Editing Podcast:Home, Part I
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{{ | {{podcast|author=PrePressChris|emailAuthor2= and [[Special:Emailuser/Steelviper|Steelviper]]|suffix=s|additionalCopyright=and David Eick}} | ||
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==[http://www.scifi.com/battlestar/downloads/podcast/mp3/206/bsg_ep206_1of5.mp3 Teaser]== | ==[http://www.scifi.com/battlestar/downloads/podcast/mp3/206/bsg_ep206_1of5.mp3 Teaser]== | ||
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So, basically we proceeded to ask the network- we thought he was right. We thought we were trying to cram too much- and we asked the network if we could make it a two-parter. Basically we had enough for one and a half episodes. That'll be the story we'll tell on the next episode, about how we came up with the other half of episode seven. What you're watching now was basically the first two acts of episode six | So, basically we proceeded to ask the network- we thought he was right. We thought we were trying to cram too much- and we asked the network if we could make it a two-parter. Basically we had enough for one and a half episodes. That'll be the story we'll tell on the next episode, about how we came up with the other half of episode seven. What you're watching now was basically the first two acts of episode six | ||
RDM: And like I mentioned before this, couplet of episodes, now, is really the culmination of all the arcs that began in season one. In a very real sense "Home" I and [[Home, Part II|II]] is the completion of the entire [[Season 1 (2004-05)|first season]], and what you'll see coming up after the conclusion of "Home, Part II" is you'll see that we begin different stories. There's more self-contained episodes, there's different story arcs begin and in a very real sense this is where it all comes to a conclusion. And it was just too much material to try to wrap up. I think what we kept running into was we could get through the plot, per se, in a one hour script. You could get from here to there, and get to [[ | RDM: And like I mentioned before this, couplet of episodes, now, is really the culmination of all the arcs that began in season one. In a very real sense "Home" I and [[Home, Part II|II]] is the completion of the entire [[Season 1 (2004-05)|first season]], and what you'll see coming up after the conclusion of "Home, Part II" is you'll see that we begin different stories. There's more self-contained episodes, there's different story arcs begin and in a very real sense this is where it all comes to a conclusion. And it was just too much material to try to wrap up. I think what we kept running into was we could get through the plot, per se, in a one hour script. You could get from here to there, and get to [[Kobol]], go down to the surface, go to the [[Tomb of Athena]], wrap these story lines up, but you were missing all the fun of doing it. You were missing seeing [[Kara Thrace|Starbuck]] and [[Lee Adama|Apollo]] reunite. | ||
DSE: Yeah. | DSE: Yeah. | ||
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RDM: We were just trying to do too much in one episode, and the network and the studio agreed, so we had enough time to split this into two parts. | RDM: We were just trying to do too much in one episode, and the network and the studio agreed, so we had enough time to split this into two parts. | ||
(Timecode: 3:11) | |||
DSE: The first draft of this, before we made the split, was 65 pages. We tend to shoot scripts that are about 45 to 47 pages long, and then they come in ten to fifteen minutes long and we have to cut the equivalent of what would have been another ten to fifteen pages out of it, so you would never go into production with a 30 page script because, yeah, you might be on time, but you wouldn't have any way of massaging or improving things because you'd be limited by the amount of footage you had. In a 30 page script, I don't know what that would be. It'd be a trailer for an episode of ''Battlestar Galactica''. | DSE: The first draft of this, before we made the split, was 65 pages. We tend to shoot scripts that are about 45 to 47 pages long, and then they come in ten to fifteen minutes long and we have to cut the equivalent of what would have been another ten to fifteen pages out of it, so you would never go into production with a 30 page script because, yeah, you might be on time, but you wouldn't have any way of massaging or improving things because you'd be limited by the amount of footage you had. In a 30 page script, I don't know what that would be. It'd be a trailer for an episode of ''Battlestar Galactica''. | ||
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DSE: So, it was always tough to fit it in, as Ron was saying, and it was really, I think, generous of the network to allow us split this into two, because it wasn't an episode of like last year's "[[Act of Contrition]]"/"[[You Can't Go Home Again]]" that had this very deliberate plot, involving Starbuck crash-landing on a planet and having to jump-start a [[Cylon Raider (RDM)|Cylon Raider]] to get home. This was more character threads. We had one big story point in that we go to Kobol, but for the most part it's about Adama and his struggle with recuperation, and settling back into being the commander. It's Laura Roslin finally making the big decision to take a portion of the fleet away and going against everything she's been about, which was about bringing everyone together, and now here she is splitting everyone apart. And it's about the plot from [[Tom Zarek]] and his guy [[Meier]] to assasinate Lee Adama. It's really more character-y and just a litttle bit softer in terms of story. It was really more character-driven, and it was more of an achievement, I think, on that front that we were able to get the network to agree to make something like that a two-parter, because it's tricker to pull that off. | DSE: So, it was always tough to fit it in, as Ron was saying, and it was really, I think, generous of the network to allow us split this into two, because it wasn't an episode of like last year's "[[Act of Contrition]]"/"[[You Can't Go Home Again]]" that had this very deliberate plot, involving Starbuck crash-landing on a planet and having to jump-start a [[Cylon Raider (RDM)|Cylon Raider]] to get home. This was more character threads. We had one big story point in that we go to Kobol, but for the most part it's about Adama and his struggle with recuperation, and settling back into being the commander. It's Laura Roslin finally making the big decision to take a portion of the fleet away and going against everything she's been about, which was about bringing everyone together, and now here she is splitting everyone apart. And it's about the plot from [[Tom Zarek]] and his guy [[Meier]] to assasinate Lee Adama. It's really more character-y and just a litttle bit softer in terms of story. It was really more character-driven, and it was more of an achievement, I think, on that front that we were able to get the network to agree to make something like that a two-parter, because it's tricker to pull that off. | ||
(Timecode: 4:50) | |||
RDM: There was Meier, played by [[imdb:nm0001664|James Remar]]. We were very excited to get him for this two-parter. I think that David and I both were big fan of his work, going all the way back to the original "[[imdb:tt0083511|48 Hours]]." | RDM: There was Meier, played by [[imdb:nm0001664|James Remar]]. We were very excited to get him for this two-parter. I think that David and I both were big fan of his work, going all the way back to the original "[[imdb:tt0083511|48 Hours]]." | ||
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DSE: ...and we were making fun of them, and James remarked "You know, I was in 'Cruising,' which was all about the homosexual underworld." So that's how I learned that story. | DSE: ...and we were making fun of them, and James remarked "You know, I was in 'Cruising,' which was all about the homosexual underworld." So that's how I learned that story. | ||
(Timecode: 6:05) | |||
RDM: This return to Kara- of Kara has been a long time coming. This little bit here with Starbuck and Apollo and the hug and the quick kiss and all that was something David- I think you just came up with this in the teleplay- | RDM: This return to Kara- of Kara has been a long time coming. This little bit here with Starbuck and Apollo and the hug and the quick kiss and all that was something David- I think you just came up with this in the teleplay- | ||
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DSE: I was sitting with my laptop doing rewrites while we were shooting, I think, episode three and- or four, and Jamie read this return scene. I was- literally he was standing over my shoulder reading the return scene and he said, "I should kiss her." Or, "We should kiss." Or something like that. And I went, "Oh my God, that's great." And so I just wrote a version of it and it made it all the way through the process. | DSE: I was sitting with my laptop doing rewrites while we were shooting, I think, episode three and- or four, and Jamie read this return scene. I was- literally he was standing over my shoulder reading the return scene and he said, "I should kiss her." Or, "We should kiss." Or something like that. And I went, "Oh my God, that's great." And so I just wrote a version of it and it made it all the way through the process. | ||
(Timecode: 6:47) | |||
RDM: It's a really interesting subtext for the whole piece. The only thing I regret about this whole sequence is that we couldn't afford to actually show the [[Heavy Raider]] actually sitting in the docking bay. | RDM: It's a really interesting subtext for the whole piece. The only thing I regret about this whole sequence is that we couldn't afford to actually show the [[Heavy Raider]] actually sitting in the docking bay. | ||
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RDM: Because you only get that exterior shot, and then you see her coming down the corridor, unfortunately. But that's just one of the many things you just have to bite the bullet on producing these shows. | RDM: Because you only get that exterior shot, and then you see her coming down the corridor, unfortunately. But that's just one of the many things you just have to bite the bullet on producing these shows. | ||
(Timecode: 7:04) | |||
DSE: Ron also educated me a lot, I think, in terms of knowing how to adjust your expectations when you write something that's a little bit different. | DSE: Ron also educated me a lot, I think, in terms of knowing how to adjust your expectations when you write something that's a little bit different. | ||
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==[http://www.scifi.com/battlestar/downloads/podcast/mp3/206/bsg_ep206_2of5.mp3 Act 1]== | ==[http://www.scifi.com/battlestar/downloads/podcast/mp3/206/bsg_ep206_2of5.mp3 Act 1]== | ||
(Timecode: 8:09) | |||
DSE: So, as I was saying, this is one of the few scenes that actually remained intact and was executed pretty much exactly as I hoped and it's just nice when that happens | DSE: So, as I was saying, this is one of the few scenes that actually remained intact and was executed pretty much exactly as I hoped and it's just nice when that happens | ||
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RDM: Adama at the press conference. I think this was always- this scene is virtually untouched, too. Was this notion that Adama's not the guy who likes to deal with the press. | RDM: Adama at the press conference. I think this was always- this scene is virtually untouched, too. Was this notion that Adama's not the guy who likes to deal with the press. | ||
(Timecode: 14:34) | |||
DSE: Yeah, we were talking about this scene had a very literal- "[[imdb: tt0068646|Godfather]]"- which was a great moment in history, actually, where [[wikipedia:Alexander Haig|Al Haig]] takes the stand- | DSE: Yeah, we were talking about this scene had a very literal- "[[imdb: tt0068646|Godfather]]"- which was a great moment in history, actually, where [[wikipedia:Alexander Haig|Al Haig]] takes the stand- | ||
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DSE: (Laughs) | DSE: (Laughs) | ||
RDM: ...who got to die, who's killed- | RDM: ...who got to die, who's killed- do we killin'? Are we killing Billy? Are we killing Elosha? Ah, let's kill 'em both. No, they're both gonna live. OK, well now we're just- So, (laughs) it became this absurd thing going on. | ||
DSE: And it's really necessary, in a way... | DSE: And it's really necessary, in a way... | ||
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RDM: Yeah. | RDM: Yeah. | ||
DSE: ...because you're telling a story about the cost in blood to make- for Laura to have made this decision to go to [[ | DSE: ...because you're telling a story about the cost in blood to make- for Laura to have made this decision to go to [[Kobol]] and divide [[The Fleet (RDM)|the Fleet]] and if she does it and there's no cost, there's no- there are no ramifications personally for her, then it's like she's gotten away with something. | ||
RDM: Yeah, it's like- it's not so- Yeah. Easy decision for you to make, Laura. It's no big deal, but if you go down and you lose somebody close to you, whether that's Billy or whether that's Elosha, then she really has paid a price, and it felt important for the character that she pay a- that she personally pay a price for leading them on this crusade. | RDM: Yeah, it's like- it's not so- Yeah. Easy decision for you to make, Laura. It's no big deal, but if you go down and you lose somebody close to you, whether that's Billy or whether that's Elosha, then she really has paid a price, and it felt important for the character that she pay a- that she personally pay a price for leading them on this crusade. | ||
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RDM: Is not (unitelligeable) | RDM: Is not (unitelligeable) | ||
DSE: Yeah, and not taking into account that there is difficulty in communicating, and that there's miscommunication and that miscommunication is going to lead to what you're about to see, this very near miss with [[Louanne | DSE: Yeah, and not taking into account that there is difficulty in communicating, and that there's miscommunication and that miscommunication is going to lead to what you're about to see, this very near miss with [[Louanne Katrain|Kat]]. And- | ||
RDM: Oh, this is a sequence I tortured the visual effects guys with. Because I kept obsessing on things like their relative distance, and closing speeds, and where they would really be, and you really- In these kinds of things, you're really straddling, once again, you're straddling a line between the reality of the situation and where they would actually be and the actual speeds that they would be going at, versus how to visually tell the story 'cause in a very real sense you can't get them all in the frame at the same time. You want to be able to see what's going on, so that forces you to squash the perspective a bit and put things closer to- put ships closer to one another when they'd really be further apart. And you just have to try to come up with a dramatic compromise so you can tell the story, first and foremost. You worry about the realism of it a close second. | RDM: Oh, this is a sequence I tortured the visual effects guys with. Because I kept obsessing on things like their relative distance, and closing speeds, and where they would really be, and you really- In these kinds of things, you're really straddling, once again, you're straddling a line between the reality of the situation and where they would actually be and the actual speeds that they would be going at, versus how to visually tell the story 'cause in a very real sense you can't get them all in the frame at the same time. You want to be able to see what's going on, so that forces you to squash the perspective a bit and put things closer to- put ships closer to one another when they'd really be further apart. And you just have to try to come up with a dramatic compromise so you can tell the story, first and foremost. You worry about the realism of it a close second. | ||
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(Timecode 24:23) | (Timecode 24:23) | ||
DSE: | DSE: Paul Leonard- Paul is our Associate Producer for all of last season, and all of this season, and the [[miniseries]] as well, and is the guy in cha- the ringleader when it comes to all things; sound, and color correction, and visual effects. He and Gary Hutzel, our visual effects supervisor, work very closely together. I haven't told you this yet, Ron, but Paul has been- typically what happens on these episodes is I go to a dub stage and I hear a playback, I give a lot of notes, we remix certain sections, and that is how the sound is finished on the show. For this one, we did that. That we went way over time because I made a lot of changes and then I asked Paul to send me a DVD, which I got last night, which I gave more notes on, so they're going to go back and remix today- | ||
RDM: And remix again? | RDM: And remix again? | ||
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DSE: ...because I have not let go of certain sound effects issues. | DSE: ...because I have not let go of certain sound effects issues. | ||
RDM: | RDM: Dave is very popular in post-production. | ||
DSE: (Laughs) Well, on this one I think they've been very generous, they- I think they all- they all kind- you could tell the body languages that everyone had been prepared. They knew this was going to be- | DSE: (Laughs) Well, on this one I think they've been very generous, they- I think they all- they all kind- you could tell the body languages that everyone had been prepared. They knew this was going to be- | ||
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RDM: (Laughs) | RDM: (Laughs) | ||
DSE: Tricky with Lee and | DSE: Tricky with Lee and Kara in that they're so happy to see each other and yet, like a brother and sister or like two repressed lovers, pick your- | ||
RDM: Yeah, pick | RDM: Yeah, pick you metaphor. | ||
DSE: -your metaphor, have a hard time being pleasant to one another for any stretch of time before they're bickering about something. Which you just saw there and then in a scene coming up you'll see the reverse is true. This was the scene that inspired my remark to | DSE: -your metaphor, have a hard time being pleasant to one another for any stretch of time before they're bickering about something. Which you just saw there and then in a scene coming up you'll see the reverse is true. This was the scene that inspired my remark to James that about their relationship that got- | ||
RDM: -Oh, them touching each other?- | RDM: -Oh, them touching each other?- | ||
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RDM: And he embraces it. He just totally embraces this character. | RDM: And he embraces it. He just totally embraces this character. | ||
DSE: And he's someone who, as many of you know, was very- a very outspoken opponent of the | DSE: And he's someone who, as many of you know, was very- a very outspoken opponent of the "Reimagining" of this show. And had a th- came full circle and elected to embrace it and it didn't hurt that he was given a very compelling role that started [[Season 1 (2004-05)|last season]] to embrace, and I think he's really- You never hea- I mean, this guy shows up. He's the consummate professional. Hits his marks, knows his lines. Takes direction well. He may not be seen again for several episodes. You never hear from his people. You never get complaints. There's never any questions about, "Why aren't in more of them?" I think he understands that- oh, do we have to? | ||
RDM: No, you've got time. | RDM: No, you've got time. | ||
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RDM: "If this was [[w:Stargate SG-1|''Stargate'']] they would have shot someone by now." | RDM: "If this was [[w:Stargate SG-1|''Stargate'']] they would have shot someone by now." | ||
DSE: (Laughs.) | DSE: (Laughs.) (Unintelligible.) | ||
RDM: Sorry, ''Stargate''. | RDM: Sorry, ''Stargate''. | ||
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DSE: It looks a little- | DSE: It looks a little- | ||
RDM: This looks a little fake. I wanna take the matte lines off it, blah, blah. | RDM: This looks a little fake. I wanna take the matte lines off it, blah, blah. "That's not a visual effect. That's just a practical- yeah, it's a practical." | ||
DSE: One of those times where you actually just shoot it. | DSE: One of those times where you actually just shoot it. | ||
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RDM: Yeah. | RDM: Yeah. | ||
DSE: Sometimes on paper it cer- it feels quippy or you're not sure how it's gonna work and sometimes tonally- You got an episode like this which is, by and large, pretty heavy and you're killing Elosha, Adama's upset | DSE: Sometimes on paper it cer- it feels quippy or you're not sure how it's gonna work and sometimes tonally- You got an episode like this which is, by and large, pretty heavy and you're killing Elosha, Adama's upset in the beginning- | ||
RDM: It's just enough to- | RDM: It's just enough to- | ||
DSE: | DSE: Just, yeah, to give you some lightness. 'Cause- Now this was the- one of the last scenes written, actually, because we had, as I recall, this was done after we had decided to split the episode in two. | ||
RDM: Yeah. | RDM: Yeah. | ||
DSE: And I wrote this on my couch in Vancouver where we were- we had moved into triage mode because when we got the network to approve the two-parter, Ron and I went and had dinner and basically broke what the second half of [[Home, Part II|episode seven]] would be and then there was this backwards domino effect of things that had to change in [[Home, Part II|episode six]] to make it work as its own episode. And this was a scene that we needed and- or we needed some scene. We didn't know what it was. And so I was in Vancouver having- I was now experiencing the real writer experience, where it's not fun. You're just under deadline. You've got four days. I'm sleeping three hours on my couch, rolling onto the computer, rolling back to the | DSE: And I wrote this on my couch in Vancouver where we were- we had moved into triage mode because when we got the network to approve the two-parter, Ron and I went and had dinner and basically broke what the second half of [[Home, Part II|episode seven]] would be and then there was this backwards domino effect of things that had to change in [[Home, Part II|episode six]] to make it work out as its own episode. And this was a scene that we needed and- or we needed some scene. We didn't know what it was. And so I was in Vancouver having- I was now experiencing the real writer experience, where it's not fun. You're just under deadline. You've got four days. I'm sleeping three hours on my couch, rolling onto the computer, rolling back to the computer. | ||
RDM: Write something. | RDM: Write something. | ||
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RDM: And we'll talk to you again then. Thank you very much, and goodnight. | RDM: And we'll talk to you again then. Thank you very much, and goodnight. | ||