Podcast:Faith: Difference between revisions

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(New page: == Teaser == Hello, and welcome to the podcast for episode 408 [unintelligible] "Faith". I'm Ronald D. Moore, executive producer and developer of the new ''Battlestar Galactica'' [unintell...)
 
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Hello, and welcome to the podcast for episode 408 [unintelligible] "Faith". I'm Ronald D. Moore, executive producer and developer of the new ''Battlestar Galactica'' [unintelligible]. Sorry about the [unintelligible] audio. [unintelligible, something about the audio level]. I'll never make that mistake again. Anyway. This week's- the Scotch is [unintelligible] twelve, and unfortunately the smoking lamp is out.
Hello, and welcome to the podcast for episode 408 [unintelligible] "Faith". I'm Ronald D. Moore, executive producer and developer of the new ''Battlestar Galactica'' [unintelligible]. Sorry about the [unintelligible] audio. [unintelligible, something about the audio level]. I'll never make that mistake again. Anyway. This week's- the Scotch is [unintelligible] twelve, and unfortunately the smoking lamp is out.


"Faith" is actually one of my favorite episodes of the season. I like the show a lot, for many different reasons. [unintelligible] but this is Kevin Fahey's first episode for us. Kevin was our production assistant and then graduated and became a staff writer this season. This is his first
"Faith" is actually one of my favorite episodes of the season. I like the show a lot, for many different reasons. [unintelligible] but this is Kevin Fahey's first episode for us. Kevin was our production assistant and then graduated and became a staff writer this season. This is his first time at bat for us and he did a great job. And there were post production [unintelligble] after the first draft and the second draft. Remember, that's par for the course in television.
 
Let's see. The first thing we talk about is where this episode begins. This episode, as I noted in last week's podcast of the episode prior to this, 407, was actually going to end much later. It was actually the end of the previous episode was actually pretty much the teaser of this episode, with Gaeta getting shot. All this [unintelligible] the teaser in the first off- in the ''Demetrius'' bridge. This is all shot to be in the prior episode. And essentially this was the sequence that was gonna get us all the way to the end. That episode was going to end with shots being fired and Gaeta going down, and then this episode was going to open with the aftermath, the crazy aftermath. And a couple of reasons argued to make all the changes that we did. [coughs] Sorry. One of them was just that the prior episode was just way full, and was running wildly over time as so many of our episodes are, and the second episode there were places that I wanted to tighten up at, some of the scenes with Cottle [unintelligible] so there was a natural overflow from one into the other. And also there was something about- as I watched the first episode, this sequence in ''Demetrius'', it felt like we had passed the dramatic climax, that the point of him saying, "I hereby relieve you of command of ''Demetrius''," felt like that was the high point of the scene, and then the rest of this was eroding on that dramatic moment and it just felt like it just kept going, and it didn't feel like it had a natural out, on some level. Like, I think we were gonna cut it here someplace- I'm trying to remember exactly the actual end point is in here somewhere on the chaos, it's like the shooting, and then the second episode was gonna pick up with the madness still going on. And I didn't think that was quite as satisfying as being able to play the tension of what was gonna happen next. So that argued [unintelligible] pushing over into this episode.
 
Oh, there's this whole business with Gaeta's leg. It's something we talked about in the writers' room, and it's like, well someone's gonna get shot, let's have 'em really get shot, and I believe in the early drafts of this, the first couple drafts were done in Helo still isn't aboard ''Demetrius''- it was a much later break of the storyline. Initially the mutiny was sparked by Gaeta. Gaeta was the XO and Gaeta was facing down Kara, and I think what happened in the standoff in the draft was that Kara and Athena were actually pointing guns at one another, and I think part of what we were playing in those early drafts was the interesting idea that the crew of the ''Demetrius'', the [unintelligible] crew of the ''Demetrius'' was backing the Cylon against Kara. That they had actually bonded with Athena over the course of time to the point where they would follow her even into a mutiny. That ultimately they trusted her, the known Cylon, and that's more than they trusted whoever and whatever Kara Thrace was at this point. And it was indicative of just how far Kara had gone, and also indicative of how far Athena had gone in [unintelligible]. Once we moved Helo over, it became a different storyline. The storyline was a little bit more [unintelligible]- it was little bit more influenced by ''The Caine Mutiny'' in the sequence of events that played out over there, the difference- there are noticeable differences [unintelligible] scenario you want- but I like the idea that the XO is the last one to turn against the captain, that all the other officers were united in doing all that they had to do, but the XO was the last in [unintelligible].
 
When we shot Gaeta's leg, question came up right away, "Well, how bad is he shot? How bad is the wound?" And I felt like, you know what? If we're gonna do this, if someone's gonna get shot over this, let's have some real consequences. Let's have s- let's have a problem that's gonna last a while, that's not gonna just get over real quickly. I think that one of the things that I dislike about television is that when people get gunshot wounds on tv typically it's a flesh- it's just a flesh wound. It's a bit of blood on the shirt, and it's usually on the same [unintelligible]. The character puts their arm in a sling and life goes on. One of the things I'm proud of in the series is that we generally- speaking, we haven't been pure about this, but generally speaking if somebody gets shot or hurt, it hurts, and the consequences of their wounds stay with the character for an extended period of time and we've tried to play [unintelligible], play how it would impede them, we've tried to play the pain most of all of how bad these- getting shot with a gun actually hurts and affects you. That's the end of the tease.
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== Act 1 ==

Revision as of 21:23, 17 June 2008

Teaser[edit]

Hello, and welcome to the podcast for episode 408 [unintelligible] "Faith". I'm Ronald D. Moore, executive producer and developer of the new Battlestar Galactica [unintelligible]. Sorry about the [unintelligible] audio. [unintelligible, something about the audio level]. I'll never make that mistake again. Anyway. This week's- the Scotch is [unintelligible] twelve, and unfortunately the smoking lamp is out.

"Faith" is actually one of my favorite episodes of the season. I like the show a lot, for many different reasons. [unintelligible] but this is Kevin Fahey's first episode for us. Kevin was our production assistant and then graduated and became a staff writer this season. This is his first time at bat for us and he did a great job. And there were post production [unintelligble] after the first draft and the second draft. Remember, that's par for the course in television.

Let's see. The first thing we talk about is where this episode begins. This episode, as I noted in last week's podcast of the episode prior to this, 407, was actually going to end much later. It was actually the end of the previous episode was actually pretty much the teaser of this episode, with Gaeta getting shot. All this [unintelligible] the teaser in the first off- in the Demetrius bridge. This is all shot to be in the prior episode. And essentially this was the sequence that was gonna get us all the way to the end. That episode was going to end with shots being fired and Gaeta going down, and then this episode was going to open with the aftermath, the crazy aftermath. And a couple of reasons argued to make all the changes that we did. [coughs] Sorry. One of them was just that the prior episode was just way full, and was running wildly over time as so many of our episodes are, and the second episode there were places that I wanted to tighten up at, some of the scenes with Cottle [unintelligible] so there was a natural overflow from one into the other. And also there was something about- as I watched the first episode, this sequence in Demetrius, it felt like we had passed the dramatic climax, that the point of him saying, "I hereby relieve you of command of Demetrius," felt like that was the high point of the scene, and then the rest of this was eroding on that dramatic moment and it just felt like it just kept going, and it didn't feel like it had a natural out, on some level. Like, I think we were gonna cut it here someplace- I'm trying to remember exactly the actual end point is in here somewhere on the chaos, it's like the shooting, and then the second episode was gonna pick up with the madness still going on. And I didn't think that was quite as satisfying as being able to play the tension of what was gonna happen next. So that argued [unintelligible] pushing over into this episode.

Oh, there's this whole business with Gaeta's leg. It's something we talked about in the writers' room, and it's like, well someone's gonna get shot, let's have 'em really get shot, and I believe in the early drafts of this, the first couple drafts were done in Helo still isn't aboard Demetrius- it was a much later break of the storyline. Initially the mutiny was sparked by Gaeta. Gaeta was the XO and Gaeta was facing down Kara, and I think what happened in the standoff in the draft was that Kara and Athena were actually pointing guns at one another, and I think part of what we were playing in those early drafts was the interesting idea that the crew of the Demetrius, the [unintelligible] crew of the Demetrius was backing the Cylon against Kara. That they had actually bonded with Athena over the course of time to the point where they would follow her even into a mutiny. That ultimately they trusted her, the known Cylon, and that's more than they trusted whoever and whatever Kara Thrace was at this point. And it was indicative of just how far Kara had gone, and also indicative of how far Athena had gone in [unintelligible]. Once we moved Helo over, it became a different storyline. The storyline was a little bit more [unintelligible]- it was little bit more influenced by The Caine Mutiny in the sequence of events that played out over there, the difference- there are noticeable differences [unintelligible] scenario you want- but I like the idea that the XO is the last one to turn against the captain, that all the other officers were united in doing all that they had to do, but the XO was the last in [unintelligible].

When we shot Gaeta's leg, question came up right away, "Well, how bad is he shot? How bad is the wound?" And I felt like, you know what? If we're gonna do this, if someone's gonna get shot over this, let's have some real consequences. Let's have s- let's have a problem that's gonna last a while, that's not gonna just get over real quickly. I think that one of the things that I dislike about television is that when people get gunshot wounds on tv typically it's a flesh- it's just a flesh wound. It's a bit of blood on the shirt, and it's usually on the same [unintelligible]. The character puts their arm in a sling and life goes on. One of the things I'm proud of in the series is that we generally- speaking, we haven't been pure about this, but generally speaking if somebody gets shot or hurt, it hurts, and the consequences of their wounds stay with the character for an extended period of time and we've tried to play [unintelligible], play how it would impede them, we've tried to play the pain most of all of how bad these- getting shot with a gun actually hurts and affects you. That's the end of the tease.

Act 1[edit]