Battlestar Galactica Review

Battlestar Galactica
With the 12 colonies of man all but destroyed by the evil Cylon Alliance, and the battle fleet in ruins, the sole remaining battlestar, Galactica, leads a ragtag convoy of ships in search of the mythical planet of Earth. The first stop is Carillon, where the Cylons have laid a trap.

by Ian Nathan |
Published on
Release Date:

13 Apr 1978

Running Time:

148 minutes

Certificate:

PG

Original Title:

Battlestar Galactica

Although a pilot for a subsequent American TV series, Battlestar Galactica was released as a full theatrical movie in Britain to cash in on the demand for sci-fi cowboy movies in the mould of George Lucas magnificent Star Wars. Although evidently a rip-off — there were hints of Lucas even taking the matter to the courts — this spacebound wagon train, whose limits are readily apparent, is great fun.

That is down to creator Glen A. Larson’s keen nose for a story, and grasp that what made Lucas’s blockbuster sing was fundamentally a punchy set of memorable characters with really cool names. Larson fully obliges here: Richard Hatch as the noble, straight-faced hero Apollo, the splendid Dirk Benedict as smart-tongued Han Solo clone Starbuck, and leathery Lorne Greene lending his wise basso-tones to their leader Adama. John Ireland’s dialogue even manages a sly reflexive irony: “Ten thousand light years from nowhere, our planet shot to pieces, people starving, and* I'm* gonna get us in trouble?” smarts the ever-chirpy Starbuck.

Their adventure rattles on at a great pace, dividing its attentions between the initial escape after human betrayal leads the forbidding Cylons, with their oscillating red eye-bulb, warbling computer speak and shiny metal hides, to crash the human party, and a pitstop on decadent planet Carillon. Here, the plot hides a particularly nasty about-face for the do-gooder heroes.

It may just be a launching pad for the popular series that jetted onto BBC2, but there is thoroughness to the script that allows the pilot to stand-alone. The effects too, while never touching Star Wars’ galactic ballet, are vigorous and exciting, the human’s spacecraft designed with natty Aztec motifs. The head-rush whoosh as the fighters launch along glittering tubes into the battle was just ace.

Lots of retro space cowboy fun to be had...
Just so you know, we may receive a commission or other compensation from the links on this website - read why you should trust us