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The Long Night
You know, the last time I rewatched this Breaking Bad did not yet exist, and so despite his stints in The X-Files Bryan Cranston was not yet on my radar. It’s a bit weird, seeing his younger self playing Ranger Ericson whom Sheridan has to ask for a suicide mission. (A Breaking Bad/ Babylon 5 fusion would work in that drugs and healthcare are still an issue in the 23rd century, and I can see Walter White replying to Morden’s question first with what at the start of BB he thinks to be true (“protect my family”), only for further questioning to reveal what he confesses to be true by the end of the show (Empire business/ to feel alive). He’d probably rise to temporary King of Down Below/Dust Manufacturing while managing to ruin his family in similar ways. Would he be Garibaldi’s brother-in-law? And Jesse Pinkman starts out in a similar position (former student and small time crook), though with Jesse’s luck, he turns out to be a latent telepath, meaning he later has the Psi Corps after him as well…
Aaaanyway. The very Centauri centric The Long Night unsurprsingly is one of my all time favourite B5 episodes, as the conspiracy against Cartagia comes to its climax. Since for the first time, we see conspiracy members other than Londo, Vir and G’Kar, I wonder how and when Londo recruited them. He probably left it as late as possible for fear of discovery, but once he had the seven days schedule, he knew he needed more allies for the post-Cartagia clean up operation. Still, pitching “join me in an imperial assassination” is an extremely dangerous proposal to make to people not Vir, one imagines.
This is also one of the best Vir (and Stephen Furst as an actor) episodes. Note he’s confident enough at the initial conspirator meeting to politely but firmly argue refute one of the other conspirator’s arguments, and is listened to. Then we get Vir in familiar since s1 nervous babbling mode when he delivers the poison to Londo - and btw, his and Londo’s joking out of sheer nervous tension feels so emotionally true -, then the sheer shock when it turns out he becomes the one to actually kill Cartagia, and then what is possibly my favourite Londo & Vir scene, the aftermath of Cartagia’s assassination and Vir’s reaction to it.
It’s also one of my favourite B5 scenes, full stop. Back then, I don’t think I had seen any other show or read any other book which cared to depict the toll of assassinating such an unquestionable monster as Cartagia on a sympathetic character. You usually get either victory celebrations over an evil tyrant, or a Disney death in which the tyrant in question falls instead of being killed by one of the heroes directly. Here, the show leaves no doubt killing Cartagia was the right thing to do and still shows how the fact he has now killed with his own hands hits Vir. That he seeks refuge in drink is such an early Londo thing to do is gutwrenching to both Londo and the viewer, because Londo doesn’t want Vir to become like him. Vir’s summation of what he used to want from life - “a small title, nothing fancy, and someone who could possibly love someone like me” guts me no matter how often I rewatch with what it says about Vir’s loneliness throughout his life and the way he must have been raised. And then Londo’s reply, providing the comfort after all that hurt (“…you still have your heart, and your heart is a good one - and for that, I still envy you”), which in its raw emotional honesty shows how far they’ve come with each other.
Because the personal is always political, the scene even gets a perfect wrap-up, Vir’s sad comment after Londo told him the withdrawal from Narn is in progress and they see the celebratory fireworks. (“What is it all for? What was any of it all for?”) The second Narn/Centauri war, that is. It’s a bill which Londo still has to pay, and he knows it, though not yet.
Meanwhile, G’Kar gets yet more biblical imagery - you could call one scene “The Passion of G’Kar”, and he even falls once like Jesus carrying the cross - before playing his part in the Cartagia coup, and then simultanously experiencing the liberation of his people and, for the first time, the discovery that a gulf now exists between him and then. I dare say however G’Kar imagined Narn becoming free again, this was not it. And now he has to figure out the rest of his life.
Lastly, the Ivanova and Sheridan scene at the start of this episode is another heartwarming example of what on this particular rewatch has become one of my favourite human & human friendships on the show. Not least because I know Sheridan will indeed keep his promise to Susan here. He may have a big brother instinct towards her, but he doesn’t patronize her, and in the next episode ensures she is indeed there when the battle starts.
Into the Fire
Aka the one where as a first time watcher, I was stunned to discover the big war ends mid season. I remember this being as controversial as the way it ends back in the day, i.e. not in a mighty battle (early skirmishes to draw the Shadows and Vorlons in not withstanding) but in an independence declaration and both Vorlons and Shadows
Sidenote: now, even if JMS had known in time he’d get a fifth season, I assume the Shadow war would still have ended in s4… but not after six episodes. And still, I think in this case - as opposed to some other storylines - real life worked to advantage for the show here, because the sense of urgency in these first six episodes is so strong that I can’t imagine a more leisurely narrative providing it.
Meanwhile on Centauri Prime: Bye, bye, Morden. The way Londo takes out the Shadows on Centauri Prime is both ruthless and brilliant - btw, on this rewatch it struck me that Sheridan and Londo both organize assassinations in their respective plotlines - of Kosh 2 and of Cartagia respectively - and both need a suicide gambit from members of their team to pull off a key part of their plan - and, in a fitting karmic irony, contributes to further his own fate. By which I don’t mean his ascension to Prime MInister. Because now the Shadows and their allies have a personal reason to hate on Londo. Which they did not before. Also, by killing Morden, you could say Londo has killed one already dead. (Albeit patched up to full fashionable flair just in time to die.)
I’m with
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On a note of Vir’s emotions at this point of the show, one of my earliest B5 fanfics was Knowing Love, which is a Vir pov set after the next episode, “Epiphanies”, and mildly spoilery for it. (In that it includes information where Vir, Lennier and Marcus are around this time, and what their plans are.) Mostly it looks back on Vir’s story so far, though.
The other episodes