vacantlook
Super Moderator
That was my impression too, PR.
My impression, though it certainly bears rechecking the intro to that section, was that the version that appears was written down after the pilot and before the series went into production.
The biggest surprise, to me, was that the original plan did NOT have Sinclair becoming Valen. I've more or less always assumed his becoming Valen was in the plan from the beginning, but this outline states otherwise.
Was Valen even mentioned in the first season?
I think his name was mentioned only once in S1 in "Babylon Squared" in the beginning of Delenn's speech before the Grey Council-"Summoned I come.In Valen's name..."
Maybe JMS didn't want to reveal much about Valen so early in the series and he chose not to mention his name until that.
Obviously I can't say much about season two plans at this time, since
doing so would destroy the intent of doing some things folks may not expect.
All I can say is that the deeper we got into the series, and the more I *saw*
the dynamics of the characters, the more I kept looking back and forth, from
the Minbari to Sinclair, Sinclair to Minbari, and thinking...hmmm...y'know
what'd be *real* neat...?
Which is all I can say on that for now...except to add that in any novel,
there's always some surprises that the author didn't plan for, and the key is
to be open to that.
I'm away from my book right now but I can answer generally.Two questions for those with the script books:
As far as I can tell, it would have been a different arc for Sakai. We don't know how it happens but Sakai's memory is taken away leading to Sinclair and Delenn growing close. The Shadows don't seem to be identified as such until later in the series.1. According to the original outline, would Sakai have pretty much followed Anna Sheridan's path? Or would she have been removed from the picture in another way? As a follow up, would Sinclair have gone to Z'Ha'Dum too? Without the Chaos/Order dynamic, the whole need to learn what the war was really all about does not seem like it would have been as important.
Again, we don't have any details since it's only an (about) 8 page outline but while there is a fight against Earth, Clark isn't mentioned by name. That's not to say that he or a character like him wasn't planned but it seems that the battle with Earth would likely be for very different reasons.2. Any major changes in the fight against Clark storyline?
Two questions for those with the script books:
1. According to the original outline, would Sakai have pretty much followed Anna Sheridan's path? Or would she have been removed from the picture in another way? As a follow up, would Sinclair have gone to Z'Ha'Dum too? Without the Chaos/Order dynamic, the whole need to learn what the war was really all about does not seem like it would have been as important.
2. Any major changes in the fight against Clark storyline?
B...I know it is hardly an objective analysis but I thought Sinclair and Sakai worked well as a couple. There was something about two people finally "getting it right" after all those years that resonated with me.
Does the outline give any indication of who was responsible for wiping her memory? I know the outline is vague on how it happens so that probably means it is silent on who is responsible but I wanted to ask just the same. It seems like it would probably be someone from Psi Corps, but it could have been a real twist if Delenn was behind it to create an opening with Sinclair. That does seem unlikely but it would have been really interesting story wise.
Z'ha'dum is not mentioned in the outline. The war with the Shadows in the outline seems slower with the resolution of that conflict not happen in Babylon 5 but instead happened in the idea for a spinoff called Babylon Prime. The chaos/order dynamic isn't mentioned at all in the outline. The only description of the nature of the conflict between the Shadows and the Vorlons in the outline is that the Shadows are fighting to free worlds of the Vorlons' influence but doing so with the desire to rule everything themselves.
Clark is not mentioned at all in the outline -- I can't remember a civil war between Earth factions either. Babylon Prime would've had Earth against Sinclair because they've been given information to make them believe that Sinclair is a traitor.
IIRC, according to the outline, there really isn't any open warfare against the Shadows until Babylon Prime. In the series proper, you just have the Shadows manipulating the Centauri and other races, but they don't attack openly as they started to do in "Interludes and Examinations" in the real show.
There was a major Shadow attack against a giant -- "hundreds of miles long" -- Vorlon ship. But that was going to be done covertly by the Shadows so that Earth could be blamed for the resultant "hundreds of thousands of Vorlon deaths", so yeah no full-on war until BP. I kind of would like to have seen such a scene, personally. The Vorlon ship so huge sounds intriguing.
That would seem to show the Vorlons as weaker than they ended up in B5. It really does not seem feasible to blame humans for the destruction of a Vorlon ship. Maybe the Shadows could frame the Minbari but the Humans?
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.