Editing Podcast:Pegasus
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I love all the little callbacks in this episode. I love this scene. They reference the ''[[Olympic Carrier]]''. The fact that they think they probably did shoot down over a thousand people, but there's the excuse in their mind(?), or at least, not the excuse but the thing that they tell themselves at night was, "Well, we don't know for sure that anybody was on that ship." But in their hearts they kinda know that there was somebody on that- that there were people on that ship. Yeah, "We don't know." It's such an excuse. It's such a- well emotionally I need to seize on that to justify what we did. | I love all the little callbacks in this episode. I love this scene. They reference the ''[[Olympic Carrier]]''. The fact that they think they probably did shoot down over a thousand people, but there's the excuse in their mind(?), or at least, not the excuse but the thing that they tell themselves at night was, "Well, we don't know for sure that anybody was on that ship." But in their hearts they kinda know that there was somebody on that- that there were people on that ship. Yeah, "We don't know." It's such an excuse. It's such a- well emotionally I need to seize on that to justify what we did. | ||
We gave the art department quite a bit of notice that we were going to use ''Pegasus'' in this episode and we built the ''Pegasus'' sets on a completely different soundstage than the ''Galactica'' so its really is a different ship. It's all in one soundstage. This corr- there's only this one corridor that we use multiple times shooting it in different ways; lighting it slightly differently, trying to emphasize different ang- different viewpoints on the corridor, different camera angles to kind of sell the size of the ship, but we really didn't have a lot, we just- we built out as much of ''Pegasus'' as we could given the financial constraints... and the physical constraints of the soundstage were also a limiting factor. [ | We gave the art department quite a bit of notice that we were going to use ''Pegasus'' in this episode and we built the ''Pegasus'' sets on a completely different soundstage than the ''Galactica'' so its really is a different ship. It's all in one soundstage. This corr- there's only this one corridor that we use multiple times shooting it in different ways; lighting it slightly differently, trying to emphasize different ang- different viewpoints on the corridor, different camera angles to kind of sell the size of the ship, but we really didn't have a lot, we just- we built out as much of ''Pegasus'' as we could given the financial constraints... and the physical constraints of the soundstage were also a limiting factor. [http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0399750/ Richard Hudolin] wanted to convey the notio- the idea of a more advanced [[Galactica type battlestar|battlestar]] while maintaining a connection to the battlestar we saw in the theory that on a certain level an [[Wikipedia:aircraft carrier|aircraft carrier]] is an aircraft carrier. You go aboard the [[Wikipedia:USS Hornet (CV-12)|USS Hornet]], which is tied up in [[Wikipedia:Alameda, California|Alameda in California]], and if you went aboard a [[Wikipedia:Nimitz class aircraft carrier|modern nuclear carrier]] there'd be many differences. There'd also be many similarities, and there'd be a linear connection between the two. There's a generational feeling between those aircraft carriers and there would be one between the battlestars as well. | ||
This storyline is one of the darker storylines we came up with and, boy, we just really all loved it that you would come in here and there would be this woman who looks like [[Number Six|Six]], and what would happen. To put a story where Baltar comes across the tortured and gang-raped Six of his dreams and be forced to, like, deal with her. There was something SO powerful about that idea and it would speak to really the heart of who the man is now and what goes on in his life to then be confronted with another Six, and that this Six had gone through this horrific experience and wasn't the powerful, sexy woman that we've come to know but in this case had been reduced to this state where she's lying virtually catatonic on the floor. A lot of controversy about that. About how dark we were going here. But ultimately we were able to keep it going. I felt this was a very strong and important part of the show. An interesting thing about the scene is that in large part it's hard to recognize that that's even [[Tricia Helfer|Tricia]] down there. Tricia is one of those chameleon-type actresses that if you change her hair and change her clothes she can really disappear into a different kind of character, and all- we kept having this concern. We'd look at this footage and go, "Well, my god. Can you tell that it's Six?" (laughs) We had to keep doing these tie-in shots where you're doing visual effects shots just to prove that it's the same woman. There was a lot of that. It was just hard to fight the fact that Tricia is really just able to disappear physically and personally inside this other person. | This storyline is one of the darker storylines we came up with and, boy, we just really all loved it that you would come in here and there would be this woman who looks like [[Number Six|Six]], and what would happen. To put a story where Baltar comes across the tortured and gang-raped Six of his dreams and be forced to, like, deal with her. There was something SO powerful about that idea and it would speak to really the heart of who the man is now and what goes on in his life to then be confronted with another Six, and that this Six had gone through this horrific experience and wasn't the powerful, sexy woman that we've come to know but in this case had been reduced to this state where she's lying virtually catatonic on the floor. A lot of controversy about that. About how dark we were going here. But ultimately we were able to keep it going. I felt this was a very strong and important part of the show. An interesting thing about the scene is that in large part it's hard to recognize that that's even [[Tricia Helfer|Tricia]] down there. Tricia is one of those chameleon-type actresses that if you change her hair and change her clothes she can really disappear into a different kind of character, and all- we kept having this concern. We'd look at this footage and go, "Well, my god. Can you tell that it's Six?" (laughs) We had to keep doing these tie-in shots where you're doing visual effects shots just to prove that it's the same woman. There was a lot of that. It was just hard to fight the fact that Tricia is really just able to disappear physically and personally inside this other person. | ||
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This scene used to take place on the [[hangar deck]], as I recall, and then we moved it to the corridor for production reasons. I don't think there was any other reason. I love the look here on Eddie's face when he hears the news and when he takes this news. It's like it physically hits him. Right there. You just feel like you just got- you just got hit in the gut. And the man- I mean, look at that, he's like really- and he knows what he's about to do, and he knows how far he is willing to go, and he's willing to go pretty frickin' far. And it's like... the determination of the man, I mean I- look at him. Look at Eddie go. Jesus Christ! (Laughs.) '''That''' is Commander Adama. (Chuckles.) At least that's the Commander Adama I wanna be serving with. | This scene used to take place on the [[hangar deck]], as I recall, and then we moved it to the corridor for production reasons. I don't think there was any other reason. I love the look here on Eddie's face when he hears the news and when he takes this news. It's like it physically hits him. Right there. You just feel like you just got- you just got hit in the gut. And the man- I mean, look at that, he's like really- and he knows what he's about to do, and he knows how far he is willing to go, and he's willing to go pretty frickin' far. And it's like... the determination of the man, I mean I- look at him. Look at Eddie go. Jesus Christ! (Laughs.) '''That''' is Commander Adama. (Chuckles.) At least that's the Commander Adama I wanna be serving with. | ||
The design of the ''Pegasus'' itself was the subject of much discussion, obviously, with [ | The design of the ''Pegasus'' itself was the subject of much discussion, obviously, with [http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0399750/ Richard Hudolin] and [http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0404690/ Gary Hutzel]. We saw various designs. Some of them were too far a departure from ''Galactica'' and others were just too close and it was- the trick was to do the aircraft carrier metaphor I mentioned earlier. All aircraft carriers share a certain profile, share certain design elements. They all have a big flat deck, they all have an island, they all are recognizable from a distance. If you see the [[Wikipedia:USS Enterprise (CV-6)|''Enterprise'' from World War II]] and then you see the [[Wikipedia:USS Enterprise (CVN-65)|''Enterprise'' of today]], yes there's many obvious differences, but the fundamentals are still there. It's still a flight deck, a hangar deck, a bridge- or an island with a bridge on it. | ||
This is a very big throw of the dice from Adama, and how far is he willing to go? Well, you'll have to come back and see us in January to see how far either one of them is willing to go. But I like the fact that the show builds to this point. Where it becomes like, "No, I will not do this. I will not let you execute my men." (Chuckles.) And back. Now what's she gonna do? Well, I mean, this is the cliffhanger ending for season 2b. I won't have the pleasure of speaking to you again for several months. I hope you've enjoyed season 2b- 2a, sorry, 2a of ''[[Battlestar Galactica (RDM)|Battlestar Galactica]]''. I know I have. I continue to appreciate all your support, and I appreciate your patience in waiting for these podcasts and [http://blog.scifi.com/battlestar/ the blog] that- the blog that sometimes never was. This is just one of those great endings that we just append to our visual effects guys and just say, "Give us a gre- a hell of an ending with the Vipers flying at each other and coming right at the camera and we'll just cut." And that's how you do a cliffhanger boys and girls. Well, thank you very much, and I'll talk to you again in January. Goodnight. | This is a very big throw of the dice from Adama, and how far is he willing to go? Well, you'll have to come back and see us in January to see how far either one of them is willing to go. But I like the fact that the show builds to this point. Where it becomes like, "No, I will not do this. I will not let you execute my men." (Chuckles.) And back. Now what's she gonna do? Well, I mean, this is the cliffhanger ending for season 2b. I won't have the pleasure of speaking to you again for several months. I hope you've enjoyed season 2b- 2a, sorry, 2a of ''[[Battlestar Galactica (RDM)|Battlestar Galactica]]''. I know I have. I continue to appreciate all your support, and I appreciate your patience in waiting for these podcasts and [http://blog.scifi.com/battlestar/ the blog] that- the blog that sometimes never was. This is just one of those great endings that we just append to our visual effects guys and just say, "Give us a gre- a hell of an ending with the Vipers flying at each other and coming right at the camera and we'll just cut." And that's how you do a cliffhanger boys and girls. Well, thank you very much, and I'll talk to you again in January. Goodnight. | ||
{{Podcast list (RDM season 2)}} | {{Podcast list (RDM season 2)}} | ||