McHorde-Trooper
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Apr 24, 2002
- Messages
- 236
Now I like the show enough to keep watching, but I do have some nitpicks about it.
Since these aren't nitpicks for specific episodes.
They relate to storylines and themes that run through almost every episode.
Just in case I'll put them in spoiler blocks.
Since these aren't nitpicks for specific episodes.
They relate to storylines and themes that run through almost every episode.
Just in case I'll put them in spoiler blocks.
Boomer is a Cylon . . I think they beat the life out of that story. We've known from almost the first few moments.
Such a story line should be subtle, but instead they hit us over the head with it in almost every episode.
A storyline like Boomer should be subtle and intriguing, but instead it's frustrating. When will they get it?
The Caprica-Boomer storyline seems pointless. So, far it's an episode or two
worth of drab plot that is cut up into niblets.
Ms. Blond and Robotic (No. 6)
The sexuality is still a little over emphasized. Give me Science Fiction not Si-Fi-Sex.
Cylons-Believe in One God
At first it seemed sort of ironic, humans believe in the Gods, but robots know there can only be one. That would make it somewhat cleaver, but it's so in your face most of the time.
Where are they going with this storyline?
Does the Cylon's view of God involve any morals?
The earth-thy realalism of the show that was so promising in the pilot . .
[Seen in stuff like the bodies flying off into space]
It sometimes drown out by everyting else.
Such a story line should be subtle, but instead they hit us over the head with it in almost every episode.
A storyline like Boomer should be subtle and intriguing, but instead it's frustrating. When will they get it?
The Caprica-Boomer storyline seems pointless. So, far it's an episode or two
worth of drab plot that is cut up into niblets.
Ms. Blond and Robotic (No. 6)
The sexuality is still a little over emphasized. Give me Science Fiction not Si-Fi-Sex.
Cylons-Believe in One God
At first it seemed sort of ironic, humans believe in the Gods, but robots know there can only be one. That would make it somewhat cleaver, but it's so in your face most of the time.
Where are they going with this storyline?
Does the Cylon's view of God involve any morals?
The earth-thy realalism of the show that was so promising in the pilot . .
[Seen in stuff like the bodies flying off into space]
It sometimes drown out by everyting else.