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Na'Toth asserts that Deathwalker was a war criminal responsible for a number of unethical and illegal experiments on the Narn people during wartime. In Medlab, Sinclair identifies the woman as a Dilgar, a species that had previously gone to war against many non-aligned worlds, but had died out thirty years ago when their sun went nova.
Only a single civilian colony on the planet Planthos survived the war and cataclysm. In the episode Deathwalker, a Dilgar survivor of the war appears on the Babylon 5 station in the year 2258 and is revealed to be Jha'Dur, known to many races as "Deathwalker" because of the many extravagant war crimes she committed. Following the war, Jha'Dur ...
Only a single civilian colony on the planet Planthos survived the war and cataclysm. In the episode Deathwalker, a Dilgar survivor of the war appears on the Babylon 5 station in the year 2258 and is revealed to be Jha'Dur, known to many races as "Deathwalker" because of the many extravagant war crimes she committed. Following the war, Jha'Dur ...
Episodes contained themes such as personal change, loss, oppression, corruption, and redemption. Unusual for American broadcast television at the time of its airing, Babylon 5 was conceived as a "novel for television" with a pre-planned five-year story arc, each episode envisioned as a "chapter". [3]
G'Kar (/ dʒ ə ˈ k ɑːr / juh-KARR) is a fictional character in Babylon 5 played by Andreas Katsulas.He is a Narn and initially appears as a villainous diplomat opposite Londo Mollari, being constantly engaged in insidious, if petty, and often comical schemes.
Babylon 5: A Call to Arms is based upon the sci-fi television series Babylon 5 and draws heavily on material from the television show and the boardgame Babylon 5 Wars. The game's popularity exceeded Mongoose Publishing 's initial expectations and has expanded to include new rules supplements and new miniatures; a second edition of the game was ...
Leading out of an NFL doubleheader, the episode earned a 1.2 rating with 3.95 million viewers, which was the most viewed show of Fox that night. [ 6 ] The episode received positive reviews from fans and critics, with many fans labeling it as one of the best Treehouse of Horror episodes yet.
The first two seasons ran from April 3, 2004, to February 25, 2006. In 2007, they made a five-part OVA titled Kyo Kara Maoh! R, with each episode released separately directly to DVD. In 2008, the series was renewed for a third season which ran from April 3, 2008, to February 19, 2009. The first two seasons were broadcast in America on ImaginAsian.