Alyson: that's a very good analysis of the situation.
>Compounded on this dynamic seems to be an additional one of lack of >knowledge on some (both?) of the TNT parties about when and where they >can affect the product.
This is also very much true. In one scene we shot, there's a slight reflection on the monitor wherein we can see Gideon's face reflected. (Intentional on the director's part.) They asked if we could give them the scene without the reflection. No, we can't...unless we reshoot it.
One other area where we ran up against a problem with understanding was on the EFX and delivery. They simply couldn't visualize what was going into a CGI shot before we actually *did* it. They'd look at a scene where we'd slugged time for action, and think it was slow, because no, there isn't anything there NOW, but there will be when the CGI is done.
They also kept saying (after the first 5) that the show was too dark, that they couldn't see anything, that the colors were muted. That's one reason they wanted the sets repainted, to make them more colorful. We kept saying, no, it's NOT too dark, we don't know where you're getting that.
I finally found out when I went to visit someone at TNT and looked at what THEY were looking at...not the digibeta footage, or a good clean copy of the edit...they were looking at a fourth- or fifth-generation dub of the *avid output*, which is a digitized version of the film, somewhat low-res.
So finally, we brought in their tech guy, and showed him the digital beta version, the actual footage. He looked at it, and said, "Oh, okay, you're right, it's not dark at all." But by then the mandate had come down from on high, LIGHTEN THE SCENES. Which is why the first five have a moodier, more stylistic look to them than the rest.
jms
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