When you break down her return from death as you did, what exactly did her death accomplish? In Maelstrom we are led to believe she has to overcome her fear of death to become what she really is. Well in Daybreak at the end she says she is not afraid to die but being forgotten, and we never find out what she was.
To me they took a complicated character who was strong but flawed and diluted her by saying she's a supernatural entity.
If they wanted her to bring cylon & human together they could have done it with a vision, much like Roslin in season one. No need to die.
Somehow Kara's dead body winding up on Earth 1.0 made no sense, cause her body and viper would have been dust from the pressure of that gas giant. Not to mention there's no way it could have gotten from the gas giant to Earth 1.0.
They were scrambling to make her death seem important, but all they need is weaken her character greatly in my opinion.
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Date: 2010-08-19 12:00 am (UTC)When you break down her return from death as you did, what exactly did her death accomplish? In Maelstrom we are led to believe she has to overcome her fear of death to become what she really is. Well in Daybreak at the end she says she is not afraid to die but being forgotten, and we never find out what she was.
To me they took a complicated character who was strong but flawed and diluted her by saying she's a supernatural entity.
If they wanted her to bring cylon & human together they could have done it with a vision, much like Roslin in season one. No need to die.
Somehow Kara's dead body winding up on Earth 1.0 made no sense, cause her body and viper would have been dust from the pressure of that gas giant. Not to mention there's no way it could have gotten from the gas giant to Earth 1.0.
They were scrambling to make her death seem important, but all they need is weaken her character greatly in my opinion.