dbskyler: (Default)
dbskyler ([personal profile] dbskyler) wrote2009-05-27 11:27 pm
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"Battlefield" commentary rec

Just finished listening to the commentary on the "Battlefield" DVD and it was hilarious. Basically script editor Andrew Cartmel and author Ben Aaronovitch spent the entire time making digs at the production values, pointing out dodgy special effects, plot-crucial sound effects that were in the script but didn't make it into the episode, a spaceship that's supposed to be underwater but doesn't look like it's underwater, etc., etc. Aaronovitch also made multiple disparaging remarks about his own writing -- he said quite openly that he feels the script is not his best work. Meanwhile Angela Bruce (Bambera), Sophie Aldred (Ace) and Nicholas Courtney (the Brig : D) didn't seem to know quite what to say in response. It's pretty funny. At least everyone agreed that the acting was good, which it was.

I'm a little picky about commentaries because I sometimes find them incredibly boring, but I absolutely recommend this one. Definitely not at all boring, and full of interesting insights into what went into making the show (and what didn't go into making the show, but should have).

And I don't think the script was that bad, truthfully. Believe me, RTD has done far worse.

[identity profile] dbskyler.livejournal.com 2009-06-02 01:28 am (UTC)(link)
a lot of the first releases the cast and crew are all a little 'What is this commentary thing? What are we allowed to say?

Very true. And I think that at first the cast was encouraged to do no preparation, but simply sit down and watch and react naturally, which does sometimes give you some great moments -- Tom and Lis' interactions on "The Hand of Fear" commentary make me smile every time -- but it also, and inevitably, I think, means there will be long stretches of not-much-to-say-for-this-scene. The commentaries I enjoy most are the ones where the person has obviously prepared and thought about what anecdotes they can tell for various points in the story. I think it also takes a certain skill, an ability to think of interesting things to say off-the-cuff, and that skill is, as far as I can tell, completely unrelated to acting ability. Which is why some of the best commentaries I've listened to weren't done by actors at all -- e.g., Phil Collinson, and as I said in the post above, Andrew Cartmel and Ben Aaronovitch.

By the way, I don't blame the people who aren't good at it -- I'm sure it's hard, and personally, I'm pretty sure I would suck at it.

I don't have any Davison episodes in my to-be-watched queue, but now I'm going to have to put some in just so I can hear Janet Fielding. She sounds like the best kind of commentator -- the evil instigator. : )