Editing Podcast:Sacrifice
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I wish we had a few more scenes like this, in the show, where [[Sesha Abinell|Sesha]] is talking to [[William Adama|Adama]] on the phone, because I think this is when the show does work the best. It's like- the conversations between Dana Delany and [[Edward James Olmos]] are interesting because they're two really good actors and they're selling you this material and you're starting to get engaged with what's going on with the stakes and with the thought with the politics what's going on. I just wish we had played this a little bit more in the show, like I said at the outset, given us a little more detail work on what was going on. | I wish we had a few more scenes like this, in the show, where [[Sesha Abinell|Sesha]] is talking to [[William Adama|Adama]] on the phone, because I think this is when the show does work the best. It's like- the conversations between Dana Delany and [[Edward James Olmos]] are interesting because they're two really good actors and they're selling you this material and you're starting to get engaged with what's going on with the stakes and with the thought with the politics what's going on. I just wish we had played this a little bit more in the show, like I said at the outset, given us a little more detail work on what was going on. | ||
Early drafts of the episode featured much, much, much more conflict between [[Saul Tigh|Tigh]] and Adama. I talked about last season that we were intrigued by the idea of getting to a place where Tigh and Adama were at loggerheads. That these two very close friends and trusted comrades got to a point where they were shoo- pointing guns at each other was something we were going to try in Season One and ultimately, ironically, that became "[[Tigh Me Up, Tigh Me Down]]", the comedy. This season we tried to go down that road again. We tried to play a little bit more of that here, and again, just ran into the same believability factor that was a part of me and I think that it was shared by everyone that just didn't believe the point that, well in this ep- I should explain- what we were trying, what we were going to go for in this episode was the idea that Adama's refusal to turn over [[Sharon Valerii (Caprica copy)|Sharon]] was putting [[Ellen Tigh|Ellen]]'s life in danger and that there came a point where Tigh simply was not going to allow his wife to die for the sake of a machine, and it came to a violent confrontation where Tigh was going to hand her over, and Adama didn't want him to and you had the two men going toe to toe. It just- it rang false. It didn't work and you never believed that Tigh could actually buy into the notion that giving the- the- the hostage takers what they wanted- to give the terrorists what they want, even if it was just a machine, was actually a good idea. It just seemed like, he's smart enough, and he's experienced enough to know that that's a bad- a bad move, no matter what his personal feelings were and that he couldn't quite get to a place where Ellen was really so important to his life, even in concept, that he would throw away everything in order to retrieve her. And it just- we just weren't able to pull it off but th- you can kind of see the- again, there's still shadows of that leftover in that their attitudes are still colored by this idea that Tigh is like, "You're doing all this stuff with Sharon and she's a machine and you're losing sight of that." That bit by bit, Adama, even though Adama was shot by | Early drafts of the episode featured much, much, much more conflict between [[Saul Tigh|Tigh]] and Adama. I talked about last season that we were intrigued by the idea of getting to a place where Tigh and Adama were at loggerheads. That these two very close friends and trusted comrades got to a point where they were shoo- pointing guns at each other was something we were going to try in Season One and ultimately, ironically, that became "[[Tigh Me Up, Tigh Me Down]]", the comedy. This season we tried to go down that road again. We tried to play a little bit more of that here, and again, just ran into the same believability factor that was a part of me and I think that it was shared by everyone that just didn't believe the point that, well in this ep- I should explain- what we were trying, what we were going to go for in this episode was the idea that Adama's refusal to turn over [[Sharon Valerii (Caprica copy)|Sharon]] was putting [[Ellen Tigh|Ellen]]'s life in danger and that there came a point where Tigh simply was not going to allow his wife to die for the sake of a machine, and it came to a violent confrontation where Tigh was going to hand her over, and Adama didn't want him to and you had the two men going toe to toe. It just- it rang false. It didn't work and you never believed that Tigh could actually buy into the notion that giving the- the- the hostage takers what they wanted- to give the terrorists what they want, even if it was just a machine, was actually a good idea. It just seemed like, he's smart enough, and he's experienced enough to know that that's a bad- a bad move, no matter what his personal feelings were and that he couldn't quite get to a place where Ellen was really so important to his life, even in concept, that he would throw away everything in order to retrieve her. And it just- we just weren't able to pull it off but th- you can kind of see the- again, there's still shadows of that leftover in that their attitudes are still colored by this idea that Tigh is like, "You're doing all this stuff with Sharon and she's a machine and you're losing sight of that." That bit by bit, Adama, even though Adama was shot by [Sharon Valerii (Galactica copy)|a version of Sharon]] sh- Adama has- keeps calling her "the thing" and keeps her in the brig and is very, very wary of her, that there is definitely a part of Adama that is simultaneously drawn to Sharon. That he does look to her for information and he- there is an emotional connection between the two as we saw in "[[Resurrection Ship, Part I|Resurrection Ship]]" and that Tigh is much more skeptical of that connection and doesn't believe it's leading any of them to- to a good place. | ||
Captain Thrace. So, this is again. Now we're playing out the- the- the bit of the plot where they realize that Lee's giving them an opportunity to get the door open, to get somebody on the inside. A- the- the- a perfectly valid, logical, question is why don't they use that nifty little side-passage that Lee was using to get in through the back- back door of the bathroom, and go in that way, and I guess my answer to that is it's just too small in there it'd be hard for them to carry all those rifles and they might bump their heads and get bruises or something, so they'd rather not go that way (chuckles). The- the logi- the internal justification in the show is that passage didn't lead anywhere. That that was a dead end that only went around the back and that it was very difficult and we had all kinds of, like, "Yada yada yada," ex- expo lines as they looked at various schematics and diagrams and debated different points of entry and why that this one wasn't going to work, why that one wasn't going to work and they all get cut for time but they leave it feeling like it's a bit of a hole. Er- it is- it is a bit of a hole. | Captain Thrace. So, this is again. Now we're playing out the- the- the bit of the plot where they realize that Lee's giving them an opportunity to get the door open, to get somebody on the inside. A- the- the- a perfectly valid, logical, question is why don't they use that nifty little side-passage that Lee was using to get in through the back- back door of the bathroom, and go in that way, and I guess my answer to that is it's just too small in there it'd be hard for them to carry all those rifles and they might bump their heads and get bruises or something, so they'd rather not go that way (chuckles). The- the logi- the internal justification in the show is that passage didn't lead anywhere. That that was a dead end that only went around the back and that it was very difficult and we had all kinds of, like, "Yada yada yada," ex- expo lines as they looked at various schematics and diagrams and debated different points of entry and why that this one wasn't going to work, why that one wasn't going to work and they all get cut for time but they leave it feeling like it's a bit of a hole. Er- it is- it is a bit of a hole. | ||