Editing Podcast:The Eye of Jupiter
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Part of the rationale for doing this episode was to get us back on the l- service the larger story of the show. I think one of the strengths of the show, in my personal opinion, is the variety of stories that we do. That some are very intense, personal episodes like [[Unfinished Business|episode eight]] that are very involved with just the characters and their backstories and their interrelationships. Others are more action-oriented space shows like last week's show, "[[The Passage]]", that involved a lot of flying around and things exploding, etc., etc. Other episodes are very political. This kind of episode taps into the mythology of the show. The larger stories that we're telling. The search for [[Earth (RDM)|Earth]]. These- this two-parter services a lot of masters. We had some discussions within the show and with various people within the show whether this was a correct move. I think [[Michael Rymer|Mike Rymer]] had some reservations about going in this direction when we first pitched the story to him and started talking about, in earnest, about the storyline. Whether we should stick with more political type shows and more personal, character-oriented type shows. And I felt, well, yes. That's great. Those are the shows that I personally love the most in a lot of ways are the ones that have no action whatsoever and that it's really just all character, all the time. But I think the show is about many things. And I think this is- the mythology of the show, the overarching story that we're telling, the search for Earth, the tale of the [[Religion in the Twelve Colonies|gods]], Cylon one [[God (RDM)|God]], and how those things all tie in together, I think, is also a very important part of our series. And I think that one of things I enjoy about the show is the mix, is doing different kinds of show each week. In some ways I think it's cool that there is no such thing as a typical episode of [[Battlestar Galactica (RDM)|''Battlestar Galactica'']]. What is the- what's the parody of the show? You can parody elements of the show and characters of the show, and you can parody dark and depressing storylines if you care to look at it that way, or that they're all gonna die. You can parody elements of it but there's not the, "Oh, it's another one of the- those ''Galactica'' episodes. 'Cause every week ''Galactica'' does the same show." And we don't do the same show every week. And I think that's one of the strengths of the show. I think it's also one of the dangers of the show. 'Cause I think you've also- there is an element to the- in the audience that very strongly wants to watch the same show every week. That's just television. You tune into a procedural show every week 'cause you wanna see a murder case every single week, and you want to always know who the murderer is by act four and you wanna sorta be surprised, and etc. And so I think when you're doing a series like this you are riding the line between challenging and surprising the show every week and also worrying about getting in the way of the audience's comfort and enjoyment of coming back for a familiar tale, a familiar meal, each week. And I tend to opt for doing something different every week. For doing something- to tell episodes from different points of view, to doing different styles, playing with different genres, and really looking at different aspects of what this universe is. | Part of the rationale for doing this episode was to get us back on the l- service the larger story of the show. I think one of the strengths of the show, in my personal opinion, is the variety of stories that we do. That some are very intense, personal episodes like [[Unfinished Business|episode eight]] that are very involved with just the characters and their backstories and their interrelationships. Others are more action-oriented space shows like last week's show, "[[The Passage]]", that involved a lot of flying around and things exploding, etc., etc. Other episodes are very political. This kind of episode taps into the mythology of the show. The larger stories that we're telling. The search for [[Earth (RDM)|Earth]]. These- this two-parter services a lot of masters. We had some discussions within the show and with various people within the show whether this was a correct move. I think [[Michael Rymer|Mike Rymer]] had some reservations about going in this direction when we first pitched the story to him and started talking about, in earnest, about the storyline. Whether we should stick with more political type shows and more personal, character-oriented type shows. And I felt, well, yes. That's great. Those are the shows that I personally love the most in a lot of ways are the ones that have no action whatsoever and that it's really just all character, all the time. But I think the show is about many things. And I think this is- the mythology of the show, the overarching story that we're telling, the search for Earth, the tale of the [[Religion in the Twelve Colonies|gods]], Cylon one [[God (RDM)|God]], and how those things all tie in together, I think, is also a very important part of our series. And I think that one of things I enjoy about the show is the mix, is doing different kinds of show each week. In some ways I think it's cool that there is no such thing as a typical episode of [[Battlestar Galactica (RDM)|''Battlestar Galactica'']]. What is the- what's the parody of the show? You can parody elements of the show and characters of the show, and you can parody dark and depressing storylines if you care to look at it that way, or that they're all gonna die. You can parody elements of it but there's not the, "Oh, it's another one of the- those ''Galactica'' episodes. 'Cause every week ''Galactica'' does the same show." And we don't do the same show every week. And I think that's one of the strengths of the show. I think it's also one of the dangers of the show. 'Cause I think you've also- there is an element to the- in the audience that very strongly wants to watch the same show every week. That's just television. You tune into a procedural show every week 'cause you wanna see a murder case every single week, and you want to always know who the murderer is by act four and you wanna sorta be surprised, and etc. And so I think when you're doing a series like this you are riding the line between challenging and surprising the show every week and also worrying about getting in the way of the audience's comfort and enjoyment of coming back for a familiar tale, a familiar meal, each week. And I tend to opt for doing something different every week. For doing something- to tell episodes from different points of view, to doing different styles, playing with different genres, and really looking at different aspects of what this universe is. | ||
There were earlier versions of this sequence here, of [[Gaius Baltar|Baltar]] coming in. Mike Rymer was always in love with the idea of when Baltar's first coming back on [[Galactica (RDM)|''Galactica'']], and so was [[James Callis]]. I think I didn't quite see this as big a moment as they did, of him coming back on ''Galactica'', and I kept fighting to | There were earlier versions of this sequence here, of [[Gaius Baltar|Baltar]] coming in. Mike Rymer was always in love with the idea of when Baltar's first coming back on [[Galactica (RDM)|''Galactica'']], and so was [[James Callis]]. I think I didn't quite see this as big a moment as they did, of him coming back on ''Galactica'', and I kept fighting to axe that to make this a simpler section. There was a version that was almost shot where [[Felix Gaeta|Gaeta]] was part of the team bringing Baltar aboard the ship here in the hallways, and that as they walked and talked Baltar bummed a cigarette off of Gaeta and had a conversation about how much he found himself missing the ship even though he never thought he would, and coming to realize that based on Gaeta's reaction that he could never really go home again. Elements of that idea were saved and later put into the following scene that's coming up where they're all in the [[wardroom]] and they're having the big talk between the [[Cylons (RDM)|Cylons]] and the humans. That sequence actually has a big chunk cut out of the middle of it that we'll talk about. A middle that did deal with some of the Gaeta issues. | ||
I love this sort of walk, and the way Michael shot this walk. Especially that shot we just saw there of [[Lucy Lawless|Lucy]] coming down the corridor. There's something about the way Lucy walks through that whole sequence that's really interesting. It's just the way she balances herself on shoe- on her heels, of all things, and the look in hea- her eyes and the way she carries herself when walking through the corridors. There's something powerful and evocative and provocative about the way that Lucy behaves in the whole episode. | I love this sort of walk, and the way Michael shot this walk. Especially that shot we just saw there of [[Lucy Lawless|Lucy]] coming down the corridor. There's something about the way Lucy walks through that whole sequence that's really interesting. It's just the way she balances herself on shoe- on her heels, of all things, and the look in hea- her eyes and the way she carries herself when walking through the corridors. There's something powerful and evocative and provocative about the way that Lucy behaves in the whole episode. | ||
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Small bit of editing there that I thought was nice, that elevates it slightly, is when she says, "You're bluffing," there was a scripted line and a shot line where Eddie said, "Try me," and then he asked the guards. And by just taking out the, "Try me," which you kind of hear, it's one of those expected lines in some way that you hear a lot in TV and you know is coming, and it tends to rob the moment of its impact. And by just taking that out it lets the moment speak for itself and it's actually a stronger out for the scene. | Small bit of editing there that I thought was nice, that elevates it slightly, is when she says, "You're bluffing," there was a scripted line and a shot line where Eddie said, "Try me," and then he asked the guards. And by just taking out the, "Try me," which you kind of hear, it's one of those expected lines in some way that you hear a lot in TV and you know is coming, and it tends to rob the moment of its impact. And by just taking that out it lets the moment speak for itself and it's actually a stronger out for the scene. | ||
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== Act 2 == | == Act 2 == | ||
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