When it premiered in 2006, Tim Kring’s Heroes was raved about and considered the next great piece of episodic genre TV. Many thought it would be the next Lost, and Hayden Panettiere (who’s back in a big way with Scream VI) became a star overnight. But, as soon as season 2 started, the show seemingly jumped the shark, and what began as a promising superhero epic became just another TV soap opera. What happened? Part of it had to do with the fact that Bryan Fuller, who consulted on Season One, left before the second season, while the second season also coincided with the WGA Writer’s Strike, which spelled the doom for many shows. While Heroes would continue for another few seasons, viewership died off, and many felt that the show never lived up to the considerable promise of the first season.
In this episode of Gone But Not Forgotten,...
In this episode of Gone But Not Forgotten,...
- 3/13/2023
- by Chris Bumbray
- JoBlo.com
We now know what DC Studios co-ceo and chairmen James Gunn and Peter Safran are cooking up for your favorite DC Comics characters, including such stalwarts as Superman, Swamp Thing and Batman and Robin. But as many answers as the announcements provided, there were just as many questions. Chief among them: what will happen to the movies that were already in various states of development at Warner Bros. when Gunn and Safran were hired? And how will they fit into the highly serialized, unified new DC Universe?
Well, TheWrap was invited to a presentation with Gunn and Safran along with a small group of reporters, where they detailed not only where their projects will be headed but also what will become of what has already been shot.
Also Read:
‘The Last of Us’ Episode 3 Debuts to 6.4 Million Viewers, Up 37 From the HBO Series’ Premiere Gone But Not Forgotten
Fairly early...
Well, TheWrap was invited to a presentation with Gunn and Safran along with a small group of reporters, where they detailed not only where their projects will be headed but also what will become of what has already been shot.
Also Read:
‘The Last of Us’ Episode 3 Debuts to 6.4 Million Viewers, Up 37 From the HBO Series’ Premiere Gone But Not Forgotten
Fairly early...
- 1/31/2023
- by Drew Taylor and Umberto Gonzalez
- The Wrap
After-school cartoons were never cooler than they were in the nineties. Batman: The Animated Series set the tone for how a cartoon could aim higher than just being kiddie fare. But, in the mid-nighties, Disney made an incredible animated series of their own, Gargoyles, which told a highly serialized story about nocturnal creatures which come alive at night and turn to stone by day. To this day, fans of the series continue to beg Disney for a revival series on Disney+. Unfortunately, the House of Mouse has yet to grant the request, but if the passion remains, we could see another Gargoyles series down the road.
Gargoyles had the following synopsis: In the Dark Ages, there was a race of heroic warrior monsters known as Gargoyles. These creatures existed as stone during the day, but become flesh and blood at night. One Scottish clan made an alliance with humans to...
Gargoyles had the following synopsis: In the Dark Ages, there was a race of heroic warrior monsters known as Gargoyles. These creatures existed as stone during the day, but become flesh and blood at night. One Scottish clan made an alliance with humans to...
- 1/23/2023
- by Steve Seigh
- JoBlo.com
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