Contents: Overview - Backplot - Questions - Analysis - Notes - JMS
The Centauri situation escalates. Lyta and Franklin visit the Drazi homeworld on a mission of mercy at Vir's request. Wayne Alexander as Drakh.
P5 Rating: 9.43 Production number: 518 Original air date: June 17, 1998 DVD release date: April 13, 2004 Written by J. Michael Straczynski Directed by John Flinn III
But it's possible that a Keeper isn't implanted all at once. In "Racing Mars," Captain Jack's Keeper grew back after most of it had been removed; maybe a Keeper is implanted by placing a spore of some kind in the victim and letting it grow. In that case, Londo may indeed have been implanted and the Regent may have been referring to the amount of time it takes a Keeper to become active.
And a boot or two.
Funny thing about that. When I wrote this, this was the first part of a very tight two parter (well, actually, it's part 4 of a five parter; if you watch them straight through, one dovetails right smack into the next, it's one really huge episode). Anyway, for the fifth one, the next one to air, I decided to do a recap in the teaser, a "Previously on Babylon 5..." compilation. Hadn't done it with the others, but just decided to do it with this one, since it picks up seconds after the other.
Later, after putting it together, in a phone call with TNT, they told me about the decision to put in a break after this episode. "So you may want to consider putting a recap into the teaser, since this is a two-parter and it's been a long time and that's something you didnt' anticipate."
"Well, actually...I already did that."
A long pause. "How did you know?"
"I didn't."
Scared 'em real good with that one.
Ding!
It was ALL there, more or less in plain view.
And without it, without all that careful and deliberate setup, this episode (and especially those that follow) would never have played as well, if at all.
This was the point I was going for with people who were saying that the Byron thing was totally extraneous. To get Lyta to this point as a character -- remembering her "I'll sue" tirade as the last time she even sorta kinda got mad -- she would *have* to go through the fire, and lose something that meant enough to push her to this point. So you had to let the relationship with Byron go full term, follow it over time, and see what it meant to her to justify and motivate what happens to and with her in the last part of the season.