Editing Podcast:Torn
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{{ | {{podcast|author=Steelviper|emailAuthor2=|suffix=|additionalCopyright= and Terry Dresbach}} | ||
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Ok. Let's talk a little bit about the setup for this episode. "Torn" is actually in an interesting experience for me, because when this episode came in on the director's cut in post-production, the word out of post was, "Oh my God." I got this word that this was a very troubled episode and that there certain people in post-production said that they hated it. And so I had to scramble and figure out what we were gonna do. There some- there some problems in the narrative and how the story layed out that were difficult to deal with and as we go through the show I'll point out the places where we had to put some bandaids on some problems. | Ok. Let's talk a little bit about the setup for this episode. "Torn" is actually in an interesting experience for me, because when this episode came in on the director's cut in post-production, the word out of post was, "Oh my God." I got this word that this was a very troubled episode and that there certain people in post-production said that they hated it. And so I had to scramble and figure out what we were gonna do. There some- there some problems in the narrative and how the story layed out that were difficult to deal with and as we go through the show I'll point out the places where we had to put some bandaids on some problems. | ||
This episode was structured into the third season to be another bridge episode. It sets up a lot of things that happen in the next episode. You see at the end of the story that there's a big fat "To Be Continued". Now, right here in the beginning. This scene with [[Gaius Baltar|Baltar]] and [[Number Six]] out by the beach was actually not meant to open the show. The show was actually supposed to open much more linearly on the [[Galactica (RDM)|''Galactica'']] picking up the pilot exercise that now opens act one, watching their flight training. Seeing the fuel pro- the collision and the fuel problem with [[Kara Thrace|Kara]] and see how screwed up things were back on the ship. And then you were gonna get to Baltar wandering around the [[Basestar (RDM)|baseship]] and trying to figure out how things operated. And the truth was as you looked at the cut it just didn't work. It just- it was very plodding and the storyline didn't layout very well. And essentially it was a script problem. We find this often in the show where we're dealing with things in post where you can trace them all almost invariably back to the script. They're almost never something that your covering up that was a problem on the set or with performance. Because you can usually get or cut around that stuff in one way or another. But when story doesn't work it's always the fault of the script. So what I did, this scene, you'll | This episode was structured into the third season to be another bridge episode. It sets up a lot of things that happen in the next episode. You see at the end of the story that there's a big fat "To Be Continued". Now, right here in the beginning. This scene with [[Gaius Baltar|Baltar]] and [[Number Six]] out by the beach was actually not meant to open the show. The show was actually supposed to open much more linearly on the [[Galactica (RDM)|''Galactica'']] picking up the pilot exercise that now opens act one, watching their flight training. Seeing the fuel pro- the collision and the fuel problem with [[Kara Thrace|Kara]] and see how screwed up things were back on the ship. And then you were gonna get to Baltar wandering around the [[Basestar (RDM)|baseship]] and trying to figure out how things operated. And the truth was as you looked at the cut it just didn't work. It just- it was very plodding and the storyline didn't layout very well. And essentially it was a script problem. We find this often in the show where we're dealing with things in post where you can trace them all almost invariably back to the script. They're almost never something that your covering up that was a problem on the set or with performance. Because you can usually get or cut around that stuff in one way or another. But when story doesn't work it's always the fault of the script. So what I did, this scene, you'll not that we're doing a lot of trickiness here. In the cut that the students just saw there's a lot of bad ADR lines with the voices of the editors actually standing in for [[James Callis]] and [[Tricia Helfer]]. We'll have- right there you can see that we're fuzzing out his mouth. 'Cause he's actually saying very different words. This was a sequence from much later in the show, on a very different topic, and what I- as I was watching the cut I thought, "Well, let's start- let's start the episode off at least with the most provocative image. Let's start with Tricia Helfer in a red bikini out on the the beach." | ||
Student: Wooo! | Student: Wooo! | ||
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Class: (Laughs.) | Class: (Laughs.) | ||
RDM: Ok. And from that point, I said, "Let's-" Now this is all stolen footage. All this stuff of Baltar waking up in bed and looking around is actually footage that was shot for the previous episode, for "[[Collaborators]]". So this is not even from, this is all a created montage of scenes that's supposed to give you the feeling that Baltar's having this conversation with Six, and that later he's gonna talk about projection and what projection means to the [[Cylons (RDM)|Cylon]]. But as scripted and shot that was also all much deeper into the episode. And I just thought, "Let's start this episode | RDM: Ok. And from that point, I said, "Let's-" Now this is all stolen footage. All this stuff of Baltar waking up in bed and looking around is actually footage that was shot for the previous episode, for "[[Collaborators]]". So this is not even from, this is all a created montage of scenes that's supposed to give you the feeling that Baltar's having this conversation with Six, and that later he's gonna talk about projection and what projection means to the [[Cylons (RDM)|Cylon]]. But as scripted and shot that was also all much deeper into the episode. And I just thought, "Let's start this episode with something more intriguing." | ||
Now the sets here in the Cylon baseship are atypical for ''Galactica'' in that they are more overtly science fiction than our usual stuff. ''Galactica'' is much more realistic. It feels much more like an aircraft carrier or warship or a real spaceship. In the Cylon baseship we felt intuitively that it was important that, ok, whatever you're going to see over there, you're going to be disappointed with. Whatever your imagination has concocted for you for the interior of the baseship, whatever I show you, you're gonna go, "Oh, I thought it was gonna be cooler than that." | Now the sets here in the Cylon baseship are atypical for ''Galactica'' in that they are more overtly science fiction than our usual stuff. ''Galactica'' is much more realistic. It feels much more like an aircraft carrier or warship or a real spaceship. In the Cylon baseship we felt intuitively that it was important that, ok, whatever you're going to see over there, you're going to be disappointed with. Whatever your imagination has concocted for you for the interior of the baseship, whatever I show you, you're gonna go, "Oh, I thought it was gonna be cooler than that." | ||
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RDM: So we went for the stripped down, austere, scifi kind of look, with some surrealistic elements. Like the couch that you saw Baltar reclining on. And there's ornate chairs and upholstered- like the table and the chaise lounge there, feel more like [[Wikipedia:2001: A Space Odyssey (film)|''2001'']] something odd and offputing. Now, as I was dealing with the cutting of this episode, I started to feel like the sets weren't working. I was starting to lose faith in our ability to hold these sets on camera and really play the story. I thought, "Maybe the audience is getting a little bored here and a little disappointed and maybe the sets don't look that interesting." And it wasn't- I started to feel like maybe there's not that much going on over there. And I started to play with the idea of dissolves. There's a lot of dis- whenever we go to the Cylon baseship and Baltar's story there's a lot of dissolving images of him over him and playing with time slightly, multiple takes, and it conveys this feeling of being out of body and like something weird- You're in an alienated world. You're with him. It's his point of view, suddenly. It wasn't scripted, but it's his point of view and you're with Baltar, and what the hell's happening to Baltar? | RDM: So we went for the stripped down, austere, scifi kind of look, with some surrealistic elements. Like the couch that you saw Baltar reclining on. And there's ornate chairs and upholstered- like the table and the chaise lounge there, feel more like [[Wikipedia:2001: A Space Odyssey (film)|''2001'']] something odd and offputing. Now, as I was dealing with the cutting of this episode, I started to feel like the sets weren't working. I was starting to lose faith in our ability to hold these sets on camera and really play the story. I thought, "Maybe the audience is getting a little bored here and a little disappointed and maybe the sets don't look that interesting." And it wasn't- I started to feel like maybe there's not that much going on over there. And I started to play with the idea of dissolves. There's a lot of dis- whenever we go to the Cylon baseship and Baltar's story there's a lot of dissolving images of him over him and playing with time slightly, multiple takes, and it conveys this feeling of being out of body and like something weird- You're in an alienated world. You're with him. It's his point of view, suddenly. It wasn't scripted, but it's his point of view and you're with Baltar, and what the hell's happening to Baltar? | ||
And on top of that, I was looking for some- what's the sound? What's going on in the background. And I glommed onto this idea of piano, of classical piano. It was something that James Callis had actually suggested for an earlier episode of scoring a Cylon scene with classic piano and I had a bunch of [[Wikipedia:Ludwig van Beethoven|Beethoven]] sonatas at home and I brought 'em into the editing bay and gave them to the editor and I said, "Let's score- just take from this and score all the scenes in the temp track to Beethoven." And so all the Cylon scenes were originally, I mean, [[Bear McCreary]] our composer has actually written specific pieces for these so they won't be Beethoven on air. But when you were watching the Cylon baseship scenes and they were dissolving and montage-y and out of body and you had this free-flowing, free-wheeling feeling and then it was underscored with this piano. And the piano didn't like become more dramatic as the scene got more dramatic, and it didn't become scary, and it didn't become comedic. It just played a piece all the way through. It gave this out of body quality to all those scenes and that's what I | And on top of that, I was looking for some- what's the sound? What's going on in the background. And I glommed onto this idea of piano, of classical piano. It was something that James Callis had actually suggested for an earlier episode of scoring a Cylon scene with classic piano and I had a bunch of [[Wikipedia:Ludwig van Beethoven|Beethoven]] sonatas at home and I brought 'em into the editing bay and gave them to the editor and I said, "Let's score- just take from this and score all the scenes in the temp track to Beethoven." And so all the Cylon scenes were originally, I mean, [[Bear McCreary]] our composer has actually written specific pieces for these so they won't be Beethoven on air. But when you were watching the Cylon baseship scenes and they were dissolving and montage-y and out of body and you had this free-flowing, free-wheeling feeling and then it was underscored with this piano. And the piano didn't like become more dramatic as the scene got more dramatic, and it didn't become scary, and it didn't become comedic. It just played a piece all the way through. It gave this out of body quality to all those scenes and that's what I decide, "Well, that's gonna save the episode." (Chuckles.) That's the trick. | ||
Now did that work? Does anybody... what's the consensus on the Cylon baseship scenes | Now did that work? Does anybody... what's the consensus on the Cylon baseship scenes? | ||
Student: It's very surreal. | Student: It's very surreal. | ||
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Student: Can you say something about the backstory of [[Ellen Tigh|Ellen]] and her relationship to him? | Student: Can you say something about the backstory of [[Ellen Tigh|Ellen]] and her relationship to him? | ||
RDM: Yeah and- in epis- in "[[Exodus, Part I | RDM: Yeah and- in epis- in "[[Exodus, Part I]]" when they were on [[New Caprica]] during the occupation, [[Saul Tigh|Colonel Tigh]] was a member of [[New Caprica Resistance|the resistance]], the insurgency against the [[Cylons (RDM)|Cylons]]. And he had a wife named Ellen. And Ellen was a blonde woman and he and Ellen had had this tempestuous, crazed relationship and she slept around and they were both drunks and there was shades of Virginia Wolfe, [[Wikipedia:Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?|''Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?'']]. But, there was a storyline where essentially she was sleeping with [[Cavil|a Cylon]] in order to get him out of [[New Caprica Detention Center|detention]], where he lost his eye, but then the Cylon- she used the Cylon to get her husband out of detention and the Cylon used her. Said, "I wanna know where the resistance is meeting and if you don't tell me I'm gonna kill your husband." And so she was trapped. She was in this no-win situation. And she gave up information and told the Cylons about a key resistance meeting and there was an ambush and several people were killed. And Colonel Tigh ultimately found out about it, and he had a rule in his resistance that if you collaborated or betrayed the group you had to die. And so in "[[Exodus, Part II]]" Colonel Tigh had to- Colonel Tigh poisoned his own wife and killed her and she died in his arms, and it was really a devastating thing for the character. Now he's back on [[Galactica (RDM)|''Galactica'']] and he's try- he's still not over it. He's trying to get on with his life but he can't and he keeps her clothes in the closet and so on. | ||
Tell me what you think. Let's talk about it. Questions, feelings, stuff you like, didn't like, either in this scene or throughout, just- | Tell me what you think. Let's talk about it. Questions, feelings, stuff you like, didn't like, either in this scene or throughout, just- | ||
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Student: Yeah, I have a question. Do you think it's- Apollo's rapid weight loss is believable, I guess? | Student: Yeah, I have a question. Do you think it's- Apollo's rapid weight loss is believable, I guess? | ||
RDM: Do I believe ( | Class: (Laughs.) | ||
RDM: Do I believe (unintellible). | |||
Student: Uh, no. | |||
RDM: | RDM: It's pushing. Actually this is a pickup scene that we shot later to do something for the fact that we were gonna do this rapid weight loss. At the end of [[Season 2 (2005-06)|season two]], Apollo had put on a lot of weight. He was "Fat Apollo", as we called him. And then he was fat in the beginning of the season, and this is one of those ideas that we came up with, I came up with, at the end of last season. And I just frankly didn't know what to do with. It was- I had a lot of things that we were trying to juggle and I co- there was a psychological underpinning for the fact that he had go- he has this elaborate backstory with Starbuck that drove him to gain weight, and he had settled down and gotten married, and then had gotten fat and lazy was essentially his storyline. And then we kept talking about ways this season that he was gonna lose the weight. And he was gonna go to the gym, and he was gonna join the [[Colonial Marine Corps|Marines]] at one point, he was gonna stop being a fighter pilot, and become more of a pure warrior and that was gonna be the method towards getting him back in shape. And those storylines kept either not working on the page or we kept cutting them for time. And we kept getting to these places where, "What are we doing about 'Fat Apollo'?" And the question just- it just kept getting moved off the table and so we finally just said, "You know what? Let's just... Ok. He's not 'Fat Apollo' anymore." He's jumping rope and he's working out and seeing we can prove it, there he is on the scale. | ||
Terry: In outer space he has the magic pills. | Terry: In outer space he has the magic pills. | ||
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Student: Speaking of props, is there a reason why all the papers are octagons? | Student: Speaking of props, is there a reason why all the papers are octagons? | ||
RDM: Oh, why do we cut the corners off all the pages? It was just a design idea that came up in the [[ | RDM: Oh, why do we cut the corners off all the pages? It was just a design idea that came up in the [[miniseries]]. It's- because the- it's always this fine line about how close to our contemporary reality is it, and what are the slight differences that remind you that it's not [[Earth]], and somebody came up with this idea of clipping the corners- | ||
Student: Colonel Tigh had [[Triad (RDM)|eight sided cards]]. | Student: Colonel Tigh had [[Triad (RDM)|eight sided cards]]. | ||
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This idea of the Cylon projections was- as we were talking about life on the baseship early on, I started thinking about, ok, what are we gonna do? We're gonna be on these sets. I don't know if these sets are gonna work, in terms of what the audience expectation is, and I needed something else. If they're just these walls and these boring lights, isn't the audience just going to be always disappointed about what the Cylon life is like. And thought, "Well maybe... they are machines after all. They can do pretty much whatever they want. And if they choose to envision their surroundings as a forest, maybe they have that ability." Now, see, this is where the original, the beach sequence used to live here in its entirety. He was in the middle of that scene with Number Six, on the baseship, and then in his mind he went to what we call [[Cylon-Related Hallucinations#Baltar.27s Internal Six|"Head Six"]], the imaginary Six in his head, and the whole beach scene played out here. And what I did is I took the first half of that scene, cut it, moved it to the top of the teaser, and then looped in different dialogue to have a completely different conversation. | This idea of the Cylon projections was- as we were talking about life on the baseship early on, I started thinking about, ok, what are we gonna do? We're gonna be on these sets. I don't know if these sets are gonna work, in terms of what the audience expectation is, and I needed something else. If they're just these walls and these boring lights, isn't the audience just going to be always disappointed about what the Cylon life is like. And thought, "Well maybe... they are machines after all. They can do pretty much whatever they want. And if they choose to envision their surroundings as a forest, maybe they have that ability." Now, see, this is where the original, the beach sequence used to live here in its entirety. He was in the middle of that scene with Number Six, on the baseship, and then in his mind he went to what we call [[Cylon-Related Hallucinations#Baltar.27s Internal Six|"Head Six"]], the imaginary Six in his head, and the whole beach scene played out here. And what I did is I took the first half of that scene, cut it, moved it to the top of the teaser, and then looped in different dialogue to have a completely different conversation. | ||
Student: Within the logic of the show, does the place that the | Student: Within the logic of the show, does the place that the chararacter projects to ever affect their movement? Like, were they to walk into a rock or a tree or something? Is that really a problem? | ||
RDM: It's a good question. I fudged it. I went around it completely. You'll see that there's- we- actually, I forgot we- I used to have an extension of that piece where as he walked- followed her down the corridor I dissolved over a piece of them walking in the forest and they turned left down the corridor but in the forest shot they actually kept going straight. And it was a discontinuity, but I- in my mind I justified it by saying that the Cylons are much smarter than we are and yes they choose to look at their environment as a forest, but they also know where they really are and they have a feeling of what the objects are in the room or in the hallway, and they're never going to run into- they're never gonna run into a real object and they know intuitively that all the objects in their projection aren't really there, so they would walk right through a rock. | RDM: It's a good question. I fudged it. I went around it completely. You'll see that there's- we- actually, I forgot we- I used to have an extension of that piece where as he walked- followed her down the corridor I dissolved over a piece of them walking in the forest and they turned left down the corridor but in the forest shot they actually kept going straight. And it was a discontinuity, but I- in my mind I justified it by saying that the Cylons are much smarter than we are and yes they choose to look at their environment as a forest, but they also know where they really are and they have a feeling of what the objects are in the room or in the hallway, and they're never going to run into- they're never gonna run into a real object and they know intuitively that all the objects in their projection aren't really there, so they would walk right through a rock. | ||
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RDM: It's closer to what he sees, and we're gonna touch on that again [[Season 3 (2006-07)|this season]] with [[Caprica-Six]] and the [[Cylon-Related_Hallucinations#Six.27s Internal Baltar|Baltar in her head]] and there's a larger ideas of why those two characters keep seeing these imaginary people and there's a suggestion that perhaps those imaginary beings are linked on some level, that we might get to explore at some later date. It's all still up in the air for a lot of discussion of what that means and is there a real connection or is it a completely separate idea. | RDM: It's closer to what he sees, and we're gonna touch on that again [[Season 3 (2006-07)|this season]] with [[Caprica-Six]] and the [[Cylon-Related_Hallucinations#Six.27s Internal Baltar|Baltar in her head]] and there's a larger ideas of why those two characters keep seeing these imaginary people and there's a suggestion that perhaps those imaginary beings are linked on some level, that we might get to explore at some later date. It's all still up in the air for a lot of discussion of what that means and is there a real connection or is it a completely separate idea. | ||
Student: [[Cylons (RDM)|Cylons]] are aware of the fact that they were created by humans. How do they- what sort of | Student: [[Cylons (RDM)|Cylons]] are aware of the fact that they were created by humans. How do they- what sort of religious creation myths do they allow themselves? | ||
RDM: What the Cylons believe is that [[ | RDM: What the Cylons believe is that [[God]] creat- God, singular, there is a singular God that created mankind. Mankind is a flawed creation. Sinned. Has essentially thrown away the gift of the soul and of God's love. God then had man create the Cylons as a more perfect entity. And now the Cylons are supposed to take the place of the flawed humans in the cosmos and essentially are the next generation. When I was- in the [[miniseries]], I talked a lot about how the Cylons saw themselves as mankind's children and that there was a line somewhere that, essentially, "Children can't become really, truly adults until their parents are dead." And so the Cylons had to kill their parents in order to evolve and mature. And that was their philosophical world view. But they felt that they were- God is love, and that they were in the service of a loving, compassionate God that offered redemption and so on. | ||
Student: Is the hope to find [[ | Student: Is the hope to find [[Earth]] just, like, to continue the annihilation or is- | ||
RDM: What the Cylons want to do there? At this point in the series we're leaving that a bit opaque. What they wanna do when they get to Earth. And we'll start playing as we go forward what their plans are for Earth, what they hope to achieve there. They shifted their- their goal at the beginning of the show was just to annihilate mankind. And then they- at a certain point they hijacked our objective as well and now they also see Earth as an objective for themselves and a way for their own redemption and a way for a second home in some sense. 'Cause they tried various things. This is a young soc- the other thing to keep in mind with Cylons is that they are a very young culture. They've only existed for about forty or fifty years. And so they're- they started in a- they were very much on the same page with one another, and as the series has developed we've seen more divisions start to grow and different points of view starting to develop. And their philosophical object- their philosophical underpinnings of the Cylon society are starting to shift and change as well. At first it was just as simple as, "Kill this humans," then it was, "Maybe we were wrong about that." And, "Ok, we're machines. We're smart machines. We can admit mistakes. Maybe we were wrong to kill them. Now we'll try to live with them in an occupation and we'll try to like get a handle on this." And, "Ok, that didn't work, either. Ok, now we're gonna go to Earth." And you can see these guys shifting and changing and trying to adapt as they learn and grow. | RDM: What the Cylons want to do there? At this point in the series we're leaving that a bit opaque. What they wanna do when they get to Earth. And we'll start playing as we go forward what their plans are for Earth, what they hope to achieve there. They shifted their- their goal at the beginning of the show was just to annihilate mankind. And then they- at a certain point they hijacked our objective as well and now they also see Earth as an objective for themselves and a way for their own redemption and a way for a second home in some sense. 'Cause they tried various things. This is a young soc- the other thing to keep in mind with Cylons is that they are a very young culture. They've only existed for about forty or fifty years. And so they're- they started in a- they were very much on the same page with one another, and as the series has developed we've seen more divisions start to grow and different points of view starting to develop. And their philosophical object- their philosophical underpinnings of the Cylon society are starting to shift and change as well. At first it was just as simple as, "Kill this humans," then it was, "Maybe we were wrong about that." And, "Ok, we're machines. We're smart machines. We can admit mistakes. Maybe we were wrong to kill them. Now we'll try to live with them in an occupation and we'll try to like get a handle on this." And, "Ok, that didn't work, either. Ok, now we're gonna go to Earth." And you can see these guys shifting and changing and trying to adapt as they learn and grow. | ||
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RDM: It's a riff on a lot of those different ideas. I mean, you can go all the way b- even [[w:Frankenstein|''Frankenstein'']] on some level is about this story and the idea of mankind's creation then turning back on itself is an old idea in science fiction. So what we tend to do is we embrace that as, "Ok. This is our history. This story has been told in many different forms and different ways." I'd say the closest analogies to the Cylons are the [[w:Replicant|Replicants]] in [[w:Blade Runner|''Blade Runner'']]. In ''Blade Runner'', and we talked about that a lot at the time, the Replicants, the [[w:Rutger Hauer|Rutger Hauer]] [[w:List_of_minor_characters_in_Blade_Runner#Roy_Batty|character]] and [[w:Daryl Hannah|Daryl Hannah]]'s [[w:List_of_minor_characters_in_Blade_Runner#Pris|character]] and [[w:Sean Young|Sean Young]]'s [[w:List_of_minor_characters_in_Blade_Runner#Rachael|character]], there's something very human about them, and very touching, and very emotional. And Rutger Hauer is metaphysical and he looks and is trying to see things in a larger light, and he's poetic at certain points. And they're gripped by their own mortality and they're struggling to find their creator. And I was moved and touched by that and I thought that's an interesting place to start the conversation about who the Cylons are. | RDM: It's a riff on a lot of those different ideas. I mean, you can go all the way b- even [[w:Frankenstein|''Frankenstein'']] on some level is about this story and the idea of mankind's creation then turning back on itself is an old idea in science fiction. So what we tend to do is we embrace that as, "Ok. This is our history. This story has been told in many different forms and different ways." I'd say the closest analogies to the Cylons are the [[w:Replicant|Replicants]] in [[w:Blade Runner|''Blade Runner'']]. In ''Blade Runner'', and we talked about that a lot at the time, the Replicants, the [[w:Rutger Hauer|Rutger Hauer]] [[w:List_of_minor_characters_in_Blade_Runner#Roy_Batty|character]] and [[w:Daryl Hannah|Daryl Hannah]]'s [[w:List_of_minor_characters_in_Blade_Runner#Pris|character]] and [[w:Sean Young|Sean Young]]'s [[w:List_of_minor_characters_in_Blade_Runner#Rachael|character]], there's something very human about them, and very touching, and very emotional. And Rutger Hauer is metaphysical and he looks and is trying to see things in a larger light, and he's poetic at certain points. And they're gripped by their own mortality and they're struggling to find their creator. And I was moved and touched by that and I thought that's an interesting place to start the conversation about who the Cylons are. | ||
== Act 3 == | == Act 3 == | ||
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