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The Colonials
In 1978, the remnants of the 12 Colonies were a diverse
group who worshipped in different churches, came from various cultural,
ethnic and economic backgrounds, and spoke different languages.
There were saints and sinners, honorable leaders and crooked
politicians, stand-up citizens, murderers and thieves; they basically
represented all of humanity. They were led by a warrior/priest
named Adama who led through his convictions and his hard-won tactical
knowledge, who drew his strength from his family and his faith.
They spoke and dressed in such a way that it was clear that they were
human, yet not of Earth.
The Colonials of the 2003 Battlestar
Galactica bore no resemblance to that.
William Adama
Portrayed by noted actor Edward James Olmos, William
"Husker" Adama is a broken-down officer nearing retirement, in command
of a scrap-bound battlestar. He mourns the loss of his wife through
divorce, his oldest son through his inattention, and a younger son to a
flying accident. He was marking time before standing down when the
Cylons struck. As the extent of the attack became known, he
assumed overall command and fled to Ragnar Station to obtain supplies
and bullets, the Galactica having been stripped in preparation of it
becoming a museum.
William Adama is a sullen, morose man forced into
command. He is not afraid to manipulate others to obtain his
goals; he uses the gods of his people, the Lords of Kobol, as tools, and
begins his quest for supreme leadership of the Colonial survivors by
lying about knowing the location of a mythical planet the ancient texts
call "Earth".
Lee Adama
Son of William, Lee (callsign "Apollo") bears his father much hatred, blaming him for
pushing his younger brother, Zack, into becoming a fighter pilot when
Zack did not have the talent or drive to do well, which ultimately cost
Zack his life when he lost control of his Viper and crashed.
Sullen and morose, Lee
becomes CAG of Galactica, but consistently defies his father's orders
and is never really punished for his insubordination. He eventually is
given command of the Pegasus, an advanced battlestar.
Saul Tigh
Second in command of Galactica, Saul Tigh is a sullen,
morose drunkard who is kept from a dishonorable discharge through his
friendship with William Adama. Once a good officer, he is now
marking time until the Galactica is decommissioned and he is retired.
He is viewed as something of a joke among the junior crew.
Kara Thrace
Her callsign "Starbuck", Kara Thrace picks fights with her superior officers, ignores her orders,
smokes cigars, and has indiscriminate sex. She is sullen and
morose, a hot-shot
pilot, a top-notch riot-control officer, sniper, and may very well be a
Cylon - or a messiah.
Laura Roslin
As portrayed by award-winning actor Mary McDonnell, Laura
Roslin is a politician in the mold of Nancy Pelosi or Hillary Clinton -
a far-left-wing liberal Democrat. Which, naturally, makes her every decision
the right decision. She butts heads early on with
William Adama, who is just about as much a liberal-thinker as she is but
since he's military he wants a military dictatorship; they eventually
compromise and run the fleet jointly.
Laura Roslin is not always sullen and morose; she is
often melancholy, as she was diagnosed with breast cancer at the same
time as the Cylon attack and is likely to die. Unable to obtain
scientific medical care, the only available doctor being a sullen and
morose smoker of Marlboro cigarettes, she obtains and uses an illegal
herb as treatment. The treatment gives her hallucinations, which
the local priestess sees as prophetic, and we toy with the idea that
Laura Roslin might be Moses and lead her people out of Egypt. She
doesn't, although she is miraculously cured of her cancer near the end
of the first season.
Conclusion
The brief profiles of these few main characters
reflects the nature of the Colonial society and the individuals we see
in it. There are few minorities represented (although the actress
playing Sharon "Boomer" Valleri is Asian). The religion of the
Colonials is polytheistic - they worship multiple gods called "The Lords
of Kobol" (in 1978, the "Lords of Kobol" were the equivalent of saints,
interceding with God on someone's behalf).
These Colonials speak colloquial, 21st
Century North American English, complete with slang. They wear
jackets and ties found in any department store. Obviously, these
Colonials are supposed to be the current society of
North America, and they are portrayed as doltish, petty tyrants who
deserve the genocidal come-uppance the Cylons deliver.
Watching the December 2003 miniseries that introduced
this universe, many fans found themselves rooting for the Cylons.
Written by John Pickard
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