The Weekly Round-Up for Feb. 22 to 26

February 27, 2010 by Rueben  
Filed under Uncategorized

Here are the sci-fi based entertainment news items for this week:

TV SERIES NEWS

Warehouse 13 will return to Syfy starting on July 13 with a new 12 episode run.

The new season of Doctor Who, starring the new Doctor – Matt Smith – will debut on BBC America on April 17

DEVELOPMENT NEWS

Romany Malco (Weeds) has joined Michael Chiklis (The Shield) and Autumn Reeser (The O.C.) in the ABC drama pilot No Ordinary Family about an average American family that develops special abilities.

NBC has booked a two-hour backdoor pilot called The Jensen Project that follows 12 geniuses who move to an isolated spot in the Allegheny Mountains to spend their time inventing ways to fix the world’s problems and then share their discoveries freely and anonymously with the world. The cast includes Kellie Martin, Brady Smith, Patricia Richardson and LeVar Burton.

Shane West (ER) has been added to the cast of the CW drama pilot Nikita, which stars Maggie Q in the lead role.

BOX OFFICE NEWS

Thandie Newton, Jason Issacs and David Tenant will appear in the box office movie Retreat that will center on a troubled couple (Newton and Issacs) who take some time off on a remote island to try and heal their relationship. The trip takes a nasty turn when a sickly military man (Tenant) appears at their doorstep and tells them that a virus is claiming the lives of millions back on the mainland.

Ian McShane will play the villainous, legendary pirate Blackbeard in the fourth installment of Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides.

Frieda Pinto (Slumdog Millionaire) has joined the cast of the Greek mythology epic War of the Gods, appearing alongside Henry Cavill (The Tudors), who will play Theseus, a young warrior who leads both men and the Olympian gods in a battle to defeat the Titans, the long-imprisoned former deities who plan to use demons to restore their power. Pinto will play Phaedra, an oracle priestess who joins Theseus’ quest.

Eric Balfour , Donald Faison, actress Scottie Thompson and Brittany Daniel will star in the sci-fi thriller Skyline who awoken to find an otherworldly source has begun wiping out humanity. A small group of survivors within the building must hold off the attack.

Cuba Gooding Jr. and Cole Hauser have joined the cast of the indie thriller The Hit List. The story is about a man who confesses his problems to a stranger (Gooding Jr.) whom he has met in a bar. But what started out as a drunk ramble about the five people he’d most like to see dead, turns deadly serious as the people on that list start getting killed.

Mickey Rourke is set to play the father of Conan in the remake of the movie Conan the Barbarian, which stars Jason Momoa in the lead role.

David Goyer has left as executive producer on FlashForward and it seems for good reason. He will be writing the new Superman film to be called (at least for now) The Man of Steel. It was also announced that Jonah Nolan (who co-wrote The Dark Knight) will be working with Goyer on this project.

CASTING SCOOP

Kristin Kreuk (Smallville) may be appearing in an upcoming episode of Fringe. In other Fringe news, Leonard Nimoy will be back as William Bell in the season finale of the series.

Gil Bellows (Ally McBeal) will appear in an episode of Smallville as infamous DC comics character Maxwell Lord.

David Anders (who was just seen in 24) will appear in a multi-episode arch in April on The Vampire Diaries as Elena and Jeremy’s uncle, Jonathan Gilbert, who comes to Mystic Falls to cause some trouble.

Ravi Kapoor (Crossing Jordan) will appear on an upcoming episode of FlashForward, as a man who comes in contact with Aaron Stark (Brian F. O’Bryne) when Aaron travels to Afghanistan to search for answers related to his daughter’s military service and subsequent disappearance.

James Callis (Battlestar Galactica) will be joining the ABC series FlashForward in a major role for several episodes at the end of the season.

RUMOR PATROL

A number of actors are being considered by Marvel Studios for the lead role in the movie The First Avenger: Captain America. They include: Chace Crawford (Gossip Girl), John Krasinski (The Office), Scott Porter (Friday Night Lights), Mike Vogel (Cloverfield), Michael Cassidy (Privileged) and Patrick Flueger (The 4400). This list is just for testing candidates and doesn’t reflect any final decisions by the studio.

MARK YOUR CALENDAR

The following movies and special will air this weekend and throughout next week:

The Syfy movie Beauty and the Beasts: A Dark Tale will air on Saturday, February 27 at 9 PM. The movie stars Estella Warren.

The Winter Olympics come to a close over the weekend with the closing ceremonies on Sunday.

NEW EPISODES OF EXISTING SHOWS

Here are the new episodes of the dramas that will be airing this coming week:

Saturday, February 27:
Survivors on BBC America at 9 PM

NOTE: Legend of the Seeker will air a new episode in syndication this weekend. Check your local listings for date, time and channel.

Sunday, February 28:

NOTE: Legend of the Seeker will air a new episode in syndication this weekend. Check your local listings for date, time and channel.

Monday, March 1:
24 on FOX at 9 PM
Chuck on NBC at 8 PM

Tuesday, March 2:
Lost on ABC at 9 PM

Wednesday, March 3:
Being Erica on SOAPNet at 10 PM
Spartacus: Blood and Sand (reair) on Starz at 10 PM

Thursday, March 4:
Burn Notice on USA at 10 PM (finale)

Friday, March 5:
Ghost Whisperer on CBS at 8 PM
Medium on CBS at 9 PM
Caprica on Syfy at 9 PM
Spartacus: Blood and Sand on Starz at 10 PM

NOTE: Please check your local listings for the correct air dates and times for all of the above.

Have a great weekend!

Please note that I will feature a weekly round-up of general news items at our sister site located at http://nicegirlstv.com/. Please visit there as often as you can. Thanks!

The Weekly Round-Up for Jan. 25 to 29

January 30, 2010 by Rueben  
Filed under News, Uncategorized

Here are the sci-fi based entertainment news items for this week:

CONDOLENCES

Legendary author J.D. Salinger (The Cather in the Rye) passed away this week at the age of 91.

Petite actress Zelda Rubinstein, who played the psychic in the classic movie Poltergeist passed away at 76 this past week.

NEWS

The new FOX drama Past Life will be airing one week earlier than originally planned and rather than a two-hour debut, the show will have a one-hour premiere at 9 PM on February 9 with the show moving into its regular time slot of Thursdays at 9 PM on February 11. The series should finish on March 11.

The film Avatar has officially become the biggest-grossing movie of all time even over former king of the movie world Titanic.

TV SERIES NEWS

Mark Pellegrino and Titus Welliver will reprise their roles of Jacob and his nemesis on Lost when it returns for its final season.

ABC Family Channel has picked a one-hour drama:  Pretty Little Liars:

The series will follow four estranged best friends who are reunited one year after their best friend and queen bee of the group, Alison, goes missing only to discover they are receiving messages from an anonymous “A” who knows all their secrets. The drama stars Lucy Hale (Privileged), Troian Bellisario (NCIS) Ashley Benson (Eastwick), Shay Mitchell, Laura Leighton (Melrose Place), Nia Peeples (The Young and the Restless) and Bianca Lawson (The Vampire Diaries).

The second season of the UK series Being Human has yet to air here in the States, but is nearly at an end on the BBC and has been renewed for a third season with the regular cast returning.

DEVELOPMENT NEWS

One of the new shows in development at ABC includes:

NO ORDINARY FAMILY (ABC) – This pilot come from Greg Berlanti and Jon Harmon Feldman and is about a typical American family whose members have special abilities. ( Kind of like Brothers & Sisters x Heroes?!)

A spinoff of Supernatural, called Ghostfacers, which revolves around a group of ghost hunters who film their adventures (who have appeared in several episodes of the series in the past) will initially run as three-minute episodes online on TheWB.com and on the CW’s website and will star A.J. Buckley, Travis Wester, Brittany Ishibashi, and Austin Basis.

NBC has picked up the drama The Cape, which is a light drama with a comic book sensibility set in a fictionalized version of Los Angeles, centering on a former cop framed for a crime who becomes the Cape, a masked hero, to clear his name and reunite with his son.

BOX OFFICE NEWS

James Marsden will star in the live-action/computer-animated hybrid comedy I Hop that follows an out-of-work slacker (Marsden) who accidentally injures the Easter Bunny (voiced by Russell Brand) and must take him in as he recovers.

Naomi Watts and Daniel Craig will star in the psychological thriller Dream House about a family that relocates into what appears to be the ideal residence in small town Connecticut only to discover that their beautiful new home was the site of another family’s slaughter, believed to be at the hands of the husband who survived.

The production group behind the film The Spiderwick Chronicles have optioned Kat Falls‘ underwater adventure novel Dark Life, which is set in a near-future world in which rising ocean levels and natural catastrophes have led some people to homestead on the ocean floor. The action centers on an underwater teenage boy and a surface girl who join forces to uncover a government conspiracy.

British actor Nicholas Hoult (Skins) has joined the movie Mad Max: Fury Road, which is to be set a short while after events in 1985’s Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome. Charlize Theron and Tom Hardy are set to star in lead roles.

Guy Pearce and Mary-Louise Parker will star in the thriller The Well that revolves around a well-to-do Manhattan couple whose obsessive pursuit of salvation ultimately leads to destruction. Actor Tim Guinee wrote and will direct the movie.

CASTING SCOOP

Newcomer Odessa Rae will appear on an upcoming episode of Smallville as DC villain the Silver Banshee, aka Siobhan McDougal who is a vengeful spirit of a fallen Gaelic heroine. She’s accidentally released from the underworld, and takes out her vengeance at an unassuming country bed and breakfast.

Michael Shanks has landed a role on Supernatural where he will portray a character named Rob, who is part of a local militia. He is married and has a son – but a loss will force Rob to dedicate himself solely to a cause.

Robert Englund (Freddy Krueger himself) will terrorize Booth and Brennan in a slasher-themed episode of Bones that is to air this spring.

RUMOR PATROL

Mel Gibson is in negotiations to star in the spy thriller Cold Warrior about a Cold War spy who comes out of retirement to confront a domestic terrorism threat from Russia by joining with a younger agent.

Sam Worthington (Avatar) is the frontrunner to star in movie Dracula Year Zero that will be part historical fact and literary fiction that centers around the life of young Transylvanian Prince Vlad, better known as Vlad the Impaler, leading the charge to fend off the Ottoman Empire’s attempts to use Romania as a foothold to conquer the rest of Europe.

MARK YOUR CALENDAR

The following movies and special will air this weekend and throughout next week:

The Syfy movie Meteor Storm will air on Saturday, January 30 at 9 PM. The movie is about meteors that strike San Francisco, causing a city official to evacuate the populace while a scientist tries to determine the cause of the strikes. Stars include Michael Trucco and Kari Matchett.

Also, Lost will return for its final season on Tuesday, February 2 for a 2-hour premiere, starting at 9 PM.

NEW EPISODES OF EXISTING SHOWS

Here are the new episodes of returning and new series that will be airing this coming week:

Saturday, January 30:
Demons on BBC America at 8 and 9 PM

NOTE: Legend of the Seeker will be back with all new episodes in syndication starting this weekend. Check your local listings for date, time and channel.

Sunday, January 31:

NOTE: Legend of the Seeker will be back with all new episodes in syndication starting this weekend. Check your local listings for date, time and channel.

Monday, February 1:
Chuck on NBC at 8 PM
Heroes on NBC at 9 PM

Wednesday, February 3:
Being Erica on SOAPNet at 10 PM

Thursday, February 4:
Fringe on FOX at 9 PM
The Vampire Diaries on The CW at 8 PM
Supernatural on The CW at 9 PM

Friday, February 5:
Smallville on the CW at 8 PM (Two-Hour Special)
Ghost Whisperer on CBS at 8 PM
Medium on CBS at 9 PM
Caprica on Syfy at 9 PM

NOTE: Please check your local listings for the correct air dates and times for all of the above.

Have a great weekend!

Please note that I will feature a weekly round-up of general news items at our sister site located at http://nicegirlstv.com.  Please visit there as often as you can. Thanks!

The Making of the Star Trek Pilots, Part 2: “Where No Man Has Gone Before”

January 25, 2010 by RetroEd  
Filed under Retrovision, Uncategorized

With Jeffrey Hunter departing, taking over the center seat of the Enterprise in the second pilot would be Canadian-born actor William Shatner, whose career had included highly acclaimed roles on stage (THE WORLD OF SUZIE WONG, A SHOT IN THE DARK), screen (THE BROTHERS KARAMAZOV) and television (TWILIGHT ZONE, THE OUTER LIMITS, FOR THE PEOPLE, and the pilot for the unsold series ALEXANDER, THE GREAT).

“I was offered the part in a rather peculiar fashion,” Shatner related to the English press in the 1970s. “They had made a pilot of STAR TREK with an actor who is now deceased, Jeffrey Hunter, and NBC did not like the pilot but they liked the idea. They said change the cast, change the story but give us another pilot for STAR TREK and we’ll pay a certain amount of money. So they showed me the first pilot and said, ‘Would you like to play the part and here are some of the storylines that we plan to go with; you can see the kind of production we have in mind. Would you care to play it?’ And I thought it was an interesting gamble for myself as an actor to take, because I’ve always been fascinated by science fiction. I liked the production; I liked the people involved with the production, and so I decided to do it. But it was under these peculiar circumstances of having a first pilot made that I did it.

“I then talked at great length with Gene Roddenberry about the objectives we hoped to achieve, and one of those objectives was serious drama as well as science fiction. His reputation and ability, which I knew first-hand, was such that I did not think he would do LOST IN SPACE. And I was too expensive an actor, with what special or particular abilities I have, to warrant being put in something that somebody else could walk through. So I felt confident that STAR TREK would keep those serious objectives for the most part, and it did.”

Bob Justman, who would go from assistant director on “The Cage” to Associate Producer on “Where No Man’s Gone Before,” explained, “Gene was very happy that he was able to get Bill Shatner, who was highly thought of in the industry. I had worked with Bill on OUTER LIMITS and he had a good reputation in the television and entertainment industries even at that time, well before the second pilot of STAR TREK. He was someone to be reckoned with and we certainly understood that he was a more accomplished actor than Jeff Hunter was, and he gave us more dimension. The network seemed to feel that Jeff Hunter was rather wooden. He was a nice person, everyone liked him, but he didn’t run the gamut of emotions that Bill Shatner could do. Shatner was classically trained. He had enormous technical abilities to do different things and he gave the captain a terrific personality. He embodied what Gene had in mind, which was the flawed hero. Or the hero who considers himself to be flawed. Captain Horatio Hornblower. That was who he was modeled on.”

Enthused Leonard Nimoy, “Bill Shatner’s broader acting style created a new chemistry between the captain and Spock, and now it was quite different from that of the first pilot.”

In the pages of I AM SPOCK, he elaborates, “Bill’s Captain Kirk was a swashbuckling Errol Flynn type of hero, he played the with a great deal of energy and élan, and wasn’t afraid to take chances. That élan has cost him at times; people have made fun of his exuberance because it made it easy to do a caricature of Kirk. His attack on a line of dialog, his unique way of pausing before blurting out the final word or phrase, were readily captured by imitators. But that energy was vital for the show, and made it possible for me to finally find a niche for my role. I don’t think the Spock character would have worked as well with Jeff Hunter, because Jeff’s Captain Pike was introverted and soft-spoken, so that there was no contrast between the two.”

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And the relationship between the two characters and actors–despite whatever ego problems would arise later–positively sparked. David Gerrold, famed author, STAR TREK scholar and author of the episode “The Trouble With Tribbles,” notes, “All of the movies and all of the episodes hold together because Shatner holds it together. Spock is only good when he has someone to play off of. The scenes where Spock doesn’t have Shatner to play off of are not interesting. If you look at Spock with his mom or dad, it’s very ponderous. But Spock working with Kirk has the magic and it plays very well, and people give all of the credit to Nimoy not to Shatner.”

While Shatner was hired, the three NBC-requested scripts for a second pilot were finished, including the Samuel A. Peeples’ effort “Where No Man Has Gone Before,” which chronicled the metamorphosis of Enterprise crewmember Gary Mitchell into a God-like being.

“My vague memory is that there had been several problems with ‘The Cage,’” reflected the late James Goldstone, who had been signed to direct STAR TREK’s second pilot. ” NBC was skeptical that a series could be manufactured, so to speak, on a weekly basis. One of the requisites put on the second pilot was to shoot it in, as I recall, eight days, which would then prove to them that a weekly series could be done in six or seven days. The other requisite, I would guess, it being television, is that NBC very much wanted something that could be ‘commercial’ against the police shows and all the other action things that were then on television.

“A combination of NBC, Gene, perhaps other executives at Desilu and I, read all three [scripts], discussed them in length, decided on what became ‘Where No Man Has Gone Before,’ and then embarked on a great deal of polishing and rewriting on a conceptual and physical level, so that we could make it in eight days. This one just seemed to have the potential to establish those characters on a human level. The only gimmick is the mutation forward, the silvering of Gary Mitchell’s eyes, and it works because it’s simple, as opposed to the growing of horns or something. Ours was a human science fiction concept, perhaps cerebral and certainly emotional.”

Samuel Peeples, who has written more segments of episodic television than anyone could ever keep track of, had actually had some connection with Gene Roddenberry and STAR TREK prior to “Where No Man Has Gone Before.”

“Gene Roddenberry and I had known each other from writing HAVE GUN, WILL TRAVEL” Peeples recalls. “He was trying to start a science fiction series and he knew that I had one of the largest science fiction collections in the world. He was researching his show and asked if he could go through my magazines and get some ideas for the Enterprise. Gene went through all the covers, and that’s really how the Enterprise was born.”

In Peeples’ script, the starship Enterprise comes across a charred metallic “black box” (similar to what is used today on airplanes) from a long-lost space vessel. Captain James R. Kirk (the middle initial eventually changed to T. once the pilot led to series) has the device beamed aboard. In the meantime strong ties are established between the captain, Lieutenant Gary Mitchell, and first officer Mr. Spock. The Enterprise approaches an energy barrier at the edge of the galaxy and attempts to make its way through, resulting in the ship nearly being destroyed and metamorphosizing Mitchell’s natural ESP abilities. Those powers grow to the point where he becomes a god-like being, manipulating everything around him.

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Spock listens to the black box and learns that the captain of that vessel was desperate to learn anything he could about ESP, and shortly thereafter ordered that his ship be set for self-destruction. Now Kirk is faced with one decision: kill Mitchell before the Enterprise is crushed by the man’s ever-increasing power.

“We were intrigued with the corruption of power theme manifesting over the ordinary individual,” says Peeples. “that was the basic premise, and we had to put in extrapolations of known scientific principles. At that time, the radiation belt had been discovered around the Earth, and my premise was that galaxies themselves might be separated by this type of barrier.

“Gene and I were trying to avoid the space cadet cliche,” he elaborates. “We were both very concerned about it being an adult show. One thing, as later episodes proved, was the problem which never should have existed: the bug eyed monsters. We both discouraged the idea, believing that we should keep things as realistic as possible. If a person was different physically, then explain the reason for that difference. In a particular atmosphere, he might have a larger lung. If it was a planet with an extraordinarily bright sun, he would have different eyes. We were actually trying to project reality against an unfamiliar background. In other words, we would deal with reality according to the environmental background we encountered.”

“Where No Man Has Gone Before” went into production soon thereafter. Joining Shatner, Nimoy and Gary Lockwood was Paul Fix as Dr. Mark Piper, George Takei as Physicist Sulu, James Doohan as Chief Engineer Montgomery Scott, Lloyd Haynes as Communications Officer Alden and Andrea Dromm as Yeoman Smith, with Sally Kellerman “guest starring” as Dr. Elizabeth Dehner. As fans of the show recognize, the final STAR TREK cast was slowly taking shape.

NBC viewed the pilot in early 1966, and gave Roddenberry the green light for his series, much to the delight of everyone, as they were proud of what they had achieved.

“I was very happy with it,” enthused James Goldstone. “From a director’s point of view–or this director’s point of view–you have certain targets and certain problems which have to be overcome in any picture, whether it’s a $20 million feature or a television show. A director measures his success in two ways. Obviously, like everybody else, you measure it by whether or not it’s a critical and commercial success, but you also measure it in terms of overcoming obstacles. The obstacles were temporal, budgetary, but they were also conceptual. I was very proud of the work we were able to do. When I say we, I don’t mean it in a generous sense. I mean that it was a very collaborative effort, as are all pilots. We, being Gene, especially; Bobby Justman and the main actors who later became the main stars. Everything was planned in detail, and Bobby and I knew if we didn’t move from one set to another or one scene to another by a certain hour, we were in trouble.”

At a convention appearance, Roddenberry expressed, “The second pilot seemed to have great concepts: humans turning into gods. But they were nice safe gods, gods who go ‘Zap! You’re punished.’ Kind of like the guys you see on those Sunday morning shows…The biggest factor in selling the second pilot was that it ended up in a hell of a fist fight with the villain suffering a painful death. Then, once we got STAR TREK on the air, we began infiltrating a few of our ideas.”

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Actor Gary Lockwood, who portrayed Gary Mitchell and who would later go on to portray astronaut Frank Poole in Stanley Kubrick’s 2001, recalls working on STAR TREK’s second pilot.

“To tell you the truth,” he smiles, “I thought it was a little bizarre and I thought it was kind of embarrassing, and I hoped it worked out because everybody was excited about it. It was a very hard job to do. You couldn’t see the other actors. I’d rehearse and get everything all ready, but I couldn’t see the actors because of the contact lenses that changed my eyes. They didn’t blind me for the first few days, but after a few days the eyes swelled up and got sore. Then to have them on for just two or three minutes was agonizing. Scenes were rehearsed without them. The other thing about it, people always thought I was kind of egotistical so when I got to play that part, a lot of people laughed and said, ‘He’s finally found his niche.’ That’s been a joke among my friends.

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“That character was tough to reach, because there’s no prototype character to look at. So you create a mental image and try to fill that slot. All I tried to do was downplay the mechanics and not be too dramatic. It’s the same thing I did in 2,001. Try to play the part very quietly and very realistically, and later on people don’t think you’re pushing. That’s the way to sustain it. There was a natural progression to the character. In order to do that, you have to think it out. Let me say one thing to you that I can say about American actors I don’t like and who don’t like me. You have to apply a certain amount of intelligence to your role first, and then you can apply the emotion after you’ve made an intellectual decision. Too many young kids I work with are all trying to figure out how to make the line comfortable. You work in Europe, they’re trying to bend to the line. Here they’re trying to bend the line to them. It’s a different approach. With Gary Mitchell, the idea was trying to go to the character and not make the character comfortable to me. I’m not Gary Mitchell.”

In the early 1980s when the second STAR TREK feature, THE WRATH OF KHAN, was in development and word had leaked out that an enemy from Kirk’s past was reaching out to him in vengeance, many believed that that person was going to be a resurrected Gary Mitchell. More recently, visual effects supervisor Darren Doctorman, who works on the independent web series STAR TREK: PHASE II, mused that he thought that the fifth film in the series, THE FINAL FRONTIER, would have been far more interesting had the Enterprise’s quest to meet God resulted in Kirk confronting Gary Mitchell.

Although neither came to pass, the character DID return, albeit in print form. Author Michael Jan Friedman chronicled Mitchell’s life in a pair of novels published in 1998 under the umbrella title MY BROTHER’S KEEPER. Volume one was called REPUBLIC, followed by CONSTITUTION. The character was also resurrected in the one-shot 1996 comic book STAR TREX, which serves as a crossover between the original series and (believe it or not) Marvel Comics’ X-Men. The special was written by Scott Lobdell (an integral writer of the X-Men comics) and drawn by Marc Silvestri.

As the Star Trek Comics Checklist describes: “Investigating a spatial rift near Delta Vega, the planet where Dr. Elizabeth Dehner and Lt. Cmdr. Gary Mitchell mutated and died, the Enterprise encounters a ship in distress. Before exploding, seven life forms are detected and another ship comes through the rift. A being named Gladiator leaves the second ship and claims Delta Vega in the name of the Shi’ar Empire, punching Scotty’s shields for emphasis. Meanwhile, the seven life forms have teleported to a cargo hold in the Enterprise – Cyclops, Phoenix, The Beast, Wolverine, Storm, Gambit and Bishop. With the crew of the Enterprise, the X-Men must face Deathbird and Proteus, who has bonded with the essence of the long dead Gary Mitchell and a potentially inexhaustible supply of psionic energy.

In an interview with ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY, Lobdell offered, “It’s a perfectly natural crossover. At heart, they’re both stories about a handful of people facing the unknown. They both hit the same nerve in American consciousness. Isn’t that what we’re in the business of doing – going where no one has gone before?”
Admitted Silvestri, “It was a challenge, putting realistic [human] characters next to one that are idealized forms. But it was fun just getting these characters into the same panel.” — Retrospective by Edward Gross

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COMING SOON IN PART 3: “ASSIGNMENT EARTH”

The Weekly Round-Up for Nov. 9 to 13

November 15, 2009 by Rueben  
Filed under Uncategorized

Here are the sci-fi based news items for this week (November 9 to 13):

NOTE: Typically the weekly round-ups are posted every Friday night or early Saturday morning, but unforeseen circumstances delayed that from happening this week.

NEWS

ABC has confirmed that no new episodes of their brand new series Eastwick will be produced beyond the original 13-episode commitment. ABC higher-ups are considering moving Ugly Betty to Wednesdays at 10 PM in January as part of a flashy re-launch of the show in an effort to save it. What that means for the return of Lost, which normally holds the Wednesday at 10 PM time slot, is uncertain. The Ugly Betty move is only speculative at this point.

Producers at True Blood are now casting for Caroline Compton (Bill’s wife), who, in another flashback to his earlier life, is surprised to discover her man was not killed in the Civil War, as she had thought.

The CW has decided to package Smallville’s upcoming (and highly-anticipated) Justice Society-themed two-parter into a two-hour movie event airing on January 29. The Geoff Johns-penned episodes — titled “Society” and “Legends” and featuring such DC Comics characters as Stargirl, Hawkman, and Dr. Fate — were originally designed to air separately. But, according to Smallville insiders, CW execs felt they could get more mileage out of combining them.

UPDATE: It’s been stated online that this special two-movie has been moved to February inside of January.

Dollhouse has been canceled by FOX, but the show is expected to finish its 13-episode order. The remaining episodes will air on December 4, 11 and 18 as well as January 8, 15 and 22 (which will be the finale, of course).

It looks like the British favorite TV series Torchwood will be back for a fourth season. Things will hopefully star to move in January.

Syfy has quietly cut back the episodic order of Battlestar Galactica prequel series Caprica by one episode, bringing the total to 19 installments.

NEW DEVELOPMENT SLATE

Author Ray Bradbury has signed a deal with indie producers White Oak Films to develop The Bradbury Chronicles, a six-hour miniseries based on six of his short stories. No network is currently attached to the project, which will be executive produced by Bradbury, John Dayton, Merrill Capps, Todd Klick, Cory Travalena, and Dale Olson, with Bradbury himself adapting his own work.

NEW SEASON TALLY

The following is a run-down of the general state of the TV shows for the fall season – not just the sci-fi (ish) based shows, but excludes reality:

The shows that have been canceled so far this season are: Dollhouse, Hank, Eastwick, Trauma and The Beautiful Life. Numb3rs has essential been canceled in lieu of a minimized season this year. The shows that are still in jeopardy are: Brothers, Cold Case, Fringe, Gary Unmarried, Law & Order, Melrose Place, Three Rivers, ‘Til Death and The New Adventures of Old Christine.

And given the growing prevalence of DVR viewing, a number of shows have increased their viewership – in some cases quite significantly. Over the course of the fall season – from September 21 to October 25 – the following series, in order of appearance, had the biggest gains thanks to DVR viewership:

Grey’s Anatomy
The Office
Criminal Minds
The Big Bang Theory
Private Practice
FlashForward
NCIS
Desperate Housewives
Glee
CSI: Miami
NCIS: Los Angeles
Castle
The Good Wife
Modern Family
CSI: NY
House
Heroes
Brothers & Sisters
30 Rock
Law & Order
Numb3rs
Cougar Town
Ghost Whisperer
Medium

BOX OFFICE NEWS

Krysten Ritter (Breaking Bad and Confessions of a Shopaholic) has been cast in the romantic comedy film with a vampire twist, by writer/director Amy Heckerling (of Clueless fame), called Vamps. The film is a modern-day tale of two young female vampires living the good life in New York until love enters the picture and each has to make a choice that will jeopardize their immortality.

Duncan Jones, who directed the much buzzed about movie Moon will next direct the sci-fi thrilled Source Code. Jake Gyllenhaal is in negotiations to star. The movie centers on a soldier who wakes up in the body of an unknown commuter and is forced to live and relive (over and over) a harrowing terrorist train bombing until he can determine who is responsible for it.

Marti Noxon has been hired to pen a remake of the classic 1985 horror comedy Fright Night by Dreamworks.

AS HEARD ON/MUSIC NEWS

The song “Unthought Known” by Pearl Jam was featured in this past week’s episode of FlashForward.

The songs featured in this week’s The Vampire Diaries included “Come Back When You Can” by Barcelona, “Houses” by Great Northern, “Lies” by Pablo Sebastian, “Post Electric” by Idlewild, “The Spectator” by The Bravery and “Think I Need It Too” by Echo & The Bunnymen.

CASTING SCOOP

Fringe is on the hunt for a fortysomething actress to play Walter’s wife.  She’s described as being strong, broken, intelligent, attractive, likable, lovely and extremely versatile. This could be a possible recurring role.

Pam Grier (The L Word and Jackie Brown) is joining the cast of Smallville for multiple episodes, playing DC Comics villainess Agent Amanda Waller. She is expected to be seen starting in late January.

Sheila Kelley (L.A. Law) will play the recurring role of Kendall, an intellectual beauty with a sharp edge to her wit who is caught committing corporate espionage and has to lie her way out in the final season of Lost.

Sean Faris (Reunion) will appear in a multi-episode arc on The CW hit The Vampire Diaries. He will play Ben, an ex-high school football star-turned-bartender at the Mystic Grill, who is friends with Matt and there are hints that a possible romance will happen between Ben and one of the show’s females.

Robert Patrick (The Unit and The X-Files), will appear in the 10th episode of Chuck, playing Colonel Keller, a mysterious figure from Casey’s past. In this episode we also meet Alex, a young Marine; Kathleen, a strong, independent, attractive woman around 40; and Stanley, a short guy in his mid-30s who is a total geek.

Actor Matthew Del Negro, who had recurring roles on The West Wing and The Sopranos, but most recently turned up on United States of Tara and Trauma, has been cast as Danny Torcoletti in Eastwick despite the show not getting a full season pick-up.

Lost is currently looking for several Latin actors for its ninth episode of its upcoming final season. The roles include a loving wife and devout Catholic named Isabella, who has been suffering an illness for many years; a religious man named Ignacio who has turned to crime; a stern Catholic priest named Father Suarez, and a wealthy Latino doctor. Rounding out the guest cast for this episode, is a 30-something English military officer man named Jonas Whitfield.

Gina Torres (Firefly and Serenity) will guest star on the The Vampire Diaries’ 10th episode as Bree, a past associate of Damon’s, who holds the key to the more sinister Salvatore brother acquiring something he desperately wants – access to a tomb.

Kate Vernon (Battlestar Galactica) will soon join the cast of Heroes. Not much is known about the character she’ll portray, however.

RUMOR PATROL

Kevin Sorbo is reportedly close to agreeing to a schedule to play a bad guy on The Legend of the Seeker.

Len Wiseman (Underworld) is in talks to direct and produce an untitled apocalypse-themed pitch for 20th Century Fox.  The story is based on an original idea about a group of people who survive the end of the world and the mystery surrounding how they got to that position. Writers are currently being sought for the project. Wiseman is still attached to the underwater military actioner Atlantis Rising and the futuristic war feature Shrapnel.

MARK YOUR CALENDAR

Here is a list of new episodes for the returning and new fall shows:

Sunday, November 15:
Dexter on Showtime at 9 p.m.
The Prisoner on AMC at 8 p.m. and 9 p.m.

NOTE: Check your local listings for channel, date and time for next new episode of The Legend of the Seeker.

Monday, November 16:
Heroes on NBC at 8 p.m.
The Prisoner on AMC at 8 p.m. and 9 p.m.

Tuesday, November 17:
V on ABC at 8 p.m.
The Prisoner on AMC at 8 p.m. and 9 p.m.

Wednesday, November 18:

NOTE: Eastwick is being pre-empted tonight because of a special dedicated to Janet Jackson; and while the show has essentially been canceled, the network will air the remaining filmed episodes.

Thursday, November 19:
FlashForward on ABC at 8 p.m.
The Vampire Diaries on The CW at 8 p.m.
Supernatural on The CW at 9 p.m.
Fringe on FOX at 9 p.m.

NOTE: This will be the last new episodes of The Vampire Diaries and Supernatural until January 14, 2010.

Friday, November 20:
Ghost Whisperer on CBS at 8 p.m.
Medium on CBS at 9 p.m.
Smallville on The CW at 8 p.m.
Stargate: Universe on Syfy at 9 p.m.
Sanctuary on Syfy at 10 p.m.

NOTE: Please check your local listings for the correct air dates and times for all of the above.

Have a great weekend!

Please note that I will feature a weekly round-up of general news about non-sci-fi based series and movies posted at our sister site located at http://nicegrlstv.com/. Please visit there as often as you can. Thanks!