Editing Podcast:The Ties That Bind
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== Act 3 == | == Act 3 == | ||
All that thumping and banging in the background is because my children are on the floor directly above my head. I think this was structured differently in the script. I think the previous act was not an act and I think we sort of cut back into the scene in the same act and kept going. I think I restructured this in the editing room, I could be wrong –I’m sure someone will correct me from the production team. But I think I restructured this in the editing room, to make that the act and come back here, at the top. OK, going to Anders, because it’s like well what’s going on in his brain as he hears all this stuff. Again this was another scene that was chock full of Centurions initially. That’s why you had that big wide shot there at the end, because we had spotted Centurions all the way around the room. I don’t know if they were doing quite as much acting and reacting in this scene as in the prior one but they were more characters within the scene in the original cut –which explains the odd grouping here at the table where you have these four at the very big table at the center of the room and so much wide space around them. You notice that I am cutting to angles that are so tight that… they were avoiding camera compositions where Michael had left room for the centurions to play in the background, is the most elegant way of stating it. So, essentially, by cutting the Centurions out I screwed up [[Michael Nankin]]’s blocking. [laughs] One of the evil things producers do to directors to inspire mutual hatred by all parties. I felt bad, because Michael Nankin is one of our best directors and the problems in the episode, as usual, are all traceable back to the story and script level and they were mostly things that I was struggling with and having problems with. They weren’t really the fault of the director. | |||
Here’s the scene. This is the first [[Quorum of Twelve (RDM)|Quorum]] scene. I really tortured [[Michael Taylor]] about this scene. Over and over again, kept taking different takes at it. [[Jane Espenson]], who wrote a subsequent episode, had cracked the back of a Quorum scene and doing Question Time and I kept referring Michael to her draft. Saying, look at how Jane did it! Which was just driving him insane, of course, because no writer wants to hear that, go look at somebody else’s draft. Again, we are going to a House of Commons feel here, there’s even two sides to the room; in the House of Commons it’s the two parties, here it’s arbitrary, it’s just two sides of the Colonies –it's a nice way to delineate the two sides of the room. But I liked the sense that a delegate has to stand, there’s a formality to how they address one another --my friend, the delegate from so-and-so does not the president feel that—I like all that quite a bit in the way this all flows into one another. And just that shot there of Laura putting her head on her hand and what a pain in the ass this must be because presumably, all the way through the series, ever since the Quorum was re-established in "[[Colonial Day]]" these scenes have been going on off-camera. Laura, on ''[[Colonial One]]'', has had to deal with this civilian [[government]] that she brought into being --the representatives of the people out there. | Here’s the scene. This is the first [[Quorum of Twelve (RDM)|Quorum]] scene. I really tortured [[Michael Taylor]] about this scene. Over and over again, kept taking different takes at it. [[Jane Espenson]], who wrote a subsequent episode, had cracked the back of a Quorum scene and doing Question Time and I kept referring Michael to her draft. Saying, look at how Jane did it! Which was just driving him insane, of course, because no writer wants to hear that, go look at somebody else’s draft. Again, we are going to a House of Commons feel here, there’s even two sides to the room; in the House of Commons it’s the two parties, here it’s arbitrary, it’s just two sides of the Colonies –it's a nice way to delineate the two sides of the room. But I liked the sense that a delegate has to stand, there’s a formality to how they address one another --my friend, the delegate from so-and-so does not the president feel that—I like all that quite a bit in the way this all flows into one another. And just that shot there of Laura putting her head on her hand and what a pain in the ass this must be because presumably, all the way through the series, ever since the Quorum was re-established in "[[Colonial Day]]" these scenes have been going on off-camera. Laura, on ''[[Colonial One]]'', has had to deal with this civilian [[government]] that she brought into being --the representatives of the people out there. | ||