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The Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles were inspired by the A-Team
Each of the Turtles is an expy of an A-Team member.

Leonardo = Hannibal (the serious, no-nonsese leader).

Raphael = Baracus (the hot-headed muscle of the group).

Donatello = Murdock (the brains of the operation).

Michaelangelo = Face (the ladies' man).

The Murdock of the movie is South African.
He speaks fluent Swahili (not a native South African language, true, but spoken widely across the continent), and his South African accent is more convincing than his American one. He just pretends to be American because...he's Murdock.
  • Non-US citizens must have permanent residency to join the US military, and they are restricted to low-level positions that don't require security clearance. It is possible that Murdock became a US citizen after joining the army, however.
    • It doesn't matter which method he uses, he would still be restricted to lower-level positions and it would be difficult to acquire even the basic, entry-level clearance. Not impossible, but difficult, and it would still be the only clearance he could ever acquire. It would, however, be enough to allow him to progress completely through the vanilla army enlisted ranks and retire.
    • I've never seen someone who is not a native-born American limited to lower-level positions. That's completely false. You can become a citizen and get a top secret clearance. I know this first-hand. For example, I worked with a guy who was born in Iraq, served in the Iraqi Army, fought in the Iran-Iraq war (all of it), moved to Michigan, became a citizen, then several years later, went back to Iraq as a translator with a secret clearance.
  • He's not "really" a native of South Africa. He has a fake passport that somehow got mixed up. He was supposed to be passing himself off as Jewish, but there's nothing in that scene that suggests that he isn't actually a natural-born American citizen. The fact that he spoke the language was just rule of cool or rule of funny.
  • Probably rule of funny combined with the fact that the actor really is from South Africa (and played Wikus in District 9).

Murdock is a Time Lord.

Let's expand on this theory a bit, shall we?

Warning: What follows is an extremely complicated, long-winded, multi-fandom Epileptic Tree. You have been forewarned.

Starbuck finally made his way to earth, but on the way through the atmosphere, his ship got caught up in some kind of time vortex phenomenon. He fell through this "time storm" and was reverted to a baby, and then he crash landed in the year 1950.

Now, Starbuck's father, Chameleon.....you remember how the Nomen called him "The Jackal"? Yeah I figure that's significant because, you see, rogue Time Lords have this habit of using names prefaced by the word "The". There's the Doctor, the Master, the Rani.......so obviously The Jackal/Chameleon is a Time Lord!

Anyway, Chameleon found out that Starbuck was headed to earth and followed him there. He got caught up in the same time storm, but since he's full Time Lord (I assume Starbuck is only half), it didn't de-age him, but it did send him back to 1950. But when his ship crashed, he was injured and had to regenerate. His new incarnation was much younger, and unfortunately, his new personality was even more of a manipulative jerk than the last one. But he still remembered his son. He found the other crashed ship and the baby Starbuck.

Realizing what had happened, Chameleon resolved to try to settle in on this new planet and raise his boy. So he took the name A.J. Bancroft, called his son Richard, and tried to live a somewhat normal life. He even met a woman named Samantha and they fell in love and got married. It went okay for a little while, but gradually his ambitions started to get the better of him, and eventually A.J. ran off. And you know the rest of that story from Family Reunion. Of course A.J. changed some details when he told Murdock, because, well, who would believe the real story? Of course A.J. didn't know just who Murdock really was.....

You see back on Gallifrey (before the Time War), the High Council (because of course they don't have a very high opinion of rogue Time Lords) decided to send another Time Lord to go after The Jackal/Chameleon/A.J. Well, the guy that they sent encountered some problems along the way, and he ended up having to disguise himself as a human. He stored his Time Lord memories in a pocketwatch, which we see in Alive at Five. So he ended up on earth and became H.M. Murdock. But even as a human, he still had that innate Time Lord sense that allowed him to find other Time Lords. That's how he ended up in the same unit with Face.

Now this is where the theory encounters some problems. The question is, when did Murdock open the watch and regain his Time Lord memories? It must have been before Alive at Five, because when Face opened the watch then, nothing happened to Murdock. But if that were the case, then why was Murdock surprised to discover that A.J. was Face's father in the very next episode? That innate sense should have kicked in and he should have recognized The Jackal, even in his new incarnation.

There's a couple of ways to possibly explain it:

  • 1. He hadn't got the memories back by Family Reunion. But he had put some failsafes in the watch years earlier. It would only restore his memories if he opened it, so when Face opened it in Alive at Five, nothing happened.
  • 2. Alternately, he had regained his memories before Alive at Five, but he'd been in human form for so long that it was taking a while for all of his Time Lord senses to recover completely. He remembered his mission (to track down The Jackal), but he didn't recognize A.J. as The Jackal right away. And it's entirely possible that The Jackal suspected that the Time Lords would send someone after him, so he used some kind of perception filter as protection.

Theory number 2 makes the most sense. Anyway, sometime after Family Reunion, Murdock found out about the Time War. Realizing he had no home planet to return to, he decided to remain on earth and continue his life as H.M. Murdock. Eventually he may have told the rest of the guys his secret. Or maybe he just told Face.

The A-Team is a sequel to Taken

"Hannibal" is an alias for Bryan Mills. The A-Team is his on-again-off-again Day Job, and Taken took place during his temporary retirement.

The passport Hannibal used in the airport says Bryan Mills.

"Bryan Mills" is one of Hannibal's many aliases. He's just a father, going to meet his daughter in Paris... nope, nothing to see here...

The film is in continuity with Modern Warfare.

Years ago, a crack commando unit was sentenced to prison by a military court for a crime they didn't commit... and the world just fuckin' watched.

(Read it somewhere, thought it was cool)

General Shepherd called in every favour he had, but his best still wasn't enough to save Hannibal, his friend and trusted subordinate, from the tribunal. Nevertheless, when the A-Team broke out and went on the run, he offered all the discreet help he could.

Fast forward to Modern Warfare 2. One of the things Shepherd does with his blank cheque is clear the A-Team's names. Regrettably, before he can send Hannibal and the Team after Price and Soap, he dies. What a shame.

The A-Team have Red Dwarf viruses.
Hannibal has the Luck Virus. Face has Sexual Magnetism (and may be a terminal case.) Murdoch has a mutated strain of the Inspiration virus. BA... is just a bad-ass.

B.A. Baracus is mildly autistic
  • He has distinct difficulty with social interaction. His responses are generally limited to a few repeated phrases, and has difficulty changing his social behavior, using the same statements and arguments multiple times and with no regard for how others react to them. He can't seem to tell at all when people are deceiving him, and responds to people messing with him (especially Murdock) as though they are completely genuine.
  • He's a mechanical genius. While overall competent at other non-social activities, his intelligence and creativity restricted to that one field.
  • He possesses a doggedly one-track mind, often requiring Hannibal to keep him from overlooking more important goals in pursuit of his current fixation.
  • He seems to empathize and interact with children better than with adults.

B.A.'s fear of flying is part of his Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder.
  • In Vietnam, he went on a lot of dangerous missions, and flew with Murdock on most of them. Murdock's "crazy" evasive manouvres to avoid being shot down permanently soured B.A. on flying. When we meet his mother she implies he always feared flying but in order to have become a Green Beret he would have to have completed Airborne training. So he may always have been afraid but sucked it up until Murdock's antics exacerbated his phobia.

The Show is a Holodeck Program.

Considering that we have Dwight Schultz as one of the leads of the Show; and how his Character in Star Trek: The Next Generation, Reginald Barclay, is a lot more confident, when he's in the Holo Deck; isn' it possible that the A-Team is what Barclay refers to as "Program Nine", in the Episode; "Hollow Pursuits"?

Face IS Starbuck.
  • In the last episode of Battle Star Galactica we see the fleet receive TV footage of the Apollo moon landings in 1969, establishing the time period for the series. We last see Starbuck in Galactica 80 marooned on a remote moon but with a Cylon spaceship he can use to escape. It's possible he made his own way to Earth and adopted the identity of Templeton Peck, an orphan whom he physically resembled who was killed in the Vietnam War. This poses the problem of the famous scene where Face recognises the Cylon at Universal Studios but it's possible that when the fleet started settling its' population on Earth they created the fictional Galactica universe to prepare humanity for the potential coming conflict.

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