T
2004    44minAction, Adventure
8.795%94%8.2
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Dopo lo sterminio cylone, la specie umana conta solo 49.998 sopravvissuti. Il Comandante William Adamo guida la Flotta Coloniale a bordo del Galactica, unica astronave militare salvatasi dall'attacco alle Dodici Colonie, mentre Laura Roslin assume la difficile carica di presidente presso il Colonial One. Insieme guidano l'umanità verso una nuova casa, la leggendaria tredicesima colonia nota come Terra. La Flotta è sottoposta a continui attacchi da parte dei Cyloni, e fatica a restare unita dopo ogni salto. I piloti di Viper, tra i quali spicca il tenente Kara "Scorpion" Thrace, sono sotto il comando di Lee Adamo, figlio del comandante. Lo scienziato Gaius Baltar, il responsabile dell'attacco cylone, è anch'egli a bordo della Flotta e tenta di conquistare la fiducia dei piani alti costruendo un congegno in grado di rilevare la natura di un cylone umanoide. Allo stesso tempo inizia ad avere visioni del cylone che lo sedusse su Caprica, Numero Sei, che sostiene di essere un angelo di Dio. Il Tenente Sharon "Boomer" Valerii scopre di essere una copia dormiente del Numero Otto e tenta di uccidere William Adamo. Nel frattempo, Scorpion si reca a Caprica per recuperare la Freccia di Apollo, un antico manufatto che secondo le Scritture aprirebbe le porte della Tomba di Atena, luogo mistico che aiuterebbe l'umanità a trovare la rotta verso la Terra. Sul pianeta si unisce a Karl Agathon, che ha vissuto gli ultimi mesi con una copia del Numero Otto credendo che questa fosse Boomer.

4 Stagioni

  • Stagione 1
    Stagione 113 Episodi
  • Stagione 2
    Stagione 220 Episodi
  • Stagione 3
    Stagione 320 Episodi
  • Stagione 4
    Stagione 420 Episodi
  • Speciali
    Speciali10 Episodi
  • Edward James OlmosCommander William Adama / Regista
  • Mary McDonnellLaura Roslin
  • Jamie BamberLee 'Apollo' Adama
  • Katee SackhoffKara 'Starbuck' Thrace
  • James CallisGaius Baltar
  • Tricia HelferNumber Six
  • Tahmoh PenikettKarl 'Helo' Agathon
  • Grace ParkSharon 'Boomer' Valerii
  • Michael HoganSaul Tigh
  • Aaron DouglasGalen Tyrol
  • Callum Keith RennieLeoben
  • Alessandro JulianiFelix Gaeta
  • Kandyse McClureAnastasia Dualla
  • Donnelly RhodesDr. Sherman Cottle
  • Bodie OlmosLt. Brendan 'Hot Dog' Constanza
  • Nicki ClyneCrewman Specialist Cally Henderson
  • Leah CairnsLt. Margaret 'Racetrack' Edmondson
  • Rekha SharmaTory Foster
  • Michael TruccoSamuel T. Anders
  • Paul CampbellBilly Keikeya
  • The Gutter Monkey24 marzo 2025
    With a deep lore, gripping mysteries, and thought-provoking existential themes, it's one of the smartest sci-fi shows ever to air.
  • Arthas Menethil2 gg fa
    Hard-hitting, Gritty, on the Edge of your Seats. This is what remakes are all about; hit it out of the Park with this one. Pray your favorite show gets treatment like this; you know they loved the source material.
  • The Patrick16 settembre 2025
    This show was recommended to me back in 2010, and here I am in 2025 finally giving it a watch. Unpopular opinion: I’ve struggled to fully enjoy it. I’m a huge sci-fi fan—Star Trek, The Expanse, Star Wars, Firefly, etc.—and while parts of the story really work for me, others don’t land. Season 1 has been my least favorite so far, but Season 2 pulled me in more. I may revisit this review after I finish Season 4, but so far it hasn’t matched the hype for me. I suspect it would have hit harder if I’d watched it when it originally aired; coming to it fresh in 2025 is tougher when so many similar—or stronger—series exist now. That said, I can see why it’s beloved. Even if I’m not enjoying it as much as others, it’s a good show with a great cast and characters. I really want to like it more—and maybe, with time, I will. To be continued… Update: this show has grown on me since finishing it a little while ago. I am now proud to be a BSG fan.
  • carlin_985 settembre 2025
    Best Sci Fi television show of all time. Incredible show
  • flavo4326 novembre 2025
    Battlestar Galactica (the reimagined series) is one of the rare television reboots that doesn’t just honour its source material—it surpasses it in nearly every way. I loved the original, but this reimagining absolutely blew me away. The updated visual effects, detailed set designs, and inspired casting choices created a world that felt immersive, lived-in, and emotionally charged. However, it was the complex, layered storytelling that truly set the series apart. The show balanced political intrigue, wartime survival, questions of identity, and moral ambiguity with remarkable finesse. It took the core concepts of the 1978 series—humanity on the run, Cylons in pursuit, faith versus logic—and evolved them into something far deeper and more resonant. This wasn’t just a remake; it was an evolutionary leap forward in sci-fi television. Battlestar Galactica proved that you can remain faithful to the heart of an original story while elevating it to new heights. It remains one of the finest sci-fi series ever created.
  • Bryon Hammer3 gg fa
    In terms of "bang for your buck" this is the greatest sci-fi tv shows ever made. Every single episode is a haymaker punch. The character development is top notch, the story is incredible, the strength of the characters is outstanding. You will love some characters, you will hate some characters, and you will change your mind about some characters. Even the bad episodes are good (Black Market and Unfinished Business). If you are re-watching this after years of letting it sit on the shelf or if you are watching this for the first time then you are in for one heck of a wild ride. Strap it, hang on, grip tight. You will enjoy every moment of this show from beginning to end.
  • Callum22 ottobre 2025
    ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐(out of 5) Battlestar Galactica (2003) – Humanity’s last stand among the stars, where faith and circuitry collide. “Battlestar Galactica” (2003) is what happens when classic space opera grows up, looks in the mirror, and realises the stars aren’t quite as bright as they used to be. Reimagined from the 1978 series, it takes the campy adventure of the original and rebuilds it into something darker, sharper, and far more human. This is science fiction stripped of fantasy’s polish — all rusted metal, political tension, and moral ambiguity drifting through cold vacuum. Unlike Star Wars, which mythologises space as a place of destiny, or Firefly, which romanticises it as a frontier of freedom, Battlestar Galactica treats it as a prison of survival — a journey through despair where humanity clings to scraps of civilisation and sanity. Every decision feels weighty, every death lingers, and every moment of hope feels like it’s paid for in blood. Edward James Olmos anchors it beautifully, bringing his steady gravitas back from the original series — not as a relic, but as a reinvention. His Admiral Adama is the embodiment of resilience: flawed, grounded, and burdened with impossible choices. The early seasons are gritty and uncompromising, exploring the dangers of overreliance on technology and the fragility of human morality under pressure. But as the story barrels toward its conclusion, the show drifts into philosophical and religious overdrive, with divine intervention stepping in where tighter writing once ruled. It’s not enough to undo the brilliance that came before — just a reminder that even great series sometimes lose themselves in their own mythology. Despite its stumbles, Battlestar Galactica remains one of the finest pieces of televised science fiction ever made — a rare blend of spectacle and introspection, as thrilling in its dogfights as it is haunting in its questions about what it truly means to be human.

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