In June 1978, prior to the release of the pilot,
20th Century Fox (producers of
Star Wars) sued
Universal Studios (producers of
Battlestar Galactica) for
plagiarism,
copyright infringement,
unfair competition, and
Lanham Act claims, alleging
Galactica had stolen 34 distinct ideas from
Star Wars. Universal promptly countersued, claiming
Star Wars had stolen ideas from their 1972 film
Silent Running, notably the robot "drones", and the 1930s
Buck Rogers serials. Fox's copyright claims were dismissed by the trial court in 1980, but in 1983, a federal
appeals court reversed that decision and remanded the case for trial. It was later "resolved without trial".
Star Wars director
George Lucas additionally threatened legal action against Apogee, Inc., the visual effects studio formed by
John Dykstra and several other former artists from Lucas'
Industrial Light and Magic who decided to remain in
Van Nuys rather than relocate to
San Rafael, California with the rest of the company. Lucas claimed that Apogee's work on
Galactica was being done with equipment that he had left behind, for a project that would be in direct competition against
Star Wars. Eventually, Apogee agreed to surrender the equipment to ILM, and several members of Dykstra's team returned to ILM. Afterwards, Universal's newly formed visual effects division,
Universal Hartland Visual Effects, took over the show's visual effects for the remainder of its run. Lucas also went after
Galactica merchandise, claiming that the
Cylon Raider and Colonial Viper toys could be confused with his own
Star Wars toys. His major contention was that the
Galactica toys featured plastic pellets that could be fired to simulate lasers, and these constituted a choking hazard for children, and he did not want to be blamed for any such accidents, despite none of the
Star Wars toys offered by
Kenner having anything similar. Such an accident came to pass on Christmas Day 1978, when a four-year-old child accidentally shot a pellet from a Cylon Raider toy into his mouth, where it lodged in his larynx and caused his brain to be deprived of oxygen. He was declared dead six days later on New Year's Eve 1978. Within two weeks,
Mattel issued an immediate recall of all
Galactica toys with missiles, and the boy's parents sued Mattel. A second incident involved the Colonial Viper toy which ended in emergency surgery to remove an inhaled pellet from a young boy's lungs. This incident was not fatal, but Mattel subsequently redesigned all of its
Galactica toys so that the pellets no longer left the toy when fired. ==Ratings==