Editing Podcast:Home, Part I
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DSE: So, as I was saying, this is one of the few scenes that | DSE: So, as I was saying, this is one of the few scenes that remained intact and was executed pretty much as I hoped and it's just nice when that happens. | ||
. | RDM: It is one of those things that you learn in TV, or, I guess, just writing for anything. You have- when you're writing it you have a play moving in your head, at least I do... | ||
RDM: It is one of those things that you learn in TV, or, I guess, just writing for anything. You have- when you're writing it you have | |||
DSE: Yeah. | DSE: Yeah. | ||
RDM: ... You | RDM: ... You play a movie of how you think it's going to look, almost down to what the shots are... | ||
DSE: Totally. | DSE: Totally. | ||
RDM: ... and as you're writing it | RDM: ... and as you're writing it- inevitably, if I write that the character is standing, the character will be sitting. If I imagine the character is coming into the frame from left to right, he goes in right to left. It's weird. It's part of the process of giving over this material to other people, who interpret it, to the director and the actors, the crew, help chips in and chimes, and sets that change and you don't anticipate them, and actors come up with things on the set that you- there's a cer- | ||
DSE: But you have a different attitude about that than a lot of writer/producers, because I've worked a lot with [[imdb: nm0001027|Shaun Cassidy]], as we've talked about, and he's a dear friend and a very talented writer/producer, but he suffers | DSE: But you have a different attitude about that than a lot of writer/producers, because I've worked a lot with [[imdb: nm0001027|Shaun Cassidy]], as we've talked about, and he's a dear friend and a very talented writer/producer, but he suffers of all that you've talked about very vocally and very clearly. | ||
RDM: (Laughs) | RDM: (Laughs) | ||
DSE: It tortures him when he thought he'd be sitting- he wrote in capital letters, "He's sitting," and the guy is standing. From the first time you were looking at dailies on the miniseries, I remember your taking this shockingly zen approach to- "Well, y'know, that's not how I imagined it, but it works really well." I think that's really healthy, especially on a show like this which has a verite style and a very naturalistic apporach to it. You want to encourage ad-libs, you want to encourage interpetive approaches to the material and you don't want to be- you don't want it, necessarily, executed exactly as written if there's something better on the | DSE: It tortures him when he thought he'd be sitting- he wrote in capital letters, "He's sitting," and the guy is standing. From the first time you were looking at dailies on the miniseries, I remember your taking this shockingly zen approach to- "Well, y'know, that's not how I imagined it, but it works really well." I think that's really healthy, especially on a show like this which has a verite style and a very naturalistic apporach to it. You want to encourage ad-libs, you want to encourage interpetive- the approaches to the material and you don't want to be- you don't want it, necessarily, executed exactly as written if there's something better on the- | ||
RDM: Yeah, I mean the thing- the line you try to walk is to give them enough freedom to breathe life into it, and do the unexpected thing that then becomes gold, but then they can't change the story. It has to still service the intent of the scene, | |||
RDM: Yeah, I mean the thing- the line you try to walk is to give them enough freedom to breathe life into it, and do the unexpected thing that then becomes gold, but then they can't change the story. It has to still service the intent of the scene, because you have other scenes that are following it... | |||
DSE: Yeah. | DSE: Yeah. | ||
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RDM: Yeah. | RDM: Yeah. | ||
DSE: ...because people know that if they want to do something different there can be a discussion about it. What you don't want is for the inmates to be running the asylum, so to speak... | DSE: ...because people know that if they want to do something different there can be a discussion about it. What you don't want is for the inmates to be running the asylum, so to speak... | ||
RDM: Yeah. | RDM: Yeah. | ||
DSE: ...and for it to be viewed as this forbidden thing you're not supposed to do because, of course, everyone then is encouraged to do it, and especially when you're entering into your | DSE: ...and for it to be viewed as this forbidden thing that you're not supposed to do because, of course, everyone then is encouraged to do it, and especially when you're entering into your second or third seasons and everyone's getting bored with the process anyway. They want something to... | ||
RDM: Yeah. "What can I do now?" | RDM: Yeah. "What can I do now?" | ||
DSE: ...liven things up, just in terms of the boredom of hanging around | DSE: ...liven things up, just in terms of the boredom of hanging around the set all day. It looks exciting when you watch it, finished, together, but there's probably there's probably no more mind-numbingly boring than sitting on a set waiting for your scene, and people come up with all sorts of things to entertain themselves. | ||
RDM: To entertain themselves. Ah, the famous walnut scene. | RDM: To entertain themselves. Ah, the famous walnut scene. | ||
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RDM: We were talking about this terms of something else, right? | RDM: We were talking about this terms of something else, right? | ||
DSE: Yeah, this is one of the last scenes I wrote as a new way to introduce this new charcter, [[George Birch]], named after- loosely after my father-in-law. And we were talking about a completely different episode, episode five, which preceeded this. We were in prep. We were talking to the director about a nightmare scene that | DSE: Yeah, this is one of the last scenes I wrote as a new way to introduce this new charcter, [[George Birch]], named after- loosely after my father-in-law. And we were talking about a completely different episode, episode five, which preceeded this. We were in prep. We were talking to the director about a nightmare scene that has since been- that has now been cut from the episode where Kara wakes up in the hospital... | ||
RDM: Oh, yeah. | RDM: Oh, yeah. | ||
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DSE: So, just- | DSE: So, just- | ||
RDM: Lt. Birch is a very tall man, | RDM: Lt. Birch is a very tall man, and- | ||
DSE: Yes. (laughs) | DSE: Yes. (laughs) | ||
RDM: This whole little sequence- this runner of the replacement | RDM: This whole little sequence- this runner of the replacement CAG, went through a lot of internal strife as we tried to wrestle this to the ground. I mean, it's a very untraditional kind of storyline that you're following here. It's not, really, that Adama is facing a crisis back on Galactica. It's not facing down the Cylons. The ship isn't about to explode. He's not really even going through an internal crisis of concious or something. He's trying to move on, and representative of him trying to move on is that somebody has to be the CAG, and bring in this guy who seemingly is everything you want the CAG to be, and he falls short. And I think in earlier versions people got killed, as I recall. | ||
DSE: Yeah. | DSE: Yeah. | ||
RDM: That was the central change we kept playing back and forth with. How big of a screw-up is Birch, is the question. And it's hard because you want it for dramatic effect. You want him to be as big a screw-up as possible, to really dramatize the idea that ''Galactica'' can't- and the rest of them can't get along without the people that they've lost, but then the worse he is, the more of a fuck-up he seems- and you go, "Oh God, this is the best pilot that they have left downstairs? Put [[ | RDM: That was the central change we kept playing back and forth with. How big of a screw-up is Birch, is the question. And it's hard because you want it for dramatic effect. You want him to be as big a screw-up as possible, to really dramatize the idea that ''Galactica'' can't- and the rest of them can't get along without the people that they've lost, but then the worse he is, the more of a fuck-up he seems- and you go, "Oh God, this is the best pilot that they have left downstairs? Put [[Kat]] in charge, for Christ's sakes." | ||
DSE: (Laughs) | DSE: (Laughs) | ||
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RDM: So it went back and forth, and I don't even remember how we resolved it- why we resoved it in this fashion. I think it was just a general feeling that once people died, Adama had made such a fundamental judgement- error of judgement that he just couldn't recover. | RDM: So it went back and forth, and I don't even remember how we resolved it- why we resoved it in this fashion. I think it was just a general feeling that once people died, Adama had made such a fundamental judgement- error of judgement that he just couldn't recover. | ||
DSE: Yeah. The | DSE: Yeah. The blowback became how much do we make Birch's screw-up the definitive motivation for Adama's decision... | ||
RDM: Yeah. | RDM: Yeah. | ||
DSE: ...that he makes at the end of the episode, and as we continued to explore the story it became clearer and clearer that | DSE: ...that he makes at the end of the episode, and as we continued to explore the story it became clearer and clearer that Birch's screw-up should just be one brick in the wall. | ||
RDM: Yeah. | RDM: Yeah. | ||
DSE: It shouldn't be the straw that breaks the camel's back, necessarily. | DSE: It shouldn't be the straw that breaks the camel's back, necessarily. That took the onus off it needing to involve people dying, and it should just be the kind of thing that deeply concerns you... | ||
RDM: Yeah. | RDM: Yeah. | ||
DSE: ...that makes you start to question. We've all had those experiences, whether it's- you hire a nanny. You leave the house having just met the babysitter for the first time, and your dinner isn't settling very well because there's something just not right about that person, then- | DSE: ...that makes you start to question. We've all had those experiences, whether it's- you hire a nanny. You leave the house after having just met the babysitter for the first time, and your dinner isn't settling very well because there's something just not right about that person, then- | ||
RDM: You can't concentrate. | RDM: You can't concentrate. | ||
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DSE: Yeah, you can't concentrate. You find yourself rushing home early, and- it didn't really need to be any more than that. | DSE: Yeah, you can't concentrate. You find yourself rushing home early, and- it didn't really need to be any more than that. | ||
RDM: Adama at the press conference. I think this was always- this scene is virtually untouched, too. | RDM: Adama at the press conference. I think this was always- this scene is virtually untouched, too. This is a notion that Adama's not the guy who likes to deal with the press. | ||
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RDM: "I'm in charge." | RDM: "I'm in charge." | ||
DSE: "I'm in charge," and, 'course, in this same situation it's not about Adama being ill- | DSE: "I'm in charge," and, 'course, in this same situation it's not about Adama being ill-equipted, although in earlier versions of this had him sweating and stammering- | ||
RDM: Yeah, he fumbled a lot more. | RDM: Yeah, he fumbled a lot more. | ||
DSE: Yeah, deeply uncomfortable in this position. The scene was much more about Adama's internal struggle to keep it together then, than it ultimately became, but there was still this idea that- here's a guy who's not in his right element here. And it was really just intended to speak to the absence of | DSE: Yeah, deeply uncomfortable in this position. The scene was much more about Adama's internal struggle to keep it together then, than it ultimately became, but there was still this idea that- here's a guy who's not in his right element here. And it was really just intended to speak to the absence of Laura Roslin. This is what she normally does. And there is still a line, even, from that earlier version that we were able to keep in coming up here where Tigh says- where Adama says, "Don't let me do that again." And Tigh says, "It always looked easy enough when Roslin did it." | ||
RDM: Yeah. | RDM: Yeah. | ||
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DSE: He's maintaining the illness. He's not let go of that reality. He's sort of being helped here by Tigh before he yanks his arm away. Eddie is very deliberate about those things. | DSE: He's maintaining the illness. He's not let go of that reality. He's sort of being helped here by Tigh before he yanks his arm away. Eddie is very deliberate about those things. | ||
RDM: Yeah, he's very | RDM: Yeah, he's very comitted to the continuity of the characters. | ||
DSE: Yeah. | DSE: Yeah. | ||
RDM: | RDM: What they're about. | ||
DSE: Now this scene I didn't write at all. (laughs) This is- | DSE: Now this scene I didn't write at all. (laughs) This is- | ||
RDM: Oh, yeah. I remember this scene. I | RDM: Oh, yeah. I remember this scene. I remember this scene. | ||
DSE: This is something that you- that we realized to our horror- (laughs) | DSE: This is something that you- that we realized to our horror- (laughs) | ||
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DSE: (Laughs) | DSE: (Laughs) | ||
RDM: So, | RDM: So, this was one of those scenes that I just started with nothing and decided to make something out of. This whole story of him looking on the bridge, looking down at the fish. The only inspiration for it was my wife and I took a trip to Alaska a year ago, and there was a bridge where we stood on and looked down at the salmon spawning... | ||
DSE: Really? | DSE: Really? | ||
RDM: ...someplace up in Alaska. Yeah, and it was just- it was very like- one of those really evocative images | RDM: ...someplace up in Alaska. Yeah, and it was just- it was very like- one of those really evocative images, looking down at a very shallow riverbed, and there were just so many fish you couldn't deal with- it was really bizarre, strange. Half of them were dying, and spawning. It was just this weird life and death place. From that it was this sense of looking out at this other, this fish that weren't really like you, that had this whole other world going on. I thought it was interesting to suggest that Baltar was moving into a place where he was starting to look at humanity that way. He was starting to look around and go, "I'm not really a part of these guys." | ||
DSE: Yeah. | DSE: Yeah. | ||
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RDM: Yeah. | RDM: Yeah. | ||
DSE: ...and kind of sexy at the same time. And you're certainly aware that this is a guy who's out of touch with people around him, who's got this thing that's obviously an apparition, | DSE: ...and kind of sexy at the same time. And you're certainly aware that this is a guy who's out of touch with people around him, who's got this thing that's obviously an apparition, this ring in his ear, because, of course, there she is not there, and it still works. | ||
RDM: Yeah | RDM: Yeah | ||
DSE: And it was originally an act out, I'd structured it as an act out. I't didn't work well as an act when we saw the cuts, so we | DSE: And it was originally an act out, I'd structured it as an act out. I't didn't work well as an act when we saw the cuts, so we really slide it around and end on this scene, which was a deeply experimental scene to the extent that we've never really shown Laura Roslin this direct and this angry in confronting a Cylon. She's always had a go-between, or been given news from someone else, and this is really the first time we put her in a situation where she was addressing a Cylon face-to-face, and it's really interesting, her body language and the way she maintains this measured tone in here voice, but you can feel the rage underneath it. It's a really unusual scene for [[Mary McDonnell|Mary]]. | ||
RDM: And this is mostly a following up to the earlier scene that we didn't talk about. But what I think is really interesting that we're starting to say about Laura is that she's willing to say whatever she has to to the Cylons. She | RDM: And this is mostly a following up to the earlier scene that we didn't talk about. But what I think is really interesting that we're starting to say about Laura is that she's willing to say whatever she has to to the Cylons. She tol- again, she promised another Cylon, "Oh, don't worry, if you just do x y and z, you'll be fine." | ||
DSE: Right | DSE: Right | ||