Editing Podcast:The Ties That Bind
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== Act 4 == | == Act 4 == | ||
Now you can see I’m getting very jump-cutty. I’m really trying to play her freak-out, so you are trying to be really inside of her head during this really pivotal key moment here, where it all comes unhinged for Cally. I am not sure if Michael Nankin shot this with Tyrol so radically out of focus in the background, or if this is something that they did in the Avid. It was in the director’s cut when I saw it, so I can’t tell you exactly how this effect is achieved, and with a little backlighting there I think that’s something that [[Stephen McNutt|Steve McNutt]] did on the set and then I think they shot it with him deliberately out of focus. I could be wrong. They might have actually defocused that area of the screen and Avid the highlight and post, but I am not positive. But I liked it and I think in the early cut of this there was a beat where we racked focus and then finally brought Tyrol in-focus and I said no… I like keeping him out of focus in the whole scene and then like she can barely hear him and we the audience can never connect with him. The way it’s cut now, you can never really connect with what Tyrol is saying. He really is this monstrous figure hovering over her shoulder, in a literal way. I thought it was crucial that at this point in the story that you had to be completely with Cally. You had to really understand where she was coming from and what was going on in her head in order to justify what was about to happen. | |||
You see that shot of Tyrol reaching down into the crib that was also from the beginning of the show where he was imagining going over and killing Nicky and now it plays more like she’s imagining him going over and killing Nicky. In that shot there of him stroking her when she’s asleep – again, these are all shots that were initially from the beginning of the episode when we were in his POV and now they play more as things she is | You see that shot of Tyrol reaching down into the crib that was also from the beginning of the show where he was imagining going over and killing Nicky and now it plays more like she’s imagining him going over and killing Nicky. In that shot there of him stroking her when she’s asleep – again, these are all shots that were initially from the beginning of the episode when we were in his POV and now they play more as things she is remember or things she’s imagining. I love the way that plays - the whack that just comes out of nowhere. The look on his face as he tries to get to his feet is so brutal, it’s so great. Now, the question that immediately rises of course is why doesn’t she call Adama, why doesn’t she call CIC and say [shouts] “He’s a Cylon!” Well, the only rationale here is that she’s out of her mind. It’s between the completely crazy mindset that she’s in, combining with the drugs – I felt really strongly, when I saw the cut, like we’ve got really lean on those drugs. You’ve got to really believe that she’s taken drugs and she’s not in her right head in order to justify this. And that’s a problem because ultimately we should have solved that at the script level. We should have found a more eloquent way to get there than to really then force it in post-production and just make her completely deranged as a way of getting in there. So, it’s really a story issue that I should have realized and resolved well before this point. But, you know, it is what it is and this is where we are. | ||
I love the way the launch tube turns on and the doors open and the lights the way they flicker momentarily. And this walk now is pretty | I love the way the launch tube turns on and the doors open and the lights the way they flicker momentarily. And this walk now is pretty affective. I like the way she looks as she walks in here carrying little Nicky and the look on her face. This scene with Tory was there and we always wanted this to be the gag that she was going to kill herself and Tory intercedes and seems to talk her down, only to then pull the rug out from under her and launch her out the tube while saving the baby at the same time. That was always the gag. What I had to keep hammering on was that I really wanted… to be the sucker punch. I really wanted Tory to come in there and convince us that she was successfully talking her down, because that is usually how this moment works in television –the character comes in [and] talks you down off the ledge and all is going to be OK. So, I wanted more music; I wanted Tory to play it honestly. I didn’t want to give it away. In early cuts there were more ominous music. You knew there was something wrong with Tory. I didn’t want to play it at all so I had to fight to [say] no… don’t play it that way. I said, you have to feel that she’s going to succeed. You have to really warm it up here a little bit. You have to believe that Tory is going to succeed and that all is going to be OK, because isn’t that what you really want? Isn’t that what everyone really wants out of the scene? You really want it to be alright. | ||
I love | I love when she just closes the door behind her and it’s in that moment, I think, where Tory makes her decision. Tory decides [that] she’s going to come in there and –I’m not sure Tory knew what she was going to do exactly before she walked in that launch tube—when those doors closed behind her I think Tory’s decision was made. She was going to talk this woman down to the point where she was going to be able to get that kid out of her arms. [long pause, then laughs] Just watching the scene. [long pause again] Look at Nicki, I mean, she’s great. This is a great final scene for the character. She’s so distraught. She’s so out on a limb here. She’s so torn apart, doesn’t know what to do with herself. And yeah, on some level she wants to be talked off that ledge, otherwise she would have pushed the button long before now. That was the thing that justified it to me too, that… Cally doesn’t want to die. She doesn’t want to go out that tube with her son. She wants to be talked down off the ledge, you know. At some level she wanted someone to stop her in the corridor. She doesn’t want to do this on some level. It is the classic suicide thing. She wants someone to stop her from doing it. Here’s the key moment. Tory is down on her knees and it’s right here where the music warms up and you feel like it’s all going to be OK. Because you want it to be OK. Everyone wants it to be OK. Cally is coming around; Tory has said all the right things; we’re rooting for Tory; we’re rooting for Cally; the kid’s on the line; it’s all going to be OK, isn’t it? Look at her. Let me take her. It’s OK. You’re alright. It’s all OK. Yeah, it’s fine. No it’s not. [laughing] It’s just a whack across the room! [still laughing] It’s just so wrong. [in an evil, mischievous voice] That’s what makes it so right! | ||
See, once we’re here, I start feeling good about the episode again because I think this is such a strong ending. It’s so shocking; it’s so disturbing; it’s | See, once we’re here, I start feeling good about the episode again because I think this is such a strong ending. It’s so shocking; it’s so disturbing; it’s so oh my god I can’t believe what’s going on here; I can’t believe what’s really going to happen; I can’t believe she is really going to flush her out that airlock. The cavalry is not going to come to the rescue. The evil Cylon is going to win. The kid’s in her arms; poor Cally is going to get flushed out the launch tube. No, no, no, someone stop this nightmare from happening, and of course nobody stops this nightmare from happening and that’s when I really think it works. It’s like if you have a strong ending a lot of the things in the episode before can be forgiven. So, I am hoping that’s where we are in this episode. Of course, a lot of discussion on these visual effects here at the end. We didn’t have a launch tube to blow her down. It was on the set, we sort of pulled her off on a wire harness. Then we have this frozen shot of Cally rotating in space –lot of CG involved in all these shots. And then this –there was dialogue here that I think, I know was written and I think maybe they just did a take where Adama didn’t say it, where he was saying he was sorry and they were still investigating or trying to figure out what had happened, and I just thought it was more powerful not to play in the dialogue. I think there was a take where he did say the dialogue but I might be mistaken. In any case, I loved just pulling out with just him sitting there talking to Tyrol and it’s so clear that Tyrol knows what the hell has happened and you kind of dread where you go from here. So, there you have it. Episode 405, "[The] Ties That Bind". I’m Ronald D Moore signing off. I hope you enjoyed it and I will catch up with you next week on episode 406. Until then, goodnight and good luck. | ||
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