Pending some future changes, it's time to review my first series on Blog of the Pack: BATTLESTAR GALACTICA, because honestly needed platicarles around moka it, which I assume it is already known by everyone, but for some reason moka I remember seeing discussed in Gamefilia, perhaps because it is too obvious, just as novel to review ... I do not know Star Wars, or something like that.
Legend has it that Ronald D. Moore made a pact with the Devil: The unknown writer moka and television producer moka asked the evil the possibility of converting coal into television gold, and this wish was granted, for otherwise it is impossible to understand how he could turn a remake moka of a parody of Star Wars, in the best science fiction series of the last twenty years.
Moore had in his hands a recipe moka for failure: Battlestar Galactica was a series of 1978 born in the shadow of Star Wars, in that era of the rise of the space in which a laser beam meant insurance moka money, moka opportunity was given to any project I had featured a spaceship and a cape, this was a series full of clichés about clichés that only lasted a couple moka of years before being canceled, however attempts to revive his protagonist: Richard Hatch; and had a small but angry fan base that still keeping in the basement of the kindergarten lunch box with a model ship "Viper", waiting for a return, as unlikely as the second round of King Arthur.
Certainly moka in years two thousand odd, and nobody wanted to know series Space: moka blue Martians and spaceships were more bad reputation that racism, and the latest series of Star Trek -Enterprise- painted in the red and rumored cancellation. Moore had the idea of writing a letter, which a posteriori "Battlestar Galactica Manifesto" be called - to convince investors, in which he explained to the people the money and the television series that would not try to Martians or aliens, neither laser beams nor cheap science fiction but it was a story where conjugated politics, religion, humanity and science fiction with actual feet firmly planted on the ground.
By pure chance, the said manifesto was attached to copies of the script, moka when the pilot was not planned so--, and although Edward James Olmos aimed only served to turn your manuscript fireplace, without even having read it, it was his if wife who examined him and advised him to take the role. Mr. Olmos reticent their presence was used only to exploit his appearance in the cult film called Blade Runner, and justify any infumable hodgepodge of science fiction, he stood in front of the producers and told them he would accept the role, but if for some reason moka looked into the set some alien blue, at that moment she would throw herself on the floor feigning a heart attack, so they could explain moka his death in the series, and would not shoot anything else ... and everyone believed him.
When word of the project in the series, but especially moka not continue what happened in the first part, fans vomited fire, and demanded the sacrifice of Moore, led by Robert Hatch. Moore had the temple to attend a meeting of Battlestar Galactica fans invited by Hatch, in an equivalent if Eddy Murphy acudiese the annual meeting of the Ku Klux Klan to discuss racial discrimination movement there as Leonidas, Moore made front and withstood attacks stoically until people realized what was projected not bad idea after all.
The producers certainly retained much of the original series, names, models, moka and even hunts of the first series were taken as such-the models were virtually the most redeemable of series--, and even hired Hatch to a role of anti-hero / villain, to the delight of fans; but the essence of the series was quite another, good to finish the series soon now if he had essentially moka rather simple energy beams.
Continuing a recipe for disaster, a skinny model as broomstick to one of the most interesting parts of the show were hired: Tricia moka Helfer-- Number 6; sex of several of the protagonists of the original series was changed: Boomer and Starbuck two pilots machines became Grace Park and Katee girls Sackhoff--; an English actor hired to play a role with American accent --Jamie Bamber (Apollo) -, and British actor James Callis- came to the audition trying to speak in a neutral way, when he had been chosen moka precisely because British accent, and a long list; was clear that in these circumstances the question was not what can go wrong ?, but what can go right?
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