Sixteen years since the last straight to DVD revival, twenty-five years since the original television series gave its last bow, Babylon 5 returns polished up as an animated special The Road Home. Is it the beginning of a new era, or a nostalgic curio for the die-hards?
Time has been kind to Babylon 5. It was never a series which relied on the quality of its effects and a movie quality production. It’s strengths was its unashamed respect of literary SF and the power of a good story well told. Matched with rich characterisation that allowed its flawed protagonists to both fail hard and triumph satisfyingly over the years, spending most of the intervening time in stories that were often imaginative and morally grey. After years of only being accessible on VHS and DVD, recent years have seen it return to wide syndication, availability on streaming services and after a long campaign by fans, a HD remastering, all of which has enabled it to be enjoyed by new generations of fans, some of whom were not even born when its final story Sleeping in Light went out on TNT.
Babylon 5 was influential in several ways. It was one of the first SF series to embrace CGI, using the groundbreaking NewTek Video Toaster, which made computer graphics feasible on a cable television budget. It popularised the concept of the story arc. Instead of self-contained, almost interchangeable episodes where the status quo would always be reset after an hour, creator and chief writer J Michael Straczynski (known as JMS to fans) planned a “novel for television” to be told over five seasons. The idea was mocked as vainglorious by many, yet the programme proved that there was an audience who would commit to the journey. Now it would be hard to find a TV series which doesn’t have ongoing threads. Finally there was the way JMS embraced the fledgling internet, specifically Usenet to communicate directly with watchers in a way that hadn’t been possible before. He gave us an insight into the writing and production process of an ongoing, often struggling TV series that was fascinating and educational, as well as building up a whole community around the show.
It’s that ongoing community and the recent revived interest which has allowed The Road Home to exist. That and apparently a new willingness at Warner Bros to exploit a franchise which it was previously content to sit on.
The plot of The Road Home taps into Hollywood’s current love of multiverses and alternative worlds. On his first official engagement off-station, President John Sheridan becomes unstuck in time as the result of a malfunction in the new tachyon-based power generator he is supposed to be inaugurating. Teleporting into the future and the past, he then finds himself travelling sideways in alternate versions of the Shadow War, where the Shadows or the Vorlons win, both with cataclysmic results for humanity and its allies. Worse, if he cannot jaunt home, the multiverse itself might collapse.
Rather like a wedding, how much the viewer gets out The Road Home depends a lot on how many faces you recognise. If the above synopsis seems confusing, then this animated movie will be a lot of sound and fury, signifying not much. As an introduction to Babylon 5, it’s too reliant on pre-knowledge for the vast majority. Yet thanks to JMS’ script and the obvious affection of the production team, at the same time it’s a film that contains everything that made Babylon 5 what it was, good and bad. Action and big SF concepts like quantum physics, nestle with pulp staples like ancient alien cities being discovered, powerful aliens being reawakened, and passionate declarations of undying love. Smart jokes like a galactic vista being interrupted by a search of socks, share time with clunky one-liners. B5 could be moving but it could be amusingly pretentious too and there’s some windy philosophy at “the Rim” of the universe, delivered with deathly, if mellifluous, tones, which could have come straight from an obscure prog rock album sleeve notes.
Tragically, the series has lost more than the usual percentage of cast members. The voice cast contains all the surviving regulars, led energetically by Bruce Boxleitner returning to the role of John Sheridan. It’s great to hear Patricia Tallman, Peter Jurasik, Claudia Christian, Bill Mumy and Tracy Scroggins in character once more. They are joined by a cast of creditable actors taking on other beloved characters and thanks to good casting and direction from casting director Liz Carroll and Matt Peters respectively, none of them jar in the ear. Sadly the episodic nature of the story means that few of the regulars get much time to shine, apart from Sheridan and Delenn, but there’s a lot of fun to be had with the return of fan favourite, the gnomic alien Zathras and most of the funniest moments belong to him.
Visually the film looks marvellous, enjoyably opening out and subtly updating the old locations on the space station and Epsilon 3. It has that recognisable Warner Bros look that’s been seen in many of their recent superhero cartoon movies, tall figures with great cheekbones. Just about everyone is instantly recognisable, although it took me a few moments to recognise Elizabeth Lochley. The production team cleverly incorporate several iconic visual scenes from the series, such as the launching of the Starfurys or the reveal of The Great Machine.
I’m reviewing the bluray release, which comes in a slipcase and has two extras, an enthusiastic commentary by Boxleitner, JMS and supervising producer Rick Morales, and an appreciative making of documentary B5 Forever with some interesting behind footage of the cast recording their parts.
During the documentary, JMS says he has ideas for future animated stories and I certainly hope this special is successful enough for more. As a victory lap and a celebration for long time fans, The Road Home is a treat that doesn’t disappoint. For newcomers, the pilot film The Gathering or the TV movie In the Beginning is still the place to start.
In other news, my friend Rik Hoskin has a couple of new short stories published. You can read his tart little SF tale The Replacement Agency for free at https://www.cosmoramaofficial.com/fiction/the-replacement-agency
Meanwhile, the latest issue of Cosmic Horror Monthly magazine features the return of Rik, writing a new tale of Lovecraftian terror called Party-Line.
