I thought G'Kar's admitting he didn't know what he would do after crushing the Centauri showed he still had some potential to turn away from that path; and that was what dissatisfied Morden. Londo has no qualifiers to his answer. G'Kar's 'I don't know' also reminded me of Delenn's doubts as expressed to the Inquisitor.
Oddly, and probably since on my first viewing I saw things out of order and missed a lot, I thought Delenn's glowing triangle was some sort of protection from the Vorlon, a bad guy detector of some kind. Sort of like Glinda's kiss on Dorothy's forehead. Which made the later reaction to Londo and the urn more explicable.
Kosh's statement 'they are not for you' (again, at the first viewing) I thought meant the people on the station; that all the ambassadors would be involved (as they were, one way or another) in what was coming. The human exceptionalism aspects of the show always bother me.
"The vision of B5 being destroyed with one shuttle leaving..."
This time through that scene seemed to foretell the 'original' ending; with Sinclair and Delenn escaping the destruction of the station at the last minute with David.
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Oddly, and probably since on my first viewing I saw things out of order and missed a lot, I thought Delenn's glowing triangle was some sort of protection from the Vorlon, a bad guy detector of some kind. Sort of like Glinda's kiss on Dorothy's forehead. Which made the later reaction to Londo and the urn more explicable.
Kosh's statement 'they are not for you' (again, at the first viewing) I thought meant the people on the station; that all the ambassadors would be involved (as they were, one way or another) in what was coming. The human exceptionalism aspects of the show always bother me.
"The vision of B5 being destroyed with one shuttle leaving..."
This time through that scene seemed to foretell the 'original' ending; with Sinclair and Delenn escaping the destruction of the station at the last minute with David.