Bodysnatcher

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Bodysnatcher was a partly finished script that was written but ultimately unused for the first series of the BBC sci-fi sitcom Red Dwarf.

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Bodysnatcher was one of the scripts to be handed around during the interview process for the main casting, although at this point it was still unnamed. It was alledgedly this script that caught the attention of Peter Risdale-Scott, the commissioner for BBC Manchester that he read on the train bound for BBC London. Alfred Molina and Alan Rickman, who were auditioning for Lister and Rimmer respectively, performed their audition from this script. One of Cat's lines:

"I've eaten five times, I've slept six times, and I've made a lot of things mine. Tomorrow, I'm gonna see if I can't have sex with something!"

...was originally in this episode's script, but was moved to Confidence and Paranoia when the original script was dropped.

Because this script was conceptualized and part-written at a very early stage of development, many areas of the script do not gel with the other episodes of Series I. For example, the Cat does not speak to anyone but himself. The characters underwent minor development and back story elements were changed throughout Series I, and so the unnamed script would have had to undergo serious changes to fit in with the rest of the series and the canon in general.

Eventually, the unnamed and unfinished script was dropped in favour of Me². The original series finale involved Lister resurrecting Kochanski's hologram from the projection disc he found with Confidence.

However, when the unnamed script was dropped Me² was written to compensate for the missing episode and the ending of Confidence and Paranoia was similarily changed, so the disc in Kochanski's box was in fact Rimmer's.

Now, with the release of Red Dwarf Remastered on DVD in the Autumn, the same audio story board process used in recreating the lost episode of Series VII, Identity Within, will be used to create the episode. When the script was retrieved from the vaults of Grant Naylor offices, it was found to be without an ending. The writers Rob Grant and Doug Naylor, who went their separate ways during pre-production on the ITV series The 10%ers in 1996, collaborated on bringing the script into line with the series' continuity and giving it an end. It will be on the bonus disc of Red Dwarf Remastered, which is due to be released in Autumn 2007.

--ReddishShadow 11:31, 25 March 2007 (UTC)

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