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View Full Version : New Battlestar Galactica spin-off/prequel: Blood and Chrome (ACTUALLY SOUNDS GOOD)


Magus
10-23-2010, 03:14 PM
http://www.tvsquad.com/2010/10/22/syfy-adama-blood-and-chrome/

A few months ago, the Syfy network commissioned an online series called 'Battlestar Galactica: Blood & Chrome,' a chronicle of the war experiences of young William Adama.

The network liked Michael Taylor's script for the project so much that Syfy will air 'Battlestar Galactica: Blood & Chrome' on the network as the pilot for a possible young Adama TV series.

Mark Stern, Syfy's executive vice president of original programming and the co-head of original content for Universal Cable Productions, said the network hoped to begin production on the pilot in Vancouver in early 2011.

"When we read Michael's script, it was so clearly a full-blown pilot for a series," Stern said in a Thursday interview. "The scope is fantastic and bigger, I think, than anticipated, so we said, 'Let's do it as a 2-hour backdoor pilot.' ... We're trying to get up and running as soon as possible."
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Read on for more on 'Blood & Chrome' as well as a bit of news on 'Caprica,' another 'Battlestar Galactica' spinoff.

'Blood & Chrome' won't air until the fourth quarter of 2011 at the earliest, Stern said, but an early 2012 debut sounds more likely, especially if the network decides to go forward with a full series. Given the project's origins as an online project, expect lots of Web extras as well.

Fans missing the Battlestar Galactica itself -- the valiant old ship that housed Adama, Starbuck, Apollo and the rest -- will get to see it once again, or a version of it, in the new show. High-resolution digital scans were made of all the 'Battlestar Galactica' sets before they were torn down, and those scans will be used in the new project, which, like Syfy's 'Sanctuary,' will employ cutting-edge computer effects to supply virtual sets.

"It's an opportunity to 'see them before they were famous,'" Stern said of 'Blood & Chrome,' which takes place roughly 20 years after the events of 'Caprica' and about 40 years before the events of 'BSG.' "Here's the Battlestar Galactica as a brand-new, shiny ship -- well, not shiny, but as a new ship that had just been commissioned. What was that like?"

The Adama of 'Battlestar Galactica,' as so memorably played by Edward James Olmos, was a capable military commander leading the fight against the Cylon race under almost impossible conditions. Ensign William Adama of 'Blood & Chrome' is newly minted Viper pilot, one who goes through a challenging experiences on a difficult mission.

"This is very much an action-adventure, war series," Stern said. "This is definitely dealing with people who are fighting the fight. ... As you hope 'Battlestar' would do, it kind of comments on that process a little bit... but not in a preachy way, not in an issues-oriented way, not in a hitting-you-over-the-head way. Really, the fabric and the canvas of the series are people in the fight and what they grapple with when it comes to each other and what they grapple with when it comes to the enemy they're fighting."

"Your way into the story is a young William Adama who is not the grizzled old veteran we have come to love in 'BSG,'" Stern noted. "This is someone who is more like us, in terms of coming into this with certain preconceptions and learning as you go. ... It's very much about relationships along the way. I think ultimately the arc of the pilot and of the series is about getting Adama to be who you came to know in 'BSG,' but it's also about the deep relationships he forms. And I don't think there are any deeper relationships than the ones you form in life-or-death situations."

In a July interview, Taylor, a 'Battlestar Galactica' and 'Caprica' co-executive producer, said 'Blood & Chrome' was about "a young man's initiation into war: both the realities of war as fought by soldiers on the ground (and in Battlestars and Vipers), and the somewhat less real version portrayed in the media."

Ronald D. Moore, 'BSG's' executive producer, was "in the room" when the 'Blood & Chrome' story was conceived; Stern called him the "godfather" of the project. However at this time, Moore, who has a deal with Sony and is developing projects like 'The Wild, Wild West' there, has no official role on 'Blood & Chrome.'

Given that a full-blown series, if one is ordered, might not go into production for a year, Stern said the hope is that Moore might be able to come on board if 'Blood & Chrome' goes forward beyond the pilot. David Eick and Taylor are executive producers and Bradley Thompson and David Weddle are producers on 'Blood & Chrome'; all are veterans of 'BSG.'

Stern said actor Nico Cortez was "great" as young Adama in the 'BSG' movie 'Razor,' but it is not certain that he will take the lead in 'Blood & Chrome.' "I'm assuming there will be a full casting process for this pilot, but with Nico at the top of the list," Stern said. There's also a chance that we'll meet younger versions of other 'Battlestar' characters or people connected to either that world or to 'Caprica,' but the new project would try to do those things with "a light touch," Stern said.

Asked if 'BSG' composer Bear McCreary would do the music for 'Blood & Chrome,' Stern said no deal had been struck but he "couldn't imagine" the project without a McCreary score.

For 'Caprica' fans wondering what all this means for their show, Stern noted that 'Blood & Chrome' was developed separately from the other 'Battlestar' spinoff, which is in the midst of airing season 1 episodes now.

"To be really categorical about it, this is not about finding something else so we can get rid of 'Caprica," Stern said. "I don't know the fate of 'Caprica' yet, but, if anything, 'Blood & Chrome' going to series would only be a great opportunity to pair it with something.'

Stern said the decision on whether to give 'Caprica' a second season would be made no later than Nov. 15.

A few more clues about the 'Blood & Chrome' story follow. Look away if you'd rather not know them.

'Blood & Chrome,' which takes place in the tenth year of the Cylon War, follows Adama, a recent Academy graduate, as he and a rookie pilot take a female character on an important mission. There's a potential love interest for Adama in the story, but the pilot is basically about that mission, which, if successful, could turn the tide of the war.

UPDATE 4 pm CT: Here's the official press release about the project from Syfy:

New York, NY – October 22, 2010 – Syfy is readying an exciting all-new chapter in the Battlestar Galactica saga with a greenlight for Battlestar Galactica: Blood & Chrome from Executive Producer David Eick, it was announced today by Mark Stern, Executive Vice President of Original Programming, Syfy and Co-Head of Content for Universal Cable Productions. Universal Cable Productions will produce the 2-hour pilot with Syfy utilizing cutting edge CGI and virtual technology.

Battlestar Galactica: Blood & Chrome takes place in the 10th year of the first Cylon war. As the battle between humans and their creation, a sentient robotic race, rages across the 12 colonial worlds, a brash rookie viper pilot enters the fray. Ensign William Adama, barely in his 20's and a recent Academy graduate, finds himself assigned to the newest battlestar in the Colonial fleet... the Galactica. The talented but hot-headed risk-taker soon finds himself leading a dangerous top secret mission that, if successful, will turn the tide of the decade long war in favor of the desperate fleet.

"The 'Galactica' universe as re-imagined by Ron Moore and David Eick is rich with possibilities and backstory," said Mark Stern. "We jumped at the chance to revisit the William Adama character and explore this exciting chapter in the BSG narrative which falls between the events of the original series and the prequel, 'Caprica,' currently airing on Syfy."

"While maintaining the themes of politics, social propaganda, and the timeless question: what does it mean to be human? – 'Blood & Chrome' will also return us to the authentic, relentless depiction of combat and the agony and ecstasy of human-Cylon war, which was the hallmark of 'Battlestar Galactica's' early seasons," said David Eick.

Michael Taylor wrote the teleplay from a story by Eick, Taylor and Bradley Thompson & David Weddle.

I dunno about you guys, but this sounds like what people actually wanted in a prequel to BSG (what I originally imagined Caprica was going to be like until I actually saw it), and the young Adama part in Razor was my favorite part of the movie (the freefall battle with the old-model Cylon was pretty great).

It also sounds a bit like the death knell of Caprica unless it is getting better ratings than I think it is (I can barely stand to watch it).

Note: I decided to make this a separate topic rather than bump the other Battlestar/Caprica topic but if a mod thinks it would be better merged that is cool.

Fifthfiend
10-25-2010, 02:46 PM
I feel like a young Adama series would be kind of hard to watch knowing where everything inevitably goes.

It'd just be like "dead in nuclear armageddon, dead in nuclear armageddon, dead in nuclear armageddon, hangs on for a lousy couple of years then dies on prehistoric Earth, dead in nuclear armageddon..."

Magus
10-25-2010, 02:49 PM
I see it as a possible return to the more innocent days of the old '70s series, wherein the nuclear armageddons were more lighthearted and frivolous.

Then again Razor showed how the original Hybrids were made so there goes that hunky dory possibility.

bluestarultor
10-25-2010, 03:20 PM
My major concern with this is that it's going to be on SyFy. This is a network known for letting its best series all die, popularity be damned. This could shoot diamonds out of your speakers and still be replaced after a season by some bullshit about killer Cheese Whiz.


If it were to go to a better network, it might have a better chance. Also, I might be able to see it. I don't get SyFy. :(

Fifthfiend
10-25-2010, 03:26 PM
I kind of wish that Galactica had been abruptly and inexplicably cancelled after three seasons in spite of its high ratings at the time.

Magus
10-26-2010, 04:20 PM
There would be the problem with the mail bombs if they did that.

Fifthfiend
10-27-2010, 07:04 PM
I just worked out my other problem with caring about anything Galactica-related now, which is that canonically the answer to everything in the series is God did it. There's effectively only one character, that character is God, and everything we see is him playing hand-puppets with himself.

Nique
10-27-2010, 07:59 PM
I'm not sure if I can handle another BSG series. When I see, within the span of one episode, the writers go from heavily implied rape directly to an actual albeit brief depiction of rape and then later show a seemingly totally happy person put a bullet through their head, I get slightly depressed.

Fifthfiend
10-27-2010, 08:32 PM
a seemingly totally happy person

This actually isn't really uncommon among suicide victims

Nique
10-27-2010, 09:12 PM
Exactly.

It is to the show's credit, possibly, to show realistic or plausible reactions to incredibly horrible circumstances, but it is still pretty hard to watch.

Archbio
10-27-2010, 09:24 PM
The title is appropriate: chrome tends to be grey.

Fifthfiend
10-27-2010, 09:49 PM
But Galactica didn't so much tend to be gray as more hilariously antiwhite and negablack.

Archbio
10-27-2010, 09:56 PM
Most viewers (like Cavil) don't have the sophisticated optics necessary to see those parts of the alignmentoplotic spectrum as anything more than a big muddle of grey.