You haven’t seen the last episode yet, have you?
No.
I’m not giving anything now, right?
No, no, you tilt in the direction I think it has been set. I’m more eager to see it now. I do have a performance question: How do you and your fellow actors play people who are not the same person?
In the first season we created the idea that they sit around dinner and they have the same action – it’s a cultural thing in these three. We have adopted these technical approaches to make their shared consciousness visually. We came up with those little dances that we will do on those dining table scenes. In season 2, we did something different. We created the idea that a person who doesn’t follow the rules, whether other brothers like it or not.
Oh, it’s very interesting.
I love working with Terry [Mann, who plays Brother Dusk] and Cassian [Bilton, who plays Brother Dawn] and Laura. This is a unique concept [writer and producer David S. Goyer] There are many different ways to study it with these cloned emperors. I think this is a completely primitive idea and is consistent with the question asked by Asimov Base There are other works of him.
I totally agree that this is a real primitive idea. There is always a new way to play basic blues, but it’s a very new idea that I can’t think of a predecessor. Maybe there is one.
It’s time too. It’s time. You can do this over time and generations, and that’s what I’m doing now in Season 3. We have been covering for 300 years now and we can still look back.
Just like Asimov.
He has been studying this story for many different decades, Base Books, writing them with collaborators and finding ways to find other short stories and storylines he wrote in other books and series and expanding the world Base.
Yes, but I also think about it, a lot of the original material can be overwhelming.
I really like that in this show we didn’t treat the production of the series like fan novels, where would we be OK, now we’ve finished the scenario where this happens, now we’ve finished the scenario where this happens, this happens, this happens. But we have the grand slam of the story that Isaac Asimov left on the table, and we can explore the plot he wrote, the plot he refers to, the plot that happened offstage, which he later discovered and realized in his writing.
Yes, it is true to the shape of Asimov’s thoughts and will not be invisible to them.
As a sci-fi fan, I feel like it’s a great opportunity to be able to use it on screen, use it and be inspired by what he has achieved in front of us. Base Then connect all the other different stories and plots he created throughout the process. I mean, he is just a prolific writer.