
Showing posts with label Once Upon A Time. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Once Upon A Time. Show all posts
Tuesday, May 15, 2012
ABC Fall Schedule
ABC is the next network to announce its Fall Lineup.
Even though the net gave a last-minute reprieve to Body of Proof, it is not on the schedule. It may be a mid-season offering, though that would mean a shortened season. That's a shame ... it's a good show.
Looks like a great deal of shows are returning. Dancing With the Stars is doing an all-star edition - that was only a matter of time. And, like NBC, in late fall they'll be putting comedies in the 8 o'clock hour on Fridays. Not sure why the shift in November, but I've given up trying to figure out how network powers-that-be minds work. Revenge moves to Sunday to fill the void left by Desperate Housewives, which had a nice series send-off this week, in my opinion.
So, here is what ABC will be bringing you this fall:
Mondays
8 p.m. - Dancing With the Stars (January will switch to the Bachelor)
10 p.m. - Castle
Tuesdays
8 p.m. - Dancing With the Stars Results Show
in January, 8 p.m. - How to Live With Your Parents (for the Rest of Your Life) (NEW)
8:30 - The Family Tools (NEW)
9 p.m. - Happy Endings
9:30 p.m. - Don't Trust the B---- in Apartment 23
10 p.m. - Private Practice
Wednesdays
8 p.m.- The Middle
8:30 - Suburgatory
9 p.m. - Modern Family
9:30 p.m. - The Neighbors (NEW)
10 p.m. - Nashville (NEW)
Thursdays
8 p.m. - Last Resort (NEW)
9 p.m. - Grey's Anatomy
10 p.m. - Scandal
Fridays
8 p.m. - Shark Tank (moves to 9 p.m. in November)
November, 8 p.m. - Last Man Standing
8:30 - Malibu Country (NEW)
9 p.m. - Primetime: What Would You Do? (moves to 10 p.m. in November)
10 p.m. - 20/20
Sundays
7 p.m. - America's Funniest Home Videos (how many years IS this???)
8 p.m. - Once Upon a Time
9 p.m. - Revenge
10 p.m. - 666 Park Avenue
Still to come ... CBS and The CW.
Check back and, so as not to miss a thing from Your TV Tour Guide, follow me here: www.twitter.com/TV_Tour_Guide
Monday, March 19, 2012
Recap - WonderCon 2012
Thanks to renovations happening up north in its usual San Francisco home, this year's WonderCon was held in Anaheim, Calif. and thanks to a good friend's birthday present, I was able to attend Saturday and Sunday, partaking in all the geeky and mainstream goodness offered to us humble fans.
Saturday was all about the big screen, offering sneak peeks and trailer premieres for a wide range of - for the most part - great looking, entertaining films: Prometheus, The Amazing Spider-Man, Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter, Looper, Lockout, Snow White and the Huntsman, Resident Evil: Retribution, Sound of My Voice and Battleship. The panels were fun and the guests - including Charlize Theron, Kristen Stewart, Michael Fastbender, Peter Berg, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Maggie Grace and Sir Ridley Scott - shared stories from the sets, little teases, etc.
But this is a bog about the small screen so Sunday was really my day. On the menu: ALCATRAZ, FRINGE and ONCE UPON A TIME.
ALCATRAZ
Stopping by for the Alcatraz panel were stars Sarah Jones (Det. Rebecca Madsen), Jorge Garcia (Dr. Diego Soto), Parminder Nagra (Dr. Lucy Banerjee), Jonny Coyne (Warden Edwin James) and Robert Forster (Ray Archer); co-creators Steven Lilien and Bryan Wynbrandt; and executive producers Jennifer Johnson and Daniel Pyne.
They opened with an exclusive sneak peak of the season finale (Monday, March 26 at 8 p.m. on FOX), which looks to be action-packed and promises to both answer season-long questions and pose more for the next season to (hopefully) come. Questions/information included:
FRINGE
This was the panel I was most looking forward to. I've been a fan of this show from day one and have waited white-knuckled every spring for renewal. It's always been a bubbled show but has lived on, and hopefully, if FOX is to abandon it, they'll at least grant it a chance to wrap up the story.
The future of the show was actually posed to the panel, which included executive producer/showrunner Jeff Pinker, executive producer Joel Wyman and stars Joshua Jackson (Peter Bishop), John Noble (Walter Bishop), Blair Brown (Nina Sharp) and Seth Gabel (Lincoln Lee). Wyman said with great confidence "We don't even think about those thinhs," to which the cast let out hearty guffaws and Noble quietly stated "Bulls**t."
Noble himself was a riot. The panel first screened a collection of "Walterisms" - a montage of the character's many often inappropriate but always hysterical sayings, comments, etc. All at the table insisted that Noble in fact IS Walter, which is why he plays him so well. Regarding whether the cast ever gets used to the weirdness of the events in the episodes, while Gabel said it would be really wrong if they got used to it, Jackson said they don't have to get used to the weirdness on the set because Noble is the weirdness.
Jackson had a blast and himself was hilariously entertaining. For example:
Ultimately, the panel said that while they do battle the network at times, their priority of storytelling is for us, the fans, and they stick with that till the end, whenever that may be. Here's hoping for season five and a chance to end the show on their terms.
Catch Fringe Friday nights at 9 p.m. on FOX.
ONCE UPON A TIME
We were first treated to a screening of the episode "Heart of Darkness," which would air later that night on ABC. Watching on the big screen in a room filled with dedicated fans was awesome. Cheers and whoops arose every time Robert Carlyle (Mr. Gold/Rumplestilskin) appeared on screen, everyone laughed in unison and thoroughly enjoyed the showing.
After, co-creators and executive producers Adam Horowitz and Eddy Kitsis came out to express their gratitude for all the love and support for the show and answer questions. I wasn't aware of it but apparently there are quite a few LOST "easter eggs" strewn throughout the show (both were executive producers on the hit series), so now I'll be paying attention.
They said they received great support for the show from ABC right from the start - after all, what better network to host a show about fairy tales than the one owned by Disney? Both men said the net lets them pretty much do anything they want, and that gives them great story-telling freedom.
Fairy tales/stories/characters they hope to visit in the future include Ariel (The Little Mermaid), Peter Pan, Rapunzel and Mulan. They said there are still lots of people to visit both in Storybrooke and Fairy Tale Land and they don't want to close off any doors to who could appear.
SPOILER ALERT!
The finale, being filmed this week, will feature the return of a beloved character - the Huntsman, who was killed off earlier in the season. "We gotta warn you," joked Kitsis, " He's gotten more handsome." We will also learn more about the mysterious August, they have a plan for the town's doctor and the theme of love and how it's possibly the way for the trapped citizens to escape the curse will be explored further in this and future seasons.
There's no doubt ABC is bringing this gem of a show back for a second season. Be sure to catch it every Sunday at 8 p.m. on ABC.
Keep your fingers crossed that I make it to Comic-Con this July!
Saturday was all about the big screen, offering sneak peeks and trailer premieres for a wide range of - for the most part - great looking, entertaining films: Prometheus, The Amazing Spider-Man, Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter, Looper, Lockout, Snow White and the Huntsman, Resident Evil: Retribution, Sound of My Voice and Battleship. The panels were fun and the guests - including Charlize Theron, Kristen Stewart, Michael Fastbender, Peter Berg, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Maggie Grace and Sir Ridley Scott - shared stories from the sets, little teases, etc.
But this is a bog about the small screen so Sunday was really my day. On the menu: ALCATRAZ, FRINGE and ONCE UPON A TIME.
ALCATRAZ
They opened with an exclusive sneak peak of the season finale (Monday, March 26 at 8 p.m. on FOX), which looks to be action-packed and promises to both answer season-long questions and pose more for the next season to (hopefully) come. Questions/information included:
- Why Alcatraz was chosen as the setting for the show - Say the word and it immediately evokes mystery and danger, plus rumblings of conspiracy ... after all, the order to close the prison on March 21, 1963 was signed by a Kennedy (Robert) - a name synonymous with conspiracy
- Will we find out what's behind "The Door"? - Yes. Pyne said everyone had goosebumps when they shot the reveal. Forster got a hearty laugh from the audience when he boasted that he already knows what's behind it.
- Past inmates/escapees will be returning for the finale, which will end with a tremendous cliffhanger.
- Apparently Sam Neill (Emerson Hauser) enjoys the scenes where he gets to shoot people. In fact, he would rather have fewer lines and more gunplay!
- Should viewers expect more deaths of the characters? - Be prepared. "This is Alcatraz ... things can always get worse," Wynbrandt warned.
- How do the characters get from the Rock to the mainland so friggin quickly? - While the panel insists the actual boat ride takes about 10 minutes, next season they may try out the Alcatraz jet ski... or Rebecca's dolphin.
- Most exciting of all - the finale features an exact recreation of the famous San Francisco car chase from the 1968 film Bullitt - one of the most thrilling auto chase scenes in cinema history. But while the original film took 9 days to film, the Alcatraz crew did it in three. Many locals who saw the original scene film came out to watch the remake.
FRINGE
The future of the show was actually posed to the panel, which included executive producer/showrunner Jeff Pinker, executive producer Joel Wyman and stars Joshua Jackson (Peter Bishop), John Noble (Walter Bishop), Blair Brown (Nina Sharp) and Seth Gabel (Lincoln Lee). Wyman said with great confidence "We don't even think about those thinhs," to which the cast let out hearty guffaws and Noble quietly stated "Bulls**t."
Noble himself was a riot. The panel first screened a collection of "Walterisms" - a montage of the character's many often inappropriate but always hysterical sayings, comments, etc. All at the table insisted that Noble in fact IS Walter, which is why he plays him so well. Regarding whether the cast ever gets used to the weirdness of the events in the episodes, while Gabel said it would be really wrong if they got used to it, Jackson said they don't have to get used to the weirdness on the set because Noble is the weirdness.
Jackson had a blast and himself was hilariously entertaining. For example:
- Question: "Do you think Lincoln will end up with either of the Olivias in the various universes?" Gabel: "I hope I end up with at least one of them." Jackson: "If he ends up with both, we'd have to move to cable."
- Late in the panel, an audience member wanted to know if the cast knows what's coming plot-wise ahead of time. Jackson: "I've learned more in the last ten minutes than I have all season!"
- Regarding character deaths on the show and how many return, Jackson had this to say: "Is anyone ever really dead on Fringe? Actually, the best way to be brought back is to die a noble death." He added that a good phone call for a cast member to receive is "Congratulations! We're killing you off!"
- When asked if there are any comparisons between Peter and Jackson's character Pacey on Dawson's Creek, he said that they're both human. Then later, when it came up that Peter can't seem to make up his mind about his relationship with Olivia, a lightbulb went off - "That's it! [Pacey] couldn't make up his f**king mind either!" Seems the guys he plays sure can waffle!
Ultimately, the panel said that while they do battle the network at times, their priority of storytelling is for us, the fans, and they stick with that till the end, whenever that may be. Here's hoping for season five and a chance to end the show on their terms.
Catch Fringe Friday nights at 9 p.m. on FOX.
ONCE UPON A TIME
We were first treated to a screening of the episode "Heart of Darkness," which would air later that night on ABC. Watching on the big screen in a room filled with dedicated fans was awesome. Cheers and whoops arose every time Robert Carlyle (Mr. Gold/Rumplestilskin) appeared on screen, everyone laughed in unison and thoroughly enjoyed the showing.
After, co-creators and executive producers Adam Horowitz and Eddy Kitsis came out to express their gratitude for all the love and support for the show and answer questions. I wasn't aware of it but apparently there are quite a few LOST "easter eggs" strewn throughout the show (both were executive producers on the hit series), so now I'll be paying attention.
They said they received great support for the show from ABC right from the start - after all, what better network to host a show about fairy tales than the one owned by Disney? Both men said the net lets them pretty much do anything they want, and that gives them great story-telling freedom.
Fairy tales/stories/characters they hope to visit in the future include Ariel (The Little Mermaid), Peter Pan, Rapunzel and Mulan. They said there are still lots of people to visit both in Storybrooke and Fairy Tale Land and they don't want to close off any doors to who could appear.
SPOILER ALERT!
The finale, being filmed this week, will feature the return of a beloved character - the Huntsman, who was killed off earlier in the season. "We gotta warn you," joked Kitsis, " He's gotten more handsome." We will also learn more about the mysterious August, they have a plan for the town's doctor and the theme of love and how it's possibly the way for the trapped citizens to escape the curse will be explored further in this and future seasons.
There's no doubt ABC is bringing this gem of a show back for a second season. Be sure to catch it every Sunday at 8 p.m. on ABC.
Keep your fingers crossed that I make it to Comic-Con this July!
Sunday, October 23, 2011
Review - Once Upon a Time
"There once was an enchanted forest filled with all the classic characters we know. Or think we know. One day they found themselves trapped in a place where all their happy endings were stolen. Our world."
This is how ABC's new fantasy-drama series Once Upon A Time begins, along with breathtaking scenery (if CGI, very seamlessly created) and one of the most famous kisses of all time.
Fairy tales go head to head this season, with NBC debuting Grimm next week. But Once Upon A Time is off to a promising start, offering a well-paced, beautifully shot pilot that masks the necessary setting-up-the-premise exposition with, and I must quote Disney's Beauty and the Beast here, "Far off places, daring sword fights, magic spells, a prince - or rather, an entire cast of characters - in disguise.
**Episode Details Follow**
Once Upon A Time focuses primarily on Snow White (Big Love's Ginnifer Goodwin) and Prince Charming (Josh Dallas, Hawaii Five-O), who, in keeping with the traditional story, have pissed off the Evil Queen (Lana Parrilla, Miami Medical, Swingtown) with their perfect beauty and happiness. She takes revenge by placing a curse on the entire kingdom, vowing that the only happy ending anyone will ever have ever again will be hers. Before the curse, delivered via an all-encompassing black cloud, Snow gives birth to a daughter, Emma (Jennifer Morrison, How I Met Your Mother, House), who will eventually be the key to ending the curse and setting everyone free. Placed in a magical wardrobe, Emma is transported to real-world Boston, where she grows up part of the foster system and in adulthood becomes a bail bondsman, or "bondsperson," as she calls it.
On Emma's 28th birthday, ten-year-old Henry Mills (Mad Men's Jared Gillmore) knocks on her door and informs her that he is the son she gave up for adoption a decade before. He then tells her that she must come back with him to his home, Storybrook, Maine. Turns out Henry, who is in possession of a book full of all the fairy tales, knows Emma's true destiny and bluntly tells her so. Emma's response? "Kid, you've got problems." Henry confidently rebuts "Yep, and you're gonna fix them."
In Storybrook, time is frozen, no one remembers their true selves and bad things happen to anyone who tries to leave. Snow is now a school teacher, Charming is a comatose John Doe and the Evil Queen is mayor. Other citizens include Mr. Gold (Robert Carlyle, SGU Stargate Universe), who owns Storybrook and in his other identity is the scheming, manipulative Rumplestilskin (his intro is quite reminiscent of Hannibal Lecter in Silence of the Lambs); Archie Hopper (Raphael Sbarge, Prison Break, 24), a.k.a. Pinocchio's Jiminy Cricket and Henry's therapist; Granny (Beverly Elliott, Harper's Island), who runs the local boarding house; and Ruby (Meghan Ory, True Justice, South Beach), a.k.a. Red Riding Hood and a fellow boarder.
The series frequently transitions back and forth from the fairy tale kingdom to the real world, but it's not distracting since they are distinctly their own entities. Goodwin, with her ivory skin and sweet but strong demeanor, makes for a convincing Snow and Parrilla offers plausible bite and chill to her Queen. Morrison's tough snark plays for the resistant Emma and you can tell she's going to be a force for the Queen to reckon with. It's strange to hear characters from stories known for decades have real conversations wrought with conflict and emotions and deal with real problems just like regular folk. The series has included characters from many different stories and united them together in one realm, as the Shrek film series did, but it works.
And with messages like "Believing even in the possibility of a happy ending is a very powerful thing," you can't help but root for good to triumph and embrace the grand adventures to come.
Bottom Line: Dare to believe in this enchanting series.
Catch Once Upon A Time Sundays at 8 p.m. on ABC.
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