Editing Podcast:Exodus, Part II
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 61: | Line 61: | ||
We had some internal questions about the technical feasibility of ''Galactica'' jumping into the atmosphere and falling through the- falling like a rock through this. You could argue it either way. It's all s- it's science fiction so who knows what ''Galactica''<nowiki>'</nowiki>s made of and the structure integrity, etc., etc. My logic was, "Look. If ''Galactica'' can take hit from a nuke, and keep on moving, which we established in the [[miniseries]]. If it can take a nuke and still be ok on some level, this is a tough motherfuckin' machine." So that means if it- I can buy that it has enough structural integrity to fall through that atmosphere. It couldn't maneuver. It can't fly. That's not what it's designed to do. But I bought the idea that it could hang together long enough to just fall straight down and then launch its Vipers and then get the hell out of there. | We had some internal questions about the technical feasibility of ''Galactica'' jumping into the atmosphere and falling through the- falling like a rock through this. You could argue it either way. It's all s- it's science fiction so who knows what ''Galactica''<nowiki>'</nowiki>s made of and the structure integrity, etc., etc. My logic was, "Look. If ''Galactica'' can take hit from a nuke, and keep on moving, which we established in the [[miniseries]]. If it can take a nuke and still be ok on some level, this is a tough motherfuckin' machine." So that means if it- I can buy that it has enough structural integrity to fall through that atmosphere. It couldn't maneuver. It can't fly. That's not what it's designed to do. But I bought the idea that it could hang together long enough to just fall straight down and then launch its Vipers and then get the hell out of there. | ||
This beat of [[Samuel Anders|Anders]] finding Kara, unco- she's unconscious because, in terms of plot, you don't want him to come in right here and that she's awake and she says, "Hey, I've got [[Kacey | This beat of [[Samuel Anders|Anders]] finding Kara, unco- she's unconscious because, in terms of plot, you don't want him to come in right here and that she's awake and she says, "Hey, I've got [[Kacey|my daughter]]," and "Take her too." So this is a bit of a- this is a bit of manipulation that she's been laying unconscious all this time. | ||
This shot. Now this doesn't quite sell the story point enough 'cause we only had one visual effects shot to sell this with. The idea was after they jumped out to the atmosphere, they jump up above, and they really only jumped into pretty low orbit again, and they're, like, clawing for altitude all the way up. | This shot. Now this doesn't quite sell the story point enough 'cause we only had one visual effects shot to sell this with. The idea was after they jumped out to the atmosphere, they jump up above, and they really only jumped into pretty low orbit again, and they're, like, clawing for altitude all the way up. | ||
| Line 78: | Line 78: | ||
Ok. Now this, I think, is a key moment. This tells me a lot about William Adama. When he knows that the end is here and he really is facing that moment, there's a moment in every person's life, or at least in every character's life, when they face death. Truly face it and truly believe that they're gonna die. How do they react? And when you answer that question you have said something fundamental about that character and who they are and what they're about. And when William Adama's answer, when he felt he's really going to die, what did he do? He stopped. He looked around to the men around him, and he said, "Gentlemen, it's been an honor." And that to me defines that character. You can't redefine the character. You can't have him face that situation and react differently again. He can face a different situation. He can have other people in jeopardy. There's situations in which he would continue to fight. But in that circumstance, when everything fell apart, he just turned to the men around him and said, "It's been an honor," and accepted it. And went out- was going to go out in a quiet way, instead of raging against the light. And I thought that that's an interesting choice. It's not the traditional way that a key- a hero reacts to these circumstances and that's really what attracted me to it. And I think as a writer you fit, especially in a tv show, you have to choose. You have to make choices and live with them. And that's a choice. That is a choice about who Adama is and when you take a character to that place and you answer that question you've now, like, rounded out the definition of that character in a very fundamental way. [[Kara Thrace|Kara]]'s answer in a similar situation would not be the same. | Ok. Now this, I think, is a key moment. This tells me a lot about William Adama. When he knows that the end is here and he really is facing that moment, there's a moment in every person's life, or at least in every character's life, when they face death. Truly face it and truly believe that they're gonna die. How do they react? And when you answer that question you have said something fundamental about that character and who they are and what they're about. And when William Adama's answer, when he felt he's really going to die, what did he do? He stopped. He looked around to the men around him, and he said, "Gentlemen, it's been an honor." And that to me defines that character. You can't redefine the character. You can't have him face that situation and react differently again. He can face a different situation. He can have other people in jeopardy. There's situations in which he would continue to fight. But in that circumstance, when everything fell apart, he just turned to the men around him and said, "It's been an honor," and accepted it. And went out- was going to go out in a quiet way, instead of raging against the light. And I thought that that's an interesting choice. It's not the traditional way that a key- a hero reacts to these circumstances and that's really what attracted me to it. And I think as a writer you fit, especially in a tv show, you have to choose. You have to make choices and live with them. And that's a choice. That is a choice about who Adama is and when you take a character to that place and you answer that question you've now, like, rounded out the definition of that character in a very fundamental way. [[Kara Thrace|Kara]]'s answer in a similar situation would not be the same. | ||
And she has to go back for [[Kacey | And she has to go back for [[Kacey|the child]]. And the chaos- I mean, it's all just this chaos of trying to get out, and who's gonna get out, and what's the time. In the middle of it, Kara has to go back. | ||
And I love this. This feeling of- this is, not quite, but this is sort of [[Wikipedia:Death of Adolf Hitler|Hitler in the bunker]]. It's the Russians are out there. We're losing. We're not gonna make it. What do we do? If you commit suicide on some level. And they're gonna nuke the city. And that there's a place for [[Gaius Baltar|Baltar]]. I mean, that was a key question. How could Baltar escape with them? Well, he's only gonna escape with them if they want him to. And that there was a sense of, yeah, well you could call it loyalty. You could call it recognition of their own shortcomings. [[Cylons (RDM)|Cylons]] are learning and changing and they have different points of view on things than they did at the beginning. The fact that they're willing for Baltar to come with them now says alot. I love that the [[Felix Gaeta|Gaeta]] beat, with the gun. | And I love this. This feeling of- this is, not quite, but this is sort of [[Wikipedia:Death of Adolf Hitler|Hitler in the bunker]]. It's the Russians are out there. We're losing. We're not gonna make it. What do we do? If you commit suicide on some level. And they're gonna nuke the city. And that there's a place for [[Gaius Baltar|Baltar]]. I mean, that was a key question. How could Baltar escape with them? Well, he's only gonna escape with them if they want him to. And that there was a sense of, yeah, well you could call it loyalty. You could call it recognition of their own shortcomings. [[Cylons (RDM)|Cylons]] are learning and changing and they have different points of view on things than they did at the beginning. The fact that they're willing for Baltar to come with them now says alot. I love that the [[Felix Gaeta|Gaeta]] beat, with the gun. | ||
| Line 91: | Line 91: | ||
<!-- 30:40 --> | <!-- 30:40 --> | ||
And now we bring the [[Leoben Conoy|Leoben]] and [[Kara Thrace|Kara]] and [[ | And now we bring the [[Leoben Conoy|Leoben]] and [[Kara Thrace|Kara]] and [[Kacey]] to its culmination. What he foretold in "[[Occupation]]" comes to pass. She will hold him in her arms, and she will tell him that she loves him, and that ultimately that's what he wanted. He wanted her to say the words. He- you could say he wanted to break her and that this on some level is him breaking her. On some level he just wanted her to fulfill that part of her destiny and she does that, and she knows it, and she realizes that this is the moment. She has to give this little bit of her soul, there's a part of Kara that would sooner die than do this, but with the child there, with the child hanging in the balance. And her need for the child. And the child's life. That Kara would give him this. And there's just a hint there on the look on [[Katee Sackhoff|Katee]]'s face, there's just a hint that maybe she- has it- has it worked? Has she gone a bit [[Wikipedia:Stockholm syndrome|Stockholm]] in the months of captivity and being this strange little hot-house environment? Did he actually get through to her? Is it all a ruse? I think the ques- it's an open question. And I think it's a complicated story and I don't think it's as simple as saying, "Oh, it's all a ruse. She's just trying to fool him." That's the easy way out. That's the way that tells you that Starbuck is still the hero and you take comfort in that as an audience by saying, "I'm comforted by the fact that she never gave an inch." Well, is it really that simple? Are people really that uncomplicated? Or do they do things that- do they feel things that maybe you don't want them to feel all the time. That maybe people say, do, and act and behave in ways that we don't always like. Because that's what people do. Because they're human. And Kara's human. And Leoben is not. | ||
And so this kiss. There's a- even as the knife comes out, which on some level Leoben expects, knows, isn't fighting. Is perfectly willing to die in this moment because he got what he wanted. Even in that moment, it's a question of who won. And was it even, like, a battle? Did he win? What did he win? Did Kara lose? What did she lose? What does this all mean? What does this symbolize? I think it's- I think these are interesting questions and I don't think it's my job, as a writer, to answer all those questions for you. I think it- I think you watch the episode and you take away from it what you will. I think you can, you can read into Kara's soul what you want to read into it. | And so this kiss. There's a- even as the knife comes out, which on some level Leoben expects, knows, isn't fighting. Is perfectly willing to die in this moment because he got what he wanted. Even in that moment, it's a question of who won. And was it even, like, a battle? Did he win? What did he win? Did Kara lose? What did she lose? What does this all mean? What does this symbolize? I think it's- I think these are interesting questions and I don't think it's my job, as a writer, to answer all those questions for you. I think it- I think you watch the episode and you take away from it what you will. I think you can, you can read into Kara's soul what you want to read into it. | ||