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Editing Podcast:Valley of Darkness

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This sequence, I think is really great. I think there's some people that will be quite disturbed by this sequence; I think it's really interesting and really intriguing, and it pushes the mythos forward in an interesting way, and I just think it's— but this was a controversial sequence, this whole beat of, not the [[Raptor]]s flying over, but the whole beat of [[William Adama|Adama]] and the baby and Adama drowning the baby, and I think there was a lot of hesitation, and there was a lot of nervousness, and "oh my God, can we show this?" and "oh please—" and it was a lot of arguing and y'know, I just kept fighting for it. [[David Eick|David]] and I kept fighting for it, and kept saying, "oh, this is important. This is about the threat to the child that [[Gaius Baltar|Baltar]]'s investing in, and you're basically setting up a marker that Adama in some way, shape, or form, is the threat that Baltar must face to fulfill— y'know, that Adama is going to be an obstacle— a major obstacle in front of Baltar— between Baltar and fulfilling his destiny ''vis a vis'' the child. So this is a simple, visual, clear, and brutal way of dramatizing that event, and I just felt it was great, I felt that it's part of the show, that the show has these certain no-holds-barred, really brutal quality to it, that we don't shy away from things, that we tend not to avert our eyes when a lot of other shows would avert their eyes. And so we fought about this for quite a while, but ultimately made some compromises, changed some of the cutting pattern here, jumped our— did a couple of jump cuts to get you through it, and to not linger, exactly, on the shot of the baby actually being put under the water— because we really did go for it. You'll see here coming up that there's a beat where Adama— when Adama puts the child in the water— y'know, there were bubbles coming up, I mean, it was like, ''blub blub blub,'' down it goes. The whole thing— and I don't really have a hankering for infanticide, certainly, but y'know, I did— we did kill a baby in the [[Miniseries]], and here Adama's killing a baby, and y'know, I— there is a certain sort of classic myth to this notion. [http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Genesis%204:8;&version=9; There] [http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Genesis%2022:2;&version=9; are] [http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Exodus%201:22;&version=9; children]— [http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Exodus%2012:29;&version=9; babies] [http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Num.%2031:17;&version=9; are] [http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=1%20Sam.%2015:3;&version=9; killed] [http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Jer.%207:31;&version=9; in] [http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Ezekiel%2016:20-21;&version=9; the] [[Wikipedia:Bible|Bible]]. [[Wikipedia:Jesus|Jesus]] is [[Wikipedia:Flight into Egypt|spirited]] out of [[Wikipedia:Nazareth|Nazareth]] because [[Wikipedia:Herod the Great|Herod]] is— orders it all— the first, y'know— that [[Wikipedia:Massacre of the Innocents|all the Israelite children should be killed]], and probably I'm screwing up my biblical history, but that was the gist, as I recall.
This sequence, I think is really great. I think there's some people that will be quite disturbed by this sequence; I think it's really interesting and really intriguing, and it pushes the mythos forward in an interesting way, and I just think it's— but this was a controversial sequence, this whole beat of, not the [[Raptor]]s flying over, but the whole beat of [[William Adama|Adama]] and the baby and Adama drowning the baby, and I think there was a lot of hesitation, and there was a lot of nervousness, and "oh my God, can we show this?" and "oh please—" and it was a lot of arguing and y'know, I just kept fighting for it. [[David Eick|David]] and I kept fighting for it, and kept saying, "oh, this is important. This is about the threat to the child that [[Gaius Baltar|Baltar]]'s investing in, and you're basically setting up a marker that Adama in some way, shape, or form, is the threat that Baltar must face to fulfill— y'know, that Adama is going to be an obstacle— a major obstacle in front of Baltar— between Baltar and fulfilling his destiny ''vis a vis'' the child. So this is a simple, visual, clear, and brutal way of dramatizing that event, and I just felt it was great, I felt that it's part of the show, that the show has these certain no-holds-barred, really brutal quality to it, that we don't shy away from things, that we tend not to avert our eyes when a lot of other shows would avert their eyes. And so we fought about this for quite a while, but ultimately made some compromises, changed some of the cutting pattern here, jumped our— did a couple of jump cuts to get you through it, and to not linger, exactly, on the shot of the baby actually being put under the water— because we really did go for it. You'll see here coming up that there's a beat where Adama— when Adama puts the child in the water— y'know, there were bubbles coming up, I mean, it was like, ''blub blub blub,'' down it goes. The whole thing— and I don't really have a hankering for infanticide, certainly, but y'know, I did— we did kill a baby in the [[Miniseries]], and here Adama's killing a baby, and y'know, I— there is a certain sort of classic myth to this notion. [http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Genesis%204:8;&version=9; There] [http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Genesis%2022:2;&version=9; are] [http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Exodus%201:22;&version=9; children]— [http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Exodus%2012:29;&version=9; babies] [http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Num.%2031:17;&version=9; are] [http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=1%20Sam.%2015:3;&version=9; killed] [http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Jer.%207:31;&version=9; in] [http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Ezekiel%2016:20-21;&version=9; the] [[Wikipedia:Bible|Bible]]. [[Wikipedia:Jesus|Jesus]] is [[Wikipedia:Flight into Egypt|spirited]] out of [[Wikipedia:Nazareth|Nazareth]] because [[Wikipedia:Herod the Great|Herod]] is— orders it all— the first, y'know— that [[Wikipedia:Massacre of the Innocents|all the Israelite children should be killed]], and probably I'm screwing up my biblical history, but that was the gist, as I recall.


And then we're back. And Baltar wakes up. And this sequence also went through a bit of editing. This whole show went through a lot of editing and playing around with what we say and what we do and what the notions are. This idea I thought was really intriguing that part of the [[History of the Twelve Colonies|myth of the Colonies' backstory]] is this notion that Kobol was a paradise in the same way that [[w:Garden of Eden|Eden]] in [[w:Judeo-Christian|Judeo-Christian]] tradition was paradise and that man left paradise and has been on a fall ever since. And I thought it was intriguing to go back to Kobol to find paradise and to find out that, far from Eden, there's some really nasty, horrific things happened there that- There was human sacrifice. There was barbarism. There was brutality. There were lots of things and that man fled paradise. He was not so much cat- he was driven out by the wrath of God for the things that he did. Which, in some ways, is a basic retelling of [[w:Genesis|Genesis]], is a retelling of Eden. That it was [[w:Eve (Bible)|Eve]]'s- was tempted by the [[w:Serpent (symbolism)|snake]] to eat from the [[w:Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil|apple]]. [[w:Adam|Adam]] does too and for that sin they are driven out. Well this is essentially a different version of the same kind of tale. That man himself brings the sin to paradise and this became a brutal, ugly kind of sin than simply gettin' some fruit off of some old tree that you weren't supposed to be snackin' on. These guys did some really nasty, untoward things and then they had to leave. And the myth continuing- the myth building in the show of, "Ok. The baby. Baltar's role guarding the baby. The father figure. What's he supposed to do? He's now invested in the child. Where is that gonna go?"
And then we're back. And Baltar wakes up. And this sequence also went through a bit of editing. This whole show went through a lot of editing and playing around with what we say and what we do and what the notions are. This idea I thought was really intriguing that part of the [[History of the Twelve Colonies|myth of the Colonies' backstory]] is this notion that Kobol was a paradise in the same way that [[Garden of Eden|Eden]] in [[w:Judeo-Christian|Judeo-Christian]] tradition was paradise and that man left paradise and has been on a fall ever since. And I thought it was intriguing to go back to Kobol to find paradise and to find out that, far from Eden, there's some really nasty, horrific things happened there that- There was human sacrifice. There was barbarism. There was brutality. There were lots of things and that man fled paradise. He was not so much cat- he was driven out by the wrath of God for the things that he did. Which, in some ways, is a basic retelling of [[w:Genesis|Genesis]], is a retelling of Eden. That it was [[w:Eve (Bible)|Eve]]'s- was tempted by the [[w:Serpent (symbolism)|snake]] to eat from the [[w:Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil|apple]]. [[w:Adam|Adam]] does too and for that sin they are driven out. Well this is essentially a different version of the same kind of tale. That man himself brings the sin to paradise and this became a brutal, ugly kind of sin than simply gettin' some fruit off of some old tree that you weren't supposed to be snackin' on. These guys did some really nasty, untoward things and then they had to leave. And the myth continuing- the myth building in the show of, "Ok. The baby. Baltar's role guarding the baby. The father figure. What's he supposed to do? He's now invested in the child. Where is that gonna go?"


Back a little bit. Just to jump out and talk about Tigh and the backstory. We did shoot a whole scene with Tigh and Adama that was set in the same period as the flashbacks that you saw in "[[Scattered]]". And it was a scene, it was a drinking scene, between the two men. And it was modeled on the scene in [[w:Jaws (film)|''Jaws'']] where [[w:Quint (Jaws character)|Quint]] is telling you the story of the [[w:USS Indianapolis (CA-35)|USS ''Indianapolis'']] and there was a similar beat where Tigh and Adama, who again, were on the freighter on the night before Adama goes to the fleet, are getting drunk. And they're getting really drunk. And then they're sitting there and they're trading stories and it turns out Tigh was on a ship call the ''[[Brenik]]''. And the ''Brenik'' was boarded by [[Cylon Centurion|Cylons]] and they tried to decompress the ship and kill them all and turn the guns of the ''Brenik'' against the other ships in their escort fleeet, and Adama went through- and Tigh, it was his first taste of real, ugly, hand-to-hand combat and saw dead people for the first time. And then it turned out that Adama had gone through something similar on the [[Galactica (RDM)|''Galactica'']]. It was the first time that we ever got in the show that Adama was actually on the ''Galactica''. It was his- in his backstory I always felt that ''Galactica'' was the first ship that Adama was assigned to during the [[Cylon War|First Cylon War]], as a pilot. And that he went through a similar experience and ''Galactica'' lost a lot of men. A lot of good men died when the Cylons got on board. But is essentially, that flashback was what informed the audience knows what they're plan is and that they Cylon plan was they didn't come right at [[CIC]], they didn't go toward the magazines, they didn't even go towards the engines. That they essentially went to [[auxiliary fire control]] and [[aft damage control]]. They went to these secondary places on the ship, went into aft damage control, destroyed the safeties, got into the [[Computers in the Re-imagined Series|computer systems]] and the mechanical systems and were able to overp- take over the ship from that point and then use auxiliary fire control to attack the ships around them.
Back a little bit. Just to jump out and talk about Tigh and the backstory. We did shoot a whole scene with Tigh and Adama that was set in the same period as the flashbacks that you saw in "[[Scattered]]". And it was a scene, it was a drinking scene, between the two men. And it was modeled on the scene in [[w:Jaws (film)|''Jaws'']] where [[w:Quint (Jaws character)|Quint]] is telling you the story of the [[w:USS Indianapolis (CA-35)|USS ''Indianapolis'']] and there was a similar beat where Tigh and Adama, who again, were on the freighter on the night before Adama goes to the fleet, are getting drunk. And they're getting really drunk. And then they're sitting there and they're trading stories and it turns out Tigh was on a ship call the ''[[Brenik]]''. And the ''Brenik'' was boarded by [[Cylon Centurion|Cylons]] and they tried to decompress the ship and kill them all and turn the guns of the ''Brenik'' against the other ships in their escort fleeet, and Adama went through- and Tigh, it was his first taste of real, ugly, hand-to-hand combat and saw dead people for the first time. And then it turned out that Adama had gone through something similar on the [[Galactica (RDM)|''Galactica'']]. It was the first time that we ever got in the show that Adama was actually on the ''Galactica''. It was his- in his backstory I always felt that ''Galactica'' was the first ship that Adama was assigned to during the [[Cylon War|First Cylon War]], as a pilot. And that he went through a similar experience and ''Galactica'' lost a lot of men. A lot of good men died when the Cylons got on board. But is essentially, that flashback was what informed the audience knows what they're plan is and that they Cylon plan was they didn't come right at [[CIC]], they didn't go toward the magazines, they didn't even go towards the engines. That they essentially went to [[auxiliary fire control]] and [[aft damage control]]. They went to these secondary places on the ship, went into aft damage control, destroyed the safeties, got into the [[Computers in the Re-imagined Series|computer systems]] and the mechanical systems and were able to overp- take over the ship from that point and then use auxiliary fire control to attack the ships around them.

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