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== Teaser == | == Teaser == | ||
Hello, and welcome to the podcast, and this is | Hello, and welcome to the podcast, and this is Ronald D. Moore, executive producer and developer of the new Battlestar Galactica. I am here to welcome you to the podcast for episode 418, "Deadlocked". I'm doing this on the fly, sorta in between meetings, I'm running out of my house to get back to the office and the podcast is late anyway, so unfortunately, not only is the smoking lamp out, but the bar is closed as well. | ||
OK. I will try to do the best I can in terms of giving you some inside information on this particular episode, but as I look through my notes and I went back and looked at the original story document and subsequent drafts, this is one of those episodes that didn't change a hell of a lot as it went from start to finish. Originally this was called "Drowning Woman", which was referring to | OK. I will try to do the best I can in terms of giving you some inside information on this particular episode, but as I look through my notes and I went back and looked at the original story document and subsequent drafts, this is one of those episodes that didn't change a hell of a lot as it went from start to finish. Originally this was called "Drowning Woman", which was referring to Galactica herself and her difficulties and drowning and metaphorically probably also into Caprica-Six, as well. Somewhere along the line, I think Jane, decided to change the title to "Deadlocked" which is a perfectly good title. | ||
Getting back to this particular set, I think I think I talked about in the previous podcast, this set is actually sandwiched in between our normal | Getting back to this particular set, I think I think I talked about in the previous podcast, this set is actually sandwiched in between our normal CI- I think this is C- no, no. It's not the CIC. It's- no, I'm sorry. It is the CIC. The CIC set and the back of the stage wall. This set of the superstructure- or the interior structure of Galactica is sorta sandwiched in between there, and we're actually using the actual fire escape as sort of a bit of set decoration. | ||
It was interesting to get back into | It was interesting to get back into Dogville. We hadn't been in Dogville for a while in the show, with the people, the civilians, down on the lower decks, which we had taken aboard quite some time ago. And I think that's why this scene is placed here as opposed to where it was in the original draft, which was Caprica-Six walking down just the hallways of Galactica and set upon by thugs from the Sons of Ares in that context, and I think we moved it back over here during the production process to sort of- it's a more visually interesting scene. It's also sort of reminding you of the- that we do have all these civilians on board and sort of setting up this two-tier situation aboard Galactica. We have the military operations and the military personnel and we've also got the refugees and survivors of all the various holocausts down below. | ||
This is, obviously, a very heavy Caprica-Six/ | This is, obviously, a very heavy Caprica-Six/Tigh/Ellen episode. We talked early on in the season about bringing this to- this culmination eventually. I think after Caprica-Six was impregnated by Tigh, we weren't quite sure where we wanted to go with that. I think we sort of- I kinda remember the discussion in the room when the writers first pitched it to me and they said, "And Tigh- or Cottle tells Adama that Tigh's pregnant," and the writers all looked at me and I just kinda laughed and said, "God, I fuckin' love that." And they laughed too. And we- and I said, "Where does that go?" And they kinda shrugged and said, "Well we don't know." And I said, "Well, I love it. Let's do it." So we just decided let's do it and it was gonna be an exploration of love and love from- hot Cylon on Cylon sex, and all that kind of stuff. And it was also just an opportunity to add a different layer of complexity into the series because obviously the series is not complex enough. | ||
This sequence up here is interesting in that it shows the Galactica | This sequence up here is interesting in that it shows the Galactica Vipers are actually joined in the CAP, the combat air patrol, by the Cylon Raiders and that they're now flying joint CAP missions, which I thought was really interesting. A lot of the story here in the second half of the last season has been about the gr- they way the Cylons and the humans- in the Colonial Fleet are inevitably moving closer and closer toward one another and being forced by circumstances to have to share certain duties and responsibilities and one of them, being the CAP, felt like it was one of the most visually interesting ways to do that and it would go a long ways for telling you that the cooperation had gone to a new level. | ||
This arrival of Ellen Tigh back on Galactica is obviously very reminicent, and deliberately so, of the- of when- of the episode when Ellen came back aboard- came aboard Galactica for the first time way back in season one. The shot of the Raptor door opening on to Ellen's leg. I really like this little beat, that Tyrol can tell that it's Boomer, just like sight uns- just like at first sight. He can look at her and he can tell her- he can tell that. | This arrival of Ellen Tigh back on Galactica is obviously very reminicent, and deliberately so, of the- of when- of the episode when Ellen came back aboard- came aboard Galactica for the first time way back in season one. The shot of the Raptor door opening on to Ellen's leg. I really like this little beat, that Tyrol can tell that it's Boomer, just like sight uns- just like at first sight. He can look at her and he can tell her- he can tell that. | ||
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And just to finish that thought, and now- as we get into where they are at this point, even knowing who they are, even knowing their true natures and realizing that they're thousands of years old, that they're com- incredibly sophisticated, complex machines, that they're even more sophisticated than the skinjob Cylons, and have this- these enormous word views and understanding of the cosmological nature of the universe, they're still people on some level. They're- machines but the Final Five are people and they're still crippled and they're still damaged by their own flaws and their own failing and their- and they still reach for their own sense of nobility and they still strive towards the light a bit but they're unable to grasp it. I don't know. I just find the Tighs- the battling Tighs to be endlessly fascinating and I've always loved the fact that we decided to bring Ellen aboard ''Galactica'' way back in the first season. Even though that wasn't something I ever anticipated doing in the miniseries. I assumed she was dead. Had no real plans to bring her back. And was kind of hesitant when we decided to bring her back, 'cause I thought it would be seen as just a trick and that- I didn't want- I was kinda adamant that I didn't want to keep having family members and old friends popping up in this little civilian fleet when billions of people had died and you turn around and, "Oh, hey! There's my wife." So we did it, and I tried to keep it to essentially that, and not have it keep happening. And then it became more important that Ellen- had came back for a reason. That she had a larger purpose in the drama and that we played that. And that's- the way I do the show overall. A lot of times you take a- or- I take a jump, or a leap, and say, "OK, let's go there, even though I don't know quite know where that's going to go, but let's go there because I think it's interesting and my instinct tells me that there's something there to play." But then you need to honor that and you need to try to stick with it and say, "OK. Well, if we're going in this odd direction, if we're bringing Ellen Tigh back, in violation of the rule that I set out at the beginning, well then it has to be meaningful. Then I want a reason why we're going there. I want a reason why she's back with Saul, ultimately. I want to know what that's all about." And she becomes more important in the story. At first she's serving as a dramatic foil for him and she's giving us a different voice in the show beyond just the military, which I like, and then ultimately she was the element that knitted the Final Five together, really, for me and for the audience. | And just to finish that thought, and now- as we get into where they are at this point, even knowing who they are, even knowing their true natures and realizing that they're thousands of years old, that they're com- incredibly sophisticated, complex machines, that they're even more sophisticated than the skinjob Cylons, and have this- these enormous word views and understanding of the cosmological nature of the universe, they're still people on some level. They're- machines but the Final Five are people and they're still crippled and they're still damaged by their own flaws and their own failing and their- and they still reach for their own sense of nobility and they still strive towards the light a bit but they're unable to grasp it. I don't know. I just find the Tighs- the battling Tighs to be endlessly fascinating and I've always loved the fact that we decided to bring Ellen aboard ''Galactica'' way back in the first season. Even though that wasn't something I ever anticipated doing in the miniseries. I assumed she was dead. Had no real plans to bring her back. And was kind of hesitant when we decided to bring her back, 'cause I thought it would be seen as just a trick and that- I didn't want- I was kinda adamant that I didn't want to keep having family members and old friends popping up in this little civilian fleet when billions of people had died and you turn around and, "Oh, hey! There's my wife." So we did it, and I tried to keep it to essentially that, and not have it keep happening. And then it became more important that Ellen- had came back for a reason. That she had a larger purpose in the drama and that we played that. And that's- the way I do the show overall. A lot of times you take a- or- I take a jump, or a leap, and say, "OK, let's go there, even though I don't know quite know where that's going to go, but let's go there because I think it's interesting and my instinct tells me that there's something there to play." But then you need to honor that and you need to try to stick with it and say, "OK. Well, if we're going in this odd direction, if we're bringing Ellen Tigh back, in violation of the rule that I set out at the beginning, well then it has to be meaningful. Then I want a reason why we're going there. I want a reason why she's back with Saul, ultimately. I want to know what that's all about." And she becomes more important in the story. At first she's serving as a dramatic foil for him and she's giving us a different voice in the show beyond just the military, which I like, and then ultimately she was the element that knitted the Final Five together, really, for me and for the audience. | ||
See? I like this intercut between Adama looking at the dying ship and Saul with his dying child, and just- it's beautifully done. | See? I like this intercut between Adama looking at the dying ship and Saul with his dying child, and just- it's beautifully done. | ||