It was all just a dream! The final act is simply kept under wraps because they want to spare us from having to watch Dennis' shower scene.
Humm, that makes sence. I think it will remain unfinnished until HBO's Newsroom does a story on the missing "18 minute Gap, aka the last chapter!!!
Nah, it'd only work if Pam woke up to find Garrovick in the shower. PAM: I thought you were dead! GARROVICK: Grimmer!
I so want to see this episode concluded. WHATEVER it is they should get it out. I would even help finish it because I have such respect for what they did.
I think any of us who have certain talents would be happy to help. The problem is that getting more people involved, no matter how talented, would mean some amount of rebooting. It sounds to me like Maurice is the right guy for the job and as someone once noted, the more hands, the slower the mixing.
In this case another pair of hands would be helpful, but they have to be the right hands in terms of tools, experience and outlook.
And I've found that for certain jobs there's no substitute for being able to work together in real time in real space at the same location. Your mileage may vary, but in my experience things can be resolved in seconds when you're working shoulder to shoulder with someone can take hours or even days when you're working long distance.
Not much you can do once you're in up to your neck. It's just something that should be considered and accounted for in post-production.
Been a while since that last time I visited this board. I see not too much has changed As with all fans of Exeter, I am grateful for what we have now and hope some day to see the completed version. Will check back in in another year or so and hope for the best. Thanks to all of you who have contributed and continue efforts to complete this work.
I hope you're right. I for one have simply accepted the situation for what it is: it'll be done when it's done. And I'm okay with that.
If it were not for the option and ability to put these things together long distance across the Internet, neither the second Exeter episode nor a great many other of these film projects would exist as they do at all.
Quite true. Our modest audio drama certainly would not be possible without the ability to work long distance. It's just that the Internet gives with one hand and takes with the other and that's what I mean when I say it should be taken into account.