Category: TV Action (Page 138 of 145)

“Battlestar” spins off

The Sci-Fi Channel has released plans for a prequel series to their hit series, “Battlestar Galactica.” The series will be entitled “Caprica,” and will take place 50 years before “Galactica.” The plot will center around the events and circumstances that led up to the later series.

[“Caprica”] is being developed and executive produced by Ronald D. Moore and David Eick. The duo is responsible for reengineering the 1978 Battlestar (masterminded by TV veteran Glen L. Larson) into a smash 2003 miniseries and then into a full-fledged series that’s garnered a massive cult following and just won a Peabody Award.

Like J.J. Abrams and Joss Whedon before them, Moore and Eick have been tapped for another series when the series that made them successful is still on the air. Usually this means less attention is paid to the first series, diminishing its quality. “Alias” suffered when Abrams started working on “Lost.” Ditto for “Buffy the Vampire Slayer” when Whedon started “Angel.” I think the creativity gets spread too thin and all the shows suffer. Let’s hope that Moore and Eick can keep things fresh.

At least she’s not still pregnant…

I’m not entirely sure why I’m still watching “Alias,” but Sydney finally delivered her baby last week. Considering that her pregnancy pretty much ruined the show, it’s a relief to finally have it over with. I was afraid that they would drag it out for a few more episodes, but maybe now she can get back to some real spy work now without looking completely foolish.

It was also great to see Irina again, and if there’s a better looking fiftysomething actress than Lena Olin, I’d like to meet her.

Help! My hand is glued to this wall!

“24,” Hour 19: Sutherlands on a plane

I knew that there were a couple big twists on the horizon, and leave it up to the writers to introduce, in the 19th hour, a whole new group of villains. Who are these people, besides Dr. Robert Romano? (“ER” fans, holla!) Whose interests do they represent, and how exactly is it that the President, the President, is appreciative of their kind, if faint, praise? What, are they Masons or something? Nah, can’t be. They have a black guy in their group. The Masons would never have let that happen.

First, let’s get to what will surely be Eli Cash’s “You Must Suspend Disbelief” moment: James Heller sending his car hurtling headlong into the black, Pacificy goodness. There are so many things that could have gone wrong with a stunt like that, it’s not even funny. Yes, Sydney Bristow survived a similar stunt on “Alias” years ago, but she was driving her car off a pier six feet off the ground and landed on her wheels, as opposed to flying off a gigantic mountainside and landing on her roof. And yet, despite the laundry list of things that could have gone wrong, I’m convinced that Heller is alive, for more reasons than you think.

Audrey Raines has an incredible reserve of inner strength, given the fact that she is supposed to be bleeding to death. Okay, so they explained that Robocop didn’t actually sever the artery that he said he severed, but would someone who isn’t battle trained and has never been interrogated really be strong enough to hold up like that? Dunno, but I was still glad to see the long-missing Curtis come in and save the day.

But I wasn’t nearly as glad about that as I was to see Karen Hayes come to her senses and warn Buchanan that the Feds were coming to collect Chloe, after she discovered that he was harboring her. Good for Miles for being the blindly loyal lapdog that surely would have made Chief of Staff in President I.M. Weasel’s administration (I reserve the right to give Logan a new nickname every week). But he’s letting his vendettas get in the way of what’s important, and it’s good to see Hayes realize that.

And then, we have the scene at the airport, where they apparently check the underneath of all service vehicles, but don’t bother with checking the roofs, which are, hello, much, much easier on which to find a good place to hide. As a result, we have a scene not unlike Bill Murray’s bank robbery in “Groundhog Day,” beautifully timed and completely preposterous. But hey, it gives us Sutherlands on a plane. And you know what Samuel Jackson would say if he knew that there were Sutherlands on a plane.

Meanwhile, Old Yeller was “reassigned,” in the middle of the night. Marty may indeed be nuts, but this looks fishy from every possible angle. Leaving his cell phone behind? And Logan still lets Marty go even though she’s extremely suspicious and tells I.M. Weasel that she hates him? Nope, an already paranoid President doesn’t make that mistake. He either locks her up, dopes her up, or kills her with a Russian weapon. That way, it can look like retaliation for the events earlier in the day.

So back to Big Dick Heller: I found his actions last week/hour highly suspicious, given the manner in which he ambushed Jack. Maybe he has more to hide than we thought. Perhaps Robert Romano and friends are answering to Heller? Perhaps he did jump out of the car out of sight of our view but not out of the view of Robocop’s men…and they’re okay with that? Too many possibilities, but one thing’s for sure: don’t ever assume that when you see someone die, they’re actually dead. After all, even Michael Vaughn, who was shot about 750 times, showed up on last week’s “Alias.”

And that reminds me: where the hell is Wayne Palmer? Buchanan took him in, right? We haven’t seen the guy since he got into Bill’s car. There’s no way he’s sleeping through this. So where is he? You can get away with that kind of misdirection for an hour, but not for two hours. Billy’s got some ‘splaining to do.

“24,” Hour 18: Respect mah authoritah!

I really need to stop anticipating the actions of the next episode, because my average is looking like Barry Bonds’ stat line. My latest (faulty) prediction was that James “Big Balls” Heller was in on the plot, and that he came to set Logan back on track. Of course, Robocop obtained the recording at the most convenient time, right when Logan was about to announce his resignation in front of VP Leland Palmer, and President Zen wasted no time turning the tables and demanding Heller’s resignation instead.

But there are still two things about Heller that are bothering me. For starters, the way that he ambushed Jack after Jack gave him proof that Logan was behind the day’s events, punching him in the face and preaching about responsibility, seemed a little off to me. Even if Heller’s words made sense, his actions didn’t. They seemed forced, like he was reading a speech, and never mind the fact that he just had not only Jack but his own daughter ordered to be tied up in an empty airplane hangar. WTF? Secondly, we have to remember that the schematic of the natural gas plant was encrypted on DOD software, which still points us to one of the two Hellers.

Okay, one last thing: when Heller was talking to Chicken Little about what Logan had done – with Logan confessing everything – he held his arms folded across his chest, with his coat in his arms, and he refused to shake the President’s hand. Was I the only one that thought he was holding a recorder of his own underneath that coat? And who knows, maybe he was, and he just didn’t want to let on while Logan’s goons were escorting him off of the premises.

And if Heller doesn’t prove to be Logan’s undoing, there are about half a dozen people who could be. Mike Novick, who’s been inexplicably absent the last few hours – shooting a scene for the “Sin City” sequel? – gets a tip from Karen at HTU that Logan’s acting not funny ha-ha but funny different, and after a chat with a military general, he realizes that Logan has just lied to him about the “special forces” going after Bauer. Novick asks Logan about it, gets a Samwise Gamgee-esque “I don’t like your tone” reply, and immediately knows that Something Is Up. Little does he know that he has a support group all around him.

If only they don’t come up missing. Marty presses Old Yeller for info, and Old Yeller tells Marty that he’ll meet her behind the stables (as soon as those words left his lips, I thought, “Uh oh”), and when Marty goes to meet him and he’s not there, she calls his cell…and hears it ring right next to her. Did Old Yeller get hijacked, or was his coyness part of a bigger plan to get Marty out of the way? Until I have irrefutable proof that Old Yeller is rabid, I will assume that he’s still a good dog. But where did he go?

Buchanan was finally brought back into the mix, taking in Wayne Palmer and even Chloe after she snaked Miles’ keycard from him (oh, the irony). Chloe’s confrontation with Harrassment Girl was a joke, since she’s clearly a company player and would have done whatever HTU wanted, evidenced by her wearing a wire to implicate Chloe in the first place. One question, though: why didn’t we see Wayne Palmer at Buchanan’s place? And how on earth did Chloe even get out of the HTU parking lot? They had to have known she was gone within a matter of minutes. They’re making this martial law thing a mockery.

Lastly, there’s the exchange between Robocop and Jack over the recording and Audrey. What a stone cold motorscooter Robocop is for handing over Audrey, but only after severing one of her arteries and giving her minutes to live. Jack used to work for this guy. This guy tazered him and, hello, tried to blow him up just a few hours ago. How on earth did Jack think that any negotiation with Robocop would be on the level? Even Audrey’s going, “Don’t do it, Jack!” Still, they show a shot in the scenes for next week with Audrey holding a gun to Robocop’s head, but we all saw what happened the last time someone tried to kill him. The girl’s bleeding to death. She has to be pretty weak.

So many lives in the balance. There are hints that Marty’s been disposed of. We don’t know what happened to Old Yeller. Audrey is bleeding to death. Big Balls is being forced to resign. They still haven’t dealt with the unconscious Warlock, who may be able to implicate Logan in a way that he hadn’t anticipated. But then again, Logan never anticipates anything, does he? Buffybot and I were laughing out loud when Logan was openly dismissing all of the advice Mike Novick had given him earlier in the day. Well, sure, Cluck Cluck Chuck, if you had ever wanted to do the right thing at any point during the last 18 hours, then he could have helped you. Pity you were too busy laying siege on your own country.

“24,” Hour 17: Pigs in Zen.

And just like that, Charles Logan has gone from President Buck Buck Brawwwwk to President Zen. The fraidy cat tendencies? The complete inability to make a decision about anything? Gone. In its place is an eerie calm and newfound assertiveness that inexplicably escapes everyone around him. Perhaps you can understand VP Leland Palmer missing the change in demeanor – but then again, Logan just issued an order for Bauer’s arrest, after reinstating the man mere hours ago, so Palmer may merely be biding his time – but Marty Logan, his wife? I’m not so sure about that one. Maybe that scene existed solely so Logan would have to suffer the guilt of knowing his wife is so proud of him, but would castrate him if she had any idea what he was really up to. Prediction: Marty doesn’t live to see the final seconds. Charles takes her out when she knows too much.

Jack and Wayne kidnap the president of a bank in order to get a recording that Evelyn made, leaving Evelyn and daughter Amy in a hotel (he even said to her, “I’ll be right back,” thus violating one of the rules of surviving a horror movie). Of course, Evelyn passes out from the pain of the gunshot wound in her leg, and Amy calls 911, which immediately tips off Robocop as to her whereabouts. Evelyn gives up Jack and Wayne, but we never find out what became of Evelyn and Amy. My guess is in real life, they’d be dead. Do the producers of “24” have the onions to execute a little girl? Don’t know yet, but in the meantime, another innocent is killed in the line of duty. Sorry, banker dude.

Meanwhile, back at HTU (Homeland Terrorist Unit), even ice queen Karen Hayes is having second thoughts about everything. When Logan gives her the order to bring in Bauer, she doesn’t understand why. Of course, she is, for the moment anyway, bound by duty, and uses Audrey to find Jack. They put a tracer on Audrey’s car when she leaves to “get some sleep,” but Chloe finds the tracer by remote and Audrey stashes it on another car. Sweet. Audrey calls her father, still the Secretary of Defense, and asks if he can land at an airport nearby so she can break the news about Logan’s involvement in the day’s events.

I’m not so sure that’s a good idea.

It’s way too early for the last card to be played yet. This doesn’t end with Logan as the ringleader. He doesn’t have the smarts or the guts. Again, maybe Heller’s the one pulling the strings? They show a clip in the scenes for next week’s episode where Heller tells Logan, “I know what you’re doing. I’m here to put a stop to it.” Maybe the next line is, “You’ve lost control of everything, Logan, you big dope! Now, do I have to flog you again like I did last time, while you say, ‘Thank you, sir, may I have another’?”

All kidding aside, we still don’t know who knew that Jack was alive, and that Tony, Michelle, Chloe and David Palmer conspired to cover it up. And where the heck did Mike Novick go? He’s been gone for almost four hours now. This still one more card, maybe two, that has yet to be played. The Warlock should be waking up soon. Buchanan will factor into things somehow. We still don’t know that Walt actually killed himself. Lastly, I don’t know how Logan could have possibly rationalized assassinating David Palmer as an unfortunate necessity to allowing Russian terrorists to obtain nerve gas. Geez, now that I look at it that way, suddenly nothing makes sense. Logan may be an idiot, but he’s not reckless. The explanation for all this better be a good one.

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