Law & Order: Svu showrunner Warren Leight on Monday shed light on some season-ending happenings that now won’t be happening, due to the TV industry’s coronavirus pandemic-related shutdown.
Previously (and as noted in the attached Shortened Season Status chart), Leight revealed that the long-running NBC procedural halted production on Season 21 four episodes shy of its 24-episode order. As a result, “Episode 20 may end up being our finale,” he said. “If it is, it will be oddly fine in that slot — with return performances from many perps and [victims] we’ve met this season.”
More from TVLineSuperstore: Jason Ritter...
Previously (and as noted in the attached Shortened Season Status chart), Leight revealed that the long-running NBC procedural halted production on Season 21 four episodes shy of its 24-episode order. As a result, “Episode 20 may end up being our finale,” he said. “If it is, it will be oddly fine in that slot — with return performances from many perps and [victims] we’ve met this season.”
More from TVLineSuperstore: Jason Ritter...
- 3/23/2020
- TVLine.com
For those readers not familiar with the Gothic imagery of British photographer Simon Marsden, now is the time to be introduced. His latest book, Vampires: The Twilight World, will be published by Palazzo Editions on December 1, 2011.
Using primarily infrared film to photograph ruins of castles, manor houses, palaces, etc. (all reputedly haunted), Marsden, over the course of his nearly 40-year career, has captured some of the scariest places on earth: Leap Castle in Ireland, Corvin (Hunedoara) Castle in Romania, Père Lachaise Cemetery in Paris, as well as Venice, Italy; the ruins of Elizabeth Bathory's Cachtice Castle; and Puschino-Na-Nare Estate near Moscow (viewers of the Korean horror film R-Point might find themselves getting goosebumps when they see this place).
Dread Central recently had the good fortune to interview Sir Simon and discuss how he came to photographing places most of us would avoid (and he had one "adventure" for this book...
Using primarily infrared film to photograph ruins of castles, manor houses, palaces, etc. (all reputedly haunted), Marsden, over the course of his nearly 40-year career, has captured some of the scariest places on earth: Leap Castle in Ireland, Corvin (Hunedoara) Castle in Romania, Père Lachaise Cemetery in Paris, as well as Venice, Italy; the ruins of Elizabeth Bathory's Cachtice Castle; and Puschino-Na-Nare Estate near Moscow (viewers of the Korean horror film R-Point might find themselves getting goosebumps when they see this place).
Dread Central recently had the good fortune to interview Sir Simon and discuss how he came to photographing places most of us would avoid (and he had one "adventure" for this book...
- 11/2/2011
- by thebellefromhell
- DreadCentral.com
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