A View from the Gallery

Overview

As the station defends itself against an alien attack, two ordinary crewmen, Mack and Bo, try to carry on and keep the station running. Robin Atkin Downes as Byron. Lawrence LeJohn as Bo. Raymond O'Connor as Mack.
P5 Rating: 7.87

Production number: 505
Original air date: February 11, 1998
DVD release date: April 13, 2004

Written by J. Michael Straczynski
Story by J. Michael Straczynski & Harlan Ellison
Directed by Janet Greek


Plot Points

  • @@@887271921 An alien attack force of unknown origin is sweeping through local space, probing for weak planets that are ripe for invasion. The force has attacked the Gaim and Babylon 5 already, but seems to be no match for the White Star fleet.
  • @@@887272469 During the initial occupation of Narn, the Centauri tried to demoralize the resistance movement by bombing the seven largest cities on the planet.
  • @@@887272469 G'Kar spent much of his childhood in bomb shelters thanks to the Centauri bombardment.
  • @@@887272469 Brown sector is considered an undesirable assignment by the maintenance crew; it's generally staffed by new people.
  • @@@887306541 Before the Dilgar War, Franklin's father was captured by one of the factions in a civil war after his ship crashed. Though injured, he survived because a military doctor treated him despite the protestations of the other members of the faction. When Franklin saw his father alive and learned what had happened, he decided he wanted to become a doctor and that he would always care for all the injured, whether they were his own people or the enemy.

Unanswered Questions

  • @@@887271921 Who were the aliens?
  • @@@887271921 What does the device Bo used on the floor do?

Analysis

  • @@@887272469 Byron's telepathic reach is long; he was able to send his senses out into the space around the station, find a single Starfury pilot, and transmit the pilot's experiences into the mind of a non-telepath. Assuming, of course, he wasn't inventing the scene for Bo's benefit.

  • @@@887394198 Before he projected the Starfury experience into Bo's mind, Byron asked Bo whether the plight of the pilots really mattered to him. That's the same question Byron asked of Lyta before agreeing to help Garibaldi. What significance does the question have to Byron?

  • @@@889495008 Telepaths seem to have a perspective on death that's quite different from that of normals. Lyta's story about being inside the mind of a dying person ("The Paragon of Animals") is one difference. And now Byron has revealed that telepaths can read telepathic imprints on inamimate objects someone has recently died near. That ability was foreshadowed in "Walkabout," in which the new Kosh was able to view an afterimage of his predecessor's death.

  • @@@887324144 The "crawlers" Mack found in the C&C console and which were mentioned as being common in Brown Sector may be related to the infestation in "The Very Long Night of Londo Mollari," which prompted new import regulations on food.

  • @@@887394198 If Lochley was concerned enough about the safety of the station to order Sheridan and Delenn to be ready to flee in lifepods, why wasn't Draal's help enlisted in the station's defense? Does she know about Draal's promise to put the Great Machine at Sheridan's disposal ("The Long, Twilight Struggle?")

Notes

  • @@@874172141 The script for this episode was written in one day.
  • @@@887305792 The conversation between Mack and Bo about Ivanova's departure was a reference to the controversy stirred up on the net and elsewhere when Claudia Christian's departure from the show was announced.
  • @@@887739335 The price of spoo is highly volatile: near the beginning of the episode, as Mack and Bo ate lunch, Mack claimed it cost 10 credits an ounce. At the end of the episode, he said it cost 15.
  • @@@887306068 The Narn day is 31 hours long.
  • @@@887306541 Sheridan referred to Delenn's promise to see him again "in the place where no shadows fall." She spoke those words before entering the Markab isolation area in "Confessions and Lamentations."
  • @@@890719511 The incident recalled by Mack and Bo, in which Sheridan chased down someone who injured Delenn, was in "Ceremonies of Light and Dark."
  • @@@887306823 Byron seems to be a "Hamlet" fan; he quoted Hamlet's speech to Yorick's skull from Act 5, Scene 1.

jms speaks

  • @@@871230814 Harlan is working on something now, and suggested something that I then based an episode on, so we share story credit on "A View from the Gallery."

  • @@@887394198 One of the things I always do is look for ways to turn the series format on its head, and show us our characters from other perspectives, since perspective is so much at the heart of the show. Whether that's jumping forward in time, or an ISN documentary, or seeing everything through the eyes of a third party (or two), it's always a risk, because it's never what one expects to see, and a lot of people like to see what they expect to see.

  • @@@893013143 Writing a script is invariably faster than fixing an outside script. I can write a script from zero in an average of 5-7 days. On a few rare occasions it's gone longer, but when that happens, I find I lose the white-heat of the story, and it wanders a bit. In a few cases I've written a script in a day or two (A View from the Gallery all came out of my keyboard in one day, between about 4 p.m. and 3 a.m.)

  • @@@887657318 About the Ivanova-rumors scene
    It was never meant as a shot at Claudia, but rather at the folks out there whose only interest is in rumors, and starting trouble, and feeding feuds.

  • @@@887657240 Did the actors who played Bo and Mack learn to mimic you and Harlan Ellison?
    No, they didn't. What they did do...they got along famously, the two actors, and they spent their off-hours rehearsing the scenes, over and over, until they got it down to a patter, very natural. They loved the roles.

  • @@@889481855 While there was a little of Harlan in Mack, there wasn't intentionally any jms in Bo.

  • @@@887477381 Lochley's hairstyle was really severe. Did she pull it back in a hurry?
    Scoggins did exactly what you suggest, Diane. She figured, "This isn't about hair." She was awakened, and had to get to C&C fast, she ain't gonna do her hair, just ponytail it back.

    She didn't realize, in making that choice, that it would make her a) look that severe in the uniform, since she was still getting used to it, and b) give her the Ivanova "peanut-head" as she used to call it. She later realized this was a bit of an error, and has never done it since.

  • @@@887305885 Why could Byron alone project to Bo's head, while it took the whole group of telepaths to control the alien?
    Because there's a substantial difference in will and intent in making a person who's come to murder you turn around, and creating a momentary illusion in someone's head. It's the degree of effort involved.

  • @@@887394198 Garibaldi's position is hardly covert if Lochley chews him out in public.
    No, there's nothing secret in Garibaldi being head of covert intelligence, any more than it's secret who the head of the CIA is. There was no reason she couldn't say that in front of them, or anyone else; it's common knowledge.

  • @@@887823099 "Well, actually she still wouldn't discuss it in public."

    What public?

    These are two STATION PERSONNEL, who work for her, who are part of the military command structure, who have the same loyalty oaths as she has. They didn't have this conversation in the Zocalo, in front of civilians, it was in a closed area with two other STATION PERSONNEL, who are entrusted with a high enough security clearance that they can work on C&C firing consoles during heavy action, in a situation where every second counts in getting things ready for the next wing of an imminent attack.

    This is a non-starter issue, frankly.

  • @@@887477381 Where are the portholes visible from outside the station?
    Look carefully at the station. It is in segments; and at the outer wall of each of those segments, as with the sanctuary, you can get an outer view. You can see the lights from some of these areas that have portholes in the station when it's dark.

  • @@@887657240 Why wasn't Draal called?
    I don't think Draal wants to be bothered each and every time B5 is in a hassle. He specifically said he wanted to be left alone. Otherwise you also get into a "god in the box" deus ex machina situation where, "Oh, we're in trouble, quick, get Draal." Truth is, if they called him every time they got in trouble, he'd never get ANY sleep.

    Now, if B5 had failed in stopping this advance force, and the main fleet came in, then yeah, they might very well call him. But this was just an advance force, and she knew they could take it, and she was right...so where's the need for Draal? He should be a last resort ONLY.

  • @@@887963699 But wouldn't she want to minimize casualties?
    True, but is it *her* resource to do with any time she wants? It is a separate institution and operation, that has said, politely and not terribly politely, that on balance it would prefer to be left alone.

  • @@@887823099 "Hmmm, wouldn't Draal likely be aware of what was happening so close anyway? And would it not be possible that he may also be aware of how strong the force was, how soon the white stars would arrive, etc, and thus know if he was needed as a last resort?"

    You're not describing Draal, you're describing God, and he ain't in this show. For one thing, we couldn't afford him....

  • @@@887903603 "The "let them attack someone else, just not us" was actually a little startling to me. If they were going to blow these guys up, I kinda wished they'd put a little more effort into it rather than just foisting them off onto the next, perhaps less-fortunate people."

    Given that this is a little-known, distant, entire *race* out preying on weaker races, of which this was just an expeditionary force, how (short of planetary genocide) would you have stopped them? Moreover, is that really Lochley's (or B5's) mandate, to eliminate every hostile race out there?