The Passage (Battlestar Galactica)
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“The Passage” | |
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Battlestar Galactica episode | |
The first wave of the fleet approaches the Algae Planet |
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Episode no. | Season 3 Episode 10 |
Guest stars | Lucy Lawless |
Written by | Jane Espenson |
Directed by | Michael Nankin |
Production no. | 310 |
Original airdate | December 8, 2006 |
Episode chronology | |
← Previous | Next → |
"Unfinished Business" | "The Eye of Jupiter" |
Episode chronology |
"The Passage" is the tenth episode of the third season from the science fiction television series Battlestar Galactica. It aired on December 8, 2006.
[edit] Plot
Survivor Count: 41,420
The fleet's food supply has been contaminated with radiation, forcing everyone to subsist on rapidly dwindling food rations. Athena, who has been doing reconnaissance, discovers a planet where abundant algae is found that can be used as a nutritious, if unappetizing, food source. Unfortunately, the planet is located on the other side of a vast, highly radioactive star cluster. Not only is the cluster dangerous, but also the intense light and radiation is blinding to both the naked eye and conventional navigational systems. It is unfortunately too big to go around. The fleet must cross the cluster or risk starvation. Because of the size of the cluster, each ship must jump to a point within it before jumping again to the planet.
Members of Galactica's staff discuss their options, and Major Apollo proposes that each civilian ship be paired with a Raptor, which will serve as a guide for each ship and direct it safely towards the algae planet. The Raptors are chosen for the mission because their navigational systems are shielded against radiation. Each pilot is issued with a white radiation warning badge which turns solid black when the pilot has been exposed to their maximum safe level of radiation. At that point that pilot is to be pulled off the operation.
Following the strategy meeting, Kat is approached by a disheveled-looking man named Enzo who addresses her as "Sasha". After trying to ignore him, Kat finally tells him emphatically that she is Captain Louanne Katraine, and to stay away from her. She walks away, while the man tells her she cannot deny who she really is. Enzo continues to harass her, trying to get her to cooperate in some unnamed and apparently criminal activity. It is evident that the two know each other, despite Kat's protestations to the contrary.
Starbuck spies on one of their conversations, and she later questions Enzo and then confronts Kat about what she saw. Kat tearfully admits she was once a "trucker" — a smuggler of drugs and of criminals, and that she stole the identity of a woman who had died prior to the Cylon attack on the Colonies. Starbuck says that one theory behind the success of the Cylon attack was that the Cylons might have infiltrated the planet with the help of smugglers like Kat. Kat, deeply shaken by the insinuation that she is a traitor, says she operated at a time before the Colonials knew some Cylons had human appearances. If any were Cylon she didn't know of it. She begs Starbuck not to tell Admiral Adama, and that she will tell him herself.
Elsewhere at the Cylon fleet, Gaius Baltar grows concerned about the strange behavior of Number Three, who has been periodically wandering off. Wondering what she could possibly be up to, he learns from Number Six that her behavior is causing concern among the other Cylons as well. Baltar confronts Three, learning that she keeps committing suicide and resurrecting, over and over again. During her resurrection, Three says she sees the five humanoid Cylons that have yet to be revealed, even drawing pictures of them. Baltar, still wondering if he could be a Cylon himself, asks if he is one of the remaining five, however, Three says her visions are very abstract and she can give no further details.
Meanwhile, back at the Colonial fleet, many of Galactica's pilots participate in Apollo's plan, in which the civilian ships transfer most of their population to Galactica, while the ships are piloted by a skeleton crew. Each Raptor pilot must make sure that the civilian ship under his or her guidance does not get lost while within the blinding, turbulent cluster, and then transmit correct jump coordinates to the ship. As the mission proceeds, the pilots become more and more fatigued and sickened by the intense radiation. Kat in particular is traumatized by the loss of two ships, the Adriatic (which was being escorted by Hot Dog) and the Carina (which was being escorted by Kat herself).
Kat is plunged into a deep state of depression from a combination of guilt about her false identity, the loss of the ships, and the physical and psychological stresses of flying through the cluster itself. In her depression, she steals a white radiation badge (out of Helo's locker) and uses it to replace her own black one. She also conceals that her hair has started to fall out due to overexposure to radiation.
Kat makes one last attempt to guide a civilian ship, the Faru Sadin through. This time, like the others, the civilian ship becomes adrift and hidden by the brilliant light of the cluster. The mid-cluster jump point rapidly becomes unstable and even more lethal, prompting Admiral Adama to order all Raptors to jump to the planet, whether or not they have located their associated civilian ship. Kat vows not to lose another ship and disobeys the order. In her persistent efforts to locate the lost ship, she is exposed to a lethal dose of radiation. She successfully guides the ship to the algae planet. When she returns to Galactica, she is greeted with a round of applause from Adama and much of the Galactica crew, Starbuck included. However, she collapses as soon as she gets out of her Raptor.
Back on the Cylon Basestar, Three and Baltar visit the Basestar's hybrid. The female humanoid lays in a liquid chamber uttering an incoherent rant. Believing every cryptic word the Hybrid utters has meaning, Baltar gets close to her to listen. Against Three's advice, Baltar tries to touch the Hybrid, who immediately grabs Baltar's arm telling him about "the husband of Hera" and to look for his "eye". Baltar recalls Hera's husband as the god, Jupiter, and determines that the "Eye of Jupiter" is something they must look for, believing it to be another clue to finding Earth.
Back at the Colonial fleet, Starbuck, now remorseful for what she had said to Kat, visits the dying pilot in sickbay. She gives her a bottle of sleeping pills, "just in case she needs them". Admiral Adama also visits Kat and tells her that he is promoting her again to the rank of CAG, because she had always tried to protect the people under her command. Kat is hesistant to accept, and tells Adama that there is something about her that he should know. Adama just says that whatever she was going to say wouldn't change what she had already accomplished.
The scene changes to a briefing room. All of the Galactica's pilots are gathered in front of a chart listing the command structure of the flight group. The pilots somberly watch as Admiral Adama swaps Kat's name with Apollo's, so making her the CAG.
Later, Starbuck is shown, trying to hold back tears as she affixes Kat's picture to the wall commemorating the missing and deceased. Apollo watches behind her.
[edit] Continuity
In this episode, Athena is shown to be much more resistant to radiation poisoning than a human. This is contrary to the mini-series, where the original copy of Leoben Conoy encountered in the munitions depot at Ragnar Anchorage is portrayed to be especially vulnerable to radiation.
[edit] Trivia
- This episode re-uses a plot element from the pilot episode of the original Galactica series "Saga of a Star World". In that episode, the fleet's food supply has been contaminated and the fleet is forced to go through a dangerous and bright nova to reach a planet with food. Similarly, the second episode, "Lost Planet of the Gods", ends with a new Viper pilot dying on a hospital bed.
- Kara tacks the picture of Kat next to the photo of the girlfriend of a fallen Viper pilot that Kat had placed on the wall in the episode "Scar".
- The Hybrid makes the possibly fourth wall-breaking statement, "Throughout history, the nexus between man and machine has spawned some of the most dramatic, compelling, and entertaining fiction".
- Oddly though, Hera is the wife of Zeus, the Greek equivalent of Jupiter . Hera's equivalent in Roman mythology is Juno . Thus, the husband of Hera was Zeus, not Jupiter.