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| It was good to bring back the whole relationship between Kara and Sam and to say that it wasn't just forgotten and it wasn't meaningless. I mean, she did love him. She did marry him. And that- there fee- honest feelings there all the way to the end of the show. | | It was good to bring back the whole relationship between Kara and Sam and to say that it wasn't just forgotten and it wasn't meaningless. I mean, she did love him. She did marry him. And that- there fee- honest feelings there all the way to the end of the show. |
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| I love that Adama just won't give him anything. And that Adama's just refuses to play Gaeta's game on any level. Even though Lampkin would like him to play it a little bit more, Adama's just- his loathing for what this man has done, for his betrayal of his friendship. I mean, Adama's just not a guy that you like to lie to, and these are lies. And that once he thinks that Tigh is dead- even the- bickering- the tearing at one another, even that ends now. Now it's just- now he just backs off completely and now he's just not gonna give him anything. | | I love that Adama just won't give him anything. And that Adama's just refuses to play Gaeta's game on any level. Even though Lampkin would like him to play it a little bit more, Adama's just- his loathing for what this man has done, for his betrayal of his friendship. I mean, Adama's just not a guy that you like to lie to, and these are lies. |
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| I think there was a little bit more here for Lampkin and Zarek, and it kinda- I kinda chopped it back a little bit just to maintain the tension. I didn't wanna release that tension with- a bigger moment.
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| I'm sorry. Distracted. [[Terry Dresbach|Mrs. Ron]] walked into the room for a moment. Mrs. Ron always distracts me when she walks in the room.
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| This was a- bit of slight of hand. How did you fix it? I fixed it with a blinking box [Laughs.] that we threw in just 'cause we didn't- want a whole long tech explanation. It was beside the point, but we had to cover it with something, and it's like, you know what? He pulled in a blinking tech box. I think we even talked about it. And it just became a blinking tech box that fixed it all. My feeling- it was one of those moments where I felt like, you know, if you really care what the fuck is in the blinking tech box, then we've lost you anyway and you're not in the show.
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| This was kinda cool to give Mark, who's a friend of mine, and actually a really good guy. It was nice to give him a little bit of action here. Make him be a little heroic and do something with his bare hands and a pen. And I like that his first reaction is, "No." It's like, "No, no, no. This is not why I'm here." Lampkin's one of those guys who can't help himself and he's gonna get out of here, but then he does have a conscience or a heart or something and just like, "Oh, shit. I guess I gotta do this, 'cause I have to look at myself in a mirror again someday too." "Frak!" This is- a great episode for Mark. I mean, he really, really sold Romo Lampkin and his whole perspective in this episode just really well. Made him really smart and just- it was an excellent performance on his- part.
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| Can't say enough about A.J., obviously. A.J. is just tremendous in these- three episodes, really. Since mine, he's been on- clearly on his own Gaeta arc ever since "Disquiet", building and building and building. Going to- these places and trying to make these decisions and letting you feel- it's like you start to hate him because of what he's doing, but you really have a tremendous amount of sympathy for him along the way and I just think it's a remarkable achievement. And the duo of him and Zarek. This coulda been the face of the Fleet. This coulda been- they could have started their own series. It coulda been how these two then tried to work things out and to lead the human race. Would Tom Zarek have turned against Gaeta? Maybe at some point. I don't think that he intended that from the get-go. I think Zarek probably know in the back of of his mind that there was a point where may have to take out Gaeta too, but Zarek's not a military man. He needs the military behind him. He absolutely had to have someone like Gaeta in the chain of command who was respected and could command loyalty from officers and men in order to make this thing work at all. And I don't know what would have happened if they had succeeded in this coup attempt, in terms of the relationship between the two of them. I'm sure it would have been rocky. Especially after the murder of the Quorum and how they were gonna deal with the Fleet captains and the civilians after that, and what they were gonna try to do. It wouldn't have been easy, but I don't know. They might have- made a go for it and they might have survived for a time. And who knows what kind of storyline that would have been?
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| I love that we never really explain what Tyrol's doing in these conduits for long perio- until he actually gets there and sabotages the FTL. It's just nice bit of business that you just keep cutting back to him and you keep wondering where he is and what he's doing and where he's going and- I- That was pretty effective. It's just one of those nice, completely cinematic moments in that it's just visual. You just keep watching this man traveling somewhere and you never quite know where he's going, and then that's the whole gag.
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| This one is kind of a guilty pleasure. The shooting of Adama as a dream. It's a cheat. I won't- shy away from that description. It's a bit of a dirty trick. But- it kinda works. Especially when you tie it to the dream and you're quickly out of it. I don't know. I can't even defend it. It's just a dirty trick we play on the audience and it kinda works despite itself. But I do like this beat with Baltar that- he starts to feel, "Oh my God, I left those people behind. Who am I? What am I? Here I am again. I'm again- I'm having sex with a Six," which is really how everything started. I mean, you'll notice that as we get to the end of the series there's a lot of hearkening back to the beginning. That there's a sense of symmetry to certain things and there is that sense of, "All this has happened before, and all of it will happen again." And once again, here's Baltar running away, and finding- trying to lose himself in the arms of one of these women, one of these same women, while other people are suffering and other people are paying the consequences for his actions. And I like the fact that Baltar's able to see that. He's gotten to a point where he can actually see that in himself and actually pull himself up short here. Then you kinda get to the heart of his relationship with the cult. What does Baltar really think? He do- for all of his true believer status and all of his moments that he starts to really believe in his bullshit, he has a certain attitude towards these people that listen to him and follow him. And I wanted to bring that out.
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| Now we get down to the real- deal here. I didn't wanna show- I didn't wanna show how he was rescued in this moment. It seemed much more effective to play it out like this. To- you set all the pieces in motion and then you wonder how exactly- how it came off. It did go through several revisions in terms of how we stroked out the final moments here of Gaeta, when Gaeta gives the order. At what point do you cut to Laura? At what point do you cut to Zarek? There's a lot of choreography here of- and timing. When do you go to Gaeta in his quarters? What was Gaeta doing? When does he give the order? Does Gaeta s- think twice about the order? We played different scenarios about when Gaeta might have a second thought. When he might decide to spare Adama. Maybe he takes his ti- There was a lot of just- playing around with different versions of how to get to the place where we wanted to go, which is Adama saved at the last minute, Gaeta starting to realize that the jig is up, and that it's all hopeless, and it felt right that here he does give the order to do it. He really didn't have a road back. He didn't see a road back. There wasn't a road back for him. And I like that this is how we reveal. That you just come right off of Narcho and boom, he's- they've already been- they've already taken down the marines and they've already taken down the execution squad and we're past that point. I just thought this was more effective than watching them run in and yell, or run in and point guns, or anything.
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| There was additional moment here where Adama was willing to let all the marines join up on his side if he wanted them to- if they wanted to, he gave them a choice, and if you would decide to stand by me, stand by me, and then the marines looked at each other one by one, they got up and they stood with Adama. And I thought- I just didn't buy it when I saw it. I liked it in the script but I kinda felt like it didn't play truthfully here, at this moment. And I like that it was more about this one guy who couldn't go back than it was about how these other guys would go back, and that Narcho couldn't go.
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| The- just to jump ahead to the end here, for a second. The whole notion that Adama didn't execute everybody. That he executed Felix and Tom Zarek, but there were significant numbers of other people who were not executed actually kinda comes out of- necessity. Didn't feel like that was the smart thing for him to do, which is start having mass executions on board, that that wouldn't help. Try to put things back together. And it also came out of history. There was an incident- I believed in the American, well it would have to be, during the American revolution where Washington's men mutinied. Some divisions or regiments of them mutinied against their officer- or mutinied with connivance of some of their officers and the mutiny was put down. I wanna say they were from Pennsylvania but I wouldn't swear to that. Washington's solution was to hang the ring leaders, but allow the rest of them to go back, the rest of the regular soldiers, to go back into the Continental Army and to serve again. 'Cause he was trying to hold the army together. It was about holding the army together and punishing the ring leaders who had lead the men astray, but trying to tell them, "We're gonna hang you. We still have a long, hard campaign ahead of us. We still have a long war ahead of us. We can't afford to just start shooting half the army." And that was sort of some of the philosophy that tracked into this idea as well.
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| I love Laura's reaction here. That once she hears that Adama's been killed, she's really just gonna go at Galactica. She's just- she's not gonna quit here. Now it's- she's just gonna fuckin' destroy that ship. She's gonna destroy Galactica if she possibly can. She's gonna destroy Tom Garek. Nothing's gonna stop her.
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| == Act 4 ==
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