New footage from the lead-up to Nasa’s first manned trip to the moon (and the landing itself) features in the upcoming documentary Apollo 11, which premiered at the Sundance Film Festival.
“Crafted from a newly discovered trove of 65mm footage, and more than 11,000 hours of uncatalogued audio recordings, Apollo 11 takes us straight to the heart of Nasa’s most celebrated mission—the one that first put men on the moon, and forever made Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin into household names,” distribution company Neon said of the film.
“Crafted from a newly discovered trove of 65mm footage, and more than 11,000 hours of uncatalogued audio recordings, Apollo 11 takes us straight to the heart of Nasa’s most celebrated mission—the one that first put men on the moon, and forever made Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin into household names,” distribution company Neon said of the film.
- 1/28/2019
- by Daniel Kreps
- Rollingstone.com
This award season the best editing navigated complex mood swings in capturing love and pain in such Oscar contenders as “Roma,” “A Star Is Born,” “The Favourite,” “First Man,” “If Beale Street Could Talk,” “Green Book,” and “Widows.”
Several movies started off strong with the bold opening, including the mopping of water in the credit scene in “Roma,” the perilous X-15 flight in “First Man,” and the juxtaposition of Viola Davis in bed with Liam Neeson with the botched heist in “Widows.”
“Roma,” Alfonso Cuarón’s black-and-white childhood remembrance of things past, establishes a rhythm as well as a cleansing metaphor about life and memory with the flow of water in the opening. Cuarón, who served as editor with co-editor Adam Gough, created a dance with his pacing, making the viewer a voyeur in a family drama filled with daily adventures that ebb and flow in intensity.
The director meticulously...
Several movies started off strong with the bold opening, including the mopping of water in the credit scene in “Roma,” the perilous X-15 flight in “First Man,” and the juxtaposition of Viola Davis in bed with Liam Neeson with the botched heist in “Widows.”
“Roma,” Alfonso Cuarón’s black-and-white childhood remembrance of things past, establishes a rhythm as well as a cleansing metaphor about life and memory with the flow of water in the opening. Cuarón, who served as editor with co-editor Adam Gough, created a dance with his pacing, making the viewer a voyeur in a family drama filled with daily adventures that ebb and flow in intensity.
The director meticulously...
- 12/13/2018
- by Bill Desowitz
- Indiewire
Alan Tudyk has been cast in the lead role in the upcoming “Resident Alien” pilot at Syfy.
The pilot is based on the Dark Horse comics series of the same name. Tudyk will play an alien that crash landed in the little town of Patience, Colorado and takes over the body of Doctor Harry Vanderspeigle, one of the town’s most reclusive citizens. The alien is up to no good, but his mission is sidetracked when the doctor is murdered and the alien is forced to take his place.
Tudyk recently starred in the film “Rogue One: A Star Wars Story” and was cast in the upcoming DC Universe TV series “Doom Patrol” in the role of Mr. Nobody. His other feature credits include “28 Days,” “Dodgeball,” “Frozen,” and “Moana.” He is also known for his role on the cult series “Firefly” and the film follow up “Serenity.” He is...
The pilot is based on the Dark Horse comics series of the same name. Tudyk will play an alien that crash landed in the little town of Patience, Colorado and takes over the body of Doctor Harry Vanderspeigle, one of the town’s most reclusive citizens. The alien is up to no good, but his mission is sidetracked when the doctor is murdered and the alien is forced to take his place.
Tudyk recently starred in the film “Rogue One: A Star Wars Story” and was cast in the upcoming DC Universe TV series “Doom Patrol” in the role of Mr. Nobody. His other feature credits include “28 Days,” “Dodgeball,” “Frozen,” and “Moana.” He is also known for his role on the cult series “Firefly” and the film follow up “Serenity.” He is...
- 9/20/2018
- by Joe Otterson
- Variety Film + TV
Syfy has found its Resident Alien. Alan Tudyk (Con Man, Rogue One: A Star Wars Story) is set to star in the title role in Resident Alien, a drama pilot based on the Dark Horse comics series by Peter Hogan and Steve Parkhouse, from Universal Cable Productions, Dark Horse Entertainment and Amblin TV. In addition, Sara Tomko (Sneaky Pete), The Closer alum Corey Reynolds, Alice Wetterlund (Silicon Valley) and Levi Fiehler (Mars) are set to round out the series regular cast.
Resident Alien is described as a dark, twisted and comedic fish-out-of-water story. Adapted for television by Chris Sheridan (Family Guy), it follows a crash-landed alien named Harry (Tudyk) who, after taking on the identity of a small-town Colorado doctor, slowly begins to wrestle with the moral dilemma of his secret mission on Earth — ultimately asking the question, “Are human beings worth saving?”
Tudyk’s Doctor Harry Vanderspeigle is one...
Resident Alien is described as a dark, twisted and comedic fish-out-of-water story. Adapted for television by Chris Sheridan (Family Guy), it follows a crash-landed alien named Harry (Tudyk) who, after taking on the identity of a small-town Colorado doctor, slowly begins to wrestle with the moral dilemma of his secret mission on Earth — ultimately asking the question, “Are human beings worth saving?”
Tudyk’s Doctor Harry Vanderspeigle is one...
- 9/20/2018
- by Denise Petski
- Deadline Film + TV
The hazard of traveling through time attempting to preserve history in “Timeless” is the many opportunities to mess up.
The show’s protagonists, Lucy (Abigail Spencer), Rufus (Malcolm Barrett) and Wyatt (Matt Lanter), are always one step behind villain Garcia Flynn (Goran Visnjic) as he gallivants across American history. Flynn’s ultimate goal: destroy the Illuminati-like organization known as Rittenhouse. He’s willing to ruin any historical moment to do it, and while the time travel team attempts to stop him, they’re usually not completely successful.
Even when the trio, which Rufus dubs the “Time Team,” thwart Flynn’s plans, it’s a Pyrrhic victory. Somebody usually screws things up such that history is altered, even if the change is subtle. And a few key players in our timeline have been, uh, killed, either accidentally or not so much. The good news is that America isn’t destroyed yet, but the alterations are piling up.
Also Read: 13 Time Travel TV Shows You Should Be Watching Right Now (Photos)
Here is every single change “Timeless” has made to the history of America, in order from most mundane to most widespread.
14. A nuke goes missing but no one cares
Flynn heads to Las Vegas in an attempt to steal a nuclear weapon. The Time Team worries he’s going to set it off (or later give it to the Nazis), but Flynn just uses it to power his time machine. Apparently the U.S. misplacing a nuclear warhead in the 1960s had no lasting repercussions.
13. Charles Lindbergh’s transatlantic flight crashes
In 1920s Paris, Flynn shoots down the Spirit of St. Louis just miles before Lindbergh is set to land in Paris and complete the first solo transatlantic flight in history. Nothing much changes, though — Lindbergh’s fame is delayed by a few weeks after the crash, but he still shows up to claim his fame and fortune. And he still becomes a vocal Nazi sympathizer, despite Lucy’s best efforts to convince him Nazis are not so good.
Also Read: Top 20 Best Netflix Original Series, Ranked From Great to Phenomenal (Photos)
12. Al Capone never goes to prison
With a careful bit of evidence destruction, Flynn prevents Eliot Ness and the Untouchables from making their tax evasion case against Capone. Ness winds up murdered more than 20 years too early. Still, the Time Team still manages to bring down Capone without much additional bloodshed, so not much goes differently. That Kevin Costner/Sean Connery movie is presumably a little different, though.
11. Lucy gets a random fiancé (who saves Rufus)
The changes in Lucy’s life are pretty widespread when she gets home from the first mission. She loses a sister but gains a fiancé she’s never met. It’s mostly just awkward, and then Lucy doesn’t talk to him for the rest of the season. Until, that is, he’s expedient for plot purposes in the finale.
10. Flynn saves his half-brother from bees
Flynn and pals attempted to sabotage the Apollo 11 moon landing from Mission Control, but were stopped along the way by the Time Team. In the meantime, Flynn slipped off, found his own mother, and saved his half-brother he’d never met from dying of anaphylactic shock as a child. This one doesn’t have many ripples, but it does show that Flynn is sometimes a good dude.
9. Bonnie and Clyde die at a cabin and not in their car
After accidentally interfering with a Barrow Gang bank robbery, Lucy and Wyatt hang out with Bonnie and Clyde for a bit. The time traveler interference changes how the pair meet their grisly end, with a posse of police descending on them in their cabin, rather than ambushing them on the road. The change robbed Whiskey Pete’s Casino in Nevada of the famous bullet-riddled car the bandits originally died in.
8. Lucy rewrites Texas history
Flynn rewrites history by killing Lt. Col. William Travis at the Alamo before he can complete his famous letter. Lucy takes up the task of penning a document key to Texas history and, basically, makes it up as she goes along. Everyone, including Davy Crockett and James Bowie, still dies at the Alamo and Texas is still a thing, so the overall effect is minimal.
Also Read: Top 20 Best HBO Original Series, From 'Six Feet Under' to 'Game of Thrones' (Photos)
7. John Wilkes Booth isn’t the Lincoln assassin
Flynn attempts to help John Wilkes Booth be even more successful in assassinating Abraham Lincoln, adding Army General Ulysses S. Grant, Vice President Andrew Johnson and Secretary of State William Seward. The Time Team stops the additional murders, and Flynn only succeeds in being the guy who offs Lincoln instead of Booth.
6. Benedict Arnold dies in America
With the Time Team helping, Flynn grabs Benedict Arnold, a founding member of the evil Rittenhouse organization, and uses him to try to assassinate the other founders. Arnold gets shot and dies, getting some traitor comeuppance. In our history, Arnold betrayed George Washington and then escaped to England to live happily ever after, dying roughly two decades later.
6. Jesse James murders people for a couple more days
Flynn returns to the Old West and interferes with Jesse James‘ assassination. He recruits James as a guide, and in the process they add a few more folks to James’ body count. James still buys it with a bullet in the back, but his historical assassin, Robert Ford, never goes on to become “the coward Robert Ford.” Because he winds up dead, too.
5. The Hindenburg erases Lucy’s sister from existence
After messing around at the Hindenburg disaster in 1937 and saving all its victims, Lucy returns home to find the show’s most meaningful time travel ripple: her cancer-suffering mother is now healthy, and her previously alive sister was never born. This one is personally devastating for Lucy and, what’s worse, nobody knows how it happened or how to fix it.
4. The Time Team stops H. H. Holmes
America’s first serial killer, H. H. Holmes, created an elaborate hotel that later was dubbed the “murder castle.” Holmes would kill people in the building throughout the World’s Columbian Exposition in 1893 (and before and after), but Wyatt shot and killed him three years before he would otherwise have been captured and hanged.
3. Wyatt erases a serial killer
Stealing the time machine, Wyatt and Rufus travel back to 1983 to prevent the meeting of the parents of the man who supposedly would one day kill Wyatt’s wife. The plan is to just prevent the future parents from hooking up, but Wyatt ends up causing the father’s accidental death. It’s still a success, since two of the killer’s victims are still alive in 2017 — just not Wyatt’s wife.
2. The Hindenburg doesn’t explode (until later)
The infamous disaster (“Oh, the humanity!”) doesn’t happen when the Hindenburg arrives in New York. Flynn intervenes, altering the series of freak accidents that causes a spark to ignite the airship’s huge hydrogen balloon. The upshot is the Time Team manages to save just about everyone who otherwise would have died in the disaster.
1. The team creates a new James Bond movie
In World War II, the Time Team hooks up with Sir Ian Fleming while he’s an undercover spy. Claiming to be CIA operatives, they try to stop Flynn. Fleming uses the inspiration for a Bond novel that never existed in our timeline, called “Weapons of Choice.” Time travel creates a new Bond movie, which rules.
Read original story ‘Timeless': Every History-Altering Time Travel Change, Ranked from Jesse James to James Bond (Photos) At TheWrap...
The show’s protagonists, Lucy (Abigail Spencer), Rufus (Malcolm Barrett) and Wyatt (Matt Lanter), are always one step behind villain Garcia Flynn (Goran Visnjic) as he gallivants across American history. Flynn’s ultimate goal: destroy the Illuminati-like organization known as Rittenhouse. He’s willing to ruin any historical moment to do it, and while the time travel team attempts to stop him, they’re usually not completely successful.
Even when the trio, which Rufus dubs the “Time Team,” thwart Flynn’s plans, it’s a Pyrrhic victory. Somebody usually screws things up such that history is altered, even if the change is subtle. And a few key players in our timeline have been, uh, killed, either accidentally or not so much. The good news is that America isn’t destroyed yet, but the alterations are piling up.
Also Read: 13 Time Travel TV Shows You Should Be Watching Right Now (Photos)
Here is every single change “Timeless” has made to the history of America, in order from most mundane to most widespread.
14. A nuke goes missing but no one cares
Flynn heads to Las Vegas in an attempt to steal a nuclear weapon. The Time Team worries he’s going to set it off (or later give it to the Nazis), but Flynn just uses it to power his time machine. Apparently the U.S. misplacing a nuclear warhead in the 1960s had no lasting repercussions.
13. Charles Lindbergh’s transatlantic flight crashes
In 1920s Paris, Flynn shoots down the Spirit of St. Louis just miles before Lindbergh is set to land in Paris and complete the first solo transatlantic flight in history. Nothing much changes, though — Lindbergh’s fame is delayed by a few weeks after the crash, but he still shows up to claim his fame and fortune. And he still becomes a vocal Nazi sympathizer, despite Lucy’s best efforts to convince him Nazis are not so good.
Also Read: Top 20 Best Netflix Original Series, Ranked From Great to Phenomenal (Photos)
12. Al Capone never goes to prison
With a careful bit of evidence destruction, Flynn prevents Eliot Ness and the Untouchables from making their tax evasion case against Capone. Ness winds up murdered more than 20 years too early. Still, the Time Team still manages to bring down Capone without much additional bloodshed, so not much goes differently. That Kevin Costner/Sean Connery movie is presumably a little different, though.
11. Lucy gets a random fiancé (who saves Rufus)
The changes in Lucy’s life are pretty widespread when she gets home from the first mission. She loses a sister but gains a fiancé she’s never met. It’s mostly just awkward, and then Lucy doesn’t talk to him for the rest of the season. Until, that is, he’s expedient for plot purposes in the finale.
10. Flynn saves his half-brother from bees
Flynn and pals attempted to sabotage the Apollo 11 moon landing from Mission Control, but were stopped along the way by the Time Team. In the meantime, Flynn slipped off, found his own mother, and saved his half-brother he’d never met from dying of anaphylactic shock as a child. This one doesn’t have many ripples, but it does show that Flynn is sometimes a good dude.
9. Bonnie and Clyde die at a cabin and not in their car
After accidentally interfering with a Barrow Gang bank robbery, Lucy and Wyatt hang out with Bonnie and Clyde for a bit. The time traveler interference changes how the pair meet their grisly end, with a posse of police descending on them in their cabin, rather than ambushing them on the road. The change robbed Whiskey Pete’s Casino in Nevada of the famous bullet-riddled car the bandits originally died in.
8. Lucy rewrites Texas history
Flynn rewrites history by killing Lt. Col. William Travis at the Alamo before he can complete his famous letter. Lucy takes up the task of penning a document key to Texas history and, basically, makes it up as she goes along. Everyone, including Davy Crockett and James Bowie, still dies at the Alamo and Texas is still a thing, so the overall effect is minimal.
Also Read: Top 20 Best HBO Original Series, From 'Six Feet Under' to 'Game of Thrones' (Photos)
7. John Wilkes Booth isn’t the Lincoln assassin
Flynn attempts to help John Wilkes Booth be even more successful in assassinating Abraham Lincoln, adding Army General Ulysses S. Grant, Vice President Andrew Johnson and Secretary of State William Seward. The Time Team stops the additional murders, and Flynn only succeeds in being the guy who offs Lincoln instead of Booth.
6. Benedict Arnold dies in America
With the Time Team helping, Flynn grabs Benedict Arnold, a founding member of the evil Rittenhouse organization, and uses him to try to assassinate the other founders. Arnold gets shot and dies, getting some traitor comeuppance. In our history, Arnold betrayed George Washington and then escaped to England to live happily ever after, dying roughly two decades later.
6. Jesse James murders people for a couple more days
Flynn returns to the Old West and interferes with Jesse James‘ assassination. He recruits James as a guide, and in the process they add a few more folks to James’ body count. James still buys it with a bullet in the back, but his historical assassin, Robert Ford, never goes on to become “the coward Robert Ford.” Because he winds up dead, too.
5. The Hindenburg erases Lucy’s sister from existence
After messing around at the Hindenburg disaster in 1937 and saving all its victims, Lucy returns home to find the show’s most meaningful time travel ripple: her cancer-suffering mother is now healthy, and her previously alive sister was never born. This one is personally devastating for Lucy and, what’s worse, nobody knows how it happened or how to fix it.
4. The Time Team stops H. H. Holmes
America’s first serial killer, H. H. Holmes, created an elaborate hotel that later was dubbed the “murder castle.” Holmes would kill people in the building throughout the World’s Columbian Exposition in 1893 (and before and after), but Wyatt shot and killed him three years before he would otherwise have been captured and hanged.
3. Wyatt erases a serial killer
Stealing the time machine, Wyatt and Rufus travel back to 1983 to prevent the meeting of the parents of the man who supposedly would one day kill Wyatt’s wife. The plan is to just prevent the future parents from hooking up, but Wyatt ends up causing the father’s accidental death. It’s still a success, since two of the killer’s victims are still alive in 2017 — just not Wyatt’s wife.
2. The Hindenburg doesn’t explode (until later)
The infamous disaster (“Oh, the humanity!”) doesn’t happen when the Hindenburg arrives in New York. Flynn intervenes, altering the series of freak accidents that causes a spark to ignite the airship’s huge hydrogen balloon. The upshot is the Time Team manages to save just about everyone who otherwise would have died in the disaster.
1. The team creates a new James Bond movie
In World War II, the Time Team hooks up with Sir Ian Fleming while he’s an undercover spy. Claiming to be CIA operatives, they try to stop Flynn. Fleming uses the inspiration for a Bond novel that never existed in our timeline, called “Weapons of Choice.” Time travel creates a new Bond movie, which rules.
Read original story ‘Timeless': Every History-Altering Time Travel Change, Ranked from Jesse James to James Bond (Photos) At TheWrap...
- 5/7/2018
- by Phil Hornshaw
- The Wrap
David Giuntoli‘s next TV project sounds a bit grim.
The actor — who starred as Detective Nick Burkhardt on NBC’s Grimm — has landed a lead role in ABC’s hourlong dramedy pilot A Million Little Things, our sister site Deadline reports.
The potential series follows a group of friends who are all stuck in their lives. When one of them dies unexpectedly, it’s just the wake up call the others need to finally start living. Giuntoli will play Eddie, a music teacher and stay-at-home dad who used to front a local band. Although he loves being a father,...
The actor — who starred as Detective Nick Burkhardt on NBC’s Grimm — has landed a lead role in ABC’s hourlong dramedy pilot A Million Little Things, our sister site Deadline reports.
The potential series follows a group of friends who are all stuck in their lives. When one of them dies unexpectedly, it’s just the wake up call the others need to finally start living. Giuntoli will play Eddie, a music teacher and stay-at-home dad who used to front a local band. Although he loves being a father,...
- 2/7/2018
- TVLine.com
2017-05-08T13:35:13-07:00The CW Cancels 'Frequency' and 'No Tomorrow'
The CW has axed two of its freshman dramas.
Officially canceled are rookies Frequency and No Tomorrow, The Hollywood Reporter has learned. Neither show was expected to return. No Tomorrow and Frequency were the first CW shows in years to not get additional episode pickups.
Frequency was a combination of two of the season's most popular trends: time travel and movie reboots. Starring Mad Men alum Peyton List and Nashville grad Riley Smith, the show had a small movie fan base to build on from the start. The Warner Bros. TV first-year series couldn't connect with viewers, averaging just a 0.4 rating and 1.5 million viewers — not enough to justify a back-nine pickup. The show's fate appeared to be sealed in March when CBS TV Studios tapped List for its space drama pilot Mission Control.
Read the rest...
The CW has axed two of its freshman dramas.
Officially canceled are rookies Frequency and No Tomorrow, The Hollywood Reporter has learned. Neither show was expected to return. No Tomorrow and Frequency were the first CW shows in years to not get additional episode pickups.
Frequency was a combination of two of the season's most popular trends: time travel and movie reboots. Starring Mad Men alum Peyton List and Nashville grad Riley Smith, the show had a small movie fan base to build on from the start. The Warner Bros. TV first-year series couldn't connect with viewers, averaging just a 0.4 rating and 1.5 million viewers — not enough to justify a back-nine pickup. The show's fate appeared to be sealed in March when CBS TV Studios tapped List for its space drama pilot Mission Control.
Read the rest...
- 5/8/2017
- by EG
- Yidio
It’s official: The CW has axed freshman dramas Frequency and No Tomorrow, TVLine has confirmed.
The news isn’t really a huge surprise: Neither show got an order for additional episodes last fall, capping their freshman seasons at 13 episodes each. Both shows wrapped up their initial runs in January, but The CW’s president Mark Pedowitz promised that fans of both shows would get closure “on the digital side” if they weren’t renewed.
Related2017 Renewal Scorecard: What’s Coming Back? What’s Getting Cancelled? What’s on the Bubble?
Frequency, a reboot of the 2000 movie, starred Peyton List...
The news isn’t really a huge surprise: Neither show got an order for additional episodes last fall, capping their freshman seasons at 13 episodes each. Both shows wrapped up their initial runs in January, but The CW’s president Mark Pedowitz promised that fans of both shows would get closure “on the digital side” if they weren’t renewed.
Related2017 Renewal Scorecard: What’s Coming Back? What’s Getting Cancelled? What’s on the Bubble?
Frequency, a reboot of the 2000 movie, starred Peyton List...
- 5/8/2017
- TVLine.com
Warning: Read no further until you’ve seen Friday’s Grimm, because there are major spoilers ahead.
Epic battles tend to have heartbreaking casualties, and the shootout that ended this week’s Grimm was no exception: The episode’s final moments saw an attack at the precinct that left two of Portland’s finest — Hank and Wu — dead.
RelatedGrimm‘s Baby Kelly: Time to Step Up
A very brief recap: The skull-face demon known as Zerstörer entered the real world, where he appeared as a strapping, blonde man with a very large, very deadly staff. Realizing that the bad...
Epic battles tend to have heartbreaking casualties, and the shootout that ended this week’s Grimm was no exception: The episode’s final moments saw an attack at the precinct that left two of Portland’s finest — Hank and Wu — dead.
RelatedGrimm‘s Baby Kelly: Time to Step Up
A very brief recap: The skull-face demon known as Zerstörer entered the real world, where he appeared as a strapping, blonde man with a very large, very deadly staff. Realizing that the bad...
- 3/25/2017
- TVLine.com
CBS has cast two white actors — Poppy Montgomery and David Giuntoli — as the leads of its sci-fi pilot “Mission Control” even though both roles were originally written for people of color in Andy Weir’s spec pilot script, TheWrap has learned. Montgomery (“Without a Trace,” “Unforgettable”) is taking the role of Julie Towne, who is described in an earlier draft of the script obtained by TheWrap as the daughter of a Caucasian father and Latina mother who is fully bilingual in both English and Spanish. The character also spoke frequently in Spanish in the script. Giuntoli, a veteran of NBC’s.
- 3/24/2017
- by Linda Ge and Reid Nakamura
- The Wrap
Houston, we have a recast.
Ricardo Chavira (Desperate Housewives) has joined CBS’ Nasa-inspired drama pilot Mission Control, taking the place of 24 alum Nestor Serrano, our sister site Deadline reports. The part was reportedly recast after the first day of shooting.
RelatedPilot Season ’17: Scoop on the (Possible) New Shows, Who’s In Them
Written by Andy Weir (The Martian), Mission Control follows a group of Nasa scientists and astronauts struggling to balance their personal and professional lives. Previously announced cast members include David Giuntoli (Grimm), Poppy Montgomery (Without a Trace), Peyton List (Frequency) and Levi Fiehler (The Fosters).
Chavira’s character,...
Ricardo Chavira (Desperate Housewives) has joined CBS’ Nasa-inspired drama pilot Mission Control, taking the place of 24 alum Nestor Serrano, our sister site Deadline reports. The part was reportedly recast after the first day of shooting.
RelatedPilot Season ’17: Scoop on the (Possible) New Shows, Who’s In Them
Written by Andy Weir (The Martian), Mission Control follows a group of Nasa scientists and astronauts struggling to balance their personal and professional lives. Previously announced cast members include David Giuntoli (Grimm), Poppy Montgomery (Without a Trace), Peyton List (Frequency) and Levi Fiehler (The Fosters).
Chavira’s character,...
- 3/21/2017
- TVLine.com
Ricardo Chavira is set as a series regular in CBS' Nasa-themed drama pilot Mission Control. He is joining the project, from The Martian author Andy Weir, The Martian producer Simon Kinberg and CBS Studios, in a recasting. Written by Weir and directed by Jeremy Podeswa, Mission Control revolves around the next generation of Nasa astronauts and scientists who juggle their personal and professional lives during a critical mission with no margin for error. Chavira will play…...
- 3/21/2017
- Deadline TV
This Wednesday on Criminal Minds (CBS, 9/8c), it becomes evident that Reid’s prison pal, former FBI agent Calvin Shaw, is hiding something — and based on this sneak peek, “mouthbreather” Alvez seems to know what it is.
RelatedCriminal Minds: Shemar Moore Returns — Find Out For How Long
Receiving an unexpected visit from the Bau agent, Shaw (played by Harold Perrineau) assumes that the “mouth-breather” simply wants the 411 on his colleague’s prison sitch. Wrong. No, Alvez (Adam Rodriguez) is there to confront Shaw himself, about his seemingly magnanimous reason for (eventually) turning himself in for the murder of a Ci.
RelatedCriminal Minds: Shemar Moore Returns — Find Out For How Long
Receiving an unexpected visit from the Bau agent, Shaw (played by Harold Perrineau) assumes that the “mouth-breather” simply wants the 411 on his colleague’s prison sitch. Wrong. No, Alvez (Adam Rodriguez) is there to confront Shaw himself, about his seemingly magnanimous reason for (eventually) turning himself in for the murder of a Ci.
- 3/21/2017
- TVLine.com
Breaking news: Amy Brenneman will be chasing scoops as an investigative journalist in a CBS drama pilot.
The Leftovers actress has signed on to play the lead role in The Get, a potential drama series about a team of online journalists from writer Bridget Carpenter (11.22.63, Dexter), according to our sister site Deadline. Brenneman will play Ellen, an investigative reporter for the website who’s not afraid to bend a few rules in order to get the story.
RelatedPilot Season ’17: Scoop on This Fall’s (Possible) New Shows, Who’s In Them
She joins a cast that already includes Everybody Loves Raymond alum Brad Garrett,...
The Leftovers actress has signed on to play the lead role in The Get, a potential drama series about a team of online journalists from writer Bridget Carpenter (11.22.63, Dexter), according to our sister site Deadline. Brenneman will play Ellen, an investigative reporter for the website who’s not afraid to bend a few rules in order to get the story.
RelatedPilot Season ’17: Scoop on This Fall’s (Possible) New Shows, Who’s In Them
She joins a cast that already includes Everybody Loves Raymond alum Brad Garrett,...
- 3/21/2017
- TVLine.com
At the risk of stealing Hamilton‘s thunder, James Corden unveiled his own musical about a certain polarizing politician on Monday’s Late Late Show.
VideosBeauty and the Beast Cast, Corden Recreate Disney Musical in L.A. Traffic
Alongside Timeless star Abigail Spencer, Ben Platt of Broadway’s Dear Evan Hansen and comedian Tim Minchin, Corden presented Donald: The Musical, a four-minute parody of Potus and his White House staff. (Fun fact: The song being spoofed is “When I Grow Up” from the musical Matilda, for which Minchin wrote the music and lyrics.)
In the video above, Minchin plays a kid version of Trump,...
VideosBeauty and the Beast Cast, Corden Recreate Disney Musical in L.A. Traffic
Alongside Timeless star Abigail Spencer, Ben Platt of Broadway’s Dear Evan Hansen and comedian Tim Minchin, Corden presented Donald: The Musical, a four-minute parody of Potus and his White House staff. (Fun fact: The song being spoofed is “When I Grow Up” from the musical Matilda, for which Minchin wrote the music and lyrics.)
In the video above, Minchin plays a kid version of Trump,...
- 3/21/2017
- TVLine.com
Peyton List has signed on for a new TV show… which basically confirms that her current TV show is over and out.
The Frequency star has joined the cast of the CBS drama pilot Mission Control, our sister site Deadline is reporting. The pilot, from The Martian novelist Andy Weir, centers on a group of Nasa astronauts and scientists teaming up for a crucial mission. List will play Kim, an astronaut-in-training who serves as the mission’s capsule communicator; she joins TV veterans David Giuntoli (Grimm) and Poppy Montgomery (Unforgettable) in the cast.
RelatedPilot Season ’17: Scoop on This Fall’s (Possible) New Shows,...
The Frequency star has joined the cast of the CBS drama pilot Mission Control, our sister site Deadline is reporting. The pilot, from The Martian novelist Andy Weir, centers on a group of Nasa astronauts and scientists teaming up for a crucial mission. List will play Kim, an astronaut-in-training who serves as the mission’s capsule communicator; she joins TV veterans David Giuntoli (Grimm) and Poppy Montgomery (Unforgettable) in the cast.
RelatedPilot Season ’17: Scoop on This Fall’s (Possible) New Shows,...
- 3/21/2017
- TVLine.com
Exclusive: Peyton List, star of the CW’s freshman series Frequency, is set as a series regular opposite David Giuntoli and Poppy Montgomery in CBS’ drama pilot Mission Control, from The Martian author Andy Weir, The Martian producer Simon Kinberg and CBS TV Studio. List’s casting is in second position to the Warner Bros TV-produced Frequency. The first-year drama did not receive a back order and is unlikely to get a renewal unless its reruns take off on Netflix in the…...
- 3/21/2017
- Deadline TV
Grimm vet David Giuntoli and Unforgettable star Poppy Montgomery are headed to space.
The duo will headline CBS’ drama pilot Mission Control, from sci-fi novelist Andy Weir (The Martian), our sister site Deadline reports.
RelatedPilot Season ’17: Scoop on This Fall’s (Possible) New Shows, Who’s In Them
The potential series centers around the next generation of Nasa astronauts and scientists as they juggle both their personal and professional lives during a critical mission with no margin for error.
Giuntoli — who is currently wrapping up a six-year run as homicide detective Nick Burkhardt on NBC’s Grimm — will play Stevenson,...
The duo will headline CBS’ drama pilot Mission Control, from sci-fi novelist Andy Weir (The Martian), our sister site Deadline reports.
RelatedPilot Season ’17: Scoop on This Fall’s (Possible) New Shows, Who’s In Them
The potential series centers around the next generation of Nasa astronauts and scientists as they juggle both their personal and professional lives during a critical mission with no margin for error.
Giuntoli — who is currently wrapping up a six-year run as homicide detective Nick Burkhardt on NBC’s Grimm — will play Stevenson,...
- 3/13/2017
- TVLine.com
With Grimm wrapping its six-season run on NBC, series star David Giuntoli has been tapped as the male lead in CBS’ drama pilot Mission Control. Without a Trace and Unforgettable star Poppy Montgomery is returning to CBS as the female lead in the project, from The Martian author Andy Weir and The Martian producer Simon Kinberg, which has tapped Brian Buckner as showrunner. Written by Weir and directed by Jeremy Podeswa, Mission Control revolves around the next generation…...
- 3/13/2017
- Deadline TV
Levi Fiehler (The Fosters) is set for a series regular role in CBS' Nasa-themed drama pilot Mission Control, from The Martian author Andy Weir, The Martian producer Simon Kinberg and veteran showrunner Charles Eglee (Dexter). Written by Weir, Mission Control revolves around the next generation of Nasa astronauts and scientists who juggle their personal and professional lives during a critical mission with no margin for error. Fiehler will play Izzy, an intense "propeller…...
- 3/9/2017
- Deadline TV
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