by Heather Toshiko, May 1 2012 // 11:15 AM

We probably don’t give enough attention to shows like Eureka and Lost Girl. With Eureka, you’ve got a show that’s been on for several seasons yet still manages to deliver great characters and compelling episodes as it leads up to it’s series finale.
Then, there’s Lost Girl. A fairly new show on Syfy that even from the beginning looked to be an interesting mix of genres and features interesting characters and situations. Plus, the lead character is a succubus who feeds off of people’s sexual energy, so there’s that.
Anyway, both shows had brand new episodes last night on Syfy and we’ve got bonus scenes from both of them to share with you today. In addition, we’ve also got previews for next week’s all new episodes of both shows too.
No, no need to thank us. We do it because we love you. Check out all the videos after the jump and look for Eureka and Lost Girl next Monday starting at 9/8C on Syfy.
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Posted in: News · TV
Tagged: Anna Silk, Colin Ferguson, Ed Quinn, Eureka, Joe Morton, Ksenia Solo, Lost Girl, Matt Frewer, Rick Howland, Salli Richardson-Whitfield, SyFy, TV, Video
by Joe Gillis, Apr 30 2012 // 12:00 PM

We’ve been following Aaron Sorkin’s career since the days of A Few Good Men and Sport Night. Loved that show. Then, of course, he went on to create The West Wing and later win the Academy Award for writing The Social Network.
Now he’s back on TV, at HBO this time around, and preparing to launch a new show called The Newsroom. We brought you the first trailer for the show recently and now, there’s a brand new one we want to share with you today.
In it we get to know the band of optimists and crusaders that will make up the new show and see a bit more of the ironic humor Sorkin is famous for. Sure, some of you may think this looks an awful lot like Sorkin’s Sports Night.
Even if it does have quite a few similarities, that isn’t a bad thing because, as we said above, Sports Night was a pretty great show that we loved. So, let’s just think of this one as Sports Night 2.0 with swearing and the potential for nudity and sex.
Not a bad threesome. Not at all. Check out the trailer after the break. The Newsroom premieres on HBO in June.
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Posted in: HBO · News · TV
Tagged: Aaron Sorkin, Alison Pill, Drama, Emily Mortimer, HBO, Jane Fonda, Jeff Daniels, Olivia Munn, Sam Waterston, The Newsroom, TV
by Jonathan Weilbaecher, Apr 27 2012 // 3:45 PM
My affinity for Doctor Who has to be well-known at this point in time, but there is another Brit series that really floats my boat these days. Coincidentally, or more likely not, both shows are currently headed by the same mad genius, Steven Moffat.
Sherlock co-stars one of my favorite british actors, Martin Freeman, and introduced me to the wonder that is Benedict Cumberbatch. But the show has another secret weapon that I am excited to dig into today, a wonderful score by David Arnold and Michael Price.
The name David Arnold should ring a few bells for a few of you, he is most well-known for his many recent James Bond scores, in fact he the second most frequent Bond composer right after the legend, John Barry. Aside from Bong, Arnold also has several other geek cred credits, most notably writing the scores to Independence Day and Startgate.
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Posted in: Action · Adaptation · BBC · Drama · Film Music Reviews · Film Score Friday · Music · News · Reviews · TV
Tagged: BBC, Benedict Cumberbatch, David Arnold, film music review, Film Score Friday, Martin Freeman, Michael Price, score, Series 1, Series 2, Sherlock, Soundtrack
by Joe Gillis, Apr 27 2012 // 12:00 PM
At first, NBC’s Grimm didn’t exactly blow us away. The performances were pretty wooden and the stories, while sorta interesting, still left something to be desired. Fortunately, the show has vastly improved over the course of its first season and has become one of our favorite shows.
As its Friday and Grimm is on tonight, we’ve got previews for tonight’s episode to share with you. This episode promises to be a good one as the final confrontation with the Reapers comes to Nick and his friends. Plus, Nick needs to explain Monroe to Juliette and explores his Aunt’s trailer for better tools to defeat the Reapers.
All the action begins tonight at 9/8C on NBC. Click through to check out the previews.
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Posted in: News · TV
Tagged: David Giuntoli, Fantasy, Grimm, Horror, NBC, Previews, Russell Hornsby, Sasha Roiz, Sci-Fi, Silas Weir Mitchell, TV
by Joe Gillis, Apr 26 2012 // 5:33 PM
Fans of Fox’s quirky Sci-Fi/paranormal series Fringe can relax. It seems the network is happy enough with the show’s performance and dedicated fanbase that it has decided to renew the series for fa fifth and final season.
That’s right, the show will live on at least one more year and debut with a final 13 episode season in the Fall, the last episode of which will mark the show’s 100th. Fox made the announcement today and of course, fans are not the only ones happy about this development.
“We are thrilled and beyond grateful that FOX — and our fans — have made the impossible possible: ‘Fringe’ will continue into a fifth season that will allow the series to conclude in a wild and thrilling way,” series co-creator/executive producer J.J. Abrams said.
No word yet on the exact premiere date for the final season. However, don’t get too down about that because there’s already a promo for season 5. Check it out after the break. Fringe airs Friday nights at 9/8C on Fox.
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Posted in: News · TV
Tagged: Anna Torv, Blair Brown, Fox, Fringe, J.J Abrams, Joshua Jackson, Roberto Orci
by Heather Toshiko, Apr 24 2012 // 10:15 AM

You may not realize this but reality shows usually cost far less to produce than traditional drama or comedy shows. That’s one of the main reasons you see so many of them on TV. They don’t cost much and if successful can rake in considerable profits for a network.
And as we know, Hollywood is all about profits. So, it should come as no surprise that even a network like Syfy is pushing farther into the reality show space with five new series it announced today.
These new gems include Hot Set, Paranormal Highway, Ghost Mine, Viral Video Showdown and Collection Intervention. We’ve got descriptions for each of the shows right here. See if you think they sound as bad as we do. Although, we did enjoy Syfy’s Face Off and those guys are also producing Hot Set, so maybe that one won’t be as bad as the others sound. Let’s hope.
Hot Set – From the producers of Syfy’s hit series Face Off, Hot Set is an extreme design challenge pitting two Hollywood production designers each week in a head-to-head battle to design, build, decorate and ultimately create an original and signature movie set that transports the viewer into an immersive world.
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Posted in: News · TV
Tagged: Collection Intervention, Face Off, Face/Off, Ghost Mine, Hot Set, Paranormal Highway, Reality Shows, SyFy, TV, Viral Video Highway
by Jonathan Weilbaecher, Apr 20 2012 // 3:15 PM
One thing will be certain in a few weeks. Once Summer starts there will be more high profile scores than Fridays and some good music might fall through the cracks. Which is precisely why I am so excited to bring you this early review of Danny Elfman’s score from Dark Shadows.
This score ranked as one of my most anticipated of the early summer season, and that anticipation was made all the more severe when we listened to the expanded preview a few weeks back. So suffice to say I am ready to dig into the 14th collaboration between Danny Elfman and Tim Burton.
That is a lot of feature film scores from a director with a very distinct style, and recently there has been a lot of concern about repetitiveness in Elfman’s music. You can only go to that stylized dark well so many times, and eventually it will be dried up completely.
So does this umpteenth collaboration yield beautiful sonic rewards, or is this little more than a Beetlejuice or Sleep Hallow remix album?
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Posted in: Adaptation · Film Music Reviews · Film Score Friday · Movies · Music · Reviews · TV
Tagged: Adaptation, Danny Elfman, Dark, Dark Shadows, Film Score, Film Score Friday, Gothic, Johnny Depp, Moody, review, Tim Burton, TV
by Jonathan Weilbaecher, Apr 20 2012 // 10:45 AM
Bryan Fuller, the creative mastermind behind Wonderfalls, Pushing Daises and choice episodes of Heroes and Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, might very well have two new shows on the air next season. We already told you about his two new projects likely to hit screens this season.
Now we are getting word from EW that the already greenlit Hannibal series will have a cable-esque 13 episode season one:
Hannibal, which has received a 13-episode series order, features Lecter solving crimes with empathic FBI profiler Will Graham (Hugh Dancy). For the first time, viewers will spend quality time with Lecter while he’s at large and before the world knows his secrets, working side by side with a similarly brilliant man who is destined to catch him.
What we have is Alfred Hitchcock’s principle of suspense — show the audience the bomb under the table and let them sweat when it’s going to go boom. So the audience knows who Hannibal is so we don’t have to overplay his villainy. We get to subvert his legacy and give the audience twists and turns.
Sounds mighty interesting. If Fuller and company can pull of this tight rope we might have a pretty great show on our hands. Fuller is certainly very capable, but this year will see him tackle two very well known properties. It will be interesting to see how he handles each one.
Posted in: Adaptation · NBC · News · Thriller · TV
Tagged: Adaptation, Bryan Fuller, Eddie Izzard, EW, Hannibal, Horror, Lecter, Mockingbird Lane, NBC, Season One, The Munsters, Thriller, TV
by Joe Gillis, Apr 18 2012 // 8:06 AM
For those of who want something more than the basic TV networks, and if you don’t have a premium service like HBO, there’s always USA. In fact, there’s premieres for some of USA’s most popular shows, and some new ones, just around the corner.
USA Network has set summer premiere dates for its returning series Royal Pains, Necessary Roughness, Burn Notice, Suits, White Collar and Covert Affairs. First to come back are Season 4 of Royal Pains and Season 2 of Necessary Roughness, which will hit the air on June 6 and will be shown on Wednesday at 9 PM and 10 PM, respectively.
The following week, on June 14, Burn Notice returns for Season 6, leading into the second season of Suits, which will once again be paired on Thursdays. Also returning to their regular night, Tuesday, are White Collar Season 4 and Covert Affairs Season 3, which launch on July 10.
Of those shows, we’re most interested in Burn Notice. It’s still fun to watch, features some interesting twists and turns, has some nice scenery and has Bruce Campbell. What more could you want from a show?
Posted in: News · TV · USA
Tagged: Bruce Campbell, Burn Notice, Covert Affairs, Gabrielle Anwar, Jeffrey Donovan, Necessary Roughness, Piper Perabo, Royal Pains, Summer Premiere Dates, TV, USA, USA Network, White Collar
by Jonathan Weilbaecher, Apr 17 2012 // 1:30 PM
Remaking old TV shows as movies is a tricky proposition. There are a few angles you can take with it, you could make the movie as direct an adaptation as possible. Or you could embrace the camp nature of the source material and make a farce of it.
Both tactics have failed miserably, but so to have they both worked. This spring’s 21 Jump Street is a prime example of a film that works by embracing the absurdity of the original’s sincere premise. Most indications of Tim Burton’s Dark Shadows might have succeeded in a similar fashion, so word of more classic TV adaptations can be met with some optimism these days.
According to Deadline, Universal has gotten behind their next TV to Big Screen adaptation:
Universal Pictures has set David Levien and Brian Koppelman to write The Rockford Files, a feature adaptation of the memorable series that ran on NBC from 1974-80 and featured James Garner as the down-and-out private eye. The studio will develop the film as a star vehicle for Vince Vaughn to play Rockford, and Vaughn and Victoria Vaughn will produce through their Universal-based Wild West Picture Show Productions banner.
Vaughn is a rather obvious choice, but hopefully it means they are going for a more comic approach. I know that will get fans of the original twisted up, but I think a strait forward adaptation of the show wouldn’t really work today. What could work is a Vince Vaughn staring vehicle using the show’s premise and the core of the main character. So long as it is more 21 Jump Street and less Starsky and Hutch we should be fine.
Posted in: Action · Adaptation · Comedy · Movies · News · TV · TV to Movies · Universal Pictures
Tagged: Adaptation, Brian Koppelman, David Levien, James Garner, News, The Rockford Files, TV, TV to Movies, Universal Pictures, Vince Vaughn
by Jonathan Weilbaecher, Apr 16 2012 // 3:00 PM
There are few franchises that garner the fan support quite like Star Trek. Trekkies, or Trekkers to some, are a loyal group of fans who have embraced the franchise in it’s many incarnations. Most of the stars of the shows and movies become fixtures at Star Trek conventions, but never before have the five television Captains appeared together onstage at a convention.
Well according to a Reuters report that is all about to change in London:
Organizers for “Destination Star Trek London” said on Monday that their fan convention would be the first official “Star Trek” live event in the UK for 10 years.
To mark the occasion, actors William Shatner (Captain Kirk), Sir Patrick Stewart (Captain Picard), Avery Brooks (Commander Sisko), Kate Mulgrew (Captain Janeway) and Scott Bakula (Captain Archer), who have commanded operations in each of their respective series based on the iconic TV franchise that began in 1966, will appear on stage together.
Recently William Shatner wrote and directed a documentary called The Captains, where he tracked down and interviewed each of the Trek captains. If the gathering in London is half as intriguing as that was this will be a tremendous experience. There is a really compelling allure to the idea of these iconic actors coming together to discuss the roles that came to define most of them (Bakula being the notable exception, he will always be Dr. Sam Beckett first).
Hopefully this event will be recorded and made available for those of us who can’t make it to London for this rare occasion. If for no other reason than to see what that kooky Avery Brooks will do live on stage.
Posted in: News · Paramount · Sci-Fi · Star Trek · TV
Tagged: Avery Brooks, Convention, Destination Star Trek London, Kate Mulgrew, London, Paramount, Patrick Stewart, Scott Bakula, Star Trek, TV, William Shatner
by Jonathan Weilbaecher, Apr 16 2012 // 12:30 PM
Tron: Legacy is a bit of a polarizing film. Some people loved it, others hated it while few could find much middle ground. Say what you will about the movie itself, it is hard to deny that Legacy re-introduced us to an intriguing universe that deserves to be explored a bit more.
While a third Tron film grows less and less likely with each passing month, Disney remains committed to the franchise with a new animated series set to debut on Disney XD soon. We have long known of this project, as it was announced shortly after the release of Legacy, but it has been awhile since we have been reminded that the show is still on the horizon.
That reminder has finally arrived in the form of a new trailer for the show, showcasing an impressive animated style that fits the digital world of Tron perfectly. The show also boosts an incredible voice cast, starring Elijah Wood, Mandy Moore, Lance Henriksen, Paul Reubens and even Bruce Boxleitner back as Tron.
You can check out the new trailer after the jump.
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Posted in: Adaptation · Animation · Disney · News · Sci-Fi · TV
Tagged: Animation, Bruce Boxleitner, Disney, Disney XD, Elijah Wood, Lance Henriksen, Mandy Moore, Paul Reubens, Tron, Tron Uprising