- Aaron Doral
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Number Five Battlestar Galactica character First appearance Miniseries Portrayed by Matthew Bennett Information Species Humanoid Cylon Gender Male Aaron Doral (Number Five) is a fictional character from the reimagined Battlestar Galactica series.
Doral is a humanoid Cylon (designated model Number Five)[1] who first appeared as a civilian public relations specialist aboard Galactica just prior to the Cylon attack on the Colonies. Through conversation with the Cylon agent Number Six, Dr. Gaius Baltar claims Doral is a Cylon spy and has him thrown in the brig. Gaius does so to protect himself and justify the finding of a Cylon device he has noticed; Doral actually being a spy is mere coincidence. Doral emphatically denies being a Cylon. However, not willing to take a chance, Doral is abandoned by Commander Adama on the Ragnar Anchorage weapons depot. At the time of abandonment, Doral exclaims his innocence, and claims to be from Oasis, outside Caprica City, and having been on Kobol College on Gemenon. The audience is shown that Baltar was correct in assuming Doral a Cylon, four copies of Doral, along with Number Six, Leoben Conoy, and Sharon come to his rescue. (In the novelization, Doral is a sleeper agent - he does not know he is a Cylon until the others come for him at Ragnar Anchorage.)
Doral appears again on Cylon-occupied Caprica curiously monitoring the situation developing between Sharon and Karl "Helo" Agathon. He initially decides that Sharon cannot be trusted, and orders Number Six to deal with her. Once Doral discovers that Sharon is pregnant, he states the child is a miracle, and must be protected at all costs. The discovery also leads to his suggesting a major tactical change, although the details of this new plan, as well as whatever changes were made from the original, have as yet to be clearly defined in the series.
The Doral Cylons seem to act more covertly, having an unassuming "average" appearance in order to better blend in with more trivial background matters instead of taking more noticeable positions of authority and purpose. He seems to have a position of authority among the Cylons, acting as overseer, and having a hand behind their decision making and tactical planning.[citation needed] This personalization is contradicted, however, in the special TV movie "The Plan," in which a copy of Number One/John Cavil berates a confused Doral copy (wearing clothing nearly identical to the first copy encountered by the Colonials) for his lack of disguise and caution while wandering the halls of Galactica. A later scene shows a small group of Doral copies assigned to menial labor disposing of masses of human corpses on occupied Caprica, doing work they complain is below them and should be handled by Centurions. Likewise, in the episode "Downloaded," a copy of Doral can be seen serving drinks to other humanoid Cylons. These scenes seem to imply the Doral models are of lower intelligence than other Cylon models, and possess less authority. Of the several Cylon infiltrators whose failures are listed by Cavil and "Tough Six", including the Number Eight known as Lieutenant Jr. Grade Sharon "Boomer" Valerii, the Number Two known as Leoben Conoy, the Number Six known as Shelly Godfrey, and the Number Four known as Simon O'Neill, Doral is the only one whose failure to complete the Cylon plan was not due to love but simply to blowing himself up before reaching a critical area of Galactica.[citation needed]
The Doral Cylons appear to be more fanatical, militant and cold-hearted than the other humanoid Cylons encountered thus far, short of the often vile, overtly vicious Brother Cavil.[citation needed] They calmly discuss the genocide of mankind (stating on one occasion "They [humans] would have destroyed themselves anyway. They deserve what they got."), and unhesitatingly conducting (on at least one occasion) a suicide bombing aboard Galactica[2]. On the other hand, Doral was highly critical of the human suicide bombers in "Occupation" who inflicted Cylon casualties and fatalities, lambasting them for a 'lack of nobility'. In "Torn" a Number Eight accuses Doral of "barely even being able to say [God's] name." Number Fives are the only humanoid Cylon model not shown in a romantic or sexual relationship at some point in the series, although a Five in the episode "Tigh Me Up, Tigh Me Down" "can't help wondering" what it would be like to feel as intensely as Helo does for Sharon, noting that "even in his anguish", after Sharon was taken away as part of a trial of Helo's love, "he seemed so... alive", and a Five speaking with former Galactica deckhand James "Jammer" Lyman in detention on New Caprica in a Battlestar Galactica: The Resistance webisode tells Jammer that "a wife, kids, a life" is possible for him, and for the Five himself and "all of us", if he starts cooperating with the Cylons.
References
External links
- Number Five at the Battlestar Wiki.
Characters on Battlestar Galactica Original Reimagined Lee "Apollo" Adama · William "Husker" Adama · Karl "Helo" Agathon · Samuel "Longshot" Anders · Gaius Baltar · Helena Cain · Dr. Sherman Cottle · Anastasia "Dee" Dualla · Margaret "Racetrack" Edmondson · Elosha · Tory Foster · Felix Gaeta · Louanne "Kat" Katraine · Aaron Kelly · Billy Keikeya · Romo Lampkin · Alex "Crashdown" Quartararo · Laura Roslin · Kara "Starbuck" Thrace · Ellen Tigh · Saul Tigh · Cally Tyrol · Galen Tyrol · Thomas Zarek · #1 - John Cavil · #2 - Leoben Conoy · #3 - D'Anna Biers · #4 - Simon O'Neill · #5 - Aaron Doral · #6 · #7 - Daniel · #8 - Sharon · Minor charactersList of Battlestar Galactica characters Categories:- Cylons
- Fictional secret agents and spies
- Fictional cyborgs
- Fictional robots
- Fictional clones
- Fictional characters introduced in 2003
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