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#1 |
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Michael Fassbender Fanatic
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Forum Star Join Date: Jan 17, 2016
Location: California
Posts: 10,738
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I happened to see previews of The Wonder Years during Press Your Luck on the ABC app and I think this reboot of The Wonder Years will try to do well but in my opinion it will fail and get cancelled after episode 3. For one thing whoever thought it was a good idea to reboot The Wonder Years? Because when the original The Wonder Years debuted in 1989 it was such a smash TV hit and it made Fred Savage journey from commercial and movie star to sitcom star and what I think they are hoping the lead actor will become big as Fred Savage. But as I mentioned I have a feeling that it won't survive and get big ratings. Because The Wonder Years was a heartwarming cute show when it debuted in 1989 and this show was a bad idea to reboot. I do wonder if they will have a new version of With A Little Help From My Friends and do not make it R&B flavored because the Joe Cocker version from the original The Wonder Years is such a classic
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#2 |
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Member
Forum Veteran
Join Date: Aug 31, 2012
Location: New Jersey
Posts: 5,140
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I think they should have left it alone. I enjoyed the original and it brought back memories. I think they should have set it in a later decade because the 60s are no longer relevant. I saw a preview and it looked good but they should have set it in the 2000s. That is a decade they should bring back.
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#3 |
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22 Years On Sitcoms
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Forum Legend Join Date: Aug 13, 2003
Location: Indy
Posts: 44,238
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Why doesn't the kid have a jerk of a brother like the original?
The original was around 20 years in the past so the the early 2000s would have made sense. For one thing more people could relate to that time. I think the reasoning behind placing it in the same time period as the original is suspect. We'll see. |
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#4 |
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Member
Forum 3000 Club Member
Join Date: Aug 04, 2009
Location: Memphis Tennessee
Posts: 3,072
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I am sure Fred Savage made his money but he hasn’t really done that much that I can see after Wonder Years ended. Danica McKellar who played Winnie could have been a Hollywood A Lister with some breaks but she has a genius IQ and opted for school and a career instead of gambling on a show business career.
I think this show will end up being “woke” and “politically correct” and will show white people in a bad light since only white people are racists. That will be a narrative. The father who wanted a promotion who has been on the job for twenty years who lost a promotion to a 23 year old white kid. Watch and see. I’m sorry to have a negative opinion, but this is the Hollywood narrative and ABC is very “woke”. |
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#5 |
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Member
Forum Idol
Join Date: Jan 09, 2001
Posts: 124,642
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ABC's The Wonder Years reboot with a Black cast brings a new, necessary perspective to a timeless classic
"From even the first 30 seconds, the new Wonder Years makes clear that there’s just as much to gain and appreciate from a look back at life 40 years ago — from a new perspective — as there was when the original show looked back at life 20 years ago," says LaToya Ferguson. "Especially when you consider how much things are currently still eerily similar, despite the number of decades that have passed; from the 'police talk' to the 'presidential election that created a racial divide' to a 'flu pandemic." Ferguson adds that Don Cheadle "makes for a very engaging voiceover, especially when the adult version of Dean has to process the day-to-day prejudiced actions and microaggressions he didn’t quite realize when he was a youth at the time. Dean and Cory’s white friend, Brad (Julian Lerner), constantly tries to let them know when certain white people 'aren’t prejudiced,' but his meter for such judgements is never quite accurate. But the key to this series will be to let the child version of Dean act and carry the material. The pilot offers a decent balance, but it is a bit touch and go at times, especially in the early beats of the pilot. However, as the pilot goes on, it becomes quite clear why EJ Williams was cast in the role; he is a child actor who evokes that sense of earnestness, of wide-eyed wonder and that feeling of just trying to make it through puberty. And the show’s pilot finds a perfect director — Fred Savage — to get that kind of performance out of the young actor." ALSO:
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