Editing Podcast:Resurrection Ship, Part II
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Now we’re back into the thick of the action here and the battle sequence- all these visual effects are just tremendous I must say from [[Zoic]] and all the other houses that [[Gary Hutzel]] our visual effects supervisor plays- just an amazing, amazing battle sequence. | Now we’re back into the thick of the action here and the battle sequence- all these visual effects are just tremendous I must say from [[Zoic]] and all the other houses that [[Gary Hutzel]] our visual effects supervisor plays- just an amazing, amazing battle sequence. | ||
Oh, I should talk a little about the inspiration for this ejection, this is something that came up very early in the development of the entire "[[Pegasus]]"/"[[Resurrection Ship, Part I|Resurrection Ship]]" storyline. Again in our effort to find a different way to tell battle sequences- one of the dangers of the show that I’ve talked about before is this notion that it’s dangerous to keep just playing the same dogfights over and over again, the audience gets bored, I get bored with it and I wanna keep doing something different. Part of this notion came out of a true story from the [[wikipedia:World_War_II|Second World War]] in the [[wikipedia:Pacific_ocean|Pacific]], there was a [[wikipedia:U.S._Navy|Navy]] flyer, whose name I believe was [[wikipedia: | Oh, I should talk a little about the inspiration for this ejection, this is something that came up very early in the development of the entire "[[Pegasus]]"/"[[Resurrection Ship, Part I|Resurrection Ship]]" storyline. Again in our effort to find a different way to tell battle sequences- one of the dangers of the show that I’ve talked about before is this notion that it’s dangerous to keep just playing the same dogfights over and over again, the audience gets bored, I get bored with it and I wanna keep doing something different. Part of this notion came out of a true story from the [[wikipedia:World_War_II|Second World War]] in the [[wikipedia:Pacific_ocean|Pacific]], there was a [[wikipedia:U.S._Navy|Navy]] flyer, whose name I believe was [[wikipedia:George_Gay|Ensign Gay]] and he was a pilot for a TBF Devastator torpedo plane which- or TBD it might be [[wikipedia:TBD_Devastator|TBD Devastator]] anyway- he was on a torpedo plane in the [[wikipedia:Battle_of_Midway|Battle of Midway]] and he was launched from the [[wikipedia:USS_Hornet_%28CV-8%29|USS Hornet]] and during the American attack on the Japanese aircraft carriers all- the entire squadron- his entire torpedo squadron was wiped out, they were literally- every single plane was lost and Ensign Gay was the only survivor and he survived because he went d- when he went down he got out of his sinking aircraft I believe and stayed in the water with his little life jacket on but he was in the very heart of the Japanese fleet and he had a ringside seat to watch the Battle of Midway play out all around him. He saw American dive-bombers sink three Japanese aircraft carriers, he saw the entire attack and it was such a unique perspective that I’d always been taken with it and thought well that’s an amazing place to tell a battle sequence from. From a pilot who’s like ejected and is floating in space and watching the battle happen all around him and that’s the inspiration for where the Lee sequence came from. | ||
This whole beat with [[Gaius Baltar|Baltar]] and [[Gina]] and [[Number Six|Six]] is of course a call-back to the first episode where she talks about sports as being something that she missed and that she used to go to these games and drink in the emotion and she always saved a ticket for him. And it was this piece of Six that had revealed itself to Baltar in terms of her love for him and there was something delicious about the notion that he would then steal that, he would literally steal that story and the heartfelt nature of that story and the vulnerability of that story and use it to get to the woman that he now wants in defiance of Six hanging on right- literally on his shoulder. There was something great about the juxtaposition of it, it’s great that they’re both versions of the same woman and yet he’s robbing from one to get to the other and he’s doing it for complicated reasons of genuine feeling that he has for Gina because she’s a real woman and yet it’s all based on a lie which is at the heart of a lot of things that Baltar’s about. I like that a lot, again though because we’ve now split this into two episodes, it’s a call-back all the way into the first hour which might lose some of the audience but y’know them’s the choices that you make. | This whole beat with [[Gaius Baltar|Baltar]] and [[Gina]] and [[Number Six|Six]] is of course a call-back to the first episode where she talks about sports as being something that she missed and that she used to go to these games and drink in the emotion and she always saved a ticket for him. And it was this piece of Six that had revealed itself to Baltar in terms of her love for him and there was something delicious about the notion that he would then steal that, he would literally steal that story and the heartfelt nature of that story and the vulnerability of that story and use it to get to the woman that he now wants in defiance of Six hanging on right- literally on his shoulder. There was something great about the juxtaposition of it, it’s great that they’re both versions of the same woman and yet he’s robbing from one to get to the other and he’s doing it for complicated reasons of genuine feeling that he has for Gina because she’s a real woman and yet it’s all based on a lie which is at the heart of a lot of things that Baltar’s about. I like that a lot, again though because we’ve now split this into two episodes, it’s a call-back all the way into the first hour which might lose some of the audience but y’know them’s the choices that you make. | ||