Review

iTunes TV Review - Battlestar Galactica 3.10: "The Eye of Jupiter"

"The Eye of Jupiter"
Airdate: Friday, December 15th, 2006

This is gonna be a gushy one, you guys. Everything comes together right here and it does so in the most satisfying of ways, just like when I put Buncha Crunch in my popcorn and shake it up and it coalesces into the most glorious, salty-sweet opus of deliciousness (some people will tell you that M&Ms are the chocolate-based substance of choice to mix in with popcorn, but I firmly disagree. M&Ms are too heavy and will promptly sink to the bottom, whereas Buncha Crunch is light and lovely and will mix in perfectly).

I may have perhaps found this episode even more satisfying than I would have normally because I got to watch it as it should be watched, on the big screen amongst a group of similarly-obsessed Galacticans. Thanks, TV Guide!

OK, so there's a team on Planet o' Algae, diligently gathering all of that delicious green stuff that's going to save the fleet. Algae steaks and algae cookies and algae tacos for all! Yum yum! Chief wanders off at some point and inadvertently stumbles into his own storyline -- a gigantic, temple-like thing that contains what is very likely the Eye of Jupiter, aka the key to finding Earth. At first glance, I thought this was going to be like a somewhat decrepit version of a Bajoran temple, but then the camera just kept panning up and up and up. Awesome.

Chief -- who reminisces fondly about getting all sacrilegious in his mom's prayer room with nakedness and porn mags -- is weirdly touched and drawn to the place. I love Chief having a storyline and I also love how it came about completely organically! No Stock Lifetime Movie of the Week Drug Supplier Dudes required! Cally seems to love it, too, and may I just say that she looks completely adorable in this episode? Is it the ponytail? The strategically-smeared grime? The fact that she doesn't constantly look like she wants to kill someone?

Meanwhile, Starbuck and Apollo are apparently gettin' it on now without the aid of flashback-heavy boxing matches. Lee wants them to both get divorces, but Kara ain't having it. By the way, the audience with me cracked up over Kara's devotion to the "sacrament" of marriage. Because we all know that her real devotion is to drama-fueled, frakked up relationships. She can't be involved in any other sort.

I know it seems like things can't possibly get any more awesome from here -- but trust me, they do. Because then a bunch of Cylon ships totally show up and frakkin' Baltar's voice comes over the line. I would like to take photos of the expressions that Olmos and McDonnell conjure up right here and frame them and put them on my wall for all eternity.

The Cylons come onboard (I know!) and Lucy Lawless Cylon, Cavil and Baltar have a little meeting with Adama, Roslin, and a few other assorted Galacticans. I might have to nominate this for Most Ass-Kicking Scene of the Season. It's all so good! Roslin's not-at-all-disguised disgust. Cavil's stand-up routine. Baltar's general craziness erupting into a sea of emotions that he can't handle at all. Lucy Lawless Cylon's mind-scorching hotness and glorious feathered hair and sly, sly demeanor. Everyone in the scene is simply superb.

Oh, yeah: the upshot of the scene is that the Cylons want the Eye of Jupiter. Duh. Adama counters that if the Cylons try to attack Galactica or the folks on Planet o' Algae, he'll launch every nuke he's got and destroy the Eye. And the planet and the people on it. Yikes.

The runner-up for Most Ass-Kicking Scene of the Season is totally happening while all this is going on, by the way. It's the one we've been waiting for: Boomer, Sharon, and the big Hera revelation. See, Boomer has to stay behind while the other Cylons go on their meet-and-greet -- she's not exactly welcome after the whole shooting Adama thing. So Sharon is guarding her and maintaining an excellently icy demeanor and then Boomer drops the Hera bomb. Sharon puts on a brave face, but you can tell she knows it's true. As she stalks off, Boomer yells at Sharon about how her new friends think of her as a thing -- not a person. These words make me well up for a variety of reasons: my sadness for Sharon, my goosebumpy thrill at the Hera secret finally coming out, and my need to release some pent-up tension after seeing the two Sharons finally face off. Grace Park, you rule.

Back on the basestar, Baltar and Lucy Lawless Cylon visit some more with the nonsense-spewing Hybrid and Six walks in on them and they all proceed to have the most awkward break-up ever committed to the small screen. Baltar and Lucy Lawless Cylon are all, "It's not you, it's us! It's really hard being more spiritually-enlightened than everyone else!" Six is heartbroken and also thinks they are both kind of stupid. And she's not wrong. Anyway, Baltar and Lucy Lawless Cylon head down to the surface of Planet o' Algae in order to check out the Eye of Jupiter.

Also on the surface? Centurions. Frak, yeah! Starbuck and Apollo and Anders and Dualla are all involved in defending the planet, so you know it's gonna be a party. There's a lot of dick-swinging going on between Lee and Anders and it gets even worse when Kara's Raptor is shot down while she's doing recon. Anders wants to go after his wife. Lee doesn't think they can afford to. Anders just gets progressively hotter with each passing scene.

Back on Galactica, Gaeta discovers that Planet o' Algae's sun is about to go supernova. And then Cylon ships are detected heading for the planet. Adama arms up the ol' nukes and we're done 'til January.

It all ends exactly where it's supposed to, right when your heart is lodged in your throat and your eyeballs are bugging out and you think you'll die if you don't know what happens next. The crowd yelled right here: "Awwwwwwwyeaargh!" (The "yeargh" part might have been mostly me).

Amazing. Amazing for every single character. Amazing because there are little bits of humor that cut through the mind-blowing drama. Amazing for the tear-coaxing moments like the Sharon vs. Sharon face-off.

If there's any doubt that this is the finest cast and crew working in television, this hour stomps it into the ground and spits on it. And then Lucy Lawless Cylon smiles slyly and looks gorgeous some more in her impeccably-cut, glowing white suit.

iTunes Links

Battlestar Galactica - Series
Battlestar Galactica - Season 3
"The Eye of Jupiter"


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Sarah Kuhn is an L.A.-dwelling writer with a weakness for block-style action figures, spandex-clad superheroes, and the collected works of Joss Whedon. Her work has appeared in such fine publications as Back Stage, IGN.com, Creative Screenwriting Weekly, and StarTrek.com. You can catch her geekblogging at Alert Nerd and Great Hera!.

Battlestar Galactica Archives.

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A guest said: (hide)

Better. At least we have a storyline to work with when the season restarts. Only question now is when does Sharon Go cyclon and start killing all the lying human's around her. God knows they deserve it. Wish Lucy Lawless cylon was a lesser player in all this. She's not as 'hot' as the rest yet they insist on dressing her down like she is. And why do I think Lee Adama is trading down ... oh yeah, cause he is. Love the chief but needs a bit less on the second helpers and more time in the weight room to work on those arms ... those don't look like the arms of deck monkey. And did Admiral Adama just silently call Ms. President a bitch for the 'hera manuver' ? Beginning to think Anders is going to buy the big one and take care of that whole Divorce issue. And it's the bangs on Cally with the big round eyes that give her that 'cute thing'.

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boric*acid said:

member since 13 Jun 2006 with 28 posts, unranked, send him a message or view his profile

I dunno. This was infinitely better than last week's crap-fest, but it didn't move me to quite such extremes. My interest in this series is still hanging by a thread. The highlight for me this week was Baltar pining for his former life on Galactica, that was some good characterization, that was, but the meeting of the Sharons, etc., etc. . . . I am finding the meeting of plot elements here to be veering more toward retarded than brilliant. The first two seasons were so good, but thus far my apprehensive 'Huh?' at the settling of New Caprica at the end of season two hasn't been assuaged. Come on guys, you're losing your fans right and left here . . . get those writers some stims! Whereas once I was so involved with the story I would watch for hours on end, now each week's episode sits on my hard drive collecting virtual dust after the initial viewing. Sad.

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Bosco said:

member since 03 Jun 2002 with 999 posts, unranked, send him a message or view his profile

If there's any doubt that this is the finest cast and crew working in television, this hour stomps it into the ground and spits on it.

I dunno Sarah. Dexter is pretty damned good too. Remember how back in the day, shows on the same network would occasionally mix their casts and scripts to cross-promote the shows? Or how that one time, Allie McBeal and The Practice had that special two-hour thing where you watched one on Fox, then the other on ABC? I think they should do that with BSG and Dexter.

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A guest said: (hide)

This episode was indeed a lot better than last weeks. If I were to guess, the difference was not only the fact that we're back to THE CENTRAL PLOT of the show, but also that Ron Moore was more involved. I get the distinct feeling that he doesn't have much to do with the 'one-offs' like last week's eppy, but when it comes to 'core' or story arc episodes, he pays attention.

The sad things is, I don't think he can afford to take his hand away from the show at all, yet he probably will to work on the other projects he's currently developing. This is like Buffy the Vampire Slayer all over again, which slowly but continually went downhill as its showrunner (Joss Whedon) became less and less involved in its later years. Let's hope... no, PRAY, that history does not repeat itself.

Some side notes-

- Yeah, we are now definitely dealing with 'Fat Tyrol'. What the hey? He seemed in shape only a few episodes ago.

- Callie does now appear more beautiful, and more believable as the object of the Chief's affection. I guess 'teh hotness' was always there, kudos to BSG for deciding to bring it out more.

- It is AWESOME what they're doing with Anders right now. He so looked like a 'red-shirt' waiting to be killed off not long ago, and now they're really giving him stuff to do. I love that about BSG- you think you've got it figured out, you think its going to be a cliche, and then it isn't. I hope Anders sticks around for a good long time, and I say this as someone who really hated the character when he was first introduced and thought his whole romance with Starbuck on Caprica was cheesy and forced.

- LOVED Baltar's sentimentality for Galactica and its crew. Understandable, if you've spent months aboard a basestar and its lovely but creepy crew. So fits in with his total self-obsession. He can't even see exactly why they all hate him so much, and tries to argue his case to Roslin. Perfect characterization.

- Contrary to what was said in the review, I don't think Grace Park was particularly acting up a storm in this episode. Maybe its because almost everyone else in the BSG cast is so good, but the Athena-Boomer confrontation played a bit flat. There's a way to smoulder and she didn't quite do it. But, it was 'good enough'.

- Didn't really like how the Starbuck-Apollo romance is already hitting rocks. Yeah, it was inevitable, but like so much else this season, things are playing out too fast, and we're not getting a 'meal', we're getting snacks. There should be a couple or three eppys where they're simply having hot sex and enjoying it, and are sort of living in their own little sweaty dreamland. THEN, right as you're almost forgetting they're both married... BAM, the hammer comes down. Like so many subplots this season, no patience is being shown here, and thus there is not nearly as much of an impact when things start to go bad. Oh well.

- And yes, LOVE LOVE LOVE the whole mythology thing. The Temple of Five, the Eye of Jupiter, the Final Five, the 'one who should not be named'... its all great. The quasi-mystical touches were awesome even in the original series, they're even better now.

And I'm sure that before long, we'll soon learn that the Six in Baltar's visions is... Lucifer. After all, she even says that she's 'an angel sent by God to do his will'. And as we all know, the Chrisitian Lucifer was a fallen angel.

Gotta love it.

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boric*acid said:

member since 13 Jun 2006 with 28 posts, unranked, send him a message or view his profile

Yes, so good to see the return to the search for Earth/Mythology. Let's hope they keep it up.

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