BSG coming back darker in Season 3

Personally I can’t wait for Season 3 to start. It has been too many months without some decent scifi to watch, on tv or the movies. Unfortunately we have confirmation that Stargate SG1 will not have another season after this 10th. Eureka is so so and nothing else great is on the horizon for us spacers. So we are left with Lost and BSG. Promising to be much darker even than it already was in the first two seasons, I am counting the days to october in expectation of my weekly dose of adrenalin. Nothing else can ease the addiction. In this article in Now Playing Magazine we can hear from producer Ron Moore and Edward James Olmos about the upcoming Season.

Written by Cindy White

“The first two seasons of Battlestar Galactica werent exactly lighthearted affairs, but according to executive producer Ron Moore and star Edward James Olmos, the upcoming third year will be its darkest yet. In separate interviews, the two recently spoke to Now Playing about where the show is going and whats in store for both the human and Cylon factions (Hint: Its not going to be pretty for either side).

The writing, the story, the character development is devastating, Olmos says. I cannot tell you. I worked last week and Ive never had a week like that in my life, because everything thats happening to the human species is into the final steps of its annihilation. So every single moment becomes the end of the existence of the human species, and its deadly when you are working at that level constantly. The attention is overwhelming. Both Mary [McDonnell] and I are sitting there going, My God. This is too much.

Olmos revealed that the humans will use a pandemic to try and annihilate a race (he didnt say which one, but its not difficult to guess) by infecting them with a deadly virus. He also talked about returning to the directors chair for the 12th episode, which will be the first to air after the mid-season hiatus. The tone of the episode will be quite different from his previous effort, last seasons Tigh Me Up, Tigh Me Down.

‘This one will be more connected to the main body, he says. The other one was a comedy. We decided to try one in the first season just to lighten things up. And it worked well. I thought it worked very, very well. It was very different, and it introduced some very strong characters. And in turn, those characters now are going to devastate you. What happens to them is brutal. Its very sad.

For executive producer Ron Moore, the turn to the dark side is something that was always part of the shows natural progression. I think we deal with some dark material in the third season, Moore agrees. I dont know that its any darker than anything weve dealt with previously, but the show continues to sort of take risks and be provocative and do challenging stuff. Im happy about that. But the show is not nihilistic. The show is not a bleak show about really depressing things. I think its really just about how people react and how people are and how people behave in situations and thats what youre tuning in to see.

Moore adds that hes not worried about the series getting too serious. Theres always a light at the end of the tunnel. The shows always had a dark premise at its heart, [but] the shows also always been about hope and the human condition and the fact that these people struggle on in spite of everything that happens to them.‘”


The season premiere of Galactica airs Friday, Oct. 6 on SCI FI Channel.