Editing Podcast:Flight of the Phoenix
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Now we're back in the firing range. A lot of this was scripted; getting the gun, getting the ammo, the bullet ricochets, all of it was choreographed in conjunction with the director and the actors on the set. But I think a lot of the credit to this sequence goes to [[Katee Sackhoff|Katee]] and [[Jamie Bamber|Jamie]] who I think play this just beautifully, it's like I completely- I'm just there with them in the room. The way he moves toward this table I'm particularly fond of, his reaching up, this from the back, groping up there, getting the box, the box basically almost falls on his head there on the set, he just keeps going, it missed his nose by like a millimeter. And I believe, if I'm not mistaken, I think the notion that [[Kara Thrace|Starbuck]] and [[Lee Adama|Apollo]] did this together is something the actors came up with, I think it was gonna be Katee and I think they talked or they were working on the scene and liked the idea of him steadying her hand to shoot out the window. I think that was something that they came up with which I think is a stroke of genius which I think is really nice. | Now we're back in the firing range. A lot of this was scripted; getting the gun, getting the ammo, the bullet ricochets, all of it was choreographed in conjunction with the director and the actors on the set. But I think a lot of the credit to this sequence goes to [[Katee Sackhoff|Katee]] and [[Jamie Bamber|Jamie]] who I think play this just beautifully, it's like I completely- I'm just there with them in the room. The way he moves toward this table I'm particularly fond of, his reaching up, this from the back, groping up there, getting the box, the box basically almost falls on his head there on the set, he just keeps going, it missed his nose by like a millimeter. And I believe, if I'm not mistaken, I think the notion that [[Kara Thrace|Starbuck]] and [[Lee Adama|Apollo]] did this together is something the actors came up with, I think it was gonna be Katee and I think they talked or they were working on the scene and liked the idea of him steadying her hand to shoot out the window. I think that was something that they came up with which I think is a stroke of genius which I think is really nice. | ||
And now we're in this. The [[technobabble]] on the show is a constant source of- I wanna say frustration- but it's more a sense of obligation really- which makes it frustrating. It is a science fiction series, there's a lot of space hardware involved, there are certain sci-fi concepts, if you're gonna deal with a computer [[ | And now we're in this. The [[technobabble]] on the show is a constant source of- I wanna say frustration- but it's more a sense of obligation really- which makes it frustrating. It is a science fiction series, there's a lot of space hardware involved, there are certain sci-fi concepts, if you're gonna deal with a computer [[virus]] you're obligated at some point to have to do this scene where they talk about what the problem is, it's identified and varying solutions are posited. Then usually the way you write the scene is there's no way to deal with this problem except the one possible outside crazy chance that they all inevitably take. That is the rhythm of writing one of these scenes. In this particular scene, it follows the usual pattern of things, the [[William Adama|Commander]] asking his people for the varying options, what's the toughest option that you can usually ask for. The nice thing here is of course that the deal with- this moment- essentially the nice thing here is when he says 'I got a [[Cylons (RDM)|Cylon]] expert on board' and the scene is basically led to the point where we slap [[Gaius Baltar|Baltar]] and that's the joke... and out. And actually that scene kept going where Baltar tried to revisit the issue with Adama saying 'Hey, wait a minute I really think I should go down there' and Adama says 'no, no, no, we got this all under control you just don't worry about it, you just don't worry about it' and Baltar goes and sits at the foot of the stairs and has a conversation with [[Number Six|Six]]. It was all nice stuff, I particularly liked Baltar's conversation with Six 'cos the way [[IMDB:nm0002749|Nankin]] shot it you looked up she was sitting up on the stairs in [[CIC]] and he shot her through some sort of translucent material and it was really interesting cinematically. But ultimately again this was one of those really long shows and a lot of choices had to be made. | ||
Through the varying cuts the thing that we kept coming back to was this story, the story of the gathering of the family to accomplish one task that they he set out to- and the father figure coming down and seeing it. It all kept circling back to tell the story about the family... tell the story about the family. And you had to give a certain amount of screentime to the virus because you have to do that for plot reasons and so what ends up happening is you end up cutting things like the Baltar/Six conversation. | Through the varying cuts the thing that we kept coming back to was this story, the story of the gathering of the family to accomplish one task that they he set out to- and the father figure coming down and seeing it. It all kept circling back to tell the story about the family... tell the story about the family. And you had to give a certain amount of screentime to the virus because you have to do that for plot reasons and so what ends up happening is you end up cutting things like the Baltar/Six conversation. | ||