Introduction

Battlestar Galactica: The Plan is a television film set in the re-imagined version of the fictional Battlestar Galactica universe.
It consists of newly filmed material as well as a compilation of footage from the 2004 TV series and 2003 miniseries.
The miniseries and first two seasons of Battlestar Galactica are retold with more emphasis on the Cylon perspective and their plan to wipe out the human race.
The story follows two versions of the Cylon known as Cavil, with one admitting they may have made a mistake, with the story being told in flashback. The “Final Five” Cylons are featured prominently.
The film premiered exclusively on DVD, Blu-ray Disc and digital download on 27 October 2009. It premiered on 10 January 2010 on Syfy, on 02 April 2010 on Sky Premiere in the UK, and on 06 August 2011 on Space in Canada.
Outline
The opening scenes of The Plan occur just prior to the destruction of the Twelve Colonies in the televised miniseries, Battlestar Galactica.
Humanoid Cylon John Cavil is shown leading the planning for the genocidal attack on the human race.
The seven known Cylons are present in the control room of the main Cylon base. Two versions of Cavil are shown in a Resurrection Ship, with the “Final Five” Cylons in stasis in resurrection chambers.
The two versions of Cavil briefly discuss their plans for “teaching a lesson” to their creators, the Final Five.
One version of Cavil announces his intention to witness the destruction of humanity on the ground. This version of Cavil travels to the planet Picon, where he encounters Ellen Tigh. Other characters from the series are also depicted: Gaius Baltar has a final meeting with Caprica Six; Samuel Anders is shown at his Pyramid team’s training camp along with the team doctor, who is Number Four/Simon; and Tory Foster (Rekha Sharma) is shown driving to an airport.
The destruction of the Twelve Colonies is depicted in a series of new special effects shots, with the Cylon Hybrid narrating the destruction with oblique poetry.
Almost all of the planets of the Twelve Colonies are depicted in short scenes. Ellen Tigh is severely wounded in the nuclear attack on Picon.
Cavil helps her leave the planet aboard a Colonial Fleet rescue ship. Aboard a civilian transport, Cavil torments the half-conscious woman with descriptions of his intent to destroy humanity.
Tory Foster survives the nuclear attack as well, but is wounded when her car flips over in the blast.
Anders helps console his teammates in the mountainous region where they were training.
Several scenes from the television miniseries are edited into The Plan.
Cavil later boards the Galactica, calling himself “Brother Cavil,” and takes over the Galactica’s chapel. The creation of Galactica’s “wall of remembrance” is depicted, where survivors posted pictures and mementos of their dead or missing loved ones. Using religious fliers which talk about a “plan”, Cavil covertly gathers the seven known Cylons. Cavil tells them that he intends to continue his plan to utterly destroy the human race. He also tells them that there is a sleeper agent aboard the Galactica, a Number Eight, whom he also plans to use.
Back on Cylon-occupied Caprica, Sam Anders and his teammates have fled their training centre for safer quarters. They spot Cylon Centurions collecting the parts of their fallen comrades.
Later, Sam and his companions launch their first attack on the Cylons, losing several people in an otherwise successful attack. Sam and Jean Barolay later observe several Number Fives burying numerous dead human bodies, realise that Cylons have taken humanoid form, and resolve to attack them.
They do so later, while a Cavil version supervises the Fives’ work. Cavil plays dead and survives the attack unharmed. Mistakenly believing Cavil to be a human being, Sam and his friends take the priest with them back to their camp. Cavil is clearly shocked to see Anders, because he is one of the original Final Five.
Back on the Galactica, the events of the first-season episodes unfold from the Cylons’ perspective. Brother Cavil triggers the original Cylon programming of the Number Eight known as Sharon “Boomer” Valerii. She plans a bombing of the ship’s water storage facilities. As she tries to implement her plan, Boomer becomes increasingly distraught because she has fallen in love with Chief Galen Tyrol (Aaron Douglas).
Cavil becomes angry when the Number Five known as Aaron Doral is exposed as a Cylon, and demands that he attempt to kill Commander Adama.
The Number Two, meanwhile, listens in on Colonial Fleet communications, and becomes convinced that Kara “Starbuck” Thrace (Katee Sackhoff) holds some special purpose for the humanoid Cylons. He begins to paint the nebula depicted in Season Three episodes.
Cavil, realising that the Number Two known as Leoben Conoy has had his identity compromised, demands that the Number Two turn himself over to the humans and attempt to deceive or kill them.
When Boomer’s plan to deprive the Fleet of water fails (and Boomer helps the Galactica locate more water), Cavil demands that she kill Commander Adama.
She first attempts suicide, and later purposefully botches the assassination attempt.
Cavil, worried about Doctor Baltar’s attempt to develop a Cylon detection machine, orders the Number Six known as Shelly Godfrey to frame Baltar for treason. She does so, but her attempt fails when her evidence is exposed as a sham by Lieutenant Gaeta.
Cavil orders the Six into an airlock and kills her. Cally Henderson’s assassination of Boomer is depicted as well. Cavil also orders the Number Four known as Simon to destroy the ship on which he lives with his family. Simon commits suicide rather than kill the family he has grown to love.
In the aftermath of Simon’s suicide, Simon’s wife Giana tries to convince everyone that he was not a Cylon. She seeks solace from Chief Tyrol, who is beginning to suspect that he himself might be a Cylon.
Meanwhile, back on Cylon-occupied Caprica, the other version of Cavil has ingratiated himself with Sam Anders. Cavil has ordered the Number Four to attempt to kill members of Sam’s team, but none have died and Cavil criticizes the Four’s actions.
Starbuck returns to Caprica and meets the stranded Colonial pilot Karl “Helo” Agathon. Cavil makes a failed attempt to trick Sam into thinking they are Cylons and attacking them.
Helo and Starbuck join them and attack a local Cylon base. Starbuck is wounded, taken captive by the Cylons, and subjected to various breeding experiments.
Anders, Helo, and the others rescue her, discovering that Simon is a Cylon in the process.
Later, Cavil tries to assassinate Starbuck and Anders but finds that he cannot pull the trigger, because he cannot stop thinking about Anders’ comment that death would not make him love these people any less.
When the Cylon Centurions attack, Cavil is forced to hide with the rest of the humans. That night, Cavil meets with a Number Six who informs him that the Cylons have agreed to end their attacks on the human race.
Cavil, who has changed his mind about humanity, agrees to pass on the message to the humans despite the fact that his model voted against the truce. Cavil returns to the human camp, and the humans leave the next day for the Galactica.
Meanwhile, the Brother Cavil on the Galactica is bedevilled by the repeated appearance of a young boy named John (Alex Ferris) in his chapel. Their various interactions finally end when the fake priest offers the boy an apple and then stabs him to death.
The Plan ends with “Caprica Cavil” arriving aboard the Galactica, and exposing himself and Brother Cavil as humanoid Cylons (as depicted in scenes from the second-season episode “Lay Down Your Burdens“). We realise from the Cylon perspective that he does this on purpose to stop Brother Cavil’s plans.
Brother Cavil is brought to the brig protesting that he is not a Cylon until he sees Caprica Cavil already in the brig, at which point he stops pretending. Caprica Cavil announces that the Cylons have voted to give the humans “a reprieve” because they have decided that their attempts at genocide were an error. They have left the colonies and will stop hunting the humans (this scene differs from the same scene in “Lay Down Your Burdens, Part Two“.)
Brother Cavil is in disbelief that the Cylons have decided to leave the humans alone, and continues to argue for their destruction. Caprica Cavil asserts that Brother Cavil does not understand the nature of love. He says that the Final Five loved humanity, and that Brother Cavil is jealous of this love. Brother Cavil, he claims, does not understand that God and the Final Five will love humanity even more if the human race is extinguished.
As they are escorted to the airlock, the Cavils see the Final Five Cylons watching them and admit this was not the reunion they had expected. The two Cavils are forced into the airlock where they argue their differing perspectives right up until the end.
Brother Cavil announces that he intends to finish the destruction of the human race once he is resurrected, implying that he and John Cavil are one and the same and he intends to box Caprica Cavil to prevent him from spreading his ideologies to the rest of the Cylons. The two are ejected, and float out past the fleet.
The film ends with this scene overlaid with John Cavil’s fourth-season tirade lamenting his human-like body and desiring to be more like a machine so that he could “see gamma rays, hear x-rays, smell dark matter…and feel the solar wind of a super-nova” flowing over him.
Battlestar Galactica TV Series, Films & Webisodes
You can find a full index of Battlestar Galactica TV series, films, and webisodes here.
Trivia
You can read interesting trivia and background details about the BSG franchise here.
Production & Filming Details
- Director: Edward James Olmos.
- Producers: David Eick, Jane Espenson, Ronald D. Moore, Harvbey Frand, and Ron E. French.
- Writer: Jane Espenson.
- Music: Bear McCreary.
- Cinematography: Stephen McNutt.
- Editor: Andrew Seklir.
- Production: David Eick Productions, NBC Universal Cable, and Universal Studios Home Entertainment.
- Distributor: Universal Studios Home Entertainment.
- Release Date: 27 October 2000.
- Running Time: 112 minutes.
- Country: US.
- Language: English.
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