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Freakshow
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Forum Icon Join Date: Feb 01, 2008
Location: Brooklyn, NY
Posts: 57,049
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Showtime Sets "Penny Dreadful: City of Angels" for April 26th
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#2 |
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Freakshow
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Forum Icon Join Date: Feb 01, 2008
Location: Brooklyn, NY
Posts: 57,049
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#3 |
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Freakshow
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Forum Icon Join Date: Feb 01, 2008
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#4 |
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Member
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Join Date: Jan 09, 2001
Posts: 125,524
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Showtime posts Penny Dreadful: City of Angels' premiere online ahead of Sunday's debut
Watch the spinoff of supernatural series Penny Dreadful set in 1938 Los Angeles ahead of its on-air premiere Sunday at 10 p.m. Showtime's Penny Dreadful: City of Angels is good period TV "It would be wholly understandable if fans of Showtime’s original Penny Dreadful approached its 'spiritual descendant' City of Angels with as much trepidation as excitement," says Charlie Mason. "How, we might wonder, could any offspring of John Logan’s beloved monster mash live up to the awful beauty of its parent? How could any new characters compare to the likes of Miss Vanessa Ives and the Creature? How could the Los Angeles of 1938 cast enough shadows to frighten us the way that the London of 1891 did? Well… ? Having screened the first six episodes of City of Angels (which premieres Sunday, April 26, at 10/9c), I now think we were — or at least I was — asking the wrong questions. The new series has in common with its predecessor only a supernatural element, enviable production values and Logan’s trademark dialogue, bleak poetry hung in the air like the silken strands of a spiderweb. It isn’t in any way trying to copy or immortalize its forebear. So the most germane question to ask isn’t 'Is it as good as the original?' but 'Is it good, period?' Thankfully, the answer is a resounding yes." ALSO:
How Penny Dreadful: City of Angels ensured the accuracy of its Los Angeles Mexican-American history portrayal With the 1938 Los Angeles-set Penny Dreadful spinoff, creator John Logan tells the Los Angeles times he wanted to tell a story that “had to do with where we are now in 2020 and the seismic change that happened the world in the last five years. All the assumptions I had made about liberal humanism, compassion and the democratic process were being circumvented everywhere and the marching cry of so much of this was anti-immigrant, and in America, particularly, anti-Latino and anti-Mexican. I started really researching the history of the freeways. I found that all of the freeways that were envisioned for the rich, white enclaves of Los Angeles were never built. (But) in East L.A., South Central L.A.? One hundred percent of those freeways got built. Obviously, you can’t tell the story of Los Angeles without telling the story of Mexican Americans, and you can’t tell the story of the freeways without telling the story of the communities of color that were displaced.” But since Logan is Irish, he wanted to make sure the story he was telling carried authenticity and wasn’t plagued with stereotypes or caricatures. “As much as people say full-blooded Irish is like full-blooded Mexican, it’s not," he says. In addition to his intensive research, he surrounded himself with people who would keep him “honest,” like Latinx writers Jose Rivera and Tatiana Suarez-Pico, directors Paco Cabezas and Roxann Dawson, and producing partner Michael Aguilar. He also cast talent the Academy Award-nominated Mexican actress Adriana Barraza, whom costar Natalie Dormer calls “the heart and soul of the show.” “The first time I spoke with John, I was really surprised by the care and good intentions he took to not folklorize Mexicans,” says Barraza, who plays Maria, the matriarch of the season’s central Vega family. |
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Last edited by TMC; 04-30-2020 at 11:05 PM. |
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