The Lurker's Guide to Babylon 5
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<h2><a name="OV">Overview</a></h2>
<blockquote><cite>
Sheridan discovers a connection between Morden and the death of his wife.
The station is inundated by Narn refugees. A new Earth Alliance agency
tries to recruit station personnel.
</cite>
<a href="http://us.imdb.com/M/person-exact?+Wasser,+Ed">Ed Wasser</a> as Morden.
</blockquote>
<pre>
Sub-genre: Drama
<a href="/lurk/p5/intro.html">P5 Rating</a>: <a href="/lurk/p5/038">9.30</a>
Production number: 217
Original air date: May 10, 1995
<a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B000087EYB/thelurkersguidet">DVD release date</a>: April 29, 2003
Written by J. Michael Straczynski
Directed by David Eagle
</pre>
<strong>Note: this episode is more momentous than most. Think twice before
proceeding to the spoilers; it's worth seeing unawares.</strong>
<p>
<hr size=3>
<h2><a name="BP">Backplot</a></h2>
<ul>
<li> Delenn and Kosh tell Sheridan about the Shadows and the Vorlons:<br>
<dl compact>
<dt><b>D:</b>
<dd>
There are beings in the universe billions of years older than either of
our races. Once, long ago, they walked among the stars like giants.
Vast, timeless... they taught the younger races, explored beyond the
Rim, created great empires. But to all things, there is an end.
Slowly, over a million years, the First Ones went away. Some passed
beyond the stars, never to return. Some simply disappeared.
<dt><b>S:</b>
<dd>
I'm sure this is all very interesting, but what does any of this
have to do with Morden?
<dt><b>D:</b>
<dd>
Not all of the First Ones have gone away. A few stayed behind. Hidden
or asleep, waiting for the day when they may be needed. When the
Shadows come again.
<dt><b>S:</b>
<dd>
Shadows?
<dt><b>D:</b>
<dd>
We have no other name for them. The Shadows were old when even the
ancients were young. They battled one another over and over across a
million years. The last Great War against the Shadows was ten thousand
years ago. It was the last time the ancients walked openly among us.
The Shadows were only defeated, not destroyed. A thousand years ago,
the Shadows returned to their places of power, rebuilt them, and began
to stretch forth their hand. Before they could strike, they were
defeated by an alliance of worlds, including the Minbari and the few
remaining First Ones who had not yet passed beyond the veil. When
they had finished, the First Ones went away. All but one.
<dt><b>S:</b>
<dd>
There's still one of them left. Where?
<dt><b>D:</b>
<dd>
(indicates Kosh, to Sheridan's great surprise) That is why Kosh cannot
leave his encounter suit. He would be recognized.
<dt><b>S:</b>
<dd>
Recognized? By who?
<dt><b>K:</b>
<dd>
Everyone.
<dt><b>D:</b>
<dd>
For centuries the Vorlons stood alone, the last remaining guardians.
Watching and waiting.
</dl>
<p>
<li> Delenn's question to Kosh (cf.
<a href="022.html">"Chrysalis"</a>)
was, "Have the Shadows returned to Z'ha'dum?"
<p>
<li> The Icarus, an Earth exploration vessel carrying Anna Sheridan, arrived
at Z'ha'dum in late 2256 (see
<a href="#AN:dates">Analysis.</a>)
A landing party, exploring a cave, inadvertently
discovered the Shadows, awakening them. The Shadows destroyed the
Icarus so its crew could not return to warn others, and killed the
crewmembers who wouldn't cooperate. Morden was one of the crew.
<p>
<li> Delenn and Kosh knew about the reawakening of the Shadows immediately --
maybe even witnessed it somehow as it was happening.
<p>
<li> The Earth government has formed a new agency, the Ministry of Peace
(nicknamed "Minipax" by its employees,) with the alleged goal of
helping reduce internal tensions among the EA's populace. Its first
visible action was to establish a program called the Night Watch,
paying people 50 credits a week to wear black armbands and report
suspicious people to the authorities so that troublemakers can be
reformed before they disrupt the peace.
</ul>
<h2><a name="UQ">Unanswered Questions</a></h2>
<ul>
<li> Is Sheridan's wife still alive?
<li> What is the Ministry of Peace really up to?
<li> Will Talia join?
<li> Similarly, what significance is there in the fact that Delenn narrated
Sheridan's vision? Was she sharing it with him, or had she seen it
before?
<li> What kind of information did Morden bring for Londo?
<li> What, if anything, happened to the ship that originally discovered
the ruins on Z'ha'dum? Someone must have discovered them before the
Icarus' arrival, since the crew of the Icarus knew they were going
to explore an ancient civilization.
</ul>
<h2><a name="AN">Analysis</a></h2>
<ul>
<li> Delenn's opening remarks about the First Ones bear a striking similarity
to G'Kar's comments about the beings at Sigma 957 (cf.
<a href="006.html">"Mind War."</a>)
Could those beings also be First Ones? If so, are the Vorlons aware
that they are still around in some form?
<li> Her remarks also echo her comments about humans in
<a href="020.html">"Babylon Squared"</a>
-- suggesting that she believes humanity has the capacity to eventually
rival the First Ones.
<li> Delenn stated that all but one of the First Ones have gone away, and
that the last one is Kosh. But does she mean that only one race
remains, or only one individual? Or is there a difference where
Vorlons are concerned? (See
<a href="#JS:vorlons">jms speaks</a>)
<li> If Kosh would be recognized by "everyone" because (as implied by Delenn)
his race had once walked openly among lesser ones, it's plausible that
Kosh may resemble something from legends thousands of years old -- an
angel, perhaps, since the Shadows bear some resemblance to demons and
Kosh's suit seems to have room for wings. This would tie in with
Kosh's statement in
<a href="035.html">"Hunter, Prey"</a>
that Sheridan must be ready "to fight legends" before Kosh will reveal
himself -- otherwise he'd be mistaken by some as a divine being rather
than an alien. Of course, angels and demons are far from the only
figures in the human pantheon, let alone alien mythology, and Kosh
may be something else entirely.
<li> Or the encounter suit may allow Kosh to control who gets visions like
Sheridan's; if he took it off, everyone who tried to look at him would
see something different, something personal. (See
<a href="#JS:hand">jms speaks.</a>)
This brings up a potential connection to the flashes in
<a href="020.html">"Babylon Squared"</a>;
perhaps the Vorlons were involved in Babylon 4's time travel, and
the flashes were a side effect of that.
<li> Why did Delenn demand to see Kosh in
<a href="022.html">"Chrysalis"</a>
before she was willing to undergo her change? She seems to know enough
about Vorlons that she would have had some idea what he looked like.
Did she simply want to verify that Kosh was one of the First Ones
mentioned in the Minbari history books? Or does his appearance have
something more directly to do with her wanting to become partially
human? That's assuming he was showing himself to her at all, rather
than sending her a dream sequence.
<li> How did Kosh know what happened on Z'ha'dum? Or was he just inventing
the scene he showed Sheridan based on what he figured must have
happened? Perhaps he gleaned it from his meeting with Morden in
<a href="013.html">"Signs and Portents,"</a>
though Delenn claims she and Kosh have known about it for the past
three years.
<li> <a name="AN:dates">The Icarus expedition</a>
seems to have set forth in late 2256. In
<a href="024.html">"Revelations,"</a>
which is set in early 2259, Sheridan's sister says that it's been
two years since Anna's death. In this episode, Delenn implies that
the Shadows were awakened three years earlier. Late 2256 makes sense
if both of them were rounding.
<li> The Shadows on Z'ha'dum may have been awakened in 2256,
but they weren't the first. The creature in
<a href="027.html">"The Long Dark"</a>
awoke during the Earth-Minbari War and was headed for Z'ha'dum.
What caused it to wake up before its masters did, assuming its
masters are the beings the Icarus discovered?
<li> Delenn's question was, "Have the Shadows <em>returned</em> to
Z'ha'dum?" That implies they were elsewhere; if so, where? Perhaps
the same thing that drew the abovementioned creature to Z'ha'dum
also drew the Shadows there. In that case, they may have already
been awake before the Icarus arrived.
<li> Sheridan let Morden go so he wouldn't suspect that his true nature
is known. But the damage may already be done; Morden and his
associates are likely to be suspicious of his sudden release.
The reason given to Morden -- "it was all a mistake" -- is going to
seem especially suspicious; "the Centauri asked for your release"
or "you're right; we can't hold you without charges" seem like they
would have been better excuses. Of course, the latter may be what
Zack told Morden.
<li> The Night Watch armbands seem more a tool of terror than of peace,
reminiscent of the armbands worn by Nazis and other tyrannical
regimes, a constant reminder to everyone that they're under
observation. The program seems designed to cause people to turn in
their neighbors, and it's probably naive to believe that people
accused of suspicious behavior (or worse, suspicious "attitudes")
will simply be put into therapy and
released shortly thereafter. Combined with the Ministry of Public
Morale (cf.
<a href="037.html">"And Now For a Word"</a>)
it suggests the Clark government is more interested in keeping the
citizenry under its thumb than anything noble.
<li> If it's true that the Night Watch considers thoughts dangerous, they
may well be involved with Psi Corps somehow; certainly it would make
sense for them to try to involve telepaths in rooting out undesirables.
Or, perhaps more likely, they're simply another of Psi Corps'
machinations.
<li> The Shadows aren't the only ones inhabiting places of power. Londo
observed that the technomages (cf.
<a href="025.html">"The Geometry of Shadows"</a>)
were usually cloistered in their places of power. And now the
technomages are headed for the Rim, or beyond it, because of a great
darkness approaching; what do they hope to achieve?
<li> Unless the holding cell cameras are very advanced, the Shadows'
invisibility is not all that good. Presumably there are aliens on the
station who can see well into the infrared or ultraviolet; the Shadows
would be easily detected by such beings in any public area. Perhaps
that's how Kosh knew who Morden was in
<a href="013.html">"Signs and Portents."</a>
On the other hand, it may simply be that some aliens <em>have</em>
seen the Shadows with Morden, but didn't think them remarkable enough
to be worth mentioning; they're probably far from the weirdest-looking
creatures walking around the station.
<li> Talia was able to detect the Shadows without even trying. That suggests
that telepaths will be a valuable weapon against the Shadows -- which
leads to the suspicion that the Shadows are working to co-opt Psi-Corps
behind the scenes so human telepaths will be less likely to work
against them. It's not clear whether her ability to sense the Shadows
was typical for a P5 telepath, or a result of her enhanced abilities
(cf. <a href="006.html">"Mind War."</a>)
<li> It's also worth noting that Talia saw Morden darken the same way Delenn
did in
<a href="013.html">"Signs and Portents"</a>
-- does this mean Delenn has some telepathic ability?
<li> In
<a href="004.html">"Infection,"</a>
Franklin says the Ikarans built their war machines to fend off
invasions, the last of which was 1000 years ago. Could they have been
participants in the last conflict with the Shadows? Will the
technology obtained by Earth in that episode be used in the upcoming
war?
<li> Morden's triangular hand placement while he was in his cell is
reminiscent of Lennier's meditation posture. Perhaps there's no
connection, or perhaps there is.
</ul>
<h2><a name="NO">Notes</a></h2>
<ul>
<li> The name "Ministry of Peace" and its abbreviation Minipax are from
George Orwell's "1984."
<li> The convention mentioned by Talia is probably not the one described
in the novel
<a href="/lurk/novels/001.html">"Voices"</a>
because the novel takes place before
<a href="031.html">"The Coming of Shadows."</a>
<li> Delenn's narrative bears some resemblance to Gandalf's description of
the coming of Sauron near the beginning of the first book of "The Lord
of the Rings." In particular, this passage:
<blockquote>
"The rumours that you have heard are true: he has indeed arisen again
and left his hold in Mirkwood and returned to his ancient fastness in
the Dark Tower of Mordor. That name even you hobbits have heard of,
like a shadow on the borders of old stories. Always after a defeat
and a respite, the Shadow takes another shape and grows again."
</blockquote>
</ul>
<h2><a name="JS">jms speaks</a></h2>
<ul>
<li> <a name="JS:about">"In the Shadow of Z'ha'dum"</a> is an
episode that is as emotionally raw as
<a href="022.html">"Chrysalis"</a>
with some major
revelations that force Sheridan to make the most important decision
of his life.
<p>
<li> Correct; Delenn and Kosh have said nothing about G'Kar's claims
because they're trying to keep a low profile.
<p>
<li> The shadows know that Kosh knows, because the Vorlons *always* know;
they also know (or think) that they're in a superior position because
if Kosh should tell the others, either a) most wouldn't believe him,
or b) the shadows would move aggressively now, costing untold lives.
They're more worried about an alliance between lots of races than the
Vorlons alone.
<p>
<li> I would not create a race as potentially unstoppable as the
shadows without making sure they had one -- but only one -- Achilles'
heel. Though it may take our characters a long time to figure out what
that is...almost *too* long....
<p>
<li> <a name="JS:vorlons">No, "all but one" refers to the race,</a>
not an individual. The First
Ones are various species/races. One of these species/races is still
around at this time. The Vorlons. Of which Kosh is one.
<p>
<li>@@@882988098 BTW, the one big reason that Sakai [Catherine, Sinclair's
old flame in the first season] could not have filled Anna Sheridan's
role in awakening the shadows...and this is the one thing that everyone
who advocates this theory tends to forget...is that they were *already
up and awake* in the first season, as we saw in "Signs and Portents."
They were up, around, and had had some time to build stuff up, reclaim
some of their ships, and in other ways get organized and develop their
contacts.
<p>
Also, Morden was already working for them.
<p>
<li>@@@838583849 <em>Why did Delenn demand to see Kosh?</em><br>
She wanted to see Kosh to assure herself that the Vorlons, who
she'd never met before, were who she believed them to be, and that this
was a true Vorlon and not a pretender. He had to be in place as part
of Valen's prophecy.
<p>
<li> The rim, and the "veil" beyond which the bulk of the First Ones
passed, is the Galactic rim. As for why the shadows are doing what
they're doing...that's kind of the key to the whole thing, which we
haven't turned yet.
<p>
<li>@@@839189753 Some of the first ones just got bored after millions of years,
and went off in general. The rest, for the most part, went beyond the
Rim for the same reason you cut down old trees to make room for new
ones.
<p>
<li> <em>Are the First Ones as old as the universe itself?</em><br>
Well, to some degree you're limited by the amount of time it
takes to evolve life per se, then into intelligent life, then into
spacefaring life. You need time after the Big Bang for planets to be
formed, cool, develop environments capable of supporting life...then
the long haul begins.
<p>
So yes, on the one hand, you've got races that are millions of
years older than humans, who were prowling around while we were still
furred, fanged, and slamming bones together. But they're not as old as
the universe, because they can't be.
<p>
<li> Exploration and archeological/scientific vessels like this usually
piggy-back on Explorer or other jump-capable ships, with an arrangement
that they'll be there for X-number of days or weeks, then another ship
will come that way and again piggy-back them out.
<p>
<li> Thanks. I like Vir a lot. Many folks were willing to write him off
in the beginning, not understanding that there was more beneath the
surface (a problem Vir has also had in his "life"). But you gotta be
careful; characters have a way of surprising you. And I like that, and
intended that, Vir be the first one to stand up to Morden.
<p>
<li> Again, look at the Kosh/Morden scene in
<a href="013.html">"Signs."</a>
A light is suddenly blown out off to one side. Morden didn't move.
So who did it...but his constant companions?
<p>
<li> <em>Kosh's command to Morden in "Signs"</em><br>
His comment would have been addressed to the shadows and their current
emissary.
<p>
<li>@@@839120486 <em>How does Morden communicate with the Shadows so
easily?</em><br>
Well, one can always assume that Morden received some help, in one form
or another, in adjusting to the shadows....
<p>
<li> The difference is just in accent. ZA HA DOOM is the way I pronounce
it, but ZA cHA DOOM is also acceptable (from someone who's learned to
more or less accept the 47 different ways in which one may pronounce
straczynski).
<p>
<li> And, as you note, one of things that I like to play with is the
layering of ambiguity. Let's say, just for the sake of argument, that
we set up two sides: Shadowmen vs. Vorlons, which looks like evil vs.
good. Fundamentally, I would find that boring. What you would then
have to do is get into WHY they're doing what they do, and HOW they're
doing what they do.
<p>
There is, for instance, the "good" that says, "We know what's best
for you, we'll protect you, nurture you, but you'll do it our way, and
we'll keep you away from ideas and beliefs you shouldn't be exposed
to." Okay, maybe that fits one definition of good...but is it?
<p>
On the flip side, for instance, there's the "bad" that says "There
must be conflict and death, because it's only through conflict and
death that we grow stronger, that we can eventually create an ordered
universe. The gene pool must be kept strong. To do that, there must
be war and strife and death." Okay, maybe that fits the definition
of evil, but is it?
<p>
The key, again and always, is that nothing is what it seems on
Babylon 5. And even if it looks like it IS what it is, you have to
look at WHY it is what it is...and maybe at that point it isn't.
<p>
One of the things about this show is that you see as much as
you're willing to see. You can gloss over it, say, "Okay, these are
the good guys, these are the bad guys." But the closer you look, the
more you see the shades. I imagine when the Shadowmen are more fully
revealed, some folks'll think we're going for a basic good/evil
conflict...but believe me, there's a hell of a lot more involved in
it than that.
<p>
<li> <a name="JS:hand"><em>(From a 1993 GEnie message -- presumably we can
replace "Sinclair" with "Sheridan" now.)</em></a>
<p>
I've just sat here for five minutes trying to decide how to phrase this
and not give something vital away...and it's damn near impossible.
<p>
(another five minutes passes)
<p>
Okay, look...do this. Get a piece of paper. Write down the following:
"Sinclair sees the hand, but Sinclair does not see the hand. And
five other people standing in the room would not see the hand that
Sinclair sees, or see the hand that they see."
<p>
I know it looks like gibberish. But trust me on this. Put the piece of
paper in your wallet (next to the condom) and hold onto it for about two
years. Assuming we're still around that long, at some point that
message will make absolute and perfect sense.
<p>
<li> Kosh is always and forever *exactly* what he appears to be, no less and
no more. At the same time, Kosh is absolutely *nothing* like what he
appears to be.
<p>
These are not contradictory statements.
<p>
And this is about the straightest answer I've given yet on the subject,
believe it or not.
<p>
<li> I think it would be just about impossible to put Kosh on the outside
of a mug.
<p>
<li> Exactly. You will note that Macabee says, of the Ministry, "...or
Minipax, as we like to call it around the office." It's an in-house
joke, not the real name of the thing.
<p>
<li> Re: the two speeches by G'Kar and Delenn...yes, they were constructed
specifically to echo one another, because the walkers at Sigma 957 are
one of the older races that flit through but don't really pay any
attention to us anymore.
<p>
<li>@@@846703990 The Vorlons are one of the remaining ancient races;
Kosh is one of the Vorlons, not the last of them.
<p>
<li> Kosh is a Vorlon. The Vorlons fought the Shadows. There are many
Vorlons, back home. (The Writer committed an error in that he used
too many pronouns in that segment of dialogue.)
<p>
<li> <em>Was Kosh's line about Sheridan going to Z'ha'dum a warning or a
threat?</em><br>
Yes.
<p>
<li> How do you get a shot of Morden's head on a pike past the censors?
<p>
Easy.
<p>
You frame the shot so the head is draped...in shadows.
<p>
If I were to be planning such a thing, of course....
<p>
<li> MPs (Military Police) also wear armbands. So do the Red Cross and some
United Nations forces.
<p>
<li> <em>How many times did you shoot the scene with Talia slapping
Sheridan?</em><br>
Only twice. Mainly 'cause she tended to whack him real hard.
[...]
The take you see is the first one printed.
<p>
<li> He said stop because Zack had found the right wavelength (at least
briefly) and didn't want him to go further and lose it again.
<p>
<li> <em>Will Vir, even metaphorically, get to wave at Morden?</em><br>
That would be telling.
<p>
<li> <em>Was the Great Machine inside Epsilon 3 built by a member race of the
First Ones?</em><br>
Could be.
<p>
<li> No, Varn was not one of the First Ones.
</ul>
<h3>Bruce Boxleitner speaks</h3>
<ul>
<li> <em>Bruce: what has the most challenging episode been for you so
far, and why?</em><br>
The episode we just finished filming today.
It's called In the Shadow of Za'Ha'Dum and my character deals with
some very personal issues.
</ul>