Podcast:A Day in the Life Bonus

From Battlestar Wiki, the free, open content Battlestar Galactica encyclopedia and episode guide
Revision as of 10:44, 2 July 2007 by Catrope (talk | contribs) (→‎Hour 1: correcting some stuff, some guesswork involved, will verify)
This page is a transcript of one of Ronald D. Moore's freely available podcasts.
All contents are believed to be copyright by Ronald D. Moore, Jaques Gravett and Michael O'Halloran. Contents of this article may not be used under the Creative Commons license. This transcript is intended for nonprofit educational purposes. We believe that this falls under the scope of fair use. If the copyright holder objects to this use, please contact transcriber Catrope or site administrator Joe Beaudoin Jr. To view all the podcasts the have been transcribed, view the podcast project page.


Hour 1

RDM: OK, hello and welcome to the podcast. This is a— gonna be a different podcast for us this week, we're gonna do— this is the editing session for episode what we call 14, "A Day in the Life". We're here with my editors, Jaques Gravett

Gravett: Hello, hello.

RDM: —Mike O'Halloran

O'Halloran: Hello

RDM: —we're at the post-production editing suites here at the Universal lot, and we're working on the director's cut of "A Day in the Life". OK.

I like this epis— I like things about this episode, I think ultimately, as I was watching it, it took a while to get going. And it seems— the Adama-Carolanne beats kind of lither, they don't— I'm just not pulled into that story enough, I'm wondering if— and it didn't really have a solution, except— I was thinking that maybe the stuff that comes out on the end about the divorce and the relationship with Lee, if there was a way to maybe move some of that material up earlier, so that we sort of— if we knew some of those things about their relationship, about Adama and Carolanne in the open— in the beginnings, at some place, that that would maybe flavor and color the things about what was happening through the rest of the show. And maybe there's a way of that— y'know that the final scene with Lee and Adama, where Lee reveals all that, if we move some of that up in the earlier section... It's just a question of what's the resolution of the story without that, because it's— the beat with him and her after he's with Lee, when they're in the house and he's saying "I wish I'd known, I can't believe you were like that". And they've reconciled, I don't quite sense that the journey's somehow—

O'Halloran: Well, it's a nice reveal, but it's almost too big a reveal—

RDM: Yeah.

O'Halloran: —like you don't realize where it's going and it's a big surprise ,(unintelligible) but it comes almost as too much for the last few moments of the show.

RDM: It does. It's like everything happens at the end, when they get out the Tyrol— the Cally line resolves at the end and then that big reveal comes after it, and the— all the show leading up to it just feels like it's just kind of meandering around, you know what I'm saying?

Gravett: Right. The tough thing about this one is that the Adama-and-Carolanne scenes, since they're not truly flashbacks, how do you play them? Because it's— I think once we get into the jeopardy of Tyrol-Cally, that's when the story starts moving. But it's weird for me, because the Carolanne-Adama scenes, they're not true flashbacks.

RDM: They're sort of— they're contemporary.

O'Halloran: Right.

Gravett: Because you don't want it to seem like he's going senile, like it's all just, you know, in his head. So that's—

O'Halloran: But not like— not in a psychotic way—

Gravett: Right.

O'Halloran: It's as if she were still alive, this is how she would react in this situation, you know in his mind, as his would be—

RDM: But I wonder if we should em— If we should shift the emphasis of the show to the Tyrol— If we thought of Tyrol-Cally as the A story, and Adama-Carolanne as the B story, would the show— would it help us a little bit just in setting the terms to the show? 'Cause maybe the Adama— the Adama line is so soft, it really doesn't have any true jeopardy or any emotional stakes to it, but— and the Tyrol-Cally line does. Maybe if we just suddenly play a little bit more— I mean, it's essentially a story about two marriages—

O'Halloran: I was gonna say, if that what works well, it (unintelligible) the position of a young marriage just getting started and one—

RDM: And one that's—

O'Halloran: —finished now.

RDM: —the divorced dead one.

O'Halloran: It plays really well against one another.

RDM: It's just the question of how you— how the rhythm of those two things play. Well, let's watch the tease.

Hour 2

Hour 3