MovieChat Forums > Galactica 1980 (1980) Discussion > Return of Starbuck vs. Enemy Mine

Return of Starbuck vs. Enemy Mine


Did anyone else notice the similarities between these two stories? Enemy Mine was published in 1979 and written by Barry Longyear. It won the Nebula and Hugo awards. The movie with Dennis Quaid was made a few years later. This Galactica episode came out in 1980.

Similarities:
1) Two enemy ships crash land on a strange, almost uninhabitible, planet in a fire fight with each other.

2) They are forced to befriend each other in order to survive.

3) A baby is involved and an escape from the planet involving the baby.

4) The two form a bond on the planet that makes one of them put the other in a situation where they have to choose their friend over their own kind.

Great episode of Galactica, and it topped most of the original episodes as well. Maybe if there had been more like this one the show would have lasted more than ten episodes.

I still think Starbuck could have rebuilt his Cylon friend (he did it once before) and the two of them could have escaped in the Cylon ship. Maybe this could have led to them finding the Galactica and having Cy stay on as a "good" Cylon, like Boomer in the new series.

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That is an old story line/theme nothing new.

The Defiant Ones.

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0051525/

You can trust me - I'm a movie producer.

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I agree it is a very similar theme but the idea of Cy being a robot is a fascinating element, and those Cylons are so cool. Shame about the ridiculous dialogue from Cy sometimes, but it was probably the most interesting episode of the 10, if not one of the funniest.

I wonder if they knew it was going to be the final episode. It would have been great if they could have made it into a 90-min two-parter.

** SPOILER **
I love the way the writers worked the mysterious baby into the previous 9 episodes and how Cy came good on Starbuck.

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Actually, both the Quaid movie and the BSG episode owe more to "Hell in the Pacific" than "The Defiant Ones." In "The Defiant Ones," Tony Curtis and Sidney Poitier's characters are not enemies. Although they have extreme racial tensions, as convicts they have a common enemy and are basically on the same "side." On the other hand, the 1968 film "Hell in the Pacific" starred Lee Marvin and Toshiro Mifune as an American and Japanese soldier during WWII who become stranded alone on an island. As enemies, their "job" was to kill each other, but they started to work together and ended up forming a deep bond of friendship. The Quaid movie was essentially a remake of HITP with the scifi/alien scenario replacing WWII.

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Return of Starbuck vs. Enemy Mine

^Both took their storyline plot concepts from; Robinson Crusoe basically enough.

ST4


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