Editing Number Five
From Battlestar Wiki, the free, open content Battlestar Galactica encyclopedia and episode guide
More actions
The edit can be undone.
Please check the comparison below to verify that this is what you want to do, and then publish the changes below to finish undoing the edit.
| Latest revision | Your text | ||
| Line 84: | Line 84: | ||
Actor [[Matthew Bennett]], who portrays Doral, doesn't view his Cylon alter ego as a villain. "Aaron Doral is doing the right thing as far as he's concerned," Bennett explains. "He certainly doesn't view himself as a bad guy. He can seem cold and creepy and calculated at times, but he's simply on a mission to do what he thinks is right."<ref group="production" name="bassom_companion_bennett_doral_not_villain">{{cite book|author=David Bassom|title=[[Battlestar Galactica: The Official Companion]]|year=2005|publisher=Titan Books|isbn=1845760972|page=133}}</ref> | Actor [[Matthew Bennett]], who portrays Doral, doesn't view his Cylon alter ego as a villain. "Aaron Doral is doing the right thing as far as he's concerned," Bennett explains. "He certainly doesn't view himself as a bad guy. He can seem cold and creepy and calculated at times, but he's simply on a mission to do what he thinks is right."<ref group="production" name="bassom_companion_bennett_doral_not_villain">{{cite book|author=David Bassom|title=[[Battlestar Galactica: The Official Companion]]|year=2005|publisher=Titan Books|isbn=1845760972|page=133}}</ref> | ||
Bennett was cast as Doral after initially auditioning for the role of Dr. Gaius Baltar.<ref group="production" name=" | Bennett was cast as Doral after initially auditioning for the role of Dr. Gaius Baltar.<ref group="production" name="bassom_companion_bennett_baltar_audition_original" /> | ||
=== From Script to Screen === | === From Script to Screen === | ||
| Line 90: | Line 90: | ||
* The original script for "[[Hero]]" contains significantly more detail about Doral's psychological manipulation of [[Daniel Novacek]], including the specific dialogue where Doral thanks Novacek after the gun deception is revealed.<ref group="script" name="eick_hero_script_doral_thanks_danny_gun_deception">{{cite script|writer=David Eick|title=Hero|series=Battlestar Galactica|season_number=3|episode_number=7|production_code=307-03007|script_date=October 25, 2006|version=Full Collated|page=PDF page 17, script page 11-12}}</ref> The aired episode condenses this psychological torture into brief dialogue references rather than showing the extended manipulation sequences described in the screenplay. | * The original script for "[[Hero]]" contains significantly more detail about Doral's psychological manipulation of [[Daniel Novacek]], including the specific dialogue where Doral thanks Novacek after the gun deception is revealed.<ref group="script" name="eick_hero_script_doral_thanks_danny_gun_deception">{{cite script|writer=David Eick|title=Hero|series=Battlestar Galactica|season_number=3|episode_number=7|production_code=307-03007|script_date=October 25, 2006|version=Full Collated|page=PDF page 17, script page 11-12}}</ref> The aired episode condenses this psychological torture into brief dialogue references rather than showing the extended manipulation sequences described in the screenplay. | ||
* The script describes Doral's prisoner deception as lasting "over a year" and details how he maintained the fiction of being a fellow captive, which provides context for the depth of betrayal Novacek experienced.<ref group="script" name="eick_hero_script_doral_year_long_deception_fellow_prisoner" | * The script describes Doral's prisoner deception as lasting "over a year" and details how he maintained the fiction of being a fellow captive, which provides context for the depth of betrayal Novacek experienced.<ref group="script" name="eick_hero_script_doral_year_long_deception_fellow_prisoner" /> This timeline and emotional manipulation detail was largely omitted from the final version. | ||
==Notes== | ==Notes== | ||