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[1][ISMAP]-[2][Home]
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### GUIDE ### [3][Background] [4][Synopsis] [5][Credits] [6][Episode
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List] [7][Previous] [8][Next]
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_Contents:_ [9]Overview - [10]Backplot - [11]Questions - [12]Analysis
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- [13]Notes - [14]JMS
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_________________________________________________________________
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Overview
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G'Kar tries to avoid capture by the Centauri while continuing his
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search. Delenn urges the Rangers to strike against the Shadows.
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[15]Wayne Alexander as Lorien. [16]Wortham Krimmer as Emperor
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Cartagia. [17]Lenny Citrano as Isaac. [18]Anthony DeLongis as
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Harry.
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[19]P5 Rating: [20]8.98
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Production number: 402
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Original air week: November 11, 1996
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Written by J. Michael Straczynski
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Directed by Kevin Dobson
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_________________________________________________________________
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Plot Points
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* Garibaldi's Starfury was found abandoned in space, but someone
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from Interplanetary Expeditions ([21]"Infection," [22]"Z'ha'dum")
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knew where to find it. Garibaldi was captured and is apparently in
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the custody of Psi Corps.
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* Lorien claims to be the first of the First Ones, and lives deep
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within Z'ha'dum. He says the Shadows return to Z'ha'dum because
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he's there, and that Kosh knew about his presence when he told
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Sheridan to jump.
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* G'Kar has been captured by the Centauri. In exchange for help
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overthrowing Emperor Cartagia, Londo has promised G'Kar that the
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Centauri will withdraw from Narn after Cartagia is gone.
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Unanswered Questions
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* Exactly who captured Garibaldi, and why? The Psi Corps, or some
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other group associated with them? How did they recover him from
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the inside of a Shadow vessel? Did the Shadows give him up
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voluntarily?
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* Why did they want to know what he remembered?
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* Is Lorien's claim true? Is he a member of a race of elder beings,
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or is he somehow the first intelligent lifeform in the galaxy?
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What is he, exactly?
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* When, and under what circumstances, did Lorien meet Kosh?
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* How is Londo planning to use G'Kar to unseat Cartagia?
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Analysis
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* If Garibaldi has indeed been captured by the Psi Corps, why do
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they need to question him? Presumably they could just pick
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whatever information they need out of his mind. Perhaps they're
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simply trying to get him to cooperate, on the assumption that if
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he cooperates in one area, he'll be more malleable in others.
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Alternately, perhaps they're making sure he doesn't remember what
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happened to him because they've done something to him and wiped
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his memory of the event. That would explain the conclusion of the
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interrogation scene; they gassed him to transport him elsewhere
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once they were satisfied that their memory wipe was solid.
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* Centauri torture is likely to result in the loss of G'Kar's left
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eye ([23]"The Coming of Shadows," [24]"War Without End, Part
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Two.") Whether that eye is the subject of Lady Morella's prophecy
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([25]"Point of No Return") isn't clear; it's certainly plausible
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that Londo could redeem himself by halting the torture of G'Kar,
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but there are other eyes that don't see (e.g. the Shadows' Eye at
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Z'ha'dum in [26]"The Hour of the Wolf," or the Centauri Eye from
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[27]"Signs and Portents.")
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* Given Lorien's assessment of his situation, Sheridan presumably
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qualifies as "the one who is already dead" in Morella's prophecy.
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And, in fact, Londo spares his life 17 years in the future
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([28]"War Without End, Part Two.") Assuming the prophecy is
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correct and Londo was thus redeemed, obviating the need for a
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third chance, what form would that chance have taken?
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* Why is Lorien so interested in what happens to Sheridan? He said
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Sheridan was "the only one to make it this far." Was he referring
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to the physical descent down the chasm, or some more spiritual
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journey?
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* Lorien said neither Kosh nor Sheridan wanted to die. Assuming he
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was able to resurrect Sheridan, is Kosh also still alive? If so,
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what did Kosh find to live for?
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* Lorien said he had been waiting for someone to talk to. He also
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said, several times, that Sheridan was trapped between life and
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death, between seconds. Given that he was there with Sheridan, and
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that Kosh knew about Lorien's presence, it's plausible that
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Lorien, not Justin, is in fact "the man in between" from
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Sheridan's Kosh-induced dream ([29]"All Alone in the Night.") If
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so, what will he do now that he's found Sheridan?
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* Lorien, if that's who the formless being in Sheridan's dream is,
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asked both the Vorlon and the Shadow questions. Why are those
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questions significant to him? He said that there was no good
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answer to "Who are you," implying perhaps that the search for an
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answer is what matters.
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Did the Shadows and the Vorlons get those questions from Lorien?
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Lorien claims to have met Kosh (who, oddly, he knew by name, which
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would seem to contradict the new Kosh's statement that "we are all
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Kosh") so presumably he has also met the Shadows. Perhaps each
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race latched onto one of the two questions, adopting it as its
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own.
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* Later, however, Lorien asked Sheridan _three_ questions: who he
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was, why he was, and what he wanted. The middle question is new.
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If the Vorlons and the Shadows are supposed to ask the first and
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last questions, is there supposed to be another group asking the
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second? (See [30]jms speaks)
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* One person did ask all three questions once: Sinclair, when he was
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captured during the Battle of the Line ([31]"And the Sky Full of
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Stars.")
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* Kosh may have implied the presence of a third question in
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[32]"Deathwalker" when he told Talia, "Understanding is a
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three-edged sword."
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* Lorien echoed another statement of Sinclair's, also from [33]"And
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the Sky Full of Stars." Sinclair said of his wingman Mitchell, "I
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tried to warn you, but you wouldn't listen... you never listened."
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Lorien said the same of the Shadows and Vorlons, or so it seemed,
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though he didn't provide any more context or explanation.
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Vir made a similar comment to G'Kar in [34]"Comes the Inquisitor:"
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"I wish... there was something that I could do. I tried telling
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them, but they wouldn't listen. They never listen..."
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* In [35]"Infection," Garibaldi observed to Sinclair that people
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look for things to die for, because it's easier than finding
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something to live for. Lorien echoed that sentiment at the end of
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this episode.
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* Lorien said he hated to see his children fighting. Does that imply
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he doesn't approve of Sheridan's war against the Shadows? For that
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matter, does it mean he doesn't approve of the Vorlons and the
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Shadows fighting? If so, can he do anything about it?
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* Can Lorien leave Z'ha'dum? Perhaps the planet is part of him, or
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he's bound to it in some way; in that case, Delenn's plan to
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attack Z'ha'dum could prove disastrous, assuming the Vorlons are
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as interested in Lorien as the Shadows are.
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* Lorien said the Shadows think they return to Z'ha'dum to show him
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respect, but that they don't understand any more. What don't they
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understand? Why did they originally start returning to Z'ha'dum,
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and why don't they understand now what they did long ago?
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Notes
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* The lighting at the end of the prison cell scene is symbolic; as
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soon as Londo agrees to free Narn, the cell door opens and G'Kar
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is bathed in white light, his life's goal finally within reach.
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* The passage of time on Z'ha'dum, or at least in Sheridan's
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condition, is similar to the effect of a black hole at the event
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horizon: time slows down to a standstill from the point of view of
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an outside observer.
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* As originally broadcast, Franklin cites the date as January 8 in
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his opening monologue, and says it's been 14 days since Sheridan
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disappeared. In the second US broadcast of the episode Franklin's
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opening monologue was fixed to say it was 9 days since both
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Sheridan and Garibaldi disappeared. (See [36]jms speaks) However,
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the UK broadcast, and possibly others, used the original incorrect
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date.
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jms speaks
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* I just got a copy of the ad that's going to run in TV Guide for
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"Whatever Happened to Mr. Garibaldi?" in two weeks. It's a great
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ad, well composed, well done, but it's also a major spoiler for
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something you will NOT want spoiled. So avoid the ad if possible.
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* The script was easy to write story-wise, I think it only took me a
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few days (in general, the faster the write, the better the script,
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when it comes to something like this...writing in white heat is
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best), but *very* difficult from an emotional standpoint. I was
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just about as wasted after writing it as you were after seeing it.
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There's a lot of stuff in there that's difficult or painful to
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touch, and you can only hope that it comes out okay. I'm happy it
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did.
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* _Sheridan's fall was like Gandalf's in "The Lord of the Rings," or
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like the descent into the underworld in Dante's "Inferno."_
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I've mentioned elsewhere that I was going more for the roots of
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this. Though the Dante thread you mention is closest in many ways
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(again, you dig into archetypes you end up with similar
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structures, that's the nature of the beast), it was Orpheus going
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into the underworld for his wife, and losing her, that was in the
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back of my head when I was blocking out that part of the story.
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(You can also toss in Christ's temptation by the devil, and
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descent into the wilderness, if you want.)
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This will probably get me in trouble, but...on the one hand, I am
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always delighted and impressed with the breadth and depth of
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analyses and thought of the larger group of SF fans, and the
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insightfulness with which they apply those perceptions.
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On the flip side of this discussion...for a certain percentage of
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them, that breadth and depth is only or primarily within SF and
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mainstream fantasy. The wellspring of material from which to draw
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when making comparisons is not often as broad as it should be in
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classical literature, mythology, medieval studies, and so on. They
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see a drop into a chasm, they think "Oh, Gandalf." Not
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understanding that the root of this goes back way, way, way
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further...to Orpheus and his kindred spirits.
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I was copied a note from someone on another newsgroup who insisted
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that everything in the show had an elvish/Tolkein base, including
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and *especially* the names of everyone, citing the Agamemnon as
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meaning something or other in LoTR elvish. The symbol is RIGHT
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THERE, in the name, Agamemnon, and the whole unfortunate history
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of that character and his wife, and the Cassandra character (which
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is at the center of G'Kar's character)...and yet she says, "No,
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no, it's all a clue, it means this thing over here."
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My background is as an SF fan myself, so I offer the above without
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stereotype or pejorative intent. But as well as reading SF, I
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spent most of my early adult life reading from classical sources.
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Goethe's FAUST informs Londo in many ways, as well as the history
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of early Rome, and Hegelian notions on the role of conflict, and
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the divine role of the emperor. You're talking to someone who read
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Plotinus' The Aenneads just for kicks, and whose favorite
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character was Zeno and his paradoxes. You want to talk Plato's
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perfect forms? The Socratic method of teaching? Greek tragic
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structure as embodied in Oedipus? The overall work of Sophocles?
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The Bible? I've read that one cover to cover twice...anyone else
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in the room who's done that, raise your hands and tell me you
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didn't fall asleep halfway through Numbers and Deuteronomy, the
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two most boring books in the whole darned thing.
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There was a period in my life -- from around 1976 through 1981 --
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when I devoured everything I could in these areas. Mythology.
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Existentialism. Zen. 18th century literature. I took part time
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jobs in libraries so I could get access to the widest possible
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range of books, especially new ones in areas that interested me. A
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lot of the details have washed away over the years, but the
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cumulative *sense* of that remains. I can still remember how
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excited I was when a brand new translation of the Inferno, the
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Purgatario and the Paradisio came out (from Penguin, I think),
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putting it all back into the proper lyric form, and I devoured
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them, one day each, then read them all again using the footnotes
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and marginalia.
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All that time, I never knew I was preparing myself to write this
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show, because it could *only* be done with a generalist
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background, knowing a little about a lot of areas...just enough to
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get into trouble, ususally, but still the grounding is there.
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Funny thing...about two, three weeks ago, I got an email from a
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woman who is a professor of medieval studies at a major
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university, who said she'd been nudged into watching the show by
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her graduate students, and is now a big fan of the show. She said
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that as she watched, she "clicked" constantly on the sources from
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medieval and classical literature, mythology, and other deep well
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sources, and was pleased to see them being used in a contermporary
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or futuristic venue.
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Anyway, it's what I've always said about this show...you see the
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paradigm with which you are most familiar. Sometimes that's great,
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and sometimes it's a curse.
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* But the thing is, I wasn't *thinking* of LoTR...I was thinking of
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Orpheus going into the underworld, of the classical notion of
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descending into hell to find oneself or something else...it just
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bugs me when someone assumes that they know what was in my head at
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a time when I wrote something, and then take that as a given and
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start making me explain it or acting as if this is true, when it
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ain't.
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* Larry DiTillio made the point, while on the show, that some SF
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fans reared on ST expect everyone to talk like English earls, very
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proper. We go for vernacular every time. I like the rough edges,
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the hesitations, the stumbles. In editing 402 the other day,
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there's several takes to choose from in a particular scene, but I
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picked the one where the actor slightly stumbled over the line,
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because it was at the heat of the moment, and in that kind of
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situation, we all get flustered. It made it feel more real.
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Slang and idiom have been with us forever, and always will be.
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Now, on the other hand, I don't go full-tilt bozo with it, by
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peppering the dialogue with lots of techtalk and futureslang
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because I think it becomes intrusive. So we try to find a balance.
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Some people don't like it, and like their SF to all sound the
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same. That's fine. Tastes vary.
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Also, I use some dialogue styles that lean toward the theatrical,
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what you'd see on the stage, or hear in a radio drama. Other times
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I'm right in the gutter. You use different tools for different
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jobs. My influences are from Rod Serling and Charles Beaumont and
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Norman Corwin and Ray Bradbury, so you're going to hear those
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colors from time to time, and because you don't hear a lot of that
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particular style in TV these days, some people think it's
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bad...no, it's just a different approach to dialogue.
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Look at Harold Pinter, then look at Christopher Fry, then look at
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Joe Orton. Between just those three you've got three very
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stylized, consistent approaches to dialogue, not like the other
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two at all, and between them more diversity than in a hundred TV
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shows. In theater, which is where I cut my teeth, it's *okay* to
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have dialogue that's somewhat stylized, or a bit more formal, a
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bit more literate, or whatever. In TeeVee it's all gotta be the
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same. To which I say...why?
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(I've also made the mental assumption of a return to a new
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formality in 2260, since styles go in and out of fashion. People
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use the word Mr. and Ms. more often, there's a more formal stance
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with people you often get when a culture comes out of a major war,
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as we did after WW2.)
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But dialogue tastes are utterly individual; what works for one may
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not and likely will not work for someone else. And that's okay.
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That's as it should be. As long as the totality works.
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* "I watched _What Ever Happened to Mr Garibaldi_ last night and was
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struck by the scene where Mr. G was being questioned by the
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disembodied voice. That scene was very similar to the style of
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another one of my favorite shows _Homicide: Life on the Streets_.
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I'm just wondering if that was an intentional nod to that show."
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This is kind of embarrassing, but...see, I don't watch much TV
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anymore. I don't have time. I think I've seen maybe two episodes
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of Homicide, total. So we were in with the editor to do our
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producer's cut of 402, and I was trying to describe what I
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wanted...jarring, disorienting cuts, don't worry if it matches,
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use conflicting takes or overlaps of takes...and finally the
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editor said, "Oh, you mean the Homicide look." And it'd been so
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long that I asked them to explain to me what that meant, and John
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got into it, me with him, and ended up with what we've got. I've
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got to start watching TV again, beyond X-Files, 60 Minutes and
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Simpsons. (Well, I've added Millennium, so that helps.)
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* Actually, the Garibaldi intercuts like that were something that I
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came up with in the editing room, and John Copeland and I
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thereafter assembled it, with the editor.
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* This one's a favorite of mine as well. On the Garibaldi scene, it
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was shot fairly conventionally, but as we got into editing, I
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said, "Let's do something we don't normally do, let's try a visual
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approach that's not usually part of SF shows." So we put that
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sequence together. Again, my feeling is, break your format once in
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a while or get stuck in a rut. Take chances. The worst that'll
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happen is that you'll fail.
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It's a lovely episode.
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* _Is the director the same Kevin Dobson who was on "Kojak?"_
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No, this Kevin is an Australian director.
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* _About the voiceover recap at the top of the episode_
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I figured, since this year was much more serial than in the past,
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you kinda *had* to put little recaps at the top...also, it gives
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it a different, narrative feel, which I kinda like.
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* _Franklin said it was 14 days since Sheridan's death and 9 days
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since Garibaldi's disappearance, but the two happened at the same
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time._
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This is a case where jms screwed up.
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Originally, the script read, "It's now 14 days since Captain
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Sheridan left for Z'ha'dum and was presumed killed. Nine days
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since Mr. Garibaldi disappeared while on patrol."
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I went to edit the first sentence to make it active rather than
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passive syntax. In handwriting on the page (after the first draft,
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the typists take revisions and implement them), I meant to write,
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"It is now 9 days since Captain Sheridan was presumed killed at
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Z'ha'dum." I either missed changing the days, or the typist didn't
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put it in (it happens), and that draft of the script is long gone.
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But without knowing which, I'll just take the rap for it.
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* I'm considering revoicing it...we just didn't catch it until it
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was gone.
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* "In WHTMG, Marcus is talking to G'Kar about his friends and says
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he's had "Damn few of them, and most of them are dead." My instant
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reaction was "That can't be an allusion to Return to Zork." Can
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it?"
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Y'know, if I were to read this group as an outsider, I'd think
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that this jms person was incapable of coming up with a single line
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on his own.
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NO, it wasn't a Zork reference, for chrissakes. Can we possibly
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get any more obscure here? I don't even know what this REFERS to.
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Marcus came from a mining colony. The shadows struck, and killed
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everyone there. Hence, the line above.
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There was some goofing around with SF references early on in the
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show; this got out of hand, and it stopped. I don't sit here,
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thinking, "Oh, goody, I can make a reference to The Day The Earth
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Stood Still here," or some other show. I write what is appropriate
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for the character to say. Period.
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I'm sorry if I'm a bit cranky in answering this, but jesus christ,
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people, give it a rest and stop looking for references that don't
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exist. There are only so many permutations in the english
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language, and something has got to echo somewhere for
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everyone...but that ain't the source. "Oh, look, he use the word
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THE in this episode, he must be nodding at "The Ipcriss Files" or
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"THEM" just leaving off the M to throw us off."
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Your point of reference is your point of reference, it's nothing
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to do with me. It's like a Rorscharch test, you see what you're
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familiar with.
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As a writer, you work your brains out trying to come up with
|
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something, and you try your damndest to make it original, and
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fresh, and interesting...do you have any idea how infuriating, how
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maddening, how bottomlin *insulting* it is to have 10,000 people
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parsing every sentence and saying, "Oh, here, did you take this
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from that? Is this a reference to this over here?"
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NO, IT'S NOT.
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I allowed a little of that in the first season or so, often in
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scripts by other people, on a couple of occasions by myself, but
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that's the end of it, because everyone decided that the show was
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one big easter egg hunt. Fanfic is full of this stuff, which is
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perhaps why everyone keeps looking for it here.
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If it's an absolutely blantant, and extremely recognizeable line,
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like the Tolkein reference in year two's "Geometry," then
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yeah...but some of this is getting so obscure and ridiculous that
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it's starting to make me crazy.
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Can we *please* declare a moratorium on this for a while?
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* _About the final scene with Sheridan remembering Delenn_
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During the music spotting session, where I indicate where music
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comes in and goes out, my main note to Chris on that final
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sequence was, "Break our heart."
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He did.
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* _About the shot of Sheridan as he sees the pit_
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"Was this scene redone for WHtMG? I'd have to compare, but I think
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|
I would've noticed that hopeful smile at the end of Z. It would've
|
|
been just a -little- out of place, under the circumstances."
|
|
It's *exactly* the same footage, frame for frame. Only your
|
|
perspective has changed.
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|
Sort of like Shroedinger's TV show.
|
|
* _About Peter Jurasik and Andreas Katsulas_
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|
Yeah, those two are terrific. You know you can write *anything*
|
|
for them, and they can play it. Just terrific stuff.
|
|
* _Who thought up the cat sound when G'Kar extended the pike?_
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|
The cat was my idea. Cats are endless sources of humor.
|
|
* _Ivanova wasn't in this episode. Was she supposed to be the one
|
|
cleaning out Sheridan's quarters?_
|
|
No, those scenes were always written with Franklin in mind. There
|
|
was a brief scene with Ivanova originally in the ep, but it was
|
|
snipped for time.
|
|
_The scene was inserted into the next episode._
|
|
* _Londo is very careful with his wording around Cartagia._
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|
Which is why Cartagia likes Londo...he stands up to Cartagia, but
|
|
does so in such a way that Cartagia can't touch him...doesn't give
|
|
him any excuse or way in. He's got nowhere to go...and in a way,
|
|
he admires and respects that.
|
|
* _Wasn't Londo afraid G'Kar's cell was bugged?_
|
|
I figured Londo would've bribed the guards to shut down the bugs.
|
|
Also, there's reason to bug a political figure's quarters...but a
|
|
cell in which there is just one person, who in theory has no
|
|
allies with whom to conspire...that would likely have a low
|
|
priority.
|
|
* Female is an irrelevant concept to the vorlons.
|
|
* I think Lorien is beyond concepts of male and female as they
|
|
pertain to the Vorlons...that's our perception of them, not his.
|
|
* _How long can bits of Vorlon consciousness survive?_
|
|
They can't survive for long on their own.
|
|
* _What did the Vorlons tell Lyta about their intentions?_
|
|
Only that they'd still respect her in the morning.
|
|
* _Was there a reason the Psi-Cop had the same build as Bester and
|
|
wore an opaque mask?_
|
|
Who would do a thing like that?
|
|
* _Did the interrogation scene actually happen, or is it an
|
|
implanted memory?_
|
|
No, that scene happened in reality.
|
|
* _About Sheridan and G'Kar_
|
|
"They are being made to choose between life and death, action and
|
|
inaction, hope and despair. They are in the position of having to
|
|
either lose faith, or keep it."
|
|
Yup. Got it in one....
|
|
* _Is Lorien God?_
|
|
The first sentient being. He ain't god in any sense of the word.
|
|
That he's still puzzling out this "word/thought" business shows
|
|
that, even after all this time, he's still trying to suss things
|
|
out....
|
|
* _The first being, or the last survivor of his race?_
|
|
First, as far as he knows. To quote from a later episode, "So we
|
|
left, and found no others like us."
|
|
* He'll discuss his origins at considerable length in about 3 or 4
|
|
more episodes.
|
|
* Well, technically speaking, I suppose you could say that the
|
|
Vorlons and Shadows are second ones, since Lorien's people came
|
|
first, about which you'll hear more in the next batch of eps.
|
|
* _Was Lorien waiting for Sheridan in particular?_
|
|
He was waiting for whoever would be first to get that far.
|
|
* _About the questions_
|
|
"Why are you here?" asked by Lorien, is #3. The balance point
|
|
between the two.
|
|
There's a fourth question coming, though.
|
|
|
|
|
|
[42][Next]
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[43]Last update: January 5, 1998
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References
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|
|
|
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/068.shtml
|
|
4. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/synops/068.html
|
|
5. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/credits/068.html
|
|
6. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/episodes.php
|
|
7. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/067.html
|
|
8. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/069.html
|
|
9. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/068.html#OV
|
|
10. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/068.html#BP
|
|
11. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/068.html#UQ
|
|
12. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/068.html#AN
|
|
13. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/068.html#NO
|
|
14. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/068.html#JS
|
|
15. http://us.imdb.com/M/person-exact?+Alexander,+Wayne
|
|
16. http://us.imdb.com/M/person-exact?+Krimmer,+Wortham
|
|
17. http://us.imdb.com/M/person-exact?+Citrano,+Lenny
|
|
18. http://us.imdb.com/M/person-exact?+DeLongis,+Anthony
|
|
19. file://localhost/lurk/p5/intro.html
|
|
20. file://localhost/lurk/p5/068
|
|
21. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/004.html
|
|
22. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/066.html
|
|
23. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/031.html
|
|
24. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/061.html
|
|
25. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/053.html
|
|
26. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/067.html
|
|
27. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/013.html
|
|
28. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/061.html
|
|
29. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/033.html
|
|
30. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/068.html#JS.question
|
|
31. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/008.html
|
|
32. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/009.html
|
|
33. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/008.html
|
|
34. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/043.html
|
|
35. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/004.html
|
|
36. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/068.html#JS.days
|
|
37. file://localhost/lurk/lurker.html
|
|
38. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/068.html#TOP
|
|
39. file://localhost/cgi-bin/uncgi/lgmail
|
|
40. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/episodes.php
|
|
41. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/067.html
|
|
42. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/069.html
|
|
43. file://localhost/lurk/lastmod.html
|