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The Scripts of J. Michael Straczynski, Vol. 1

chromatic writes "It's hard to overestimate the influence that Babylon 5 had on American television, especially science fiction and dramas. When it debuted, it was a smaller, scrappier competitor to Paramount's revitalized Star Trek franchise. When it ended, it had proven that not only could you tell a complex, layered story over multiple years (and through the demise of syndication, yearly struggles with funding, and often frustrating and unexpected troubles with schedules and actors), but that a lean, creator-driven show could succeed artistically." Read on for chromatic's review. The Scripts of J. Michael Straczynski, Vol. 1 author J. Michael Straczynski pages 454 publisher Synthetic Worlds Publishing rating Worth reading for B5 fans and television students. reviewer chromatic ISBN none summary Notes on and scripts to the first half of Babylon 5 season 1.

Through the course of the show, its creator J. Michael Straczynski (JMS) wrote 92 of the 110 episodes filmed, including every episode of seasons three and four and all but one episode of season five-- a record-breaking achievement. Now he's publishing all of his scripts, as written, in multiple volumes from Babylon5Scripts.com.

There are plenty of books about screenwriting and many include a few examples of actual scripts (another book from JMS himself reprints the script to the Hugo-award winning second season episode "The Coming of Shadows"). Yet what other book or series of books even promises to show the development of a series from inspiration to the final frame of the final episode? What's in the book (and the forthcoming volumes) for a Babylon 5 or sci-fan, let alone someone interested in the mechanics of television?

The Scripts of J. Michael Straczynski, volume 1 includes the first five JMS-penned episodes from season one, as well as the unfilmed draft of the pilot movie "The Gathering". Each episode includes a short essay with notable information about the writing, planning, or filming of the episode. There's also a short section of photos at the end, along with seven memos from the start of the project through the filming of the pilot.

Subsequent volumes reportedly will include similar information. The second, including the remaining seven episode JMS wrote for season one, is out and shipping now. The rest will follow every few weeks. Positives

The big draw, of course, is the scripts themselves. In particular, the draft of the pilot episode, "The Gathering", has a few major changes from the filmed version. Delenn, the Minbari ambassador, is still a masculine character in this draft. Kosh, the Vorlon ambassador and victim of an assassination plot, has a lifemate travelling with him on the station. For the most part, the changes made before filming are obviously for the better. (Though cutting Kosh's lifemate was the right choice, losing a line of dialogue about one reason for the Vorlons's obvious paranoia about their biology was a pity.)

The scripts appear as written, including typos and, occasionally, vague hints to what will occur later in the series. For example, the first appearance of a First Ones ship (the Walkers at Sigma 957 in the episode "Mind War") has an explicit note that the as-yet unmentioned "Shadowmen" ship will look very different. Another suggestion during the scene of the battle with raiders recommends using real-world physics for the Starfury crafts to differentiate from other dogfights-in-space shows.

If you're interested in scriptwriting, directing, acting, or editing, comparing the script to the finished product may be very educational. Straczynski writes sparse action, leaving most of the interpretation out of the script. Of course, the episodes so far are mostly character and background pieces with comparatively few action or effects scenes needing guidance. It may be that larger battles and flashbacks have more description; it's too early to tell.

The new material is interesting, and in a few places tells stories that never actually left the set. One explains why the change of station telepath from Lyta Alexander to Talia Winters took place between the pilot and the first episode. Another expands on the trials of pitching a show to television executives, especially during the first few attempts of the late '80s. None of this is essential to enjoying the show, but it does provide background for why things in the series happened the way they did. Drawbacks

Other scripts contain scenes that never actually aired. It's not always obvious whether this was due to time constraints, edits, or other decisions. Aside from a few mentions in the episode introductions, there are no notes in the scripts themselves related to what did and didn't make it to the screen. This may not be a drawback; they're much more readable this way and serious students may want to watch and read the episodes simultaneously anyway.

Though the scripts represent the bulk of the show and the introductions and memos provide some detail, there are plenty of decisions made during filming that don't actually have explanations in the book where you might expect them. Walter Koenig's character of Bester, the Psi-Cop, has a crippled hand, yet the book doesn't mention this at all. It's difficult to know how much detail to include -- and the permissions and availability of the material may make it difficult to include (production notes? director notes?) -- but this is by no means the whole story. Keep the Lurker's Guide handy for more details.

The book itself is solid but not remarkable. The script formatting reproduces faithfully an actual shooting script in length and layout. The print quality is good.

Very picky readers may quibble about the length and weight of the book -- most of the non-script material uses whitespace a little too generously, with large top and bottom margins and more than double-spaced type allowing only around twenty lines of text on a letter-sized page. Hopefully subsequent volumes will tighten the layout somewhat. Conclusion

While it's always possible to find bootleg or transcribed scripts online or at conventions, often at vastly inflated prices, the chance to read the official versions as filmed is worth considering for serious students of film or television as well as Babylon 5 fans. The bonus materials are nice, but they're probably more interesting to fans than students; more information about the process of how a script went from the paper to film might satisfy both groups.

The quibbles are minor; if you're already a Babylon 5 fan, you know what to expect here. If you're not a fan or a screenplay geek, this isn't the place to start -- but if you find the creative processes behind television or movies fascinating, this is an easy way to soak up wisdom and hard-earned experience. It's well worth your time to compare a few episodes in script and filmed form.

chromatic's life goals include writing a novel (done), a comic book, and an episode of a television series. Then he can sleep. Slashdot welcomes readers' book reviews -- to see your own review here, read the book review guidelines, then visit the submission page.

5 of 347 comments (clear)

  1. get over it people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Troll

    FANTASY == NOT REAL

  2. The creative processes behind television or movies by fireboy1919 · · Score: -1, Troll

    I don't know that Babylon 5's process can be generalized to all things, or even that all the decisions were good ones.

    I mean, who thinks "Special Effects? Lets get some old Amiga computers and use this 'Video Toaster' software. That works great!."

    I think that has a lot more to do with the quality of the visuals than a lack of money.

    --
    Mod me down and I will become more powerful than you can possibly imagine!
  3. Does anyone really care? by GecKo213 · · Score: -1, Troll

    As far as I'm concerned there is only Star Trek (The Next Generation too) and Star Wars. Any other series that I have seen has not impressed me, and is most likely the primary reason for their demise. By no means am I trying to be anti-SciFi here, but seriously has any other show captured anyone as those did? Some of them have "Hot Chicks" in skin tight uniforms, but that's about the extent of the draw. Troll/Flamebait mod me if you must, but that is my opinion and I'm not afraid to post it.

    -- Opinions expressed are just that, opinions and by no means should make you feel like less of a person if you happen to have opposing views. Furthermore, I'm not trying to make enemies, merely stating my personal observations.

    Generation Trance: What generation are you?
    --
    Generation Trance: What generation are you?
  4. Has anyone else noticed... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Troll

    There are a lot of similarities between the B5 humans under President Clark and the USA under President Bush?

    The president illegally gains power... (Clark by assasinating Santago, Bush by fixing elections)

    The president puts his supporters (who are incompetent at best) in positions of power (Clark restructures the military, Bush uses Condaleeza Rice, head of the CIA, head of FEMA)

    The president uses threats (which he is partly responsible for) of planetary/national security to introduce opressive laws & tighten security. (Clark uses shadow/alien threats, Bush uses terrorism)

    The president is supported/backed by powerful/influencial organisations... (Psi Cops & Haliburton)

    A police force answerable only to him (Nightwatch/Ministry of Peace = Homeland Security) that spies on the public.

    Background checks on citizens without their knowledge (Clark uses Nightwatch & Teeps, Bush uses 30,000 National Security letters & the PARTIOT ACT)

    How long until filmmakers are arrested for sedition?

    Will Bush use the next terrorist attack to declare martial law? (it'll have to be chemical/biological/nuclear)

  5. it has to be said by MORTAR_COMBAT! · · Score: 0, Troll

    babylon 5 sucked, you pretentious sonsofbitches. the emperor has no clothes.

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    MORTAR COMBAT!