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Brand New ,Never used , sealed in Box.
ALL The Complete Season 3 , third , hold in one Gift Box.
DVD Encoding:Free , can be played on any DVD Player.
Audio Tracks:Original English
Subtitles:English , Chinese. Removable .
Asia Import , some Chinese printed on the cover and disc . content same as US version .
Genre Military science fiction
Drama
Created by Ronald D. Moore
Developed by David Eick, Ronald D. Moore
Starring see below
Opening theme Gayatri by Richard Gibbs
Composer(s) Bear McCreary
Country of origin United States
Language(s) English
No. of seasons 4
No. of episodes 63 episodes, 17 webisodes, 1 TV movie
Production
Location(s) Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
Running time approx. 42 minutes
Broadcast
Original channel Sky One (Season One)
Sci Fi Channel (Season One - )
Picture format 480i (SDTV),
1080i (HDTV)
First shown in United Kingdom[1]
Original run October 18, 2004 – present
Season Three
The Sci-Fi Channel ordered a 20-episode third season on November 16, 2005, which premiered in the US on October 6, 2006, and in Canada on October 7, 2006, with the first two episodes being shown together. The broadcast schedule for Season Three did not include a long hiatus in the middle of the season, as with Season Two. Production began in April 2006 in Vancouver, British Columbia.[7] The Sci-Fi Channel moved the show to Sundays on January 21, 2007, the first time the show had changed nights since it began airing.[8]
Season Three was broadcast in high-definition on Sky One HD in the UK and Ireland, starting on January 9, 2007, and in the US on Universal HD, starting on January 27, 2007.
After the initial five episode long New Caprica story arc, Season Three consisted of mostly stand-alone episodes. In the podcast for the Season Three finale, Ron Moore stated that in an effort to attract new viewers, the Sci-Fi Channel pressured the production team to make stand-alone episodes, instead of focusing on previously established storylines. However, this met with a negative critical reception, and Moore stated that by the end of Season Three, the critical reaction and declining ratings following this paradigm shift forced the Sci-Fi Channel to admit that stand-alone episodes simply do not work in the format that the series has established for itself, and Moore went on to say that because of this the Sci-Fi Channel promised that it would not put any pressure to make stand-alone episodes in Season Four.[citation needed]
That the Sci-Fi Channel would pressure for changes in the series' formula is remarkable, considering that Moore and his production team routinely cited the network's "hands off" approach to the series as one of its strong points; that the writers were being given free rein to do what they thought best in the first two seasons.[neutrality disputed] Moore infamously explained in the episode podcasts for season 1 that literally the only time Sci-Fi Channel asked him to change something in the first two seasons, was early in production when they were a bit uneasy about the extremely dark tone of the series, and asked if Moore could insert some lighter material, such as everyone having a birthday party for someone.[citation needed] The result was that Moore sarcastically inserted a scene into the beginning of the fourth episode, "Act of Contrition", in which a number of pilots are celebrating a Raptor pilot's 1,000th landing when a drone falls from its rack due to metal and strap fatigue, ignites and flies towards the groups of pilots, killing 13 and injuring 7 more. Moore said that Sci-Fi Channel responded by saying, "We get it," and never tried to interfere in the running of the series again.[citation needed]
Season Three was released on DVD in the United States on March 18, 2008.
more about Battlestar Galactica , please check here: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battlestar_Galactica_(2004_television_series)

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