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Babylon 5



First Aired in 1994

In the year 2258, it is ten years after the Earth-Minbari War. Commander Sinclair takes command of a giant five-mile-long cylindrical space station, orbiting a planet in neutral space. At a crossroads of interstellar commerce and diplomacy, Cmdr Sinclair (2d season Captain Sheridan) must try to establish peace and prosperity between various interstellar empires, all the while fighting forces from within the Earth Alliance. It is a precarious command, particularly given that sabotage led to the destruction of Babylon stations 1, 2, and 3 and 4 vanished without trace.

Babylon 5 is an epic science fiction television series created, produced, and largely written by J. Michael Straczynski. The music for the TV series and related TV movies was composed by Christopher Franke. The pilot movie, The Gathering, aired on February 22, 1993, and the regular series initially aired from January 26, 1994 through November 25, 1998, first in syndication on the short-lived Prime Time Entertainment Network, then on cable network TNT. Because the show was aired every week in the United Kingdom on Channel 4 without a break, the last four or five episodes of the early seasons were shown in the UK before the US. The series won several awards, including two Hugos for Best Dramatic Presentation.

The series, often held as a good example of space opera, consists of a five-year story arc taking place over five seasons of 22 episodes each. The hub of the story is a large space station named Babylon 5; the five mile (8 km) long, 2.5 million ton rotating colony is built to be a gathering place for fostering peace through diplomacy, trade, and cooperation. Babylon 5 is a center of political intrigue and conflict, and eventually becomes a pawn in a massive interstellar conflict from which it emerges with a victory over forces of darkness and chaos, albeit at great cost. This is reflected in the opening monologue of each episode which includes "last, best hope for peace" in season one but changes to "last, best hope for victory" by season three.

Having long been a science fiction fan himself, Straczynski was determined to produce a science fiction series for adults where, for once, things would be done properly: consistent technology, "no kids or cute robots", no new "particle of the week" to tie up a plot. It was not a utopian future — there is greed and homelessness. It was not a place where everything was the same at the end of the day — main characters grow, develop, live, and die. An unabashedly political show, it was always ready to deal with politics, sex, religion, and philosophy.

The Babylon 5 Station unlike most television shows, this series was conceived as a novel, with a defined beginning, middle, and end. In addition, even tie-in novels, comic books, and short stories play a significant part of the overall story.

The overall story of the show was plotted out in some detail before the first episode was ever shot. Having a (loosely) predetermined plot was advantageous in many respects, as longer-term planning greatly reduced the working budget required on sets and costumes. The planned plot arc, allowing largely fixed sets and economies of scale, favorably compared with more episodic series which might require an entirely new set of props or costumes for each episode.

Though conceived as a whole, and with Straczynski writing most of the episodes (including all of the episodes of the third and fourth seasons, a feat never before accomplished in American television), it was necessary to adjust the plotline to accommodate external influences. The replacement of actor Michael O'Hare as the station commander after the first season, the unexpected departure of actresses Claudia Christian and Andrea Thompson, and the necessity to compress the fourth season story arc due to fears of cancellation proved to be major challenges. Consequently, season four is loaded with a dizzying amount of plot, and the final episode shot for season four was held back to be the ending for the fifth season, and thus the entire series.

Babylon 5 is often cited as raising the bar for science fiction television, using an arc-driven storytelling style now prevalent in science fiction and in mainstream drama. Straczynski anticipated the rise of digital television, shooting the series in 16:9 format rather than the normal 4:3 - a full six years before ER and many other dramas began doing the same thing. Babylon 5 also revolutionized the use of computer technology in creating visual effects at a time when using models and miniatures was the norm. It was also the first sci-fi series to respect Newtonian physics in its space battle sequences, since utilised in other series such as Joss Whedon's Firefly and the Sci-Fi Channel version of Battlestar Galactica (2003).

Show Stars: Michael O'Hare - Cmdr. Jeffrey Sinclair (1994), Bruce Boxleitner - Captain/President John J. Sheridan (1995-1998), Claudia Christian - Susan Ivanova (1994-1997, 1998), Jerry Doyle - Michael Garibaldi (1994-1998), Tracy Scoggins - Capt. Elizabeth Lochley (1998), Mira Furlan - Delenn (1994-1998), Andreas Katsulas - G'Kar (1994-1998), Peter Jurasik - Londo Mollari (1994-1998), Richard Biggs - Dr. Stephen Franklin (1994-1998), Bill Mumy - Lennier (1994-1998), Stephen Furst - Vir Cotto (1994-1998), Andrea Thompson - Commercial Telepath Talia Winters (1994-1995), Patricia Tallman - Commercial Telepath Lyta Alexander (1996-1998), Jason Carter - Ranger Marcus Cole (1995-1997), Jeff Conaway - Zack Allan (1995-1998)

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Episodes:


Season 1:
1. The Gathering
2. Midnight on the Firing Line
3. Soul Hunter
4. Born to the Purple
5. Infection
6. The Parliament of Dreams
7. Mind War
8. The War Prayer
9. And the Sky Full of Stars
10. Deathwalker
11. Believers
12. Survivors
13. By Any Means Necessary
14. Signs and Portents
15. TKO
16. Grail
17. Eyes
18. Legacies
19. A Voice in the Wilderness (1)
20. A Voice in the Wilderness (2)
21. Babylon Squared
22. The Quality of Mercy
23. Chrysalis

Season 2:
1. Points of Departure
2. Revelations
3. The Geometry of Shadows
4. A Distant Star
5. The Long Dark
6. Spider in the Web
7. Soul Mates
8. A Race Through Dark Places
9. The Coming of Shadows
10. GROPOS
11. All Alone in the Night
12. Acts of Sacrifice
13. Hunter, Prey
14. There All the Honor Lies
15. And Now for a Word
16. In the Shadow of Z'ha'dum
17. Knives
18. Confessions and Lamentations
19. Divided Loyalties
20. The Long, Twilight Struggle
21. Comes the Inquisitor
22. The Fall of Night

Season 3:
1. Matters of Honor
2. Convictions
3. A Day in the Strife
4. Passing Through Gethsemane
5. Voices of Authority
6. Dust to Dust
7. Exogenesis
8. Messages from Earth (1)
9. Point of No Return (2)
10. Severed Dreams (3)
11. Ceremonies of Light and Dark
12. Sic Transit Vir
13. A Late Delivery from Avalon
14. Ship of Tears
15. Interludes and Examinations
16. War Without End (1)
17. War Without End (2)
18. Walkabout
19. Grey 17 Is Missing
20. And the Rock Cried Out, No Hiding Place
21. Shadow Dancing
22. Z'ha'dum

Season 4:
1. The Hour of the Wolf
2. What Ever Happened to Mr. Garibaldi?
3. The Summoning
4. Falling Towards Apotheosis
5. The Long Night
6. Into the Fire
7. Epiphanies
8. The Illusion of Truth
9. Atonement
10. Racing Mars
11. Lines of Communication
12. Conflicts of Interest
13. Rumors, Bargains and Lies
14. Moments of Transition
15. No Surrender, No Retreat
16. The Exercise of Vital Powers
17. The Face of the Enemy
18. Intersections in Real Time
19. Between the Darkness and the Light
20. Endgame
21. Rising Star
22. The Deconstruction of Falling Stars

Season 5:
1. No Compromises
2. The Very Long Night of Londo Mollari
3. The Paragon of Animals
4. A View from the Gallery
5. Learning Curve
6. Strange Relations
7. Secrets of the Soul
8. Day of the Dead
9. In the Kingdom of the Blind
10. A Tragedy of Telepaths
11. Phoenix Rising
12. The Ragged Edge
13. The Corps is Mother, the Corps is Father
14. Meditations on the Abyss
15. Darkness Ascending
16. And All My Dreams, Torn Asunder
17. Movements of Fire and Shadow (1)
18. The Fall of Centauri Prime (2)
19. The Wheel of Fire
20. Objects in Motion
21. Objects at Rest
22. Sleeping in Light



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