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Kampfstern Galactica 1980

Originaltitel: Galactica 1980
  • Fernsehserie
  • 1980
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
5,5/10
4340
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Kampfstern Galactica 1980 (1980)
AbenteuerScience-Fiction

Als der Kampfstern Galactica schließlich auf der Erde eintrifft, müssen sie feststellen, dass sie das technische Niveau subtil erhöhen und gleichzeitig die Erde vor den Zylonen schützen müss... Alles lesenAls der Kampfstern Galactica schließlich auf der Erde eintrifft, müssen sie feststellen, dass sie das technische Niveau subtil erhöhen und gleichzeitig die Erde vor den Zylonen schützen müssen.Als der Kampfstern Galactica schließlich auf der Erde eintrifft, müssen sie feststellen, dass sie das technische Niveau subtil erhöhen und gleichzeitig die Erde vor den Zylonen schützen müssen.

  • Stoffentwicklung
    • Glen A. Larson
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Kent McCord
    • Barry Van Dyke
    • Robyn Douglass
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    5,5/10
    4340
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Stoffentwicklung
      • Glen A. Larson
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Kent McCord
      • Barry Van Dyke
      • Robyn Douglass
    • 47Benutzerrezensionen
    • 7Kritische Rezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Für 1 Primetime Emmy nominiert
      • 1 Nominierung insgesamt

    Episoden10

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    HöchsteAm besten bewertet1 Jahreszeit1989

    Fotos163

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    Topbesetzung99+

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    Kent McCord
    Kent McCord
    • Captain Troy
    • 1980
    Barry Van Dyke
    Barry Van Dyke
    • Lieutenant Dillon
    • 1980
    Robyn Douglass
    Robyn Douglass
    • Jamie Hamilton
    • 1980
    Lorne Greene
    Lorne Greene
    • Adama
    • 1980
    James Patrick Stuart
    James Patrick Stuart
    • Dr. Zee
    • 1980
    Fred Holliday
    Fred Holliday
    • Mr. Brooks
    • 1980
    Herbert Jefferson Jr.
    Herbert Jefferson Jr.
    • Colonel Boomer
    • 1980
    Mike Brick
    • Super Scout
    • 1980
    Ronnie Densford
    • Super Scout
    • 1980
    Mark Everett
    • Super Scout
    • 1980
    Georgi Irene
    • Sunshine…
    • 1980
    Tracy Justrich
    Tracy Justrich
    • Starla
    • 1980
    Lindsay Kennedy
    • Super Scout
    • 1980
    D.G. Larson
    • Super Scout
    • 1980
    Eric Larson
    • Moonstone
    • 1980
    Michelle Larson
    • Super Scout…
    • 1980
    Nicholas Davies
    • Super Scout
    • 1980
    Jerry Supiran
    • Super Scout
    • 1980
    • Stoffentwicklung
      • Glen A. Larson
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen47

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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    Rob_Taylor

    A truly awful series and not at all like the original.

    The worst series in the world....ever!

    After the events of the REAL Battlestar Galactica and series, this troll of a series came along. Gone are Starbuck and Apollo and replacing them are Troy and Dillon. Wannabee heroes who can't act. They might as well have cast Troi (StarTrek TNG) and Dillan (Magic Roundabout) for all the effectiveness they have.

    Lorne Greene must have had a mortgage to pay off or something, because I can't see any other reason he'd want to be on board this turkey.

    There's a new character, in the form of the obnoxious Dr Zee. A child genius who basically tells Adama what to do. I couldn't help thinking that maybe Adama had gone senile and Zee was his nurse - he always dressed in white, anyhow. It certainly seemed like Adama was senile, he didn't seem to be able to make a decision without consulting the boy-wonder. A far cry from the confident, decisive war veteran of the original Galactica series.

    Anyway Troy and Dillon get to inact it up a little and go to Earth on repetitive boring missions. There's none of the interesting space-going malarkey from the original series (even though a lot of it was stock footage) and I don't think I ever saw a starfighter. No budget for anything remotely interesting.

    The only gadgets on display were the flying motorcycles (I kid you not) that the heroes use now and again. The special effects of them flying through the air are particularly guffawful, reminding me of those old rear-window shots of roads in black and white films, where the road movements in the background bore no correlation to what the driver did with the wheel.

    A truly awful series and not at all like the original. Only one episode is remotely worth watching. Entitled "The Return of Starbuck" it focuses on what happened to Starbuck and has a kind of "Enemy Mine" plot involving a Cylon. Mercifully, it features only very few scenes of Dr Zee and Adama talking and none at all of Troy and Dufus. Nearly all Starbuck.

    But, apart from this one episode, the rest of the series is just awful.
    hightech_redneck32446

    Confusing

    I enjoyed Galactica 1980 when I was eight years old. Of course I enjoyed anything that had spaceships shooting at each other. Well, I watched the show 13 years later on the sci-fi channel and I could tell it was not the best of TV shows ever written. I was trying to figure out how it correlated with the first season. What had happened to the original crew of the Battlestar Galactica? As for Captain Apollo, Colonel Tigh, Athena,Cassiopia, Doctor Wilkor and Jolly. The final episode was where Leutenant Starbuck was stranded did not make sense. In the final episode of the first season the fleet was in earths solar system and none of the planets were habitable. It was like the fleet backtracked in some area of the galaxy fighting the Cylons.
    LenPal

    Oh, come on... it wasn't THAT bad...

    Galactica 1980 may not have had what the original series had, but it DID bring closure to the series by bringing them to their final destination. The scenes on Earth weren't that great, but the segment on whatever happened to Starbuck was great.

    I have great childhood memories of this series. SciFi channel just started running it again and I'm watching it more for nostalgia than as any kind of groundbreaking series. And for that, I guess I'll always love it.
    crooow64

    Good GOOGALEEMOOGALEE It Stinks!

    You know, BATTLESTAR GALACTICA was an ambitious show that had some problems due mainly to the fact that it was very expensive to produce. So rather than address that, the TV execs in their usual brilliance decided to fire most of the cast and crap on the fans. The result, GALACTICA 1980!

    Horrid, putrid and eye-bleedingly wretched are terms that only begin to describe this odious obscenity that was obviously cobbled together in the wee hours the morning of it's premiere.

    The surviving cast members from BG (Lorne Greene and Herbert Jefferson) both appear in old age make-up (did the producer's think they could connect with the 80-something viewers?). Seems that after years in space (gosh, seems just like last year.) that the Colonial Fleet has finally found Earth, BUT, they decide it's better if they don't actually land on Earth because that might alert the Cylons who want ot destroy all humans. Makes sense...for about 10 seconds until you realize that the Cylons cost too much to appear in this series! Enter Warriors "Troy" and "Dillion" who make many scouting missions to Earth. They don't really do anything much, they stand around and talk, and worry and fret. Meanwhile Adama and Col. "Boomer" stand around and talk, and worry and fret about whether Troy and Dillon will survive their latest mission. I think if they're so worried, maybe they should send someone else, seems these two warriors are the only two who ever see any action, if you can call it that. There's also some earth-chick they pal around with for some reason that I can't remember. They also now have on board "Dr. Zee", a supposedly brilliant child who gets to tell Cmdr. Adama what to do, when he's not getting beat up by the cool kids over on "The Rising Star" I mean. Seems to me they had some flying motorcycles, HELL they probably had flying monkeys too! It's just that BAD!

    Word is that there's a revival of Battlestar Galactica in the works and that it continues the series from the first series and ignores the GALACTICA 1980 continuity, as it should.

    GALACTICA 1980 is the worst series since SUPERTRAIN!
    7stp43

    Trouble-Plagued Sequel To Battlestar Galactica

    ABC's decision to cancel Battlestar Galactica after one season didn't sit well with viewers, and the show's strong ratings (it out-rated almost every ABC series renewed for 1979-80) easily justified continuation. But with costs rising faster than expected ABC and Universal Studios wanted the show for substantially less than the per-episode costs of the original show, and at a time when SFX technology was not as advanced as today (modern SFX technology allows maintenance of a series' high production values at greater affordability, as well as allowing greater production of original SFX footage), there was no practical argument against the economics angle that hurt the show.

    Nonetheless, ABC tried to continue the Galactica mythos on a budget, and regardless of whether series creator Glen Larson was involved. Larson signed on to try and make it work, but the result, Galactica 1980, was a bitter disappointment to all.

    The show's weaknesses were extensive, but by far the greatest weakness lay in the deception used in promotion before the first episode aired. Promotions used the footage of Cylon raiders blasting Los Angeles extensively and gave the impression that the Cylon empire had found Earth and was in process of slaughtering the last planet of humanity, a premise that would have given the show a much stronger punch. But this footage was merely part of a "what if?" computer simulation to illustrate why the survivors of the Twelve Colonies cannot colonize Earth - "If we land, we will bring destruction upon Earth as surely as if we'd inflicted it ourselves," as Commander Adama succinctly puts it in one of the show's best lines.

    With this premise of real life Cylon predation against Earth thus vetoed, the show begins to suffer, hurt even more by the excessive juvenile angle in the platoon of children rescued from the freighter Delphi after it is ambushed by Cylon raiders and forced to land on Earth, and also in the use of the mysterious Seraph youth Doctor Zee - had Doctor Zee been a Cylon creation (like the humanoid Cylon featured in "The Night The Cylons Landed" or better yet the Cylon IL Lucifer from the original series) that had turned against its masters, this angle would have made more sense - as it was, Zee's genesis did make for the show's best episode and surprisingly one of the best sci-fi episodes of any series, "The Return Of Starbuck." Subsequent graphic-novel speculations about Doctor Zee does make the character more understandable.

    The show also suffered from several embarrassing incidents, notably the Halloween angle of "The Night The Cylons Landed" and the general incompatibility of the Kobollian survivors with the culture of Earth, leading to numerous bits of forced comedy that really aren't funny.

    But despite these weaknesses, the show did have some superb moments - the Cylon attack on Los Angeles, deception or not, is compelling footage, lasting roughly ninty seconds on-screen and superbly mixing stock matte-FX footage of Cylon raiders over outtake footage from Universal's 1974 disaster film "Earthquake." The sequence thus becomes one the best SFX sequences ever done for television - I especially liked the shots of Cylon raiders blasting the Capitol Records building, Cylon raiders diving into strafing runs then cutting to the Cylon POV shot of a street being attacked, the street being strafed as seen from above then from low angle as a raider flies toward and then past the screen, and the triumphant flyover of Cylon raiders over the now-ravaged city.

    The introduction of new Cylons in the human-form combat ILs in "The Night The Cylons Landed" as well as the new command-class AB raider (first seen mixed with the stock FX shot of Cylons strafing the Delphi in "The Super Scouts" but not fully explored until "Night") is also an intriguing look into the evolution of the Cylon empire; not surprisingly this idea was developed to great fruition by Ronald Moore for the 2003 version of Battlestar Galactica.

    The arguments between Commander Adama and Commander Xavier (Richard Lynch) in the three-part pilot episode are well done - Lynch's Xavier gives the show as compelling a villain in his own way as John Colicos' Baltar, whose non-presence is particularly missed here. Also well done is the interaction between Troy (Kent McCord) and Dillon (Barry Van Dyke), especially early in the opening episode when we learn something of Troy's background. The presence of Boomer (Herbert Jefferson Jr.) is welcome with no other original cast members available except for Dirk Benedict's appearance in "Return Of Starbuck," and the series does tackle some moral dilemmas (notably the Nazi-Jewish angle in the three-part opening episode) generally avoided in the original series.

    By no means is Galactica 1980 great television, but it does have some excellent moments, and the cast deserves credit for trying to make it work.

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    Handlung

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    • Wissenswertes
      The series was originally to focus on Commander Xaviar travelling through time to disrupt Earth history, with Captain Troy and Lieutenant Dillon chasing him as they try to restore history. While that concept was dropped, it reportedly inspired producer Donald P. Bellisario to create Quantum Leap (1989).
    • Patzer
      At the beginning of the series, the Galactica arrives at Earth in the year 1980. It is said by Adama that their voyage has taken 30 years which means that the events of Kampfstern Galactica (1978) took place around 1950 in Earth time. However, at the very end of the original series (in the episode "The Hand of God"), the Galactica receives a television transmission that shows the 1969 Apollo moon landing. Since the fleet's journey to Earth had only started a few months prior, it means that the events of Kampfstern Galactica (1978) must have taken place at least in the late 1960s Earth time. In fact it would be at least in the 1970s since television signals travel at the speed of light and the Galactica was obviously far more than a light year away from Earth at the time they received the transmission.
    • Zitate

      Captain Troy: [after taking off in a Viper from the Galactica] Well, how did you like that?

      Jamie Hamilton: Don't bother me, I'm praying.

    • Crazy Credits
      Several episodes end with the disclaimer: "The United States Air Force stopped investigating UFOs in 1969. After 22 years, they found no evidence of extra-terrestrial visits and no threat to national security." This is due to the series featuring an Air Force division dedicated to looking for UFOs.
    • Alternative Versionen
      Some episodes in syndication carry the title "Battlestar Galactica," instead of Galactica 1980.
    • Verbindungen
      Edited from Erdbeben (1974)

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    Details

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    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 4. September 1981 (Westdeutschland)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Vereinigte Staaten
    • Offizieller Standort
      • Battlestar Wiki
    • Sprache
      • Englisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Galactica 1980
    • Drehorte
      • Stage 12, Universal Studios - 100 Universal City Plaza, Universal City, Kalifornien, USA(demolished in 2020)
    • Produktionsfirmen
      • Glen A. Larson Productions
      • Universal Television
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    Technische Daten

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    • Sound-Mix
      • Mono
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 4:3

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