List of Battlestar Galactica (1978 TV series) and Galactica 1980 episodes
Battlestar Galactica and Galactica 1980 are American science fiction television series', produced in 1978 and 1980 by Glen A. Larson and starring Lorne Greene, Richard Hatch and Dirk Benedict.
Series overview
Season | Title | Episodes | Originally aired | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
First aired | Last aired | |||||
1 | Battlestar Galactica | 24 | September 17, 1978 | April 29, 1979 | ||
2 | Galactica 1980 | 10 | January 27, 1980 | May 4, 1980 |
Episodes
Season 1: Battlestar Galactica (1978–79)
No. | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1–3 | "Saga of a Star World" | Richard A. Colla | Glen A. Larson | September 17, 1978 | |||||
In a distant part of the cosmos, the human race is embroiled in a thousand-year-long war with the robotic Cylons. Aided by the human traitor Baltar, an armistice turns out to be a ruse by the Cylons, who launch a massive surprise attack against the Twelve Colonies of humanity, almost wiping them out. Only the Battlestar Galactica, led by Commander Adama, and a ragtag fleet of 220 civilian ships survive, beginning a journey across the galaxy in search of long-lost sister civilization Earth. But the Cylons will not rest until every last human has been eliminated, and pursue them across the galaxy. | |||||||||
4–5 | "Lost Planet of the Gods" | Christian I. Nyby II | Glen A. Larson, Donald Bellisario | September 24, 1978 | |||||
October 1, 1978 | |||||||||
With many warriors suffering from an unknown ailment, the Galactica recruits new Viper pilots—mostly young women, including Apollo's new bride, Serina. Led by Adama's spiritual interpretations, the fleet enters a vast magnetic void, emerging at the planet Kobol, the legendary world from which humanity originated. Before Adama can discover Earth's location from the inscribed hieroglyphs, a Cylon attack destroys the sacred city on Kobol—and claims the life of Serina. | |||||||||
6 | "The Lost Warrior" | Rod Holcomb | Teleplay by : Donald Bellisario Story by : Herman Groves | October 8, 1978 | |||||
Marooned on a frontier planet, Apollo befriends a young widow and her son, rallying a town against "Red Eye"— a likewise marooned, yet memory-damaged, Cylon centurion gunslinger. The storyline is very much reminiscent of the classic western Shane. | |||||||||
7 | "The Long Patrol" | Christian I. Nyby II | Donald Bellisario | October 15, 1978 | |||||
After losing an experimental Viper to a smuggler, Starbuck is imprisoned on a penal colony, but this new environment holds a possible clue to the location of Earth. | |||||||||
8–9 | "Gun on Ice Planet Zero" | Alan J. Levi | Teleplay by : Donald Bellisario, Glen A. Larson & Michael Sloan Story by : John Ireland, Jr. | October 22, 1978 | |||||
October 29, 1978 | |||||||||
Herded into a confined area of space by the Cylons, the fleet must pass within close range of a lethal Cylon pulsar cannon—unless an expedition of officers from the Galactica and a team of convicts can penetrate the ice-bound fortress housing the weapon and destroy it. Apollo, Starbuck, and Boomer lead a team of cutthroat demolitions and cold-weather experts (and the stowaway Boxey). Along the way, they encounter the misguided human scientist who originally built the weapon, as well as his legions of clones. | |||||||||
10 | "The Magnificent Warriors" | Christian I. Nyby II | Glen A. Larson | November 12, 1978 | |||||
When a Cylon attack destroys the fleet's food supply, Adama and the others must agree to certain compromises with old acquaintances and with the inhabitants of a grain-rich, yet politically turbulent planet. | |||||||||
11 | "The Young Lords" | Donald Bellisario | Donald Bellisario, Frank Lupo & Paul Playdon | November 19, 1978 | |||||
Crash-landing on the planet Atilla, Starbuck befriends a group of young siblings trying to free their castle, their planet, and their father from the Cylons. | |||||||||
12–13 | "The Living Legend" | Vince Edwards | Teleplay by : Glen A. Larson Story by : Glen A. Larson & Ken Pettus | November 26, 1978 | |||||
December 3, 1978 | |||||||||
The Galactica is reunited with the Battlestar Pegasus, previously thought destroyed. Led by the brilliant but arrogant Commander Cain, the fleet is torn in its loyalty between Adama and Cain until the human traitor Baltar launches a devastating attack. In order to obtain much-needed fuel, the Galactica and Pegasus join forces in a daring attack on the Cylons. The Pegasus plunges into the teeth of Cylon forces and is either destroyed or "missing in action" after the attack. | |||||||||
14 | "Fire in Space" | Christian I. Nyby II | Teleplay by : Jim Carlson & Terrence McDonnell Story by : Michael Sloan | December 17, 1978 | |||||
The Galactica is rammed by Cylon Raiders making suicide runs on the main bridge and a landing bay. With Adama lying critically injured and the ship in flames, Boomer and Athena lead a group of survivors in the rejuvenation center, relying on Boxey's robot daggit, Muffit, to help them. | |||||||||
15–16 | "War of the Gods" | Daniel Haller | Glen A. Larson | January 14, 1979 | |||||
January 21, 1979 | |||||||||
Vipers are disappearing from regular patrols, and mysterious bright lights are flying around the Galactica at immeasurable speed. On an eerie, red-glowing planet, the enigmatic Count Iblis (portrayed by Patrick McNee), is found, apparently the sole survivor of a major catastrophe. Always shunning the mysterious bright lights, Iblis uses his charm and his supernatural powers to wrest control of the fleet from Adama, but the wiley Commander knows Iblis' key is on the red planet, where Apollo and Starbuck go only to face tragedy and find the answer to the mysterious lights. | |||||||||
17 | "The Man with Nine Lives" | Rod Holcomb | Donald Bellisario | January 28, 1979 | |||||
An old con man, Chameleon, meets Starbuck and cons him into believing he may be his father in order to gain his help in evading a trio of blood-thirsty Borellians who are after him seeking revenge for a previous con. In the process, Starbuck's girlfriend Cassiopeia learns that Chameleon's con may not actually be a con after all. | |||||||||
18 | "Murder on the Rising Star" | Rod Holcomb | Teleplay by : Donald Bellisario, Jim Carlson & Terrence McDonnell Story by : Michael Sloan | February 18, 1979 | |||||
When Starbuck is implicated in a rival triad-player's murder, Apollo and Boomer come to his defense as Protectors. They eventually uncover a plot involving Karibdis, a traitor alongside Count Baltar in the Destruction of the Twelve Colonies. | |||||||||
19–20 | "Greetings from Earth" | Rod Holcomb | Glen A. Larson | February 25, 1979 | |||||
A ship of humans in suspended animation is found drifting in space. When brought aboard the Galactica, the Colonial leaders debate whether to awaken its occupants. Their ship is eventually escorted by Apollo, Starbuck, and Cassiopeia to the planet Paradeen which is embroiled in a bitter war with the Eastern Alliance. (Originally aired as a two-hour broadcast the episode was split into two parts in syndication) | |||||||||
21 | "Baltar's Escape" | Winrich Kolbe | Donald Bellisario | March 11, 1979 | |||||
Baltar escapes from the prison barge by hijacking a shuttle piloted by Boomer and Sheba. Taking advantage of lax security imposed by the new governing council, Baltar kidnaps the council members from a Galactica landing bay and demands to be released. | |||||||||
22 | "Experiment in Terra" | Rod Holcomb | Glen A. Larson | March 18, 1979 | |||||
The mysterious bright lights return again, transporting the bewildered Apollo to the planet Terra to avert war with the Eastern Alliance. Exposing a plan by the devious president, Apollo has Starbuck warn the Galactica, which uses its laser cannon to destroy all the ballistic missiles, avoiding apocalyptic planetary holocaust. | |||||||||
23 | "Take the Celestra" | Daniel Haller | Teleplay by : Jim Carlson & Terrence McDonnell Story by : David S. Arthur, Jim Carlson, Terrence McDonnell & David G. Phinney | April 1, 1979 | |||||
When Starbuck encounters his long-lost love Aurora, she complicates matters by taking part in a mutinous rebellion aboard the Celestra. Her rebellion, undertaken for a noble cause, is soon overshadowed by a sinister mutiny by Charka, the Celestra's power-hungry second-in-command. | |||||||||
24 | "The Hand of God" | Donald Bellisario | Donald Bellisario | April 29, 1979 | |||||
Receiving a mysterious radio signal possibly from Earth, Adama and the crew are wary of a Cylon trap, and decide to turn the tables by attacking the Cylons with a captured Cylon Raider. Apollo and Starbuck, in the series finale's last scene, narrowly miss receiving Apollo 11 Moon landing transmissions from Earth. |
Season 2: Galactica 1980 (1980)
No. | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1–3 | "Galactica Discovers Earth" | Sidney Hayers | Glen A. Larson | January 27, 1980 | |||||||||
February 3, 1980 | |||||||||||||
February 10, 1980 | |||||||||||||
After 30 years of searching, the Battlestar Galactica and its ragtag fleet locate Earth. However, it soon becomes clear that Earth is not advanced enough to help combat the Cylon fleet that tailed Galactica to Earth. Captain Troy—a grown-up version of Boxey—and Lieutenant Dillon end up teaming up with a female reporter from Earth named Jamie Hamilton. Commander Xavier steals an experimental Viper capable of time travel and goes back to the 1940s in an attempt to speed up Earth's technological development by giving Colonial technology to the Nazis. Jamie, Troy and Dillon travel back in time in pursuit of Xavier, and manage to prevent the Nazis from prematurely developing the V-2 rocket. Xavier escapes, and the others return to 1980, where all three Vipers are discovered by the military. | |||||||||||||
4–5 | "The Super Scouts" | Vince Edwards | Glen A. Larson | March 16, 1980 | |||||||||
Sigmund Neufeld, Jr. | Glen A. Larson | March 23, 1980 | |||||||||||
The fleet is attacked by Cylons, who destroy the school barge. Troy, Dillon and a shuttle-load of Galactican school children make an emergency landing on Earth. The Galactican children attempt to fit in on Earth, and uncover an illegal toxic-waste dumping conspiracy. | |||||||||||||
6 | "Spaceball" | Barry Crane | Frank Lupo, Jeff Freilich & Glen A. Larson | March 30, 1980 | |||||||||
The "Super Scouts" use their superhuman strengths as ringers in a baseball game while Xavier plots their abduction. | |||||||||||||
7–8 | "The Night the Cylons Landed" | Sigmund Neufeld, Jr. | Glen A. Larson | April 13, 1980 | |||||||||
Barry Crane | Glen A. Larson | April 20, 1980 | |||||||||||
A new advanced Cylon Raider is shot down over Earth. Two of its five crew survive—a Centurion, and a new, advanced humanoid Cylon—and are loose on Earth during Halloween. Troy and Dillon attempt to kill the Cylons on Earth before they can contact their empire. | |||||||||||||
9 | "Space Croppers" | Daniel Haller | Robert L. McCullough | April 27, 1980 | |||||||||
The Galactican children help a farmer in financial trouble. This is the last episode set on Earth and the final appearance of most of the cast. | |||||||||||||
10 | "The Return of Starbuck" | Ron Satlof | Glen A. Larson | May 4, 1980 | |||||||||
Told in a series of flashbacks, this episode explains the fate of Lieutenant Starbuck, who crash-landed on a planet with a Cylon Centurion, whom he befriends believing the Centurion to be the only other inhabitant—an assumption that proves false when the Centurion discovers a woman who is on the verge of giving birth to a child and who proves to be a renegade member of the same race as the Seraphs and Count Iblis. |
Releases
Theatrical releases
Between 1978 and 1981, episodes were edited into three feature-length films. The first film, Battlestar Galactica, was an edited version of the pilot, "Saga of a Star World", featuring some differences from the original televised episodes, including the death of Baltar. It was released in cinemas in Canada, Australia and continental Europe before its American TV premiere and, in 1979, it was released theatrically in the UK, Ireland and the US. The second film, Mission Galactica: The Cylon Attack, was a re-edited version of the episodes "The Living Legend" and "Fire in Space", which also differed from the broadcast versions, omitting several scenes from both episodes. In 1979, it was released theatrically in continental Europe and Japan, and in the UK and Australia in 1980. The third film, Conquest of the Earth (also called "Galactica III" on the German poster), was a similar edit, though this time its source episodes were from Galactica 1980. It was also released theatrically, in 1981, in Europe and Australia.
Title | Release | Notes |
---|---|---|
Battlestar Galactica | 1978 | Edited version of "Saga of a Star World"[1] |
Mission Galactica: The Cylon Attack | 1979 | Merger of "The Living Legend" and "Fire in Space"[2] |
Conquest of the Earth | 1981 | Edited merger of "Galactica Discovers Earth" and "The Night the Cylons Landed"[3] |
Television movies
Following the cancellation of the series, all of the episodes from the original series were re-edited into television movies for syndication, including a third edit of the pilot. The four two-part episodes ("Lost Planet of the Gods", "Gun on Ice Planet Zero", "The Living Legend" and "War of the Gods") were all combined and expanded with about five minutes of scenes deleted from the original broadcasts. The remaining single episodes were edited into two-hour blocks, combining two episodes into a single narrative, occasionally including over-dubbed dialogue.[4] The final TV movie, an expanded version of "Experiment in Terra" with some scenes from the Galactica 1980 episode "The Return of Starbuck", featured new footage of an astronaut finding Commander Adama's logbook, which retold the premise of the show. It is believed that this version of the episode was to be released as another theatrical film in other countries, but never materialized.
# | TV movie title | Original episodes |
---|---|---|
1 | Battlestar Galactica | "Saga of a Star World" |
2 | Lost Planet of the Gods | "Lost Planet of the Gods" (expanded) |
3 | Gun on Ice Planet Zero | "Gun on Ice Planet Zero" (expanded) |
4 | The Phantom in Space | "The Hand of God" and "The Lost Warrior" |
5 | Space Prison | "The Man with Nine Lives" and "Baltar's Escape" |
6 | Space Casanova | "Take the Celestra" and "The Long Patrol" |
7 | Curse of the Cylons | "Fire in Space" and "The Magnificent Warriors" |
8 | The Living Legend | "The Living Legend" (expanded) |
9 | War of the Gods | "War of the Gods" (expanded) |
10 | Greetings from Earth | "Greetings from Earth" |
11 | Murder in Space | "Murder on the Rising Star" and "The Young Lords" |
12 | Experiment in Terra[lower-alpha 1] | "The Return of Starbuck" (edited) and "Experiment in Terra" (expanded) |
Notes
- The Experiment in Terra telemovie is not included on the UK PAL VHS box set; it has only the original episode "Experiment in Terra" without any clips from "Return of Starbuck." However, all the other telemovies appear to be in this set.