inkista
inkista t1_jdgfi42 wrote
Reply to so... will there be a Black Sails: Treasure Island with Luke Arnold reprising as Long John Silver? (aka: Nautical Breaking Bad) by hocumflute
No. The showrunners/creators have moved on to other things (The Old Man, Percy Jackson and the Olympians) and if Steinberg & Levine ain't doing it, I'm not interested.
inkista t1_j6kqmdu wrote
Reply to What is your favorite making of / behind the scenes feature on a TV show? by No-Pineapple9988
Commentary tracks on the Leverage DVD sets. John Rogers basically decided to make them showrunning master classes. And there's a commentary on every episode.
Followed by the commentary tracks on the 1980s Twilight Zone S1-S2 sets (S3 was a different crew with a different showrunner when the production moved to Canada). My only sadness is that they didn't get GRRM to comment on his episodes so we could hear the story of how the stuntman lost his nose on his adaptation of Zelazny's "Last Defender of Camelot". (I once asked him if that might be why Tyrion loses half his nose in the Battle of the Blackwater (in the books, not the show), and he grinned at me and said, "You might be right about that...")
But the Harlan Ellison commentaries are cherce and solo (he also badmouths Danny Kaye in "Paladin of the Lost Hour", which is fun), while all the other ones are group commentaries. My fave is the one on my favorite episode: "Her Pilgrim Soul" where Philip DeGuere (showrunner) and Wes Craven (director) hear how Alan Brennert came up with the plot [>!it's a ghost story, and Brennert's then-partner had died at the age of 25 of leukemia, and he heard her voice saying "I left you too soon, my darling."!<] and they go, "Man, if that was my connection with the story, I'd never be able to watch it!" Also the part where they admit to being two middle-aged men in tears on a re-view before doing the commentary.
inkista t1_j6frzdi wrote
Reply to comment by realwolverinefan724 in What tv show writing room would you have loved/love to be a part of? by PatientBalance
Not credited like that. I don't think there are other showrunners "like Sorkin".
Most showrunners don't take the "written by" credit on every episode. Those who do generally aren't using a room (e.g., Hugo Blick), or do their pass uncredited (e.g., Joss Whedon on Buffy).
And there are some showrunners who are the exact opposite; e.g., Jerry Juhl insisted on Fraggle Rock that every word that ended up on screen be written by whoever had their name on the writer's credit. If that meant they had to keep rewriting it themselves until he was happy with it, so be it.
Every writers' rooms breaks a story together as a group. But most aren't working for only one of the writers to pump out all the scripts, or for everyone to be heavily rewritten by that one writer every episode.
inkista t1_j6f6p7f wrote
'80s Twilight Zone S1-S2: George R.R. Martin, Alan Brennert, Harlan Ellison, Rockne S. O'Bannon, Michael Cassutt, Richard Matheson, etc.
inkista t1_j6f63v3 wrote
Reply to comment by nigevellie in What tv show writing room would you have loved/love to be a part of? by PatientBalance
Except by Season 2, you're only there to break story, and Sorkin is writing all the teleplays. And if you're writing the teleplay, then he's usually re-writing it ("and" means a rewrite, "&" means a collaboration).
inkista t1_j6ap5lo wrote
Reply to comment by jblanch3 in NBCUniversal’s Peacock Tops 20M Paid Subs, Streamer’s Loss Hits $978M in Fourth Quarter by MarvelsGrantMan136
For me that's primarily only true if you're using VoD for broadcast network shows (ABC, CBS, NBC, Fox). Cable-originals still tend to be either ff through the ads (e.g., SyFy, TNT, BBC America, Animal Planet, etc.) or ad-free (e.g., HBO, TCM)
inkista t1_j630zrt wrote
Reply to comment by pierophoenix in NBCUniversal’s Peacock Tops 20M Paid Subs, Streamer’s Loss Hits $978M in Fourth Quarter by MarvelsGrantMan136
Well, at least you get access to the new Rian Johnson-created show, Poker Face, and if they don't fire Bryan Fuller off Crystal Lake, there'll be that as well.
inkista t1_j630ivb wrote
Reply to comment by _Meece_ in NBCUniversal’s Peacock Tops 20M Paid Subs, Streamer’s Loss Hits $978M in Fourth Quarter by MarvelsGrantMan136
>Why watch a TV show chopped up with 4-5 ad breaks, when you can watch it via streaming with none?
Because it's free with ads, and you have to pay a sub to get ad-free streaming? Also because you don't use any of your data if you're on cable. And you can FF through the ads if you DVRed the show?
Not to mention cable boxes all do VoD, much of which is ad-free, or where you can FF through the ads.
inkista t1_j62yesw wrote
Reply to I've been watching Midsomer Murders on and off and two episodes so far have been top notch. by Any-Satisfaction-770
Wow. I like the show for very different reasons and enjoy it most when it's being tongue-in-cheek. My favorite episode is s15e4 "Death and the Divas" Because it's a love letter to Hammer films—and boy does that crew loooove Hammer films, they had so much fun making up their own—and it guest stars Sinead Cusack and Harriet Walter. And Harriet Walter is Christopher Lee's niece.
inkista t1_j62owhi wrote
Dennis Potter. God-level television.
inkista t1_j5m4r0t wrote
Reply to Nobody's Looking - Brazilian Netflix 30min 8 episodes - similar to Miracle Workers Season 1 by AgentElman
I generally recommend it to folks who need a methadone show to recover from The Good Place addiction. :) I'm just sad they only had the one season.
inkista t1_j5m2blo wrote
[Typical reddit comment of wholehearted agreement].
inkista t1_j27z60i wrote
Reply to comment by AdrianW3 in What's your favorite TV crime series? by Cr7-Cr7Real
No, it's not back on yet, and S3 begins airing new year's day on BBC One. In the USA, however, AMC+ has not yet announced a drop date for S3 (sigh).
I meant 'right now' as in I tend to change my mind every five minutes or so. :-)
inkista t1_j25xa6e wrote
Reply to How many of you had never heard of The Last of Us video game series but are excited for the show? by SteveMidnight
Not a gamer at all (the last Naughty Dog game I ever played because my sister was into it was Crash Bandicoot :-). But if Craig Mazin's showrunning it, I'm in. I've been listening to Scriptnotes ever since Chernobyl...
inkista t1_j25wzhf wrote
Reply to What's your favorite TV crime series? by Cr7-Cr7Real
Right now? Happy Valley.
inkista t1_j25wreb wrote
Reply to comment by AimeeM46 in Now that Star Trek Prodigy has finished its first season, what are your thoughts on it? by TheNerdChaplain
You may also want to look into Trollhunters on Netflix. The creators/showrunners of ST:Prodigy, Kevin and Dan Hageman, have nearly all the story writing credits on Trollhunters. It's a fantasy cgi YA cartoon that was showrun by Guillermo del Toro and Marc Guggenheim. It ended up spawning a two-series (Trollhunters, 3 Below)/one miniseries (Wizards)/one movie (Rise of the Titans) franchise on Netflix, the "Tales of Arcadia".
inkista t1_j2331z3 wrote
Reply to comment by lightsongtheold in Emily Blunt and Chaske Spencer in The English by spectacleskeptic
>Weird show but definitely count me as a fan.
You may want to check out Hugo Blick's other BBC2 shows: The Shadow Line (Roku, Hoopla, Pluto), The Honourable Woman, and Black Earth Rising (Netflix). They're all equally weird. :D
inkista t1_j232xch wrote
Reply to comment by american_dimes in Emily Blunt and Chaske Spencer in The English by spectacleskeptic
Hugo Blick loves to use Spall to terrify the bejeezus out of you. He did the same damn thing in The Shadow Line.
inkista t1_j232gup wrote
Reply to comment by whaat_the_hell in Emily Blunt and Chaske Spencer in The English by spectacleskeptic
The writer is Hugo Blick who's British. This is, believe it or not, a BBC2 drama. And Blick has a very definite style all his own (see Black Earth Rising on Netflix). So, no, it's not a typical western.
inkista t1_j2329ed wrote
Reply to comment by my__name__is in Emily Blunt and Chaske Spencer in The English by spectacleskeptic
I'd recommend it to anyone who likes Dennis Kelly's Utopia and The Third Day, Paolo Sorrentino's The Young Pope/The New Pope, or possibly Tom Rob Smith's London Spy, The Assassination of Gianni Versace, or MotherFatherSon. The slightly surreal heightened stuff with kickass writing crowd. [grin].
All the Hugo Blick fans have mostly be waiting for The English ever since the first BBC press release on the series was issued, because we've all seen The Shadow Line (Roku, Hoopla, Pluto), The Honourable Woman, and Black Earth Rising (Netflix), and we know that if Hugo Blick's writing it, what it's going to be.
inkista t1_j231nh0 wrote
I've been pushing it in the Recommendation threads ever since the BBC issued its first press release on it about two years ago, because ZOMG! Hugo Blick made a Western?!!!
Just me, but right now in the wake of The English, the thing to be crying from the rooftops is the need for folks to go find the other shows in the Hugo Blick BBC2 oeuvre: The Shadow Line (Roku, Hoopla, Pluto), The Honourable Woman, and Black Earth Rising (Netflix).
Hugo Blick is a genuine television auteur. He does the hat trick of writing, directing, and producing every episode of his series.
inkista t1_j21fry9 wrote
Reply to comment by stringrandom in A lot of unaired TV pilots have surfaced today on Internet Archive by HRJafael
Yup. That was my mental framework for watching God Friended Me: that the Machine from POI was fanfic/LARPING Early Edition. :)
inkista t1_iuh8yeg wrote
Reply to comment by atticusbluebird in The mysterious benedict society - watched it yet ?? by Josh_Swar
It's based on the Trenton Lee Stewart series of YA books, and they're basically adapting one book per season. Trailer here.
It is indeed YA, and Disney+ rates the show at TV-PG, but as a kidless age 50+ adult who still watches cartoons and reads the occasional comic book :), I love both the books and the show. YMMV. When S1 first dropped, a lot of people were likening it to Wes Anderson or A Series of Unfortunate Events.
Just me, but every now and then it's good to shower off the TV-MA dark-dark-dark spatter of most streaming shows with some lighter TV-PG or TV-Y7 kid stuff. Or hell, in the case of Bluey, TV-Y. :)
inkista t1_iuh86jb wrote
Reply to comment by funkygrrl in The mysterious benedict society - watched it yet ?? by Josh_Swar
No, that would be r/Cumberbitches. :D
inkista t1_jec8o2n wrote
Reply to What is your opinion on the Quantum Leap reboot? by Bruinsrock11
I'm enjoying it, and the fun the writers are having expanding the mythology. It's not as good as the OG show, but it's solid and getting better. But. I watched the OG show as an adult, not as a kid, so my feelings about the OG show were that I was a fan, I greatly enjoyed it, and Scott Bakula was a sweetie but it wasn't some kind of tv masterpiece for the ages. If you watched it as a kid, you could have a very different feel for the property. It's probably also why I like the Magnum PI reboot more than the average on this sub. :D
I think the new show is doing a good job of being respectful (instead of just taking the title and then graffiting all over it with whatever the hell they want), paying homage and maintaining original story, and not straying too far from the tone of the original, while still carving their own path with an interesting set of characters.
But I still think Fantasy Island's doing a better job on their reboot :D. [I'm a sucker for any former Mutant Enemy writer, and they've got two as showrunners (Elizabeth Craft and Sarah Fain), and another three (Jane Espenson, Ben Edlund, and Drew Z. Greenberg) in the writers' room.]