Post
by Specter » Wed Apr 25, 2018 11:43 am
Since “Lost Planet of the Gods” has so much going on in it, one thing that’s easy to overlook is the theme of Apollo’s spiritual rebirth. There’s really no hint of that story thread in Part 1, and it’s just barely crammed into the nooks and crannies of Part 2.
We do manage to learn that Apollo is apparently a “practical” skeptic who’s not at all impressed by the ancient writings that he thinks have “beguiled” his father, and that he believes the fleet was led to Kobol by “a burned-out star, nothing more.” But it’s not until Serina’s death scene that we learn he was also a skeptic about the existence of an afterlife. When he says they will “have an eternity,” Serina asks if he actually believes that, and that’s when he says she has “convinced” him of the immortality of the spirit.
This transformation is put to immediate use when Apollo has to reassure Boxey that Serina’s spirit and love will be with them forever, but also down the road, in later episodes, we find Apollo doing things like reminding Boxey to say his prayers and confronting Count Iblis over Sheba’s soul. So it’s a lasting change in his character that unfortunately gets short shrift in the episode where it happens.
I wonder also how they would have handled Apollo’s subsequent transition into a hedonist that was planned for Season 2. Would that transformation have been as sketchy and abrupt as this one?