Editing Podcast:The Ties That Bind
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The storyline became that Lee, in his first session at the Quorum, tries to go to Laura’s defense. Tries to step in and lend her a hand and lend his political support to her and that Laura, though, really isn’t going to have any of that. Because I think, on some level, she really is still pissed at what he did at Baltar’s trial, despite her denials to the contrary. That she just gets up and just swats him back down in a very public way. And that was always a key to me, that Laura just reached up and smacked him and kind of got an enemy out of it. Not an enemy like someone like [[Thomas Zarek|Zarek]] or something , but certainly Lee then gets up and proves his mettle and shows that he has teeth too. And this notion that Laura was considering going into these tribunals that were appointed by her and they were controlled by her, was obviously a nod towards current events and tendencies of the executive branch to want to control things. I don’t think that it’s something unique to the Bush administration, to put a name to it, I think the executive branch tends to reach for more and more power. Certainly, in emergency situations, it grabs all the power it possibly can, mostly out of good intentions and mostly out of a need to try to control events, to try to do good, to try to have more efficient government, to try to protect the people, to try to preserve security, etc etc. I wanted to play some of that. That Laura is not above doing certain things. Laura is not above arrogating more and more power to herself. Laura is not above trying to then control the judiciary, especially given the fact that the judiciary, such as it was, was the very thing that allowed Gaius Baltar of all people to be exonerated at the end of last season. So, it made perfect sense to me that Laura would be looking for a way to correct that particular flaw in their system and would then try to do it without bringing it to a public vote. And then Laura is smart enough and quick enough and nimble enough on her feet to realize that this isn’t going to go down well and that she deftly turns the tables and says I’ll bring it to a meeting and of course I was going to bring it to you all along, I just didn’t have a chance to do so. | The storyline became that Lee, in his first session at the Quorum, tries to go to Laura’s defense. Tries to step in and lend her a hand and lend his political support to her and that Laura, though, really isn’t going to have any of that. Because I think, on some level, she really is still pissed at what he did at Baltar’s trial, despite her denials to the contrary. That she just gets up and just swats him back down in a very public way. And that was always a key to me, that Laura just reached up and smacked him and kind of got an enemy out of it. Not an enemy like someone like [[Thomas Zarek|Zarek]] or something , but certainly Lee then gets up and proves his mettle and shows that he has teeth too. And this notion that Laura was considering going into these tribunals that were appointed by her and they were controlled by her, was obviously a nod towards current events and tendencies of the executive branch to want to control things. I don’t think that it’s something unique to the Bush administration, to put a name to it, I think the executive branch tends to reach for more and more power. Certainly, in emergency situations, it grabs all the power it possibly can, mostly out of good intentions and mostly out of a need to try to control events, to try to do good, to try to have more efficient government, to try to protect the people, to try to preserve security, etc etc. I wanted to play some of that. That Laura is not above doing certain things. Laura is not above arrogating more and more power to herself. Laura is not above trying to then control the judiciary, especially given the fact that the judiciary, such as it was, was the very thing that allowed Gaius Baltar of all people to be exonerated at the end of last season. So, it made perfect sense to me that Laura would be looking for a way to correct that particular flaw in their system and would then try to do it without bringing it to a public vote. And then Laura is smart enough and quick enough and nimble enough on her feet to realize that this isn’t going to go down well and that she deftly turns the tables and says I’ll bring it to a meeting and of course I was going to bring it to you all along, I just didn’t have a chance to do so. | ||
Here we have the beginning of the [[Cylon Civil War]]. This was a long time coming. We played a lot of different elements of this in building to this point and alluding to divisions but now here we go. When it is Cylon against Cylon it reminds me of [shouts] “Ape has killed ape! Ape has killed ape!” For those of you who are truly sci-fi geeks of course will recognize that [[w:Planet of the Apes|reference]]. For the rest of you, I will leave it to you and to the glories of the Internet to search out that particular quotation. In any case, another little sequence I tortured [[Gary Hutzel]] about, it wasn’t clear to me which was which, which side was which in this scenario. Who had really fired on who and which were Cavil’s guys and which were the good guys and I kept making them rearrange the geometry of it, ad infinitum. | |||
This little beat here, the Cavil-Boomer scene is a little bit of a mustache twirler in all honesty. It’s probably one step too far. It’s not a huge thing but it’s one of the minor flaws that sticks out to me as I wish I had | This little beat here, the Cavil-Boomer scene is a little bit of a mustache twirler in all honesty. It’s probably one step too far. It’s not a huge thing but it’s one of the minor flaws that sticks out to me as I wish I had take a different tack on that particular moment. Again, back to Cally, the trouble with the episode as aired now is that… because Cally has been so moved into the background, and other pieces of moved forward, I think the episode kind of lurches from one storyline to another because the Cally story was an A-story –that the Cally-Tyrol was really an A-plot and you were following them strongly through the show so that provided the spine for the episode and everything else swirled around it. OK, so once I decided that wasn’t working and I was unsatisfied with it and I decided to cut back on it and shift it around and move other things to the forefront, that left… there was no real sense of rhythm and flow to the scene order anymore. It is almost like random cuts now. So, to me, as I watch it, I keep feeling the lack of a cohesive narrative. In the earlier episodes, even though like in the first episode, you can say that Kara was sort of the A-story but the show’s about many many things, to me that episode flowed really well and moved along. I didn’t mind the fact that it was moving from scene to scene. OK, there is the giant in-joke of all time. The 1701-D, which I was not aware of; [laughs] I didn’t know they were doing that. I saw it in dailies and I was just like oh my god. The inmates are running the asylum. In the early episodes I thought it worked, that there wasn’t a strong A-line - somehow the montage of it all was really playing for me - but in this episode I feel the lack of cohesion. I feel what I’ve done, which is to take out an A-story and move other elements around. As a consequence, I never quite feel comfortable with the structure of the show. I never quite feel like I’m sinking into the story. I just always feel like I’m kind of pulled from one place to another. It is a very subjective thing, maybe I’m the only one that feels that way. | ||
This little beat here with going between the walls was something I actually fought for a while. Now I feel it’s one of the better little bits in the episode to kind of give this a nice little feeling of scope. In the initial draft, they were in the tool room or some place and Cally got a piece of equipment from the hanger deck and essentially did a wiretap. Not a wiretap but she had some sound sensitive equipment and pressed it against the bulkhead and had an earpiece and could listen in through the bulkhead to the conversation. I think it was Michael Nankin who just didn’t believe it, he thought it was hokey and thought it was very [[w:MacGyver|MacGyver]] and just didn’t buy it. He and [[Richard Hudolin|Richie Hudolin]], the production designer, had come up with this notion of going in between the walls and that there would be this giant drop in-between them. I liked it but then I was like "really?". Is this ship really designed like that? Are there really gaps between the walls and you can really fall down all this distance and stuff? And then of course they had a whole rational explanation for it; yes, actually, that is how the way the ''Galactica'' is designed and there are these places where compartments are segmented like that and there are modules, et cetera, et cetera - some whole complicated tech explanation that they probably just made up - but it sounded good and finally I just went OK let’s go for it. I’m glad they did because it does give a sense of danger to where she is and the position she is in as she is going through this. | |||
That little shot there of Tyrol cutting himself and the blood and then the shot of them in bed and him looking at his hand and all those little pieces, were originally at the beginning of the piece of the show when he was fantasizing about killing her. Now we use them later as her freak-out in a general sense of oh my god what am I married to; what’s he capable of doing. But it’s a little unclear what’s a flashback, what’s a dream, what’s an imagination, and it’s a little tenuous as you get through the section. I will admit that it’s a little rickety that she finds the note in the door jam and that leads her to this hidden conversation. What can I tell you? It is one of those things that I always felt was a problem and I always felt well we’ll solve that later… and later never came. I never quite addressed the problem; never quite solved it [laughs]. It’s a bit of a cheat. It’s a little convenient. I like this beat where she, the way this is staged, that she comes out last, turns and notices the panel is off. Unfortunately we only had that one take of the camera swinging down and seeing it, so it’s a little hard to see but it was the panel that was ajar that drew her attention –she realized that somebody had been listening in. | |||
That little shot there of Tyrol cutting himself and the blood and then the shot of them in bed and him looking at his hand and all those little pieces, were originally at the beginning of the piece | |||
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