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June 25th, 2008 by Davodd

New Amsterdam star lands lead role in ‘Virtuality’

Nikolaj Coster-WaldauFans of sexy red-head Nikolaj Coster-Waldau are rejoicing. The star of the cancelled-too-soon FOX fantasy series, New Amsterdam, will be back on home theatre screens in 2009 starring in a new science fiction show called “Virtuality.”

Coster-Waldau will play “Commander Pike” (a not-so-subtle nod to Star Trek fandom), the highest-ranking officer on an interstellar spaceship named Phaeton.

The premise of the new show follows the crew of the first manned spaceflight on a 10-year journey from Earth to a nearby star system. Being that the trip will take years in cramped quarters, the crew are mostly kept sane by tapping into an on-board computer to allow their minds roam free in computer simulated adventures. And, of course, SOMETHING GOES HORRIBLY WRONG!! (Viola, a science fiction TV series)

The concept was created by TV power producer team Lloyd Braun and Gail Berman (Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Angel).

The concept was developed into a two-hour TV pilot by the writing team of Battlestar Glactica veterans, Michael Taylor and Ronald B. Moore. [Moore also either created or wrote scripts for Carnivale, Roswell and Star Trek: TNG, DS9 and Voyager.]

The director is Peter Berg, who is best known for creating the critically-acclaimed Friday Night Lights on NBC and is currently in pre-production for re-making Dune as a feature film to be released in 2010.

Officially being promoted as a 2-hour science fiction television movie set to air in early 2009, media newspapers are calling Virtuality a “backdoor pilot.” This means is enough people watch it, it could be ordered to full series.

Other actors cast to be in the show include:

  • James D’Arcy (Exorcist: The Beginning), the “psych officer” who creates the virtual reality programs the crew engages in.
  • Joy Bryant (Spider-Man 2) as “Alice Thibadeau”
  • Sienna Guillory (Eragon) as “Rika Goddard”
  • Nelson Lee (Blade: The Series) as “Keni Yamaguchi”
  • Richie Coster (The Dark Knight) as “Jimmy Johnson”
  • Omar Metwally (Rendition) as “Dr. Eyal Meyer”
  • Jimmi Simpson (Carnivale, Rose Red) as unknown character
  • Kerry Bishé (Sex and the City) as unknown character
June 23rd, 2008 by Davodd

Torchwood Renewed for 3rd season – sort of…

News from the BBC: Captain Jack Harkness will be back with more adventures in 2009 as Torchwood got the green light for more new episodes.

But in a disappointing turn for Torchwood fandom, the “season” will consist of only five new episodes, which begin filming in August.

This announcement comes after series creator Russel T. Davies said that after in 2009, he would be leaving BBC Wales, where he produces Torchwood as well as the newly invigorated Doctor Who series and spin-off Sarah Jane Adventures.

Doctor Who also is affected by Davies’ departure. It will have only 4 episodes in 2009 – which are being aired as specials on the BBC. There is no news whether Sci FI Channel, which airs Doctor Who in the U.S. will pick up those four specials next year.

In the United States, the five new Torchwood episodes are expected to air on BBC America beginning in January or February 2009.

June 20th, 2008 by Davodd

SFTV Ratings: June 13 – 19, 2008

Following are the ratings for speculative fiction shows that aired on the broadcast networks in the past week (all shows were in repeat):

SHOW | [NETWORK] | Rating (No. of Households)

  • 1. Smallville [CW] 1.5 (1.69 million households) 
  • 2. Supernatural [CW] 1.3 (1.47 million households)
  • 3. Reaper [CW] 1.1 (1.24 million households)
  • 4. Ghost Whisperer [CBS] 1.0 (1.13 million households)

Source: Nielsen Media Research

June 20th, 2008 by Davodd

Jaded Sci Fi pulls Charlie out of prime time after two weeks

TIVO ALERT!

Charlie Jade, the show the Sci Fi called “too intelligent” for American audiences has been pulled off the Sci Fi Friday programming block after only two weeks on the air.

The network says it plans to finish out the full season of the show and viewers are invited to tune into the series on its new date and time: 3 a.m. on Mondays.

The channel had been showing Charlie Jade in the 8 p.m. Friday slot for the past two weeks aired the split-up the two-hour premiere movie as two one-hour programs on consecutive weeks. Apparently that strategy failed to bring in enough viewers on Friday – causing the move the the graveyard Monday night slot.

Instead of an original series, Sci Fi will program the Friday 8 p.m. slot with repeats of the previous week’s Doctor Who.

The Sci FI channel has done this after-midnight showing of disfavored programs with previous series in 2001 and 2002 with The Secret Adventures of Jules Verne and Lexx.

June 15th, 2008 by Davodd

‘Masters of Science Fiction’ coming to DVD August 5

If you’re like 90+% of the population and missed the short-lived Masters of Science Fiction series that ran for four weeks in August 2007 on ABC, you’re in for a treat. The 6-episode anthology series is coming to DVD Aug. 5, 2008 with a suggested price of $30 for the two-disc set.

Although, many online stores, including Amazon.com, are allowing advanced purchase of the series at a lower price. ($22 at Amazon.com)

For those unfamiliar with the series’ concept, the creators of Masters of Science Fiction decided to take short short stories by well-known science fiction writers and film them as one-hour movies for TV. The six SF authors in this set are: Harlan Ellison, Robert A. Heinlein, Howard Fast, John Kessel, Walter Moseley, and Robert Sheckley.

It was preceded by a sister series, Masters of Horror, that ran for two seasons on cable channel, Showtime.

Although 20 episodes were planned, ABC only ordered six to be filmed. Cancelled before it even aired, only four episodes actually made it to TV screen on Saturday nights at 10 p.m. – known as a graveyard slot in broadcasting.

The DVD set includes the following short films:

“The Awakening”

In the middle of a ferocious firefight outside of Baghdad, US soldiers discover a mysterious body-one that they can’t even identify as human. Swiftly, all over the earth, more such creatures appear and begin to communicate. With this contact, the world is forced to choose between peace and destruction.

    Teleplay by Michael Petroni, based on a short story by Howard Fast (Spartacus, The Crossing). Directed by Michael Petroni (The Dangerous Lives of Altar Boys). Starring Emmy®-nominee Terry O’Quinn, Elisabeth Rohm (“Law & Order,” “Angel“).

 

“A Clean Escape”

 A dying Dr. Deanna Evans refuses to believe that her patient, Robert Havelmann, cannot remember the last 25 years of his life. It remains unclear why she has been so obsessed with this particular patient until the final, shocking conclusion.

    Teleplay by Emmy®-nominee Sam Egan, based on the short story by Nebula Award- winner John Kessel. Directed by Oscar®-nominee Mark Rydell. Starring two-time Oscar®-nominee Judy Davis and Oscar®-nominee Sam Waterston (The Killing Fields, “Law & Order“).

 

“The Discarded”

The ultimate story of despised minorities forever adrift in the darkness of outer space. As a last resort – born out of their loneliness and despair – they are forced to make an ominous pact with those responsible for their plight, in the hope that they will finally be offered refuge at home on Earth.

    Teleplay by Hugo and Nebula Award-winner Harlan Ellison (A Boy And His Dog, “The Outer Limits“) and Oscar®-nominee Josh Olson (A History of Violence), based on a short story by Harlan Ellison. Directed by Jonathan Frakes. Starring two-time Oscar®-nominee John Hurt, Emmy® and Tony®-winner Brian Dennehy (Assault on Precinct 13, Cocoon) and James Denton (“Desperate Housewives,” “The Pretender“).

 

“Jerry Was A Man”

Mr. and Mrs. Bronson Van Vogel are the seventh-richest couple in the world. Pleasure is their only work; mundane or dangerous chores are done by anthropoids. All the anthropoids-a few strands of human DNA, grown into a baby and fused with plastics-are named “Joe.” Somehow, Mrs. Van Vogel’s dormant compassion is awakened by a Joe named Jerry. What traits would prove that Jerry is, indeed, a man?

    Teleplay by Oscar®, Emmy® and Golden Globe®-nominee Michael Tolkin, based on the short story by seven-time Hugo Award-winner & Science Fiction Grand Master Laureate Robert A. Heinlein. Directed by Tolkin. Starring Emmy®-winner Anne Heche (John Q, “Men in Trees“), Golden Globe®-nominee Malcolm McDowell.

 

“Little Brother”

NEVER SHOWN ON TV: In a future world where courtrooms exist without human judges or juries, automated justice is the law of the land. Sitting before a kiosk which is the judge, jury, and executioner of the future, Fredon must find a way to convince the machine of his innocence – or find some other way to save himself before time runs out.

    Teleplay by Walter Mosley (Devil in a Blue Dress, Always Outnumbered), based on a short story from Mosley’s novel Futureland. Directed by Damell Martin (“Grey’s Anatomy,” Their Eyes Were Watching God). Starring Clifton Collins, Jr. (Capote, Traffic), Kimberly Elise (“Close to Home,” The Manchurian Candidate).

 

“Watchbird”

NEVER SHOWN ON TV: It seems the perfect solution to a ballooning crime rate – filling the skies with flying robotic droids that can prevent murder before it takes place. However, nobody told these “Watchbirds” that all life depends on a formula of carefully balanced killing. Robert Sheckley’s renowned story examines one of the most important questions of our time – is it wise to sacrifice our liberty in the name of our security?

    Teleplay by J. Michael Straczynski (“Babylon 5,” “The Twilight Zone“), based on a short story by Robert Sheckley (Freejack, Escape from Hell Island). Written by Hugo Award-winner Sam Egan. Directed by Harold Becker. Starring Sean Astin, Oscar® and three-time Emmy®-nominee James Cromwell and Oscar® and Golden Globe®-nominee Sally Kellerman as the voice of The Watchbird.

 

June 15th, 2008 by Davodd

SFTV Ratings: June 6 – 11, 2008

Following are the ratings for speculative fiction shows that aired on the broadcast networks last week (all shows were in repeat):

SHOW | [NETWORK] | Rating (No. of Households)

  • 1. Ghost Whisperer 9 p.m. [CBS] 3.9 (4.40 million households)
  • 2. Ghost Whisperer 8 p.m. [CBS] 3.7 (4.17 million households)
  • 3. Smallville [CW] 1.3 (1.47 million households) 
  • 4. (tie) Supernatural [CW] 1.2 (1.35 million households)
  • 4. (tie) Reaper [CW] 1.2 (1.35 million households)

Source: Nielsen Media Research

June 7th, 2008 by Davodd

SFTV Ratings: May 30 – June 5, 2008

Following are the ratings for speculative fiction shows that aired on the broadcast networks last week (all shows were in repeat):

SHOW | [NETWORK] | Rating (No. of Viewers)

  • 1. Ghost Whisperer [CBS] 1.4 (1.58 million viewers)
  • 2. Reaper [CW] 1.1 (1.24 million viewers)
  • 3. (tie) Smallville [CW] 0.6 (0.68 million viewers) 
  • 3. (tie) Supernatural [CW] 0.6 (0.68 million viewers)

Source: Nielsen Media Research

June 5th, 2008 by Davodd

Cult hit ‘Charlie Jade’ finally gets U.S. TV debut June 6

Mark your calendars, set your TiVo or tune in Friday, June 6 at 8 p.m. ET/PT to the SciFi Channel.

The TV series the Sci Fi channel originally rejected as “too intelligent” for an American audience three years ago is finally making its U.S. debut on that very channel Friday after a 21-episode run in Canada, South Africa, the UK, Japan, Korea, France, Romania and just about every other developed country on the globe.

Hailed by critics for its writing and acting and cinematic artistry, the alternate universe- and bind-bending Charlie Jade with its catch phrase, “Three worlds… One hope,” follows the adventures of a missing persons detective who finds himself caught between three parallel universes.

Created by the team of Chris Roland (Lexx) and Robert Wertheimer (Friday the 13th: The Series), Charlie Jade was filmed almost exclusively in urban South Africa, which gives the series an odd familiar/unfamiliar, otherworldly feel.

SYNOPSIS
from the SciFi.com Sci Fi Weekly:

The series is about a detective named Charlie Jade who lives in a cold, corporate world called Alphaverse. Charlie finds missing people. However, his life is turned upside down when he tries to help a lost young woman with no identity, only to be thrown into a parallel universe. Suddenly Charlie is the lost one as he attempts to get home, along the way discovering an intricate mystery involving three separate parallel universes, Alphaverse, Betaverse and Gammaverse.

“I have to say how thrilled I am that it’s actually going to get an airing on SCI FI in the United States, because when I started this, that was my ultimate objective,” Wertheimer  said in the Sci Fi Weekly interview.

The series’ tone is dark, gritty, violent and very sexy – similar to that of Sci Fi’s current hit series, Battlestar Galactica, although some of the sex scenes which played unedited in other countries are ripe for censor trimming in the U.S.

Nominated for [[Gemini award]]s in 2006 for Best Performance by an Actor in a Featured Supporting Role in a Dramatic Series for Michael Filipowich, Best Performance by an Actress in a Featured Supporting Role in a Dramatic Series for Patricia McKenzie, Best Picture Editing in a Dramatic Program or Series, and Best Visual Effects; the series won a Gemini for best sound editing.

CAST
Jeffrey Pierce (Close to Home, The Nine) as Charlie Jade
Michael Filipowich (Earth: The Final Conflict) as 01 Boxer
Michele Burgers as Essa Rompkin
Tyrone Benskin (Persian Emmisary in 300) as Karl Lubinsky
Danny Keogh as Julius Galt
Marie-Julie Rivest (Leonidas’ mother in 300) as Jasmine
Patricia McKenzie as Reena
Graham Clarke as Brion Boxer
David Dennis as Sew Sew Tukarrs

June 3rd, 2008 by Davodd

Sneak Peek: Dollhouse – new series on FOX

Joss Whedon is coming back to TV with a new science fiction series.

For the handful of readers who do not know who this man is, he is the creator of dark fantasy television classics, Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Angel as well as the cult space opera Firefly (and he was the writer/director of the spin-off movie, Serenity).

The new show is called Dollhouse and it is scheduled to air on the FOX network starting in winter of 2009.

According to the Hollywood Reporter, the show has received a seven-episode commitment from Fox, which is authorizing Whedon to spend between $1.5 million-$2 million per episode.

The series will star Eliza Dushku (“Faith” in Buffy, and the title character in Tru Calling). She will play a character called “Echo,” a member of a group of young men and women who are imprinted with different personalities for different assignments.

WARNING: The following trailer has minor spoilers.

[MEDIA=2]

Whedon ironically returns to TV at the FOX network, the same place that treated his last series, Firefly with such sloppy hands that the neo-mogul swore off episodic television altogether – instead setting his sites on a career as a writer/director in film. But a three-year failed stint working and re-working with Warner Brothers on a concept of bringing Wonder Woman to the big screen and a will-he-be-able-to-make-it original film called Goners, had him re-evaluating his professional life.

According the a May article in the Los Angeles Times, Whedon explained that the muse for Dollhouse was the result of a lunch meeting with former employee Dushku:

Eliza had made the deal at Fox and we got together to talk about her ambition, her management, her opportunities, because I’ve always felt that she’s a huge star. Plus, she’s a friend.

But I was trying to get a movie off the ground, “Goners.” “Wonder Woman” had already crashed and burned. “Goners” they had already lost control of the instruments, but who knows? So things were not that auspicious, but I was working it. Not shunning television but not intending to come back. But as we discussed Eliza’s predicament, I started giving her some ideas about what I thought she would need: a genre show so she could be political without being partisan; an ensemble show so she didn’t have to be in every scene. And I thought about it for a bit and then literally went, oh, curse word, I just came up with the show and the title. And it was the title that I knew I was doomed. Because if you have the title, you know it’s right. And that’s just bad.

When we really discussed the whole thing, she said, “You’re talking about my life. In my life, everybody tells me who they want me to be while I try and figure out who I am.” And that spoke to me. I agreed that I’ll write and maybe oversee the pilot. So I went home and said, “Honey, I’m sorry, I accidentally agreed to a Fox show at lunch.”

And in a little more than a week, Dushku and Whedon had sold the concept to FOX. Gary Newman, Chair of 20th Century Fox Television told the Times, “There’s an extemporaneous nature to it, which keeps you kind of riveted. You have to listen really carefully because the wicked and clever asides are nonstop.”

Dollhouse is scheduled to debut on the FOX network in January 2009, Mondays at 8 p.m. ET/PT as the lead-in to FOX’s hit series 24. (As usual, the time and day are subject to change at network executive whim.)

CAST
Eliza Dushku as Echo
Amy Acker (“Fred” on Angel) as Dr. Claire Saunders
Enver Gjokaj as Victor
Fran Kranz as Topher Brink
Dichen Lachman as Sierra
Harry J. Lennix (ER, 24) as Boyd Langton
Tahmoh Penikett (“Helo” on Battlestar Galactica) as Paul Smith
Olivia Williams (The Sixth Sense) as Adelle DeWitt
Miracle Laurie as November

May 31st, 2008 by Davodd

Sci Fi channel plans to stretch genre again

Hit TV series such as space opera Battlestar Galactica have led NBC Universal’s Sci FI channel to be the 15th-highest rated cable network. But that’s not good enough in the executive suites; they think the channel can attract folk who don’t think they like science fiction.

A couple years after adding professional wrestling into its mix, last week the Sci FI channel said it once again will be moving beyond traditional science fiction. Here’s what the New York Times reported

“It’s not just aliens, spaceships and the future,” said Dave Howe, who was promoted to president of Sci Fi from general manager in January. “It’s about asking that simple question, ‘What if?’ ”

The changes evolved over several years. One result is a widening audience, especially among women. In April, for example, Sci Fi ranked sixth in cable networks in the 25-to-54 age group. Growth in female viewers outpaced that in men; 43 percent of Sci Fi’s viewers are female. 

The channel is NBC Universal’s only non-news success in internaional markets, the paper claims.