From: J. Michael Straczynski <71016.1644@compuserve.com>
Subject: The Guide To B5 on TNT
To: CIS
Date: 12/27/1997 10:01:00 AM
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Message 1 in thread
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{original post had no questions}
Yeah, it's a struggle, and hard work, no mistake, but we also have our fair share of fun as well. What makes it more bearable is that we've instituted a humane system of film-making. Most shows shoot 16 hour days and then some. We shoot 12 and that's it. If you plan out what you're doing properly, and don't get reckless, you can do that. The Directors' Guild has been fighting for 12 hour days for years, and been told that it couldn't be done. Then recently they heard about us, and their jaws dropped, and they're coming out to do an article that says, in essence, see, it CAN be done. And has been done successfully for 5 years.
jms |
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From: J. Michael Straczynski <71016.1644@compuserve.com>
Subject: The Guide To B5 on TNT
To: CIS
Date: 12/27/1997 2:44:00 PM
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Message 2 in thread
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Neil S. Turkenkopf <102664.3532@compuserve.com> asks: > Doesn't the sound of all those jaws dropping give you a headache?
I think the only reason we're still amazing them is that they're only now finding *out* about us. We're doing what we've been doing for 5 years now, it's just taken folks this long to notice us (which is about what I figured would be the case going in).
jms |
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From: J. Michael Straczynski <71016.1644@compuserve.com>
Subject: The Guide To B5 on TNT
To: CIS
Date: 12/29/1997 1:37:00 PM
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Message 3 in thread
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{original post had no questions}
I agree...it's just common sense, really.
Who knew it was in such short supply?
jms |
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From: J. Michael Straczynski <71016.1644@compuserve.com>
Subject: The Guide To B5 on TNT
To: CIS
Date: 12/29/1997 6:21:00 PM
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Message 4 in thread
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{original post had no questions}
It's both. Even in the first two years of the show, we kept to 12 hour days by virtue of making sure we were always 3-4 scripts ahead of where we were shooting, which is what makes all the difference in the world (on most shows you're lucky if you're one ahead, and sometimes pages are landing on the stage while you're shooting). You get your writers working early, and make your notes clear, to minimize mistakes.
Also, bear in mind that with the exception of maybe a half-dozen scripts, most of them by Larry, all but one of the freelance S1-2 scripts were based on premises I assigned to the writers...which in turn were based on my notes, which I give to John each season as a kind of crib sheet for the overall production of that season's shows, allowing our people to have months of cognitive lead time (where possible) on sets, costumes, that sort of thing.
jms |
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