pain when I watch that the first time...
The shot of the moon, panning then to Earth...greatest shot in tv history.
I came from Better Call Saul 😂😂👌... and WOW... Battlestar Galactica is in my heart ever time. This scene is Magic!!!
1:55 The line should have been, "If that is Starbuck over there, who am I?"
Even fighter pilots should always use proper grammar.
That’s almost sickening seeing Galactica’s back break that way