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<!-- TITLE Exogenesis -->
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<h2><a name="OV">Overview</a></h2>
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<blockquote><cite>
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Marcus and Dr. Franklin combat an invasion by parasitic aliens that attach
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themselves to humans. Ivanova investigates the possibility of bringing a
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new member into the conspiracy.
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</cite>
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<a href="http://us.imdb.com/M/person-exact?+Cox,+Joshua">Joshua Cox</a> as Corwin.
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<a href="http://us.imdb.com/M/person-exact?+Morris,+Aubrey">Aubrey Morris</a> as Duncan.
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<a href="http://us.imdb.com/M/person-exact?+Warwick,+James">James Warwick</a> as Matthew Duffin.
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</blockquote>
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<pre><a href="/lurk/p5/intro.html">P5 Rating</a>: <a href="/lurk/p5/051">7.34</a>
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Production number: 307
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Original air week: February 12, 1996
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<a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B00009OOFK/thelurkersguidet">DVD release date</a>: August 12, 2003
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Written by J. Michael Straczynski
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Directed by Kevin Cremin
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</pre>
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<h3>Watch For</h3>
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<ul>
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<li> Signs on the wall in the Brown Sector marketplace.
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</ul>
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<p>
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<hr size=3>
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<h2><a name="BP">Backplot</a></h2>
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<ul>
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<li> A race of symbiotes, the Vindrizi, has existed for half a million
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years. They were created as
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recorders, observing events all over the galaxy so that others
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can learn about the past when all the books and records have been
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swallowed by the next dark age. They survive by passing from host
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to host, always seeking volunteers who have nothing left to live for
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and want to live out their lives participating in a grand endeavor.
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<li> The Shadows have been building up forces in sector 800, near the border
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of Centauri space.
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</ul>
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<h2><a name="UQ">Unanswered Questions</a></h2>
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<ul>
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<li> What is the "package" from Mars that Marcus is waiting for?
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<li> Why are the Shadows building up their forces in sector 800?
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<li> Will Corwin prove problematic for the conspiracy of light?
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<li> Who created the Vindrizi half a million years ago, and what made
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them think such living histories would become necessary?
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</ul>
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<h2><a name="AN">Analysis</a></h2>
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<ul>
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<li> It's never made clear how much time has passed before the Vindrizi's
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departure, but it's odd that Sheridan and company didn't jump at the
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chance to get all the information they could about the Shadows and
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the previous wars while the Vindrizi were still aboard. Of course,
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it's possible such discussions took place, but they're never mentioned.
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<li> Now that Sheridan and his people know about the Vindrizi, perhaps
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they'll call upon them in the future.
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<li> What came in on the ship at the beginning of the episode? The two
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people waiting for the ship were quite happy to see it arrive. Were
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they not yet joined with the Vindrizi, or did the ship simply carry
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more of their kind?
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<li> <a name="marcus">Marcus seems a good deal less concerned with</a>
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secrecy than his
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coconspirators; he was talking to Garibaldi openly, and loudly, about
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his network of contacts in a public place. By contrast, Ivanova and
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Sheridan didn't even want to be <em>seen</em> with him at the
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Earhart's party for fear of raising questions.
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<li> Why is Ivanova so hostile toward Marcus? Have her last few romantic
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experiences made her want to discourage any new developments in that
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area? (For example,
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<a href="007.html">"The War Prayer"</a>
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and
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<a href="041.html">"Divided Loyalties."</a>)
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<li> During the medical staff meeting, Franklin mentions that there's a
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need for Drazi blood. Is the station being flooded with Drazi refugees,
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much like it was with Narn refugees while the Narn-Centauri War was at
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its peak? If so, is Babylon 5 becoming a sort of haven for refugees
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of all stripes?
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</ul>
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<h2><a name="NO">Notes</a></h2>
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<ul>
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<li> Duncan's line, "I don't like being poked by doctors," is also spoken
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by the main character Alex in Stanley Kubrick's
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<a href="http://us.imdb.com/M/title-exact?title=A+Clockwork+Orange">"A Clockwork Orange."</a>
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<p>
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<li> The ship carrying the Vindrizi is called the Dyson, most likely named
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for physicist Freeman Dyson.
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<p>
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<li> <a name="NO.macbeth">Marcus quotes from Dickens'</a>
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"A Christmas Carol" to Garibaldi, and from
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Shakespeare's "Macbeth" when he wakes Duncan up. Note that Marcus
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refers to Macbeth as "the Scottish play," and replaces "Macbeth" with
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"Marcus" in his quote -- there is a superstition
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among actors that referring to Macbeth by name is bad luck. (See
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<a href="#JS.macbeth">jms speaks</a>)
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<p>
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The particular Macbeth quotes are from Act II, scene 2:
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<blockquote>
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Methought I heard a voice cry "Sleep no more!<br>
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Macbeth does murder sleep" -- the innocent sleep,<br>
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Sleep that knits up the raveled sleave of care,<br>
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The death of each day's life, sore labor's bath,<br>
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Balm of hurt minds, great nature's second course,<br>
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Chief nourisher in life's feast.
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</blockquote>
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<p>
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Then, a moment later:
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<blockquote>
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Still it cried "Sleep no more!" to all the house.<br>
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"Glamis hath murdered sleep, and therefore Cawdor<br>
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Shall sleep no more. Macbeth shall sleep no more."
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</blockquote>
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<p>
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Glamis and Cawdor are two earl titles that Macbeth holds.
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<p>
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<li> Marcus refers to his fighting staff as a "Copeland J5000" while trying
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to convince the Vindrizi it's a medical instrument. That's most likely
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a reference to producer John Copeland.
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<p>
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<li> The Vindrizi's musing about what they've experienced is reminiscent of
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Batty's dying words at the end of the movie
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<a href="http://kzsu.stanford.edu/uwi/br/off-world.html">"Blade Runner."</a>
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</ul>
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<h2><a name="JS">jms speaks</a></h2>
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<ul>
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<li> "Exogenesis," which we just started filming this week, is probably our
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most "ordinary" story of the batch, though it puts a new spin on
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several traditional story elements.
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<p>
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<li>@@@865182196 Sometimes I do like to take stories that have always
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been done one way, and turn them on their heads to see what new
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possibilities tumble out. It's fun....
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<p>
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<li> "Exogenesis" - The last non-arc episode for some time. Puts Dr.
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Franklin and Marcus together investigating some odd happenings in
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DownBelow that may indicate some kind of alien influence. Does,
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however, introduce a thread that will play out over time.
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<p>
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<li> Another "oh, yeah, I nearly forgot"...for those out there who have
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young kids, or if you're a bit on the squeamish side yourself...there's
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one EFX shot at the end of the teaser for "Exogenesis" that you may want
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to avoid. When it was finished, John Copeland brought it into my office,
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fired it up on my TV, and looked away, saying, "You look, it creeps me
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out too much to look at it again." It's...pretty strong. So you'll miss
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the minimum possible, here's the sequence: first there's the Screaming
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Man (a), then a cutaway to two people (b), then back at the Man for the
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first part of the shot (c), the two people again (d), the man (e), and
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finally the two people. What you want to avoid, if there are real young
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kids in the room, are shots c and e. That's it for the whole episode.
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For non-netted folks, it'll go by pretty fast, but I figured it'd be
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worth mentioning as an added piece of info for the netted amongst us.
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<p>
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<li>@@@865182196 <em>How is your mental image of the arc holding
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up?</em><br>
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The overview still holds up pretty well, I think. Toward the end of
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season two, I think things got just a *tad* too convoluted in places, so
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that's being cleared up a bit, the dry brush trimmed back, the red
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herrings cleared away, because we've got to start focusing on the real
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story, not the misdirections. That's probably the one thing I'd go back
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and revise, because in general, you can't just bring something up and
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walk away form (from) it later; it's got to either fit, or be
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reasonably, logically explained away. So some time has to be spent on
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that now. But that's been done pretty effectively in this first batch
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of episodes, and now we're down to really cranking on the shadow war.
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<p>
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In four more episodes (writing-wise), I'll be at the exact midpoint
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in the story, which on one level is a little hard to believe; it's gont
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(gone) by so fast. Seems like yesterday that we just got started.
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Which is why the overview is very helpful; by constantly reminding me
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where we should be, it doesn't let me get lost in the neverwhere of TV
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production.
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<p>
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All things considered...we've had some bumps on the ride, a detour
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here and there, the occasional flat tire, but doggone it if the old
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thing seems to have a mind of its own; I started writing #7 the other
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day, and I'm well past halfway finished writing it, it's coming out
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almost as though it already existed, and I've just managed to "tune
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into" it, like the sculpter who knows that inside a block of wood is a
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horse, he just has to start chopping and cutting until he finds and
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relases it.
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<p>
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So long answer to a short question...we're still on course, and I'm
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still quite pleased with where we're going, and how we're getting there.
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<p>
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<li> Thanks. Yeah, Exo is the last non-arc episode for a long time,
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and the last chance to catch one's breath before the big fall.
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<p>
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My personal evaluation of the episode is that it's okay. The
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second half, I think, isn't as strong as the first half. Halfway
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through writing the episode, we had a problem come up in production
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that unexpectedly took me away from the script for about a week.
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(Nothing major, but it had to be dealt with and it took time.)
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Usually, I write copious notes on a script before I begin writing it.
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In this case, the story was so crystalline clear in my head that I just
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dived in, and was blasting away terrific when the hit came midway
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through. By the time I got back, I'd lost some of the fingerprints of
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the story, and had to kind of re-find them again. Mainly, I think the
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expository sequence at the end could've been done better.
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<p>
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Needless to say, that's the last time I trusted myself without
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notes, no matter how well I "see" the episode in my head. It'd be a
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great script for second or first season, but we have to keep raising
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the bar, every aspect has to be better than the last thing we did, so
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for my money it's not quite up to that standard. Happily, it's the
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*only* episode this season that I feel that way about...the rest are
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all just nifty.
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<p>
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That said, I think it has some great moments for Marcus, Franklin
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and others...and yes, there's a lot more planned with Franklin coming
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up this season, particularly toward the latter third of the season.
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<p>
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<li> Thanks (I think). Yeah, I've said from the git-go that in my
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view the second half of Exo isn't up to the first half. It is, in my
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view, the weakest of this season's 22. On the flip side, that means
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the other 21 are pretty nifty.
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<p>
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Agree with you on Marcus. I'm finding I have the same problem
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with him I have with Londo...getting him to shut up once I wire him up
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and let him go. He's a lot of fun to write, in that he can do the
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physical action stuff very well, he can do comedy, more dramatic
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emotional stuff...the whole range. I can take him places and do things
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with him that I can't in some ways for the other characters, in that he
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has only one responsibility, whereas the others have larger
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responsibilities to more people.
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<p>
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<li>@@@865182196 <em>What did Joshua Cox think of Corwin getting to leave
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C&C for a change?</em><br>
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He loved it.
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<p>
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<li> <em><a href="#NO.macbeth">About the avoidance of the name "Macbeth"</a>
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</em><br>
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<a name="JS.macbeth">Just figured I'd use that description of it</a>
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rather than Macbeth, to make it a bit more obscure, but also some
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actors do have a problem saying the name Macbeth or being around it
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when it's said (note: Jason isn't one of them). so it was also a
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courtesy. (Later on, while shooting "A Late Delivery From Avalon,"
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one of the hair dressers made the error of referring to Macbeth out
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loud in front of Michael York, and had to go through the whole
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undo-the-curse routine, walking around the stages three times, etc.)
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<p>
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<li> I like Marcus quoting literature, Shakespeare included. So
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it's something I've peppered through his character, though trying to
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avoid too much of it.
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<p>
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<li> Yes, Marcus and Ivanova should get along
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well...assuming one doesn't kill the other first....
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<p>
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<li>@@@865182197 <em>Why doesn't Marcus wear a link?</em><br>
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I just summoned up Marcus in my head. Here's what he said: "Because I
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won't wear the bloody thing, that's why. Bad enough you've got those
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pagers you wear in 1996, no privacy, no chance to get away, always at
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somebody's beck and call. Why not just put a leash around your neck and
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get it over with? It'd be faster and a good deal more honest. I'm down
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in the bar trying to be inconspicuous, dangerous characters on all
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sides, trying not to be noticed...and the link goes off, and I'm dead.
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Or at minimum seriously thumped. No, absolutely not. You'll never get
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me to wear one of those."
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<p>
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(This is btw the reason why I absolutely *refuse* to wear a pager
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myself.)
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<p>
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<li> <em>Was that Sean Connery's voice at the beginning?</em><br>
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It was a voice in the walla group that basically came out
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sounding that way.
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<p>
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<li>@@@869590206 <em>Response to the above from producer George
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Johnsen</em><br>
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No, it is Doug Cook, one of our Walla people doing a fair Sean
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imitation which was not his intention.
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<p>
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<li> <em>Where did Franklin's stim abuse problem go?</em><br>
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It hasn't come to a head yet. Any abuser of substances has moments
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when he's up, and moments when he's down, moments when he seems fine,
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moments when he's not.
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</ul>
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