Nowhere Man
Commodore
Does this mean the Civil War + Aliens or something else.
Quite the dilema for me. I'm a Civil War fanatic, but after LOST I swore I'd never watch another Cuse project.
Indeed.
At the end they will all wake up from their "flash sideways"(whatever the FUCK that means!)dream and they'll be in a church in purgatory.
LOL!!!111
So original. You said this about the alien prequel.
I thank God I'm too stupid to realize just how bad TV is.
That's just this place, and posters here are not at all representative of the larger audience. The vast majority of people whose viewing supports the TV industry are quite content with mindless drivel - otherwise how does the mindless drivel get renewed? The TV biz is in no danger at all. Anything interesting to watch - especially on network TV - is the endangered species. (Fortunately, cable is taking up a lot of the slack.)I sometimes fear for the medium of TV as it seems we've become such a hypercritical society that it doesn't seem like anybody can just sit back and relax and enjoy a TV show for what it is, just simple entertainment, nothing more, nothing less.
I wouldn't worry about that. Pretty sure it'll be straight historical fiction.Does this mean the Civil War + Aliens or something else.
That's just this place, and posters here are not at all representative of the larger audience. The vast majority of people whose viewing supports the TV industry are quite content with mindless drivel - otherwise how does the mindless drivel get renewed? .
But I tell you what, I'll take what you call "mindless drivel" over the mess that was LOST in the end, any day of the week.
But I tell you what, I'll take what you call "mindless drivel" over the mess that was LOST in the end, any day of the week.
I give high marks for creativity, so I prefer an imaginative disaster to yet another police procedural.At the very worst, it gives me something to yak about here.
Guess what, JJ's new show Alcatraz sounds like another Lost: built around a sf/f mystery.
Sounds good to me. I doubt the ending will be as controversial.The two are keeping mum on details other than to say it will be a story focusing more on fictional characters than on historical figures. It's envisioned as a serialized saga with a clear-cut "beginning, middle and end," Cuse said -- a storytelling form he knows well from "Lost."
...
The "raw facts" of the Civil War are compelling all on their own, Wallace noted, but the goal is to bring the era alive for viewers, not to recount every step on the battlefield.
"We are dramatists, not historians. We want to let the audience experience what it was like to be in these times and live through these dramatic experiences," Wallace said.
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