Alex, to respond to something you just said about JMS' journey to get this story onscreen:
As a television show, Babylon 5's story has the distinct, nauseous pleasure of being able to be taken one of two ways by the media, both of which can be justified in the "devil can quote scripture to serve his purpose" fashion. Bad reviews will most likely use the second, I've noticed, and good reviews will most likely use the first. It's all about how you want your audience to view the show before you even start in on the minutiae. I'll be as accurate as I possibly can be off the top of my head....
1) The Little Show That Could. No matter what happened, through fire, fog, snow, Shadows, and TNT, Babylon 5 endures. At the end of Season Four, PTEN kicked the bucket, and the show was left without a home, a fantastic piece of television literature looking for a home because they were piteously evicted, sort of like a sweet old couple are kicked out of a home that's being demolished because of structural problems that appeared when the home was built. They finally found a sponsor in TNT, who carried them through and even picked up a sequel to this award-winning show. Crusade, however, was on the verge of being wrested away from JMS' creative control; they wanted sex, guns, fights, ludicrous storylines like setting Dureena up to be raped, and as any creative professional with the guts, the chutzpah, and the POWER to do so (not every writer in Hollywood can refuse to be rewritten and get away with it as much as he does), JMS refused to compromise his beliefs and views about how his story should be told. Sci-Fi, seeing the potential in the show, picked it up, financed a new movie - and look at this new movie, with potential up the wazoo! JMS did it once, he's doing it in the comics and in Jeremiah, and he can do it again with Rangers.
2. The Star Trek Wannabe That Has Overstayed Its Welcome. It was nice when it was on, but Babylon 5 should remain what it was: Babylon 5, and JMS should stop trying to beat a goose that lays golden eggs if it keeps on getting killed by the network, shouldn't he? At the end of Season Four, Babylon 5 was almost cancelled (note: I've noticed good reviews will almost never use the word "cancelled" when having to do with a sequel series), but TNT took in the failing show and gave it a home, but, unfortunately, like an old couple with late-stage cancer in a nursing home, the show couldn't overcome those problems at the end of Season 4. However, the show got good ratings, so episodes of a sequel were commissioned. Although there were rumors of TNT executives wishing to become more involved with the creative decisions surrounding Crusade, the real reason why it was cancelled was because it was just a bad show. The Sci-Fi Channel is just beating a dead golden goose over and over again, trying to eke money out of a show that shouldn't have been a franchise in the first place - I mean, one of the sequels would have been stellar, right? JMS is too overwhelmed, too overstretched between all his various projects, including Jeremiah, to really be able to handle another Babylon 5 series. Maybe he's lost his vigor.
I'll give you three guesses to figure out which one I agree with, and the first two don't count...
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channe@cryoterrace | "I wonder," said Frodo, "but I don't know. And that's the way of a real tale."
[This message has been edited by channe (edited January 23, 2002).]