And you didn't even mention the nifty screen displays....
Okay, so it's a given: anything I say here has to be considered from the point of view that I have an agenda. And is thus suspect. So with that out of the way...I saw the pilot for "Space Rangers" the other day, a network star cops type series. ILM did some CGI space effects for the pilot, and I was curious to see it.
Oh, man...what a piece of...well, this is a public forum. On a writing level, it's one of those scripts that mistakes banter for dialogue, and annoying, stupid people for characterization. Just awful. As for the CGI stuf...there were only a handful of shots, they looked prosaic for the most part, one or two were very nice, and one or two were dreadful. (By comparison, where they did 5-6 CGI shots for that one-hour show, we're doing 51 CGI shots for our two-hour show. And it will cost half of what ILM charged. And look better.)
Really annoying.
Anyway....
Today we assembled all but one of the cast members of B5 for a *full* read-through of the script for the first time. We'd done scenes before, and had an early run-through with generic actors doing the lines, but this was the first time we went from FADE IN to FADE OUT with pretty much the entire cast. When you do a rehearsal like that, invariably you make changes, there are awkward moments as the cast settles into the roles.
My pen hit the paper a total of five times, each just a word here or there. That's it. And the wonderful part is that there was a chemistry among the full cast right from the word Go. It was as though they had been working together for years already. We cast *just* right. And they're a nice, professional bunch of people, not a prima donna ni the bunch. (Make that *in* the bunch.)
It went so well that, even though we'd set aside Friday for further rehearsal, our director thinks, and I agree, that they won't need it; they hit everything _ dialogue, attitude, delivery, pacing _ just right. (You always block out and work through a scene before you shoot it, on the stage, this is different.) You always go into any situatoin with the expectation that no one is going to really Get It. Here, they all got it, and I don't think Richard asked for more than three or four re-dos of scenes with different attitudes. And on those where he did, they Got It immediately on the second try.
This is *so* rare. I can't tell you.
T-minus 6 and counting.
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