Archive for March, 2010

The Syfy Channel’s 2010 Upfront Event In Photos

March 20, 2010

ON March 16th, 2010, some of the Syfy Channel’s brightest stars joined network executives and invited guests for Syfy’s Upfront Event at New York’s Museum of Modern Art to help the channel celebrate its ratings success as well as promote several upcoming projects for the 2010-2011 broadcast season. Below are some photo highlights from the gathering. Enjoy! 

Warehouse 13's Eddie McClintock and Joanne Kelly. Photo by Jason DeCrow and copyright of the Syfy Channel

  

Sanctuary's Amanda Tapping. Photo by Jason DeCrow and copyright of the Syfy Channel

Eureka's Salli Richardson-Whitfield and Colin Ferguson. Photo by Jason DeCrow and copyright of the Syfy Channel

Destination Truth's Josh Gates and Eureka's Colin Ferguson. Photo by Jason DeCrow and copyright of the Syfy Channel

Stargate Universe's David Blue and Ming-Na. Photo by Jason DeCrow and copyright of the Syfy Channel

Ghost Hunters' Amy Bruni and Kris Williams with Destination Truth's Josh Gates. Photo by Jason DeCrow and copyright of the Syfy Channel

Caprica co-creators/executive producers David Eick and Ronald D. Moore. Photo by Jason DeCrow and copyright of the Syfy Channel

Caprica's Magda Apanowicz, Sashi Roiz, Alessandra Torresani and Esai Morales. Photo by Jason DeCrow and copyright of the Syfy Channel

Stargate Universe's Ming-Na and Sanctuary's Amanda Tapping. Photo by Jason DeCrow and copyright of the Syfy Channel

Haven's Emily Rose and Stargate Universe's David Blue. Photo by Jason DeCrow and copyright of the Syfy Channel

Caprica's Esai Morales and Sasha Roiz. Photo by Jason DeCrow and copyright of the Syfy Channel

Destination Truth's Josh Gates, Sanctuary's Amanda Tapping and David Howe, President, Syfy. Photo by Jason DeCrow and copyright of the Syfy Channel

As noted above, all photos by Jason DeCrow and copyright of the Syfy Channel, so please no unauthorized copying or duplicating of any kind. Thanks!

Paranormal Investigators Series Comes To Syfy

March 19, 2010

THE Syfy Channel, the leader in paranormal reality programming, has greenlit a new hour-long series, Paranormal Investigators (working title), it was announced on March 16th by Mark Stern, Executive Vice President of Original Programming, Syfy, and Co-Head of Content for Universal Cable Productions. Paranormal Investigators will separate fact from fiction by scouring the web and traveling the world in an attempt to uncover the truth behind some of the most compelling, unexplained supernatural and paranormal occurences caught on camera. The series is executive produced by John Brenkus and Mickey Stern for BASE Productions, and is a co-production with Sci Fi Channel Europe  LLC. The six episodes of Paranormal Investigators will commence production in spring 2010 and premieres on Syfy, Thursday, July 15th @ 10 p.m. EST/PST.

Paranormal Investigators is a strong and natural fit for our growing Syfy reality slate and will be in great company alongside our successful Ghost Hunters franchise,” said Stern. “Our new partnership with BASE Productions is an exciting way to continue to grow our development mission of imagination based entertainment.”

The six-person team, led by former FBI Spacial Agent Ben Hansen, consists of Larry Caughlan, Jael de Pardo, Chi-Lan Lieu, Bill Murphy and Austin Porter. In each episode, the team will first analyze and debate potential cases by reviewing intriguing and unusual scenes and images captured on video and posted online by “eyewitnesses” from all over the world. This wide-ranging phenomena can include ghosts, poltergeist activity, UFOs, alien and creature sightings and past lives.

After agreeing on which video warrants further investigation, the team will embark on a full investigation in order to try to explain the unexplainable and dispel hoaxes from fact. They will try to re-create images, carry out scientific experiments, and search for clues and evidence using the latest technology and investigative techniques in order to answer the question, “Is this real?”

Paranormal Investigators will take viewers inside the creepy and mysterious world of paranormal behavior,” said Brenkus. “In each episode, investigators armed with the latest in high-tech equipment set out to uncover the truth behind compelling images, to dispel or prove their accuracy.”

Destination Truth Returns To Syfy For A Fourth Season

March 18, 2010

Destination Truth's Josh Gates. Photo copyright of the Syfy Channel

THE Syfy Channel has renewed its hit reality series Destination Truth for a fourth season, following its most-watched season ever this past fall. Host Josh Gates will return to take viewers around the globe in eight all-new episodes, slated to premiere on Syfy in Fall 2010.

In season four, the daring Josh and his team will once again travel to the farthest corners of the Earth in search of answers behind some of the world’s most intriguing unanswered mysteries. The crew’s itinerary will include investigations in Madagascar, Tanzania, Guam, Kenya and Cambodia. The team will also conduct the first underwater paranormal investigation when they travel to a remote Micronesian island to search for the spirits dwelling in a sunken fleet.

New episodes of season three of Destination Truth premiered on Wednesday, March 17th @ 1o p.m. EST, kicking off with a St. Patrick’s day-themed episode that featured a search for the legendary leprechaun.

Destination Truth is executive produced by Brad Kuhlman for Ping Pong Productions (1000 Places to See Before You Die, Celebrity Rehab, FM Nation). Bobby Pura and Josh Gates serve as co-executive producers.

As noted above, photo copyright of the Syfy Channel, so please no unauthorized copying or duplicating of any kind. Thanks!

Sanctuary Begins Production On Season 3

March 18, 2010

Amanda Tapping and the rest of the Sanctuary cast return for season three! Photo by Jeff Weddell and copyright of Sanctuary 2 Productions

THE Syfy Channel’s groundbreaking hit original series Sanctuary, commenced production on its third season in Vancouver on March 15th. The one-hour drama’s 20-episode season is slated to return to Syfy this fall.

Sanctuary is one of television’s most groundbreaking series, shooting almost entirely on green screen. The series was the first in North America to use the RED camera exclusively, and its stunning visual effects were nominated for a 2008 Emmy Award. Season three picks up from the adrenaline-fueled action of season two, which raised the stakes for the brilliant scientist Dr. Helen Magnus (Amanda Tapping) and her team, who use their unique combination of instinct, medicine and cutting-edge science and technology to find and aid a clandestine population of beings that the world refuses to believe exist. Sanctuary also stars Robin Dunne as forensic psychiatrist Dr. Will Zimmerman, Agam Darshi as the quick-witted Kate Freelander, Ryan Robbins and tech wiz Henry Foss and Christopher Heyerdahl as the sinister John Druitt.

Created by Damian Kinder (Stargate SG-1, Stargate Atlantis), Sanctuary is produced in association with Syfy and is distributed by Tricon Films and Television. Season three of the series will be executive produced by Damian Kindler, Amanda Tapping, Martin Wood, Keith Beedie and Tricon Films.

As noted above, photo by Jeff Weddell and copyright of Sanctuary 2 Productions, so please no unauthorized copying or duplciating of any kind. Thanks!

Riverworld Comes To Syfy In April

March 17, 2010

THE Syfy Channel sets sail this spring with the 4-hour Sunday night television movie Riverworld, premiering Sunday, April 18th from 7-11:oo p.m. EST. Starring Tahmoh Penikett (Battlestar Galactica/Dollhouse), Laura Vandervoort (V/Smallville) and Alan Cumming (Tin Man), Riverworld is an epic adventure featuring familiar characters in an unfamiliar world and is based on the popular award-winning series of novels by Philip Jose Farmer. The TV miniseries is produced by Reunion Pictures and will be distributed internationally by RHI Entertainment, who teamed up to also bring TV audiences two other Syfy Channel TV events, Tin Man and Earthsea.

Matt Ellman (Penikett) is an American war zone reporter who has witnessed the worst of humanity first-hand, yet still grasps on to an optimistic spirit. When a suicide bomber kills both Matt and his fiance Jessie (Vandervoort), they awaken separated in a mysterious world where everyone who has ever lived on Earth seems to have been “reborn” along the banks of a seemingly endless river. Determined to locate Jessie, Matt joins forces with a 13th century female samurai warrior named Tomoe (Jeanne Goossen) and American novelist Sam “Mark Twain” Clemens (Mark Deklin). Together they sail upriver in search of its source, and to discover where they are and who put them there. Alan Cumming guest-stars as the mysterious “Caretaker.”

Eric Roberts Stars in Sharktopus On The Syfy Channel

March 17, 2010

Eric Roberts as Thompson in Heroes. Photo by Chris Haston and copyright of NBC

ACADEMY Award and Golden Globe nominee Eric Roberts will star in the highly anticipated new Syfy Saturday Original Movie Sharktopus, produced by cult movie legend Roger Corman, scheduled to premiere later in 2010. Already the talk of the Internet, Sharktopus is about a research scientist (Roberts) and his talented daughter who develop a secret military weapon – a hybrid shark/octopus that can be controlled by electrical implants. But when the controls break down, the monster goes on a killing rampage at the resort beaches of Mexico.  

Eric Roberts received Golden Globe nominations for his starring roles in King of the Gypsies (1978) and Star 80 (1983). He was nominated for the 1985 Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor for his role as the escaped convict Buck in the film Runaway Train. In 1987, the actor won the Theatre World Award for his Broadway debut performance in Burn This. Roberts’ other starring roles include Raggedy Man, The Pope of Greenwich Village, Nobody’s Fool, Final Analysis and A Guide to Recognizing Your Saints. He appeared in The Dark Knight as Sal Maroni, a Gotham City Mafia boss who hires The Joker (Heath Ledger) to kill Batman (Christian Bale). On TV, Roberts has co-starred in the ABC sitcom Less Than Perfect, along with appearances on HeroesCSI: Miami, Law & Order: SVU and The L Word. He also played The Master in the 1996 Doctor Who TV movie.  

Roger Corman, who received an Honorary 2010 Oscar, is the legendary director and producer of numerous low-budget cult classics, among them It Conquered the World, Teenage Doll, The Little Shop of Horrors, House of Usher, Pit and the Pendulum, Premature Burial, The Raven, The Masque of the Red Death, The Wild Angels and The Trip. Corman is also credited with opening the door to a number of young filmmakers, including Francis Ford Coppola, Martin Scorsese, James Cameron, Jonathan Demme and Ron Howard.  

Sharktopus is produced by Roger Corman and Julie Corman, and directed by Declan O’Brien (Wrong Turn 3, Cyclops, Monster Ark, Rock Monster).  

As noted above, photo by Chris Haston and copyright of NBC, so please no unauthorized copying or duplicating of any kind. Thanks!

Heroes’ Greg Grunberg And Adrian Pasdar Perform With Band From TV

March 16, 2010

ON March 13th, 2010, the Band From TV (Hugh Laurie, Greg Grunberg, Scott Grimes, Adrian Pasdar, Jesse Spencer, Bob Guiney) performed in aid of their favorite charities at the grand opening celebration of the new Loehmann’s in Costa Mesa, California. Check out the links below to see interviews along with other behind-the-scene moments with Greg, Adrian and their fellow musicians as well as a recording of their live performance. Please note that the Broadcast Quality version had to be split into two parts due to size limitations.

Broadcast Quality Version – Part One: 

https://rcpt.yousendit.com/835962290/40d722d35ef6b5952795e498c3f61ae4

 Broadcast Quality Version – Part Two:

https://rcpt.yousendit.com/835961600/02279b9e5bbde9bf2fcea199b0615269

 Low Res Version:

https://rcpt.yousendit.com/835966716/0be7a4e6e5d3b449f099708d498c9856

James Callis Joins Syfy’s Eureka

March 16, 2010

PRODUCTION begins this week in Vancouver on season four of Eureka, one of the Syfy Channel’s most popular original series, it was announced by Mark Stern, Executive Vice President of Development at Syfy, and Co-Head, Original Content, Universal Cable Productions. The dramedy’s new season welcomes an all-new regular cast member, James Callis (Battlestar Galactica) as Dr. Grant. Syfy has ordered 20 episodes of Eureka, which will once again be shot entirely on-location in and around Vancouver, Canada, and is slated to premiere on Friday, July 9th of this year.

Throughout the four-season run of Syfy’s award-winning Battlestar Galactica, James Callis starred as Dr. Gaius Baltar, garnering both critical acclaim and fan adoration for his portrayal of the self-serving, opportunistic, conniving genius. On Eureka, Callis will play scientist Dr. Grant, a former resident of the town whose unexpected return is cause for serious alarm and – considering his romantic interest in Allison Blake (Salli Richardson-Whitfield) – significant friction with Sheriff Jack Carter (Colin Ferguson). New and returning fans won’t want to miss the big changes in store for everyone in the small town of Eureka after a cataclysmic shift turns their lives upside-down.

Once again this season, series stars Colin Ferguson and Joe Morton (Henry Deacon) will direct episodes, and making her directorial debut as well is female lead Salli Richardson-Whitfield. Also, special guest-stars returning this season include Jaime Ray Newman (Dr. Tess Fontana) and Matt Frewer (Taggart).

Sons Of Tucson’s Tyler Labine And Justin Berfield – Boys Will Be Boys

March 15, 2010

Tyler Labine stars as Ron Snuffkin in Fox's Sons of Tucson. Photo by Mike Yarish and copyright of Fox Television

TONIGHT, Sons of Tucson premieres on the Fox Television network, airing from 9:30 p.m. – 10:00 p.m. EST/PST. In the show’s pilot episode, the Gunderson boys – Brandon (Matthew Levy), Gary (Frank Dolce) and Robby (Benjamin Stockham) - hire Ron Snuffkin (Tyler Labine) to pretend to be their father after their real father goes to prison. However, they soon discover that there’s more to their “fake” dad than meets the eye.  Ron has to enroll his “sons” in school, convince Robby’s teacher to keep him in her class, sweet-talk the principal, locate mint-condition toy soldiers at his grandmother’s house and avoid a thug who wants his money. 

Last Monday, series lead Tyler Labine (Invasion, Reaper) and executive producer Justin Berfield (Malcolm in the Middle) spent part of their day speaking with myself along with several other journalists about the series. What follows is an edited version of that Q & A. Enjoy! 

Tyler, an actor once told me that one of the things he looks for in a good character is an interesting name. He said that if his character has an interesting or weird name, that he’s halfway home in figuring him out. With your character’s name being Ron Snuffkin, is there anything to that theory?  

TYLER LABINE - Yes, absolutely, I agree. I wouldn’t say halfway home with a name, but it definitely inspires you to sort of delve into the character a little bit. With a name like Ron Snuffkin, immediately a few nicknames spring to mind, like “Snuffleupagus,” “Snuff’s Enough,” and “Can’t Get Enough Of The Snuff.” You just think in little nicknames, and it sort of lends itself to you figuring out the character as being a little bit neurotic. So it’s definitely a nice tab to grab onto in the beginning.  

What was it about the show and its premise as well as the character that made you want to do it?  

TL - Well, initially, it was obviously the writing and then the name as we just discussed, but the writing for the pilot was great, and it definitely grabbed me right away. As far as the character, it’s an amalgam of every sort of great slacker character I’ve ever played and loved to play but have never been able to flesh out and turn into a three-dimensional individual. These guys have taken that sort of character and put him right in the forefront and made him a real human being. I really appreciated that, so I grabbed onto that right away, too.  

How did the kids on the show dole out the money? Ron negotiates a $400/week salary, or $350 depending on who’s paying, but how do they have the money?  

JUSTIN BERFIELD - Well, we don’t really say for sure exactly how they have the money, but in our minds we sort of figured that they have a stack of cash somewhere in the house, and they disperse it for whatever needs they have.  

TL - What I’ve always put together in my head is that the dad, when he was in jail for this white-collar crime and in an attempt to sort of keep his kids out of foster care or social services,  was clever enough, or stupid enough, to leave his children exactly what Justin said, a big stack of cash so that they could stay out of trouble and go to their house in Paloma Ridge or Tucson.  

Tyler, aside from the financial incentive, what else is it that attracts Ron into agreeing to the boys’ proposal and sticking with the situation for as long as he does?  

TL - That’s a good question. Initially, I think the money is a big allure, but then I think it’s actually just the money. There’s nothing deeper about Ron wanting to join with these kids and help them out, and he thinks it’s going to be temporary as well. So it’s the allure of the money that keeps him there, but then there are times with Ron where I think this sort of reluctant paternal figure starts to take shape, and I think he begins to learn from the boys. He sort of feels needed by these children, which is something he’s never had in his life. Ron hasn’t felt that anybody has really needed him for anything. I think that could become a big draw for him, too, along with just needing a place to stay.  

It seems like Robb [Benjamin Stockham], Gary [Frank Dolce] and Brandon [Matthew Levy] are pretty smart kids and they’re also quite young. What nuggets of knowledge will Ron try to instill in these boys in sort of a reciprocal relationship-type way?  

TL - I don’t know. I think Ron is a bit of a dummy. Well, no, actually, he’s not a dummy. He just may not have the most sage words for these kids. I think this is sort of a reluctant responsibility. It’s this reluctant father figure thing that’s coming out of Ron that I don’t feel he even really knew he had. I don’t think he even recognizes when he is being quite responsible, and it’s hard to pick out moments that are actually responsible in the show because, like I said, it’s almost like the blind leading the blind. It’s basically them just trying to stay out of physical harm, so anything else that helps them out is sort of gravy, a bonus. I don’t think that Ron is capable or set to impart any wisdom on these children.  

We have stealing money from kids, trying to con an old lady, etc. Where does Ron draw the line, or does he even want to sketch one?  

JB - I don’t know if there’s really anywhere that Ron does draw the line.  

TL - Yes, it’s definitely sad to say. Look at what he’s doing. The only thing that keeps him from being completely despicable is the fact that as you get to know Ron and the boys, you see that maybe there is something inside of Ron that’s awakening, that’s sort of enjoying this responsibility. However, as far as where does he draw the line with what he will and won’t do, I think as long as he’s not going to kill anyone or as long as no one is going to get really badly hurt, he’s up for it.  

I wanted to ask about the recasting process; Justin, was that difficult? Did you change a whole lot about the pilot?  

JB - We actually didn’t change too much with the pilot when we had to re-shoot because of the recasting. It was just a decision that we made to go a different direction with some of the characters, but the pilot really remains the same. We punched up some scenes that we were fortunate enough to be able to do because we were re-shooting, but nothing much really changed.  

What were you looking for in an oldest son [character]?  

JB - We needed one of the older kids to be the complete opposite of Gary, whereas Gary is the driven, hard-edged type of kid, Matthew Levy’s character of Brandon just sort of goes along with the flow. He’s like a lover, not a fighter. He’s a very trusting kid.  

Is that how Matthew struck you in real life, or is he just doing a great acting job?  

JB - He’s a fantastic actor. Matthew sort of resembles me. I remember how I was when I was a child actor. Matthew is constantly asking questions. He’s very curious about the whole process, and he’s always hanging out with the crew, talking with them, seeing what they do, and asking questions. In that sense I guess he’s very similar to Brandon.  

Has he surprised you in any way?  

JB - I’m not surprised. Just based on the casting process and talking to him throughout the whole audition process, he’s a very professional, smart kid. We couldn’t be happier with him.  

Tyler, what were some of your experiences shooting the pilot, and also what were some of the [acting] challenges for you first stepping into this role?  

TL - Shooting the pilot was amazing. It was so much fun. it was one of those instances where you get so much more out of the process than you expected. I learned a ton from working with these kids, including one very invaluable lesson of how to stop being such a thinking-in-my-head actor when working with children. I was my refresher course. It was sort of just doing it; someone just pushes you in and you swim, unjaded and not so hypercritical of yourself. As a result, you find yourself having genuine fun and really getting sort of authentic performances out of them. It’s infectious, and it was really a blast to do with those kids. That was sort of my favorite thing about the pilot.  

Justin, from a creative standpoint, what maybe have you enjoyed so far working on Sons of Tucson?  

JB - I think I just enjoyed it because for so long, just purely being in front of the camera, you never get to see the whole process of developing an idea for a script all the way through to filming it. And for me,  especially from the pilot, where back in 2008 we were developing this little inkling of an idea and then selling it, it’s been an eye-opening experience for me. I’m just so excited to be part of something from the very beginning. I love the whole [creative] process.  

How did the idea of this show come about?  

JB - The idea came fro our creators, Tommy Dewey and Greg Bratman. They brought this idea to us way back when, and we just sort of developed it from an idea to scripts. Finally, we took it to Fox because I had some relationships there, obviously, and they purchased it from us. It was exciting. It was like our first scripted show that we sold as a company at J2, and we couldn’t be happier with the people we’re working with and the two guys that wrote the series.  

If you could compare Sons of Tucson to a sitcom or other show from the past, which would you pick?  

JB - Visually and maybe in its tone, everyone is going to compare it to Malcolm in the Middle, but I think storywise you can’t really compare it to any show that’s been out there. It’s a truly unique concept and we’re excited that Fox and everyone else involved has a vision to see this through because on the face of it, it is kind of crazy. It’s kind of out there, but they were behind it from day one. It’s not really a concept that comes up too much in the show, and it sort of naturally waves its way into every script, so if four episodes in, someone starts to watch, they’re not going to be lost. It’s really easy to catch up on it.  

Tyler, you have a lot of fans out there who are Science Fiction fans because of the shows you’ve been on before. Anything you’d like to say to them?  

TL - Yes, don’t expect any time traveling or demons in this show. It’s a little more straightforward than that, but like Justin said, the concept of the show, this high concept or whatever, it’s a running theme in the program, but, again, you don’t need to know exactly what’s going on. It becomes more about just the relationship between this guy and these children than the actual sort of hook, I guess. It’s an easy show to just jump into.  

For Tyler and Justin, what was it like on the first day of the set with the kids, and then the last day of the pilot?  

JB - I think for us behind-the-camera guys, the first day is the most stressful of all because everything you’ve worked for comes down to this one moment, and it all begins right then and there. And the last day, our situation is different because we had a chance to shoot the pilot, and then we got to redo it after some recasting, so I guess the first pilot when we ended it was sort of like a breath of fresh air. We thought we’d finished. Everything went well and according to plan. From there, we went into editing, so it really didn’t end for us until two months later.  

TL - For me it was excitement to start, and then when we finished it was elation. When we initially shot the pilot, I couldn’t believe what we did in just eight days with a very ambitious script and working with children. There were a number of potential pitfalls, but we seemed to jump over all of them and had a really good time doing it.  

As noted above, photo by Mike Yarish and copyright of Fox Television, so please no unauthorized copying or duplicating of any kind. Thanks!

BBC’s Merlin Comes To The Syfy Channel

March 14, 2010

Bradley James as Prince Arthur and Colin Morgan as Merlin. Photo copyright of the BBC

THE second season of the critically acclaimed series Merlin makes its Stateside TV premiere on Friday, April 2nd @ 10:00 p.m. EST/PST on the Syfy Channel, following the spring season premiere of Stargate Universe @ 9:oo p.m. EST/PST. To give viewers a chance to catch up before the new season two launch, Syfy will showcase all 13 hours of Merlin‘s first season in a full day marathon on Sunday, March 28th from 10:00 a.m. – 11:00 p.m. EST/PST.  

An imaginative new twist on a timeless legend, Merlin is set in the mythical city of Camelot, before history began. It’s a fantastical realm of legendary beasts and mysterious peoples, and a dangerous world where magic has been banned by the ruthless tyrant, Uther Pendragon. In the season two premiere episode, new servant Cedric (Mackenzie Crook, The Office, Demons) threatens Merlin’s position as Arthur’s righthand man, turning the Prince against his loyal friend. Merlin is convinced the slippery newcomer is up to something and he’s right – Cedric is a con man and a thief who’s after a magnificent jewel recently unearthed in a tomb far beneath Camelot. Little does Cedric realize that his precious prize is more dangerous than he could possibly imagine.  

Merlin stars Colin Morgan as Merlin, Bradley James as Prince Arthur, Anthony Head as King Uther, Richard Wilson as Gaius, Katie McGrath as Morgana and Angel Coulby as Gwen. Series is executive produced by Julian Murphy and Johnny Capps for Shine Television.  

As noted above, photo is copyright of the BBC, so please no unauthorized copying or duplicating of any kind. Thanks!


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