Tampilkan postingan dengan label Caprica. Tampilkan semua postingan
Tampilkan postingan dengan label Caprica. Tampilkan semua postingan

Kamis, 05 Mei 2011

Aborted Reviews: 'Being Human': S1-3, 'Caprica': 1.14 - "Blowback", 'Dexter': S4 & 'Dollhouse': S2


I write a lot of stuff I never actually post here, usually because I proof-read and don't think it's good enough. It's true! I keep all my writing on a Word document that's currently 113 pages long, mostly consisting of hazy ideas for polls, talking points, random media-related articles, some research, etc.

Sometimes there are reviews (often of TV box-sets) that I struggle to find time to write from start to finish, so end up tinkering with them over a period of weeks, sometimes months -- mostly on afternoons when there are no reviews to write for shows I watched the evening before. Unfortunately, this means that these reviews can reach a moment in time where their "moment" has passed. Or, simply, I've become bored working on them, and they remain forever unfinished. Recently I've become frustrated with this fact, and increasingly aware that such reviews are destined to sit on my laptop forever, slowly turning into relics of my own mind. So, to hell with it, why not just publish what I have, in whatever state they're in?

And that's what we have here. A handful of TV reviews (mostly aborted or unfinished box-set appraisals) of Being Human, Dexter and Dollhouse, with a latter episode of Caprica thrown in for good measure. Obviously, these aren't finished (some are just "set up" really), but I think they're of sufficient quality to be posted. I hope. I don't think I'll ever find the time and proclivity to finish them, so hope you enjoy reading what I did manage to cobble together. Maybe this will embarrass me to finish what I started more often, or not start to begin with!

But that Firefly box-set review really IS coming. Honestly. Note its absence here. Trust me...

DVD Review: BEING HUMAN – Complete Series 1-3; kitchen sink supernaturalism

It's a peculiar premise that shouldn't work as well as it does: a vampire, a werewolf, and a ghost share a house together. It's the kind of concept that could be taken in different directions, tonally, but Being Human goes for character-based drama with a gentle sitcom undertone, punctuated by moments of startling horror. It's a sweet confection that should delight most people drawn to Being Human, although the show's let down by several problems underpinning its mythology.

Mitchell (Aidan Turner) is a 115-year-old vampire who led a hedonistic lifestyle with his diminutive "recruiter" Herrick (Jason Watkins) over the 20th-century, before deciding to abstain from human blood, get an inconspicuous job as a hospital porter, and live with his werewolf friend George (Russell Tovey.) The two pals move into a pink semi-detached house in Bristol, later becoming aware they're sharing it with Annie (Lenora Crichlow), their landlord's dead fiancée, and a unique support group is formed as the trio attempt to "be human" without arousing suspicion from friends and neighbours.

The premise is actually quite flawed, as the idea of overcoming your nature to fit in with mankind only works in the case of a vampire going through withdrawal symptoms -- which act as a drug addiction allegory, natch. After all, George is perfectly human for 353 days of the year, while Annie has little choice but to accept she can't be seen by normal people to achieve "social acceptance". But still, the interaction of the three characters living under one roof is the focus of the series, and fortunately the actors have an engaging rapport. Mitchell is the mandatory brooder who struggles to turn his back on his debauched past, particularly with Herrick on every corner trying to coax him back into the fold; George is the intellectual, emotional, socially-awkward guy who's tormented by his werewolf curse; and Annie's the insecure, ditzy, and impulsive one trying to understand her situation as a spirit.


Series 1 deals with storylines that are most pertinent to the show's themes and intent, as each one neatly highlights the major issues and concerns the lead characters have. Mitchell exists in a state of constant temptation from the vampires beyond the sanctuary of his new abode; George starts having a relationship with a headstrong nurse called Nina (Sinead Keenan), while trying to keep her ignorant of his hairy affliction; and Annie starts to piece together the circumstances of her death and, after realizing her fiancé murderer her, decides to exact justice from beyond the grave so she can "move on" to the next life. Each storyline cuts to the core concerns of the characters and their struggles with their very natures, and it's a synergy that Being Human never quite manages to top in later years.

By Series 2, there's more confidence in Being Human's ability to deliver compelling drama and horror, so some of the humour takes a backseat. Instead, the mythology of the show widens to encompass the presence of an organization headed up by a Dr Jaggatt and a former-priest called Kemp (Donald Sumpter) who are aware "supernaturals" exist and intend to eradicate them. Added to that, Mitchell turns preacher in trying to get the city's vampires to join him in blood abstinence; George and Nina's relationship disintegrates in the wake of George passing on his lycanthropy to her (a thin AIDS allegory), which thus pushes George into a hasty rebound with a single mother; and Annie tries to find a purpose now that she's chosen to remain earthbound.

It's a strong series, but perhaps one that alienated fans who were attracted to Being Human because of its lead character's interactions and veins of comedy. The trio tend to get lost in their own situations too much, while there's a clear sense of desperation about how to deal with Annie (who's even given a corporeal body for awhile, almost out of desperation over the constraints of a character most people can't see.) But there's enough imagination and self-belief to keep you watching, together with some genuinely gripping sequences – like the moment when George loses track of time and starts to transform into a werewolf in the middle of a primary school. A genuinely tense and visually superb sequence of mounting horror and uncertainty.

Finally, Series 3 offers minor reinvention. Mitchell, George and Nina move to Barry Island in South Wales to escape the previous year's events and, after renting a former B&B called Honolulu Heights, Mitchell manages to rescue Annie from the purgatory she was banished to the year before. From there the show takes a more inward-looking approach to its drama -- as secrets, lies and lost memories play a part in tearing the four friends apart. Guest stars play a more active role than ever, often headlining largely standalone episodes that are scheduled to break up the year's deeper story. We meet a middle-aged vampire trapped in a teenager's body, a party girl turned into a zombie, George's milquetoast father, and new semi-regulars are introduced in haggard werewolf McNair (Robson Green) and his sheltered son Tom (Michael Socha), before the return of an amnesiac Herrick lends the whole series an unpredictable edge when he becomes their lodger in the attic.

DVD Review: DEXTER: Complete Series 4 (2009)

After the misfiring third season, Dexter needed to deliver a convincing comeback in its fourth year, and found the answer to its prayers in esteemed actor John Lithgow. The series went back to its roots of having Dexter Morgan (Michael C. Hall) contend with another serial-killer on his patch; namely The Trinity Killer (Lithgow), a fiend who's escaped detection for three decades, but has returned to Miami to end his clandestine killing spree.

Retired FBI Agent Lundy (Keith Carradine) has become a self-made Inspector Abberline to his very own Jack The Ripper, determined to catch Trinity while colleagues/friends treat his theories as bunkum. Meanwhile, new father Dexter struggles to find balance between his parental responsibilities and entrenched need to slaughter criminals. The twist to this particular tale is that Dexter comes to realize he has much to learn from Trinity; a wiser, more experienced killer, having apparently perfected the art of hiding in plain sight...


The common weakness of Dexter is that most subplots unrelated to its eponymous anti-hero play like dispensable off cuts from a formulaic cop show, and that continued to be the case here. Fortunately, season 4 finds a compelling way to involve Dexter in Trinity's life for an extensive period of time, and does a great job slowly unraveling the psychosis at the heart of season 4's villain. It has the backbone of an unraveling mystery, which takes the sting out of the more tedious subplots.

Lithgow uses his pallid features and piercing blue eyes to unnerving effect, acting a portent of what Dexter's life could become, yet he's still able to evoke sympathy when the root of his problem is eventually revealed. It's a performance that buoys the entire season, even when various leaks burst through the hull, bagging Lithgow a deserved Emmy award. More importantly, he provides Hall with someone of comparable skill to bounce off, and the season takes full advantage of these two heavyweights. A visual tableau at the tail-end of "Hello, Dexter Morgan" paints the two actors as boxers squaring up to each other in the ring. To continue the allegory: season 4 may have its weak rounds, but it ends with a chilling knockout punch.

TV Review: 'CAPRICA' 1.14 – "Blowback"

"Blowback" kicked off the final five episodes in glorious style, delivering panache and forward momentum with the key stories: Daniel Graystone (Eric Stoltz) discovered the Guatrau have been smuggling some of his Cylons off-world to fight in the Tauron civil war, so persuaded its leader to stop this illegality with the promise of quicker results with his life-changing resurrection program "Grace"; Lacey (Magda Apanowicz) was sent to Gemenon aboard an STO vessel with other young recruits, only to find herself embroiled in a violent hijacking by a group of polytheists; police Captain Duram (Brian Markinson) was pressured by his boss Gara Singh (Peter Wingfield) into revealing who his informant is working undercover at Sister Clarice's (Polly Walker) abode; and Clarice herself finally got her hands on Zoe's infinity broach, which contains a backup of the martyr's avatar software, which she hopes will form the basis of an STO "afterlife".


For once, there wasn't a single storyline that bored me here, which was a huge relief after a mid-season run of duds, which felt responsible for Syfy yanking the show off-air and deciding to cancel it. Maybe they should have waited a few weeks? Everything was very neatly handled and very entertaining, with Lacey's storyline being particularly gripping as the poor girl was forced to fight for her life before the hijackers executed her fellow "heathens" and ejected their bodies out of an airlock. The twist that the entire situation was a staged test of loyalty managed to fool me, despite being a common trick, and I enjoyed the final moments when Lacey realized those who failed the test were blithely executed by an armed Cylon. The penny seemed to drop for Lacey that she's joined a religious cult that are actually as crazy as the fake polytheists.

Blu-ray Review: DOLLHOUSE - The Complete Second Season (2009)

Joss Whedon's Dollhouse was given a last-minute reprieve by Fox after its low-rated debut season in 2008, but after being transferred to the "graveyard slot" of Friday nights, the network announced its cancellation barely four episodes into its sophomore run. Fortunately, the axe fell early enough for Whedon's team to condense their potential five-year plan into the remaining half-dozen episodes. This resulted in a rip-roaring season that, while unsurprisingly hectic and devil may care in attitude, birthed so many interesting ideas and surprises that the loyal fan-base were given a satisfactory conclusion and several of the year's most exciting hours of sci-fi drama last year...


To recap the premise, Dollhouse concerns a secret organization that has pioneered mind-altering technology, enabling them to erase and implant memories into human brains. They currently use this technology to create "dolls"; willing volunteers who sign away periods of their life for financial recompense, allowing their bodies to become the shell for various personalities that a client demands. The dolls can become the world's greatest midwife, hiking companion, prostitute, soldier, secretary, pop star, or any other occupation desired. More controversially, dolls can be given the personality and memories of actual people, living or dead (provided they've had their minds copied and stored for future use). The very idea throws up an abundance of existential questions and ideas, most of which Dollhouse explores throughout its two seasons: from "sleepers" who don't even know they're dolls, sent out into the real world to keep tabs on people trying to expose the Dollhouse, to questions of mortality if one could continually inherit a host body and transfer your consciousness to a new one when age or health becomes an issue.

"Echo" (Eliza Dushku) is our heroine, a feisty volunteer for the program's Los Angeles facility, run by the authoritarian Adelle DeWitt (Olivia Williams), who has the unique ability to retain her memories of past experiences and personalities after the obligatory "treatment" (mind erasure) that followers every assignment. In season 2, Echo's ability will prove instrumental if they're to destroy the Dollhouse from the inside-out, with the help of Ballard (Tahmoh Penikett), a former FBI Agent who attempted to rescue Echo in season 1, but is now a double-agent working for the enemy, and Echo's former "handler" Boyd (Harry Lennix), a fatherly figure who's questioned the morality of the Dollhouse from the very start.

Jumat, 26 November 2010

Syfy burn 'Caprica' this January


This new is days old now, but I thought it was worth mentioning here. Maybe a few people have yet to hear. Syfy have confirmed plans to "burn off" the remaining 5 episodes of axed sci-fi drama Caprica, with a back-to-back marathon on Tuesday 4 January 2011 @6/5c.

Good news for fans who don't intend to buy the DVD to see the ending, and for those who want to record Syfy's five-hour marathon and watch them at their leisure. I'll most likely be amongst the latter, perhaps writing capsule reviews of the remaining hours for a final wrap-up post. I hope the writers give us resolution, or at least don't let it end on a cliffhanger that'll never be answered. That said, there's a chance in-development prequel Battlestar Galactica: Blood & Chrome will be able to fill the gaps in Caprica's story.

Jumat, 29 Oktober 2010

'CAPRICA' 1.13 - "False Labor"


Despite the news Syfy have cancelled Caprica, I've decided to continue reviewing its remaining episodes, albeit in a more abridged fashion. It's become clear that my reviews, much like the show, has dropped in popularity since Caprica came back from hiatus, so it makes sense not to bust a gut trying to write something that's only of narrow interest...

"False Labor" was all about struggle, and introduced an interesting new angle with Sam (Sacha Roiz) getting into the gun-smuggling trade, intending to pass weapons to soldiers fighting a Tauron civil war that echoes a conflict he fought in alongside brother Joseph (Esai Morales). Sam's off-world smuggling drew the attention of a Tauron gangster, who wasn't happy about a competitor on his turf, so threatened Sam's life as a warning. Nevertheless, Sam chose a fight for his new business, by taking control of a Cylon and using it to slaughter his rivals during a shootout at a swanky bar. The likelihood a percentage of Graystone's mass-produced Cylons will be siphoned to Tauron by Sam, giving soldiers an advantage over their enemy, is an intriguing puzzle piece in the show's intention to explain how Cylons became such a menace.

It was also entertaining to watch Daniel (Eric Stoltz) struggle to replicate Zoe's avatar code, trialing different versions of his wife Amanda (Paula Malcolmson) in an attempt to elicit a spark of sentience that's key to producing a convincing copy of a human being. Of course, the science here is incredibly far-fetched (I don't see how linking an avatar to the entirety of someone's online history would enable them to remember memories of events they weren't present for), but the basic idea is still fun to see unfold. Even if the subplot relied too heavily on the trick of having a surprising scene play out, with the audience unaware they're watching a simulation. It worked once, but I was too on guard for it to work that second time.

The real Amanda was still trying to ingratiate herself into Clarice's (Polly Walker) large family, who haven't exactly welcomed her with open arms, but eventually made a connection with the household's pregnant matriarch (by making up a sob story about her own troubled maternity) to aide her acceptance.

This episode felt a lot better to me, if only because the raison d'être of Caprica (explain the rise of the Cylons) was a bigger part of the episode and appears to have found a way to get more Cylons involved on the show. And there were compelling moments with Daniel's attempts to replicate his daughter's genius, as you can sense his desperation to achieve his goal and cheat death through technology. The scene on a building ledge between Joseph and Daniel also crackled, reminding you of earlier episodes when the Graystone and Adama patriarchs clashed. But I'm still bored by Amanda, who only became interesting when she started having visions before the hiatus, so why haven't they returned to that yet?

It was still a rather slow and measured hour, but that has been Caprica's tone for most of the season, and isn't likely to change. The upside is there's some fine acting (Stoltz confessing his many crimes to avatar-Amanda was a highlight) and fascinating ideas floating around. It's just a shame Caprica's individual positives haven't coalesced into something substantially appealing.

WRITER: Michael Taylor
DIRECTOR: John Dahl
TRANSMISSION: 26 October 2010, Syfy, 9/8c

Kamis, 28 Oktober 2010

'Caprica' cancelled!


When Syfy announced the development of Battlestar Galactica prequel Blood & Chrome last week, fans expected the worst for the existing spin-off Caprica. These fears have proven well-founded; Syfy have cancelled the low-rated sci-fi drama, which will be unceremoniously removed from their schedule next week.

Syfy's statement:

"The remaining first run episodes of Caprica -- airing Tuesdays at 10/9c -- will be removed from the schedule as of next Tuesday, November 2. These final five episodes of the season will be re-scheduled to air at a time to be announced time in the first quarter of 2011, and will conclude the run of the series."
Mark Stern, Syfy's EVP of Original Programming:

"We appreciate all the support that fans have shown for Caprica and are very proud of the producers, cast, writers and the rest of the amazing team that has been committed to this fine series. Unfortunately, despite its obvious quality, Caprica has not been able to build the audience necessary to justify a second season."
What do you make of this unsurprising news? I can't say I'm too upset, but it's a shame Caprica didn't find its feet. I wasn't so dismissive of the series compared to some (many people actively hated it), but I definitely agree it totally lost momentum after returning from hiatus. They had the chance to take stock of what was going wrong and fix it, but they didn't manage to.

Caprica's soap-opera elements just didn't appeal to BSG's audience, who preferred the epic adventuring, politics, philosophy, and thrilling action that BSG brought to the smallscreen. It also had more dynamic and appealing characters than Caprica's mix of gangsters, billionaires, teenagers, and terrorists.

Why do you think Caprica failed? And will next year's Blood & Chrome, set during the First Cylon War, have more success?

Kamis, 21 Oktober 2010

'CAPRICA' 1.12 - "Things We Lock Away"


The best episode since Caprica returned from hiatus, sure, but it's still flopping about like a dying fish in the majority of its storylines. This week's subplot with Lacey (Magda Apanowicz) held prisoner in Clarice's (Polly Walker) attic and drugged didn't offer us much, beyond letting Lacey know Clarice wants Zoe's avatar program and for her to attend STO training...

Elsewhere, the storyline inside V-world, with Zoe (Alessandra Torresani) being viciously attacked by followers of "Death Walker" of Tamara (Genevieve Buechner) inside a New Cap City coliseum, because Tamara knows Zoe was the bomber who killed her in the real world, could have been better. It was an incongruous jump to have Zoe suddenly in that bizarre situation, and the scenes were dragged out for longer than they deserved -- perhaps as a way to keep people hooked with the promise of intermittent scenes where Zoe brandishes a sword?

I was also confused by the addition of "Head-Zoe"; a vision avatar-Zoe can see who guides her through the ordeal and makes her believe in herself as a separate entity to original-Zoe. An avatar of a dead genius schoolgirl, trapped inside a virtual world, projecting a mental vision of herself to dispense words of wisdom? Can it get more convoluted? Caprica needs to find some easy-to-grasp simplicity.

The best storyline belonged to Daniel (Eric Stoltz), who won back control of his company from Vergis (John Pyper-Ferguson) when the blackmailed board members voted him back in as CEO. Daniel, aware that Joseph (Esai Morales) also now intends to have Vergis killed before he leaves Caprica, as a way to ensure he never again poses a problem, was stuck in a moral quandary. He's done terrible things in the name of business, but draws the line at killing a rival, so offered Vergis the chance to join forces and channel their wealth and influence into destroying Tauron gangsters the Ha'la'tha. But it was a deal that Vergis, himself a Tauron, couldn’t accept. Instead, he forced Daniel to stab him to death in his front room, fulfilling a cultural need to choose the circumstances of his own death.

Finally, Amanda (Paula Malcomsen) searched Clarice's cabin for evidence of her being a terrorist leader, but found nothing, only to be ordered by her handler to infiltrate Clarice's actual home. I just hope we get back to the idea of Amanda being a prophet soon, because I'm not in the least bit interested in watching her snoop around Clarice's home for the cops.

Overall, my interest in Caprica is sapped after a dozen episodes, almost to the point I'm ready to give up on it. Since it came back, it's moved away from everything I enjoyed about the earlier season. I'm still interested in Daniel's arc (even if the situation with Vergis felt like it had more to give us), but it's very difficult to keep faith that the writers know what they're doing with anything else. The show feels all over the place. Even the prospect of Tamara and Zoe as partnering "Death Walkers" in the virtual world doesn't excite me, as it might have done six episodes ago.

A glint of hope was the intriguing flashback that showed Zoe drew Cylons as a child, years before her father designed them. Did Daniel's subconscious just soak up her artwork, as he suggested, or are the Graystone's being guided down a path to create sentient robots by an outside force? If so, this points to the emergence of BSG's so-called Angels, which is fun. But, if you've seen BSG, you'll already know what their deal is (for the most part), so I'm not sure where the mystery is. Hopefully Caprica is going to explain the "Angels" in a manner that will effect how we perceive BSG. I just hope they do a good job, without revising BSG's mytharc in a way that spoils that show.

WRITER: Drew Z. Greenberg
DIRECTOR: Tim Hunter
GUEST CAST: Magda Apanowicz, John Pyper-Ferguson & Genevieve Buechner
TRANSMISSION: 19 November 2010 -– Syfy, 9/8c

Kamis, 14 Oktober 2010

'CAPRICA' 1.11 – "Retribution"


It's so frustrating, but Caprica has hit a quagmire since it came back from extended hiatus. It seems to be making all the wrong decisions right now; not least putting the emphasis on Sister Clarice (Polly Walker) in these first two episodes back, when the terrorism angle to Caprica is one of its least enjoyable components. I'm officially bored with 9/11 fears being reflected in entertainment now. On the plus side, "Unvanquished" and "Retribution" have made me realize just how much Zoe's storyline was keeping this show's heartbeat steady. The writers desperately need to get back to her story.

This week, Daniel (Eric Stoltz) has allied himself with Tauron gangsters Joseph (Esai Morales) and Sam (Sasha Roiz), who are helping him get his company back from Vergis by blackmailing the board members of his business into giving him their vote for a return. His only loyal employee, Cyrus (Hiro Kanagawa), has also returned the remnants of the broken U-87 Cylon his dead daughter's avatar was inhabiting until recently. Having Daniel interact with Joseph directly is a good move, and watching him flush away his humanity to regain his career (one colleague he pressures ends up committing suicide) is dramatic, and yet... just another layer of bleakness in a show that's becoming intolerably depressing.

The bigger focus of the story was on Clarice, who became the target of an assassination attempt at a Caprica interplanetary airport, masterminded by her STO rival Barnabus (James Marsters), which acolyte Lacey (Magda Apanowicz) and her bombers failed to pull off. This triggers a turf war between Clarice (who has the blessing of STO figurehead "Mother" to control Caprica's terrorist cells) and the ousted Barnabus, which leads to him being caught and killed with a bomb as Lacey is kidnapped by Clarice.

Simultaneously, Amanda (Paula Malcomsen) begins to realize that her friend Clarice is a terrorist leader when she's informed of the compelling evidence against her by a detective building a case against Clarice. She now looks likely to become his confidential informant, providing intelligence on Clarice's movements so the authorities can eliminate the monotheist cult that recruits suicide bombers.

In not so much what happens in Caprica that's a problem, rather how it goes about telling the story. It's becoming a suffocating sci-fi show, with nothing to balance out the dark storylines, and clogged up with plot and characters whose motivations and purpose have become difficult to remember. You need to be able to hold each of Caprica's storylines in the palm of your hand, but most are slipping through my fingers now. Of primary concern: I'm losing the thread with the Soldiers Of One cult, and why they believe bombing innocent people will somehow convert people to their cause. Who wants to join a monad religion that doesn't preach their beliefs reasonably, but primarily kills non-believers? Why is monotheism not tolerated by society? If the idea is that Clarice's followers are fundamentalist zealots that have bastardized monotheism to their own ends, then this needs to be made clearer.

I can't summon the enthusiasm to write about "Retribution" any more, but feel free to add your own thoughts below. I know Caprica wasn't to everyone's taste when it debuted earlier this year, but it really seems to be struggling now. Knowing they've had months to rethink and adjust things, with the benefit of knowing the audience's doubts and concerns first-hand, means there's really no excuse for this state of affairs. Maybe, as many suspect, there just isn't enough to Caprica's raison d'etre (let's reveal how the Cylons were created) to fuel a television show, and this should have been a six-part miniseries?

WRITERS: Patrick Massett & John Zinman
DIRECTOR: Jonas Pate
GUEST CAST: Hiro Kanagawa, Panou, Winston Rekart, Ryan Robbins & Zak Santiago
TRANSMISSION: 12 October 2010 – Syfy, 9/8c

Jumat, 08 Oktober 2010

'CAPRICA' 1.10 - "Unvanquished"


Today over at Obsessed With Film, I review the mid-season premiere of CAPRICA, Syfy's Battlestar Galactica prequel, brought to you by the designers of skintight trousers.

"Syfy's prequel to the venerated Battlestar Galactica remake was always going to face an uphill struggle. The notion of a prequel usually denotes there's been a narrative conclusion to a better storyline, so now the makers are trying to turn back-story into a narrative of its own. Sometimes prequels work, but usually they fail. Caprica failed to inherit the majority of BSG's audience when it debuted earlier this year; possibly because there's more family drama than military action, maybe because it feels less epic in scope, or perhaps because none of Caprica's characters are de facto heroes. And while that brings uncertainty and darkness to bear, you have to wonder if that's what audiences want to watch right now. There was ambiguity in BSG, too, but we started that show with a simple humans/good versus robots/evil premise, before things started to get complicated." Continue reading...

Kamis, 09 September 2010

'Caprica' returns early, 5 October


Syfy have reversed their unpopular decision to delay the second half of Caprica's first season until January 2011, and will now resume the show starting Tuesday 5 October @10pm. Great news, even if it does mean my schedule is getting to unmanageable levels because of this! The full press release is below:

NEW YORK - September 9, 2010 - The highly anticipated return of Syfy's critically-acclaimed series Caprica will come even sooner than anticipated. The second half of season one will now premiere on Tuesday, October 5, 2010 at 10:00PM ET/PT, the channel announced today. Fans will no longer have to wait until January to watch the series exciting kick-off, as the citizens of Caprica deal with the chaotic aftermath of the mid-season finale's harrowing events.

The second half of season one will transport us from stunningly vivid, twisted Virtual realities to the fascinating outer worlds of the 12 Colonies. Along the way, revolutionary tensions rise, family power shifts and our characters grapple with the physical and emotional consequences of their questionable decisions. As the season races towards its stunning conclusion, each episode lays the groundwork for the inevitable (and brutal) clash between the new Cylon race and its human creators.

"Though we initially announced the January return of Caprica, we still had hopes of finding a way to get the series back on the air sooner," said Mark Stern, Executive Vice President of Original Programming, Syfy and Co-Head of Content for Universal Cable Productions. "We've been able to successfully re-work our schedule, and are thrilled to bring the show back during what is traditionally Syfy's most-watched time of the year. The outcome should also please fans who expressed their wishes for a shorter mid-season hiatus."

Caprica stars Eric Stoltz (Daniel Graystone), Paula Malcomson (Amanda Graystone), Esai Morales (Joseph Adama), Polly Walker (Sister Clarice Willow), Alessandra Torresani (Zoe Graystone), Magda Apanowicz (Lacy) and Sasha Roiz (Sam Adama).

Caprica will immediately follow new episodes of Stargate Universe (Tuesdays @ 9PM).

The third season premiere of Sanctuary will now launch in its former timeslot on Friday, October 15 at 10:00PM ET/PT immediately following Friday Night Smackdown on Syfy at 8:00PM ET/PT.

Produced by Universal Cable Productions, Caprica is a prequel to the award-winning series Battlestar Galactica, and is executive produced by Ronald D. Moore and David Eick. Jonas Pate serves as co-executive producer and director.

Jumat, 30 Juli 2010

TRAILER: Caprica Season 1.5


I had mixed feelings about Caprica, but ultimately I think it showed great potential amidst the missteps and awkward uses of character. I also found it hard to dismiss the feeling Caprica's story is crippled because it's heading towards an ending the majorit of its fanbase (Battlestar Galactica fans) know already. To counteract that, the journey needs to be compelling in its own right, and there were admittedly enough moments that achieved that.

Anyway, Syfy have released an extensive teaser for the remainder of season 1 (see above), which unfortunately won't air until January 2011. I think it's too early to be trying to whip the fans into a frenzy, but I guess this trailer makes it clear the show is becoming more action-packed and exciting. I'm actually very surprised by how far the story appears to be developing, if this trailer isn't cleverly misleading us. It almost makes me wonder if Caprica has enough story for a second season and beyond. But, as of right now, this trailer succeeds in making me pine for the show to return, and hopefully blow us away with a more focused and unpredictable feel.