Editing Podcast:The Son Also Rises
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== Teaser == | == Teaser == | ||
RDM: Hello, and welcome to the podcast. I'm [[Ronald D. Moore]], executive producer and developer of [[Battlestar Galactica (RDM)|the new ''Battlestar Galactica'']], here to welcome you to the podcast for what we call episode seventeen, "[[The Son Also Rises]]". I am joined here in my lovely home by my equally lovely wife, [[Terry Dresbach|Mrs. Ron]]- | RDM: Hello, and welcome to the podcast. I'm [[Ronald D. Moore]], executive producer and developer of [[Battlestar Galactica (RDM)|the new ''Battlestar Galactica'']], here to welcome you to the podcast for what we call episode seventeen, "[[The Son Also Rises]]". I am joined here in my lovely home by my equally lovely wife, [[Terry Dresbach|Mrs. Ron]]- | ||
Terry: Love her or hate her. | Terry: Love her or hate her. | ||
RDM: | RDM: Love her, or hate her. | ||
Terry: (Chuckles.) | Terry: (Chuckles.) | ||
RDM: Just- but don't call her | RDM: Just- but don't call her ditzy. Mrs. Ron- Say hello, Mrs. Ron. | ||
Terry: Hello, Mrs. Ron. I'm gonna be very intellectual this time, I'm sure. | Terry: Hello, Mrs. Ron. I'm gonna be very intellectual this time, I'm sure. | ||
RDM: Yes. There are various dogs and cats wandering the room, randomly. The Scotch tonight is | RDM: Yes. There are various dogs and cats wandering the room, randomly. The Scotch tonight is Highland Twentyfive, a very nice bottle of Scotch my wife lovely gave me. | ||
Terry: For Valentine's Day. | Terry: For Valentine's Day. | ||
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RDM: Mrs. Ron doesn't join us when the smoking lamp is on- is lit. | RDM: Mrs. Ron doesn't join us when the smoking lamp is on- is lit. | ||
OK. "Son Also Rises". This is the beginning of the finale, really. We snuck this in as a making the finale of [[Season 3 (2006-07)|the season]] a bit of a three | OK. "Son Also Rises". This is the beginning of the finale, really. We snuck this in as a making the finale of [[Season 3 (2006-07)|the season]] a bit of a three parter, even though we never really said officially to the network that we were making a three parter. But it kinda is a three parter when all is said and done. And this is the first piece of it. As we approach the trial of [[Gaius Baltar]], we knew that a couple of the things that we were pretty determined to do was to somehow bring one or more of our cast members into the courtroom, as participants. We knew that that was gonna be difficult and we came up with various and sundry ideas for how to legitimize the idea of some of our people being participants in the trial. And this was where we ultimately ended up. Initially, we had talked about [[Lee Adama|Lee]] being the sole attorney for Baltar, and finding a way to justify that. | ||
Terry: But that seemed a stretch? | Terry: But that seemed a stretch? | ||
RDM: That seemed too much of a stretch. We just couldn't really get there. But we also knew that as a practical matter, to do a TV series like this, to get to a place where we're gonna do a trial episode, in a series that's not setup to do a trial episode, it seemed wrong to have all the players in the courtroom. Players being the lawyers on either side and the judges, have them all be guest stars, 'cause none of your major characters would be utilized very well, and the drama would essentially- you'd be constantly pulling away from the trial to go service the other characters and find other things for them to do, where the meat of this story is really what's happening in the courtroom. So, we bit the bullet and said, "OK. There's gotta be a way to get Lee into that courtroom in a plausible scenario." And this was the scenario that we came up with, which is to start off as a guy doing security for [[Romo Lampkin|Lampkin]], and ultimately have him aid in Lampkin's defense. It also raised the question of how do we get anyone else. We all quickly loved the idea of having [[William Adama|Adama]] be one of the judges, or be a judge. In the course- at first he was gonna be | RDM: That seemed too much of a stretch. We just couldn't really get there. But we also knew that as a practical matter, to do a TV series like this, to get to a place where we're gonna do a trial episode, in a series that's not setup to do a trial episode, it seemed wrong to have all the players in the courtroom. Players being the lawyers on either side and the judges, have them all be guest stars, 'cause none of your major characters would be utilized very well, and the drama would essentially- you'd be constantly pulling away from the trial to go service the other characters and find other things for them to do, where the meat of this story is really what's happening in the courtroom. So, we bit the bullet and said, "OK. There's gotta be a way to get Lee into that courtroom in a plausible scenario." And this was the scenario that we came up with, which is to start off as a guy doing security for [[Romo Lampkin|Lampkin]], and ultimately have him aid in Lampkin's defense. It also raised the question of how do we get anyone else. We all quickly loved the idea of having [[William Adama|Adama]] be one of the judges, or be a judge. In the course- at first he was gonna be THE judge, and then we altered that and decided that'd he'd be one of several judges in the courtroom. | ||
Terry: So, there's an excellent thread on [http://forums.scifi.com/index.php?showforum=24 the Scifi board] right now, written by a bunch of lawyers. And one of the points they made, though, is, "Why wouldn't Adama have to recuse himself as somebody who was extremely involved in this case | Terry: So, there's an excellent thread on [http://forums.scifi.com/index.php?showforum=24 the Scifi board] right now, written by a bunch of lawyers. And one of the points they made, though, is, "Why wouldn't Adama have to recuse himself as somebody who was extremely involved in this case." | ||
RDM: | RDM: We...- | ||
Terry: How do you get around that? | Terry: How do you get around that? | ||
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Terry: Yeah, but I mean he's very directly involved. | Terry: Yeah, but I mean he's very directly involved. | ||
RDM: He's very directly involved, and it's a push, and we all admit that right off the bat. It's a push. All this- we wanted to get more drama into the show, | RDM: He's very directly involved, and it's a push, and we all admit that right off the bat. It's a push. All this- we wanted to get more drama into the show, so what we did was we came up with the lottery that you're watching in these intercuts. The lottery of drawing the names of the ship captains to be the judges. There wouldn't be a jury. There'd be a tribunal of judges and that they would be chosen randomly, and Adama's name was in the hat, and it came up, and he was chosen. And that it would be chosen in that method. We also talked about the idea that the system of justice that had been prevailing in the Fleet up to this point, such as it was, was probably administered by each ship captain as that ship captain saw fit, so that the captains of the various vessels in the Rag Tag Fleet had been dispensing justice on their ship for several years now, so they were the most- they seemed the most logical people to be the judges in the tribunal because they were already dealing with the administration of justice all along. | ||
Terry: So the legal system, such it may have been, before everything that has gone on, may not necessarily be what they're pulling from in this case. | Terry: So the legal system, such it may have been, before everything that has gone on, may not necessarily be what they're pulling from in this case. | ||
RDM: Yeah. I mean, we have always proceeded on the assumption that the legal system is a very fragile thing, in the ''Galactica'' universe. That | RDM: Yeah. I mean, we have always proceeded on the assumption that the legal system is a very fragile thing, in the ''Galactica'' universe. That there probably precious few lawyers. That there's really no police force. There's no real force, other than Adama's military. | ||
Terry: So you keep the gist of the law, but not the letter. | Terry: So you keep the gist of the law, but not the letter. | ||
RDM: You keep the gist of the law, but they don't, probably- we've said they don't really have a law library. They don't have much more than the law books that Adama kept from | RDM: You keep the gist of the law, but they don't, probably- we've said they don't really have a law library. They don't have much more than the law books that Adama kept from his father and passed onto Lee in a previous episode. | ||
Terry: Right. | Terry: Right. | ||
RDM: So the idea was that each ship probably administered its own justice, and ran their ship accordingly. Just in the tradition of the captain of the ship being the ultimate arbiter of what was legal and what was not. And that there's some kind of balance, 'cause obviously [[Laura Roslin|Laura]] does exert authority in the Fleet and has, on occasion, issued presidential directives. The " | RDM: So the idea was that each ship probably administered its own justice, and ran their ship accordingly. Just in the tradition of the captain of the ship being the ultimate arbiter of what was legal and what was not. And that there's some kind of balance, 'cause obviously [[Laura Roslin|Laura]] does exert authority in the Fleet and has, on occasion, issued presidential directives. The "no abortions directive" being one of the examples. The [[Quorum of Twelve (RDM)|Quorum]] has authority. I think there's a lot of flexibility and a lot of gray areas in terms of what the legal authority is in the Fleet. But in any case we decided that- pull a set of judges from the ship captains, Adama's one of them. He gets pulled in. Yeah, you could argue that he should recuse himself, but at the same time, we just decided to brush off that and keep going. 'Cause the drama was more important to us at this stage of the game. Then we started- in all versions of this story, we always had this thing about [[Alan Hughes|Baltar's lawyer]]s being assassinated, and killed, and under threat. And this is- this was clearly influenced by the experience of some of the defense team of [[w:Saddam Hussein|Saddam Hussein]]. When Saddam Hussein was on trial, various members of his defense team, and members of the prosecution, and members of the judiciary, were all coming under attack in Iraq, for various- by various factions with various motives, and we wanted to play this in that same tenor. | ||
I think this section- I'm always struck by how much [[Tyler McClendon|the actor]] playing Baltar's lawyer there looks like [[w:John Cusack|John Cusack]]. But he's not. | I think this section- I'm always struck by how much [[Tyler McClendon|the actor]] playing Baltar's lawyer there looks like [[w:John Cusack|John Cusack]]. But he's not. | ||
This sequence was always pretty much in even the early preliminary drafts of the show. I think the major changes had to do with what Lee's story were- was, in this episode. In the original story document, it was much more about- a Lee-centric story about Lee going in and interrogating [[Caprica | This sequence was always pretty much in even the early preliminary drafts of the show. I think the major changes had to do with what Lee's story were- was, in this episode. In the original story document, it was much more about- a Lee-centric story about Lee going in and interrogating [[Caprica Six]] and he was going in to talk to Caprica Six to get evidence, to see what she was willing to testify to. Could she testify? Lee was the guy that Laura had appointed to put the legal system together, and we were playing with the idea that as- in part of- part of that job is Lee determining whether Caprica Six could be a witness at trial, which went to the heart of, "Is Caprica Six a person?" If Caprica Six is a person, then her testimony would be accepted. If she's a machine then they could not take her testimony. | ||
That's the end of the tease. | That's the end of the tease. | ||
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==Act 1== | ==Act 1== | ||
RDM: Act 1-We | RDM: Act 1-We in [[Lee Adama|Lee]]'s pursuit of [[Caprica-Six]] it was going to be actually a lot of him going into the interrogation room one on one with Caprica Six; talking to her trying to determine whether or not, which is very controversial in the ''Galactica'' world, once they decide that [[Cylons (RDM)|Cylons]] are people it had other implications on how they should be treated and what their legal rights etc etc. Which is also complicated by the fact that [[William Adama|Adama]] had designated [[Sharon Agathon|Sharon]] as a person since he gave her the Colonial uniform. It also went to the heart of the backstory between Caprica-Six and [[Gaius Baltar|Baltar]], she was going to give up the fact that he participated in the [[Fall of the Twelve Colonies|destruction of the colonies]], that was going to be a major piece of testimony that she may or may not give. We shied away from that storyline ultimately because it felt claustrophobic on the one hand. It also felt like the issues were not as relevant as the trial itself, that it was a lot of him digging for backstory from Caprica-Six that the audience already knew. They already knew what Baltar had done and not done. That wasn't really what was most interesting in the show. So we opted to go with this other route that dealt with the aftermath of [[Kara Thrace|Kara]]'s death on Lee and Adama. Watch [[Romo Lampkin]] and how he handled the case. | ||
I liked this sequence a lot | I liked this sequence a lot, his is where Lee is dealing with the pilots and Lee is not really himself. I didn't comment on the other scene earlier in the tease, when we see [[Samuel Anders|Anders]] drunk and beside himself on the Viper and he falls off and breaks his leg. In the early draft of this show we had actually opened with Lee and Anders both going to the memorial wall putting the picture up on the wall as Lee had promised. In the midst of that a fight broke out between the two men, that their anger and emotions of the traumatic event; they vented on each other and it turned into a real brawl. We decided not to do that because it seemed too expected to have them fight and it just didn't seem to like it gave you any real juice in the show. It just didn't seem like it gave you any real juice to the show. It seemed much more interesting to play them in sympathy with one another. That after Kara had died their rivalry was gone the reason for their rivalry was gone and that the two men would have to gravitate towards one another if anything in their mutual mourning. | ||
This is the introduction to Romo Lampkin who was initially, in early conversations, | This is the introduction to Romo Lampkin who was initially, in early conversations, slotted to be a one-episode role. He was going to be in this episode, get Lee going on the trial and die at the end and have Lee take over. That was when we decided that was too much of a stretch, so we opted to keep him alive. So [[Mark Sheppard]], who plays Romo Lampkin got a three episode deal out of this. | ||
Terry: The wonderful Mark Sheppard. | Terry: The wonderful Mark Sheppard. | ||
RDM: The wonderful Mark Sheppard | RDM: The wonderful Mark Sheppard who's a friend of ours. This scene originally opened with a long speech of Lampkin's. It was shot, it opened about a speech about fear and what fear does to people, the fear of Baltar, the fear of being Baltar's lawyer etc., what it was doing to people. I opted to cut it because it just seemed like the wrong intro, it was much more interesting to open with a guy in sunglasses not saying anything. | ||
The [[ | The [[Lampkin's cat|cat]], a cat makes its entrance into ''Galactica'' for the first time. | ||
Terry: | Terry: It looks an awful lot like our cat. | ||
RDM: It looks a bit like one of our cats. If I had known, truth to tell, about the online fascination slash obsession with "Jake the Dog" I would've opted to make Romo Lampkin Jake the Dog's owner— | RDM: It looks a bit like one of our cats. If I had known, truth to tell, about the online fascination slash obsession with "Jake the Dog" I would've opted to make Romo Lampkin Jake the Dog's owner— | ||
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Terry: Oh, I know. | Terry: Oh, I know. | ||
RDM: —and use the dog | RDM: —and use the dog for the whole sequence. 'Cause the whole gag is the pet is the. | ||
Terry: | Terry: This was shot before that? | ||
RDM: Yeah. | RDM: Yeah. | ||
Terry: | Terry: I'm sorry everyone. | ||
RDM: | RDM: The gag is that it's the from his dead wife. He keeps her around out of respect of her memory, but he hates the cat, which I like. That he just can't stand the cat, puts her in a bag and carries her around everywhere he goes. [[Robert Young]], who directed this, however, hated the cat, begged me to cut the cat. | ||
Terry: Never shoot with a cat. | Terry: Never shoot with a cat. | ||
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RDM: Never shoot with a cat, never shoot with animals. | RDM: Never shoot with a cat, never shoot with animals. | ||
Terry: | Terry: Well, dogs at least you can train. | ||
RDM: | RDM: Yeah, you can train dogs. I remember when I was working on [[w:Star Trek|Star Trek]], [[w:Data (Star Trek)|Data]] had a cat. There used to be five cats, and each cat did exactly one trick: the cat that would jump in Data's lap, the cat that'd lie down, the cat that would eat the food, the cat that would lie down. You had to have all 5 cats on the stage. | ||
Terry: You were lucky you had the budget. I did a movie, we only had a budget for one cat. So it was 8 hours waiting for a cat to walk across | Terry: You were lucky you had the budget. I did a movie, we only had a budget for one cat. So it was 8 hours waiting for a cat to walk across the room. | ||
It was a nightmare, how many cats did you have on this? | It was a nightmare, how many cats did you have on this? | ||
RDM: I don't remember 'cause the cat | RDM: I don't remember 'cause the cat doesn't have to do very much. I think it was just one cat. | ||
Terry: It's in the bag. | Terry: It's in the bag. | ||
RDM: It | RDM: It had put in the bag, it has one task. It has to run out of the [[Raptor]] later on and it doesn't run, you'll see see it kind of loped, it kind of saunters out of the Raptor. | ||
This scene with | This scene with Romo, the relationship between Romo and Lee is a really interesting one and the character of Lampkin himself is really something that is crafted by [[Michael Angeli]], who wrote this episode. I did not take a pass at this episode, this is Angeli's work. He has a very interesting and distinctive voice when he writes, Michael, in how he writes characters and what he brings to the party. Romo Lampkin was such a fully realized, interesting creation from the very first, from the first draft. Which we made substantial changes to along the way because all these shows | ||
get changed a lot. The one thing that didn't change was Romo. Romo was just always interesting and different and there was just something fun and fascinating about this man and he stood in contrast to sort of most of our other characters. | |||
Terry: You know that's one of the things I | Terry: You know that's one of the things I would say about him. He's so different from anyone we've really seen on this show before. | ||
RDM: | RDM: I would like to know what Romo's been doing out there in the fleet, I'd like to sort of backtrack and see what he's been doing. I'm sure it was right on the line between legality and ethics. It's an interesting character and I think Mark's a great choice. | ||
Terry: I'm going to be very interested to see what the lawyers have to say. | |||
Terry: I'm going to be very interested to see what the lawyers have to say | |||
RDM: We spent an awful lot of time dealing with the legalisms on this show. | RDM: We spent an awful lot of time dealing with the legalisms on this show. | ||
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RDM: You know, that's a high standard, truth is that's a high standard. | RDM: You know, that's a high standard, truth is that's a high standard. | ||
Terry: I love Law and Order | Terry: I love Law and Order | ||
RDM: Law and Order's one of the best legal shows in TV. That's the end of the act. | RDM: Law and Order's one of the best legal shows in TV. That's the end of the act. | ||
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I like the way that Angeli's got Romo playing [[Lee Adama|Lee]]. Understanding where his buttons are, pushing them deliberately, getting a reaction, then cutting to the heart of the matter. It's a really interesting dynamic. It's a nicely written bit of business between the two. | I like the way that Angeli's got Romo playing [[Lee Adama|Lee]]. Understanding where his buttons are, pushing them deliberately, getting a reaction, then cutting to the heart of the matter. It's a really interesting dynamic. It's a nicely written bit of business between the two. | ||
Now here is, I believe, the [[ | Now here is, I believe, the [[Lampkin's cat|cat]]'s finest hour. {{podcastref|cat|18:22}}The cat is supposed to run out of the [[Raptor]]. That's what it says in the script and if the fucking cat had read the script, it would have run out of the Raptor. But of course it doesn't. So what it does, is it saunters out. | ||
Terry: -saunters- | Terry: -saunters- | ||
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== Act 4 == | == Act 4 == | ||
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