|
|
|
[1][ISMAP]-[2][Home]
|
|
|
|
### GUIDE ### [3][Background] [4][Synopsis] [5][Credits] [6][Episode
|
|
List] [7][Previous] [8][Next]
|
|
|
|
_Contents:_ [9]Overview - [10]Backplot - [11]Questions - [12]Analysis
|
|
- [13]Notes - [14]JMS
|
|
|
|
_________________________________________________________________
|
|
|
|
Overview
|
|
|
|
A series of bombings threatens the station, and Ivanova calls on
|
|
some unusual investigators to help solve the mystery. [15]Patrick
|
|
Kilpatrick as Robert Carlson. [16]Louis Turenne as Brother Theo.
|
|
|
|
[17]P5 Rating: [18]7.75
|
|
|
|
Production number: 302
|
|
Original air week: November 13, 1995
|
|
|
|
Written by J. Michael Straczynski
|
|
Directed by Mike Vejar
|
|
|
|
_________________________________________________________________
|
|
|
|
Backplot
|
|
|
|
* All explosives manufactured in the Earth Alliance are laced with
|
|
special chemical codes to allow them to be traced to a particular
|
|
buyer.
|
|
|
|
Unanswered Questions
|
|
|
|
* What was Londo doing on a transport arriving from the Minbari
|
|
homeworld? (Assuming he was; he may have been on the Centauri
|
|
transport mentioned to G'Kar by Garibaldi.)
|
|
* How will the influx of missionaries affect the station?
|
|
|
|
Analysis
|
|
|
|
* Lennier has saved Londo twice now, once here and once (in a less
|
|
extreme way) in [19]"The Quality of Mercy." And now he's likely to
|
|
be decorated by the Centaurum. How will that affect his position
|
|
in the battle between light and dark, and his apparent new
|
|
friendship with Vir ([20]"The Fall of Night?")
|
|
* Londo apparently doesn't place absolute faith in the dream of his
|
|
death twenty years in the future ([21]"Midnight on the Firing
|
|
Line," [22]"The Coming of Shadows.") Otherwise he wouldn't have
|
|
been afraid he was going to die in the elevator. (Which isn't to
|
|
say he wouldn't have still tried to call for help, of course.)
|
|
* Lennier's own convictions, namely his prohibition against lying
|
|
except to save face for another, seem to have weakened since his
|
|
arrival, despite his pledge to do penance later. On the other
|
|
hand, perhaps he justified it in his mind by figuring he was
|
|
saving face for the obnoxious man by getting him to stop making a
|
|
fool of himself.
|
|
|
|
Notes
|
|
|
|
* G'Kar's song in the elevator is based on the ditty he sang at the
|
|
beginning of [23]"The Parliament of Dreams."
|
|
* We may have seen Carlson before, if briefly. In [24]"The Fall Of
|
|
Night," as the Earth officials arrive, there's a man in the
|
|
arrival area. He's slapped by a woman and walks after her when she
|
|
leaves. The man bears some resemblance to Carlson without the
|
|
beard. Perhaps the woman was his wife.
|
|
* Lennier's fake disease, Netter's Syndrome, is no doubt named for
|
|
executive producer Doug Netter.
|
|
* The name Theo (short for Theodore) comes from the Greek word
|
|
theodoros which means "gift of God."
|
|
|
|
jms speaks
|
|
|
|
* What's great is that this [the second] season, we haven't had one
|
|
single episode on the level of War Prayer or Infection or Grail,
|
|
some of our weaker first season eps. The worst we've done is
|
|
pretty darned good. What we're now working for in year three is
|
|
that they're all better than that at their baseline rating. And so
|
|
far, they're killer...our second episode for year three,
|
|
"Convictions," has a very different feel from anything we've done
|
|
on the show to date, a very dark, scary and gritty feel, and
|
|
probably one of the best character sequences in the series to
|
|
date. We're also doing some major EFX blow-outs of a type other
|
|
than "they go into space and shoot stuff." Very interesting,
|
|
creative, offbeat stuff.
|
|
* _September 7, 1995_: I am thus far *very* happy with season three;
|
|
we've got three shows in the can (edited, not yet scored or
|
|
mixed), and shooting number four as I type this. I think we're
|
|
already a notch above our general episodes from year two, and
|
|
"Convictions" is extremely intense, with a very different look and
|
|
feel from anything we've done before. Has kind of an NYPD Blue
|
|
feel to it.
|
|
* BTW, on the question of effects...here's one that's kinda
|
|
interesting, in that I've seen a few comments here and there about
|
|
how we must've mapped the CGI fireball into the hallway in
|
|
"Convictions" where Londo jumps into the transport tube. Some even
|
|
offered you could tell the fire was CGI.
|
|
Nooooooop.
|
|
Here's how that shot was done: we built a miniature hallway
|
|
(actually, "miniature" ain't the right word; it was something like
|
|
30 feet long or more). Painted it so that it looked exactly like
|
|
the regular B5 hallways. On film you absolutely can't tell the
|
|
difference. Then we mounted the hallway *vertically* alongside the
|
|
outside of the main building here. Set the camer at the top,
|
|
pointing down into the hall. We built a firebomb and set it at the
|
|
far end of the hall (on the bottom, in other words). We then set
|
|
off the firebomb (with all the proper authorities present), so
|
|
that it shot up the length of the vertical hall. We overcranked
|
|
the camera so it'd start in slow- motion, then pulled the plug so
|
|
that the camera slowed down to normal speed...giving the sense of
|
|
the fire swelling, then suddenly rushing forward with a huge
|
|
fireball. So when it looks like the "hallway" is on fire...it is.
|
|
Real fire.
|
|
Next we shot Londo (Peter) against a bluescreen, reacting to this,
|
|
then diving to his left. We then comp'd the bluescreen into the
|
|
hallway, and used CGI to build a transport tube door to Londo's
|
|
left, which then closed just as the fire reached it.
|
|
It was an utterly immense amount of work for, basically, a five
|
|
second shot...but it looks 'way cool.
|
|
* Effects shots like this one were/are supervised via our EFX
|
|
supervisor, Ted Rae, working closely with the director and folks
|
|
from Foundation.
|
|
* Sue: as you're looking at the fireball approaching toward camera,
|
|
he jumps to our left. Trust me on this.
|
|
* Another scene with Londo and Lennier, btw, contains a small nod to
|
|
the online fans of the show; we can't and won't use story ideas,
|
|
but there's been so much humor, reams and reams of it, every
|
|
imaginable kind of joke, that I dropped one of these jokes into an
|
|
episode...one that's come up at a lot of conventions and on the
|
|
nets endlessly. Just to acknowledge the fans in the only way I
|
|
can.
|
|
* I don't actually know for certain the origin of the joke; it was
|
|
all over the nets, and the BBSs, uploaded places with several
|
|
gazillion other lightbulb jokes (after I'd made the original
|
|
version of this in the show), which is why I figured I'd drop it
|
|
into the episode, since it was so common and associated with the
|
|
nets. While in the UK, I met a young man who said that he had been
|
|
the first with that variation, and I have no reason not to believe
|
|
him. (A couple other people sent me email saying that they had
|
|
also come up with that one; it's kind of obvious I guess, but
|
|
again, I have no way of knowing what's true because it was just
|
|
all over the place, never with attribution.)
|
|
* Actually, variations on that joke were told at a number of
|
|
conventions; it's the obvious one to go for, given that for a
|
|
while the "how many X does it take to change a lightbulb?"
|
|
question was racing all around the nets. There were literally
|
|
hundreds of them; of which, this or a variation on it was the most
|
|
common one floating around...so I let it go in as a nod to the
|
|
nets.
|
|
* Londo and G'Kar no longer really have much to discuss; they're
|
|
past that point, I figure. They hate each other.
|
|
Londo wasn't on Minbar; he was seeing someone off on a ship going
|
|
to Centauri Prime.
|
|
* Londo *does* have his moments when one almost likes him in spite
|
|
of oneself; the second episode of year three has scenes in which
|
|
you don't like him, and then you *do* like him enormously...then
|
|
you don't again. He's caught in the scissors...and trying madly to
|
|
find some way out of the situation he's in.
|
|
* Correct. Louis was not available to use for "Twilight" for health
|
|
reasons, but we like Louis a lot, and vowed to use him in another,
|
|
even better role, at the first opportunity. We seized it.
|
|
* Finding character names is sometimes easy, sometimes hard; it
|
|
really does vary.
|
|
And Theo was named for Vincent's brother.
|
|
* It was a mild Spring day, warm, clear, sunny, when Vincent Van
|
|
Gogh picked up his easel, and some paints, and walked a mile and a
|
|
half to an open field where he often painted landscapes. He set up
|
|
his easel, sat under a tree for a while, ate part of an apple,
|
|
composed a brief note to his brother Theo. Then he pulled out a
|
|
derringer and shot himself in the chest.
|
|
After an hour, realizing that he was not going to die for a while
|
|
yet, he picked himself up and staggered the mile and half back to
|
|
Theo's house, where a few hours later that evening he passed away
|
|
in Theo's arms.
|
|
Some say his sad ending came about because he felt he was a burden
|
|
to his brother Theo, and the guilt did him in; others because he
|
|
sold only one painting during his life, for 48 francs, and he felt
|
|
he would never become a painter of any worth.
|
|
On reflection, perhaps it was the thought of people bidding for
|
|
his ear that did it.
|
|
* I've always liked the name Theo, from Vincent's brother, so there
|
|
was the sound of it; also the sense of it, in that Theo was a
|
|
guide, a counselor, a confidante, which Theo might come to be in
|
|
this; and, finally, Theodore means (I just lapsed on the actual
|
|
definition) but either chosen (favored) of god or messenger of god
|
|
(have to check my dictionary of names again), which is appropos.
|
|
* We'll see Theo here and there as we go along this season.
|
|
* _Any relation to the technomages?_
|
|
No, I wouldn't think of them in technomage terms; if you look at
|
|
the history of many of these orders, they've generally pulled
|
|
together people of varying skills. Ain't really that new an
|
|
idea....
|
|
* _Any connection between Theo's mission and the short story "The
|
|
Nine Billion Names of God?"_
|
|
No, there's no connection whatsoever. The Tibetan monks in the
|
|
story were specifically coming up with all the names of god in
|
|
order to bring about the end of the world; Theo et al have come as
|
|
an exercise in comparative religion, to learn what the other races
|
|
call god, and how it compares. As others have done before, right
|
|
here on good old earth.
|
|
* Re: "The Nine Billion Names of God," the whole purpose of that
|
|
story had nothing to do with alien contact; it had to do with
|
|
gettting all the earthbound names of God into a computer, so they
|
|
could create the end of the world. The monks are on B5 in an
|
|
attempt at studying the different religions out there for the
|
|
purpose of better understanding...or more succinctly, comparative
|
|
religious studies, which long predate Clarke by, oh, about 500
|
|
years.
|
|
* _Are these the monks from [25]"There All the Honor Lies?"_
|
|
No, these are not the monks Sheridan met earlier.
|
|
* _What were the floating discs at the crime scene?_
|
|
It's a floating (air-compression) vidrecorder.
|
|
* "B5 has gravity defying video cameras"
|
|
Only if you consider a plane or any other reasonable technology of
|
|
flight to be gravity defying.
|
|
The video recorders are made of an extremely ultralight material,
|
|
new alloys that in total weighs less than an ounce; it has a
|
|
visible (and audible) air propulsion system, a high speed fan with
|
|
a stabalizer/gyroscope that keeps it steady, and move it forward.
|
|
* If you didn't notice the effect, that's good; you shouldn't in
|
|
many cases. (How many folks noticed that the two-story shot of the
|
|
blown sector of Convictions after the elevator boom is a digitally
|
|
composited set, using two different sets?)
|
|
* _Why did the "bomb squad" have to go out into space in order to
|
|
gain access to the fusion reactor?_
|
|
Going in the vacuum door was the fastest way to get a bunch of
|
|
people in there, and presumably get a big object out again.
|
|
Instead of riding transport tubes to the core shuttle, then the
|
|
core shuttle to the far end, then tubes to the bottom...you jump
|
|
out, get picked up and dumped at the far end. Takes 2 minutes
|
|
rather than 10 or 15. Remember, this place is five miles long.
|
|
* "We have a wonderful security system on B-5. Our monitors will
|
|
show you everything, except a twenty foot long fusion reactor
|
|
trigger that was put in the most sensitive part of the station by
|
|
a certified nut case."
|
|
Show me where we ever said our monitors "will show you
|
|
everything." They don't, they can't, and never have. This is a
|
|
city, and a quarter million people live here. It would be
|
|
impossible to monitor it all. As for the fusion reactor...that was
|
|
a ten foot object attached to a place where only station
|
|
maintenance people went, which was his job. He was cleared for
|
|
that kind of access, and until/unless the device was activated, it
|
|
was electronically dormant, you wouldn't notice anything. Nor did
|
|
it attract much attention. Even though they *knew* something was
|
|
there, they STILL had to look long and hard to find it, because it
|
|
had been made to look just like everything else in the area.
|
|
And it's not like everybody *knew* he was a "certified nutcase" at
|
|
the time. He didn't have an identicard that said CERTIFIED NUTCASE
|
|
on it. He worked in station maintenance. Nobody knew Tim McVeigh
|
|
was a nut until he blew up a building. Nobody knew that quiet
|
|
little man in Boston was out strangling women in his spare time.
|
|
* Doug's reaction to Netter's Syndrome was...amused, chagrined, and
|
|
the promise of swift and terrible revenge.
|
|
|
|
|
|
[31][Next]
|
|
|
|
[32]Last update: May 29, 1997
|
|
|
|
References
|
|
|
|
1. file://localhost/cgi-bin/imagemap/titlebar
|
|
2. LYNXIMGMAP:file://localhost/lurk/maps/maps.html#titlebar
|
|
3. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/background/046.shtml
|
|
4. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/synops/046.html
|
|
5. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/credits/046.html
|
|
6. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/episodes.php
|
|
7. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/045.html
|
|
8. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/047.html
|
|
9. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/046.html#OV
|
|
10. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/046.html#BP
|
|
11. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/046.html#UQ
|
|
12. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/046.html#AN
|
|
13. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/046.html#NO
|
|
14. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/046.html#JS
|
|
15. http://us.imdb.com/M/person-exact?+Kilpatrick,+Patrick
|
|
16. http://us.imdb.com/M/person-exact?+Turenne,+Louis
|
|
17. file://localhost/lurk/p5/intro.html
|
|
18. file://localhost/lurk/p5/046
|
|
19. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/021.html
|
|
20. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/044.html
|
|
21. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/001.html
|
|
22. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/031.html
|
|
23. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/005.html
|
|
24. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/044.html
|
|
25. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/036.html
|
|
26. file://localhost/lurk/lurker.html
|
|
27. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/046.html#TOP
|
|
28. file://localhost/cgi-bin/uncgi/lgmail
|
|
29. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/episodes.php
|
|
30. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/045.html
|
|
31. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/047.html
|
|
32. file://localhost/lurk/lastmod.html
|