The Cylons go to great lengths to bring the 'final five' Cylons out of hiding who emerge as the shaky alliance is in jeopardy. Galactica has a great damage which makes the crew quarrel to try to repair it
Michael Rymer, Anthony Hemingway, Michael Nankin, Edward James Olmos, Wayne Rose, Rod Hardy, Paul Edwards, Ronald D. Moore, John Dahl, Gwyneth Horder-Payton, Robert Young,
To be honest, I'm weary of Baltar and his endless visions/hallucinations, as I am of the fleet's wandering as the surviving colonists try, somewhat fitfully, to find their way back to a home planet none of them remembers.
Tonight's Battlestar Galactica finale was a cop out, but it was also the perfect goodbye. Ron Moore dropped the ball on plot but as always, the show delivered where it really mattered.
And even though this particular episode may not have been able to clear the yawning chasm of our expectations, it was an appropriate conclusion to one of the most poignant, smart and relevant television shows of the last decade.
After anxious months of geeky Web speculation over how Battlestar's final season will conclude, the best thing about "He That Believeth in Me" was how it bypassed our feverish expectations and instead set up new central conflicts.
For a series that had always used familiar trappings of sci-fi like robots and spaceships to comment on our present-day circumstances, it was the perfect final sequence.