http://www.nbc.com/heroes
Heroes set to return to NBC in 2015 with a 13 episode mini series titled Heroes Reborn!
I wonder if Marvel will sue?
Depending on who the cast turns out to be, it could be interesting. They really should have stuck with the original plan and had a rotating cast of characters instead of sticking with the same people over and over.
Revisting characters?
Sylar has to be there. Has to.
Past that, I'm guessing perhaps Hiro, Claire, and Peter. Maybe Matt Parkman. Don't/shouldn't "need" anyone else 'ceptin' Claire's Dad, and that's iffy-ish unless he's some sort of Nick Fury-esqe leader.
Although that creepy dollmaster Eric Doyle would be pretty cool as a villain maybe.
Whatever, I'm in.
This'll give me a reason to start/finish watching my DVD sets of the series. I lost track of it when it changed nights mid-run, so hopefully this incarnation will be on a night I don't have a conflict.
It won't be the same without live posting on the forums with Troy Hickman. Those were some of the best threads on the CoH forums.
Quote from: Kaos Arcanna on February 23, 2014, 03:09:49 PM
Depending on who the cast turns out to be, it could be interesting. They really should have stuck with the original plan and had a rotating cast of characters instead of sticking with the same people over and over.
Yeah here's hoping that with it being called a mini series it won,t run into all the executive interference that derailed things after other the first season.
Quote from: Kaos Arcanna on February 23, 2014, 03:09:49 PM
Depending on who the cast turns out to be, it could be interesting. They really should have stuck with the original plan and had a rotating cast of characters instead of sticking with the same people over and over.
i agree. they should have changed characters every season like they do on power rangers. imo, it would have made all the other seasons alot better.
Unfortunately, TV doesn't work that way. They want bankable stars that can draw the viewers from season to season. That's probably what derailed the original(?) plan of a new cast from season to season.
They might be able to get away with it by making it "event programming" like maxi-series from the 80's (think "V").
Quote from: CG on March 03, 2014, 03:51:07 PM
Unfortunately, TV doesn't work that way. They want bankable stars that can draw the viewers from season to season. That's probably what derailed the original(?) plan of a new cast from season to season.
They might be able to get away with it by making it "event programming" like maxi-series from the 80's (think "V").
I'd agree with you that "most" US network TV shows don't work that way, or at least the network suits don't think they "can" work that way. But I'd mention American Horror Story (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Horror_Story) as a good example of a show that's managed to prove you can in fact "reshuffle" a show's main stars and plotlines from season to season and make it work fairly well.
Basically I credit the relative nose-dive in quality of Heroes after its first season squarely on its failure to hold to its original idea of switching things up from season to season. Heroes was designed to work like American Horror Story and only fell apart when they didn't let it happen as planned. Their sad attempt to keep the same story and characters limping along like a traditional episodic TV show spelled its doom towards silliness pretty much from the beginning of the second season.
Quote from: Lothic on March 10, 2014, 04:00:06 PM
I'd agree with you that "most" US network TV shows don't work that way, or at least the network suits don't think they "can" work that way. But I'd mention American Horror Story (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Horror_Story) as a good example of a show that's managed to prove you can in fact "reshuffle" a show's main stars and plotlines from season to season and make it work fairly well.
Basically I credit the relative nose-dive in quality of Heroes after its first season squarely on its failure to hold to its original idea of switching things up from season to season. Heroes was designed to work like American Horror Story and only fell apart when they didn't let it happen as planned. Their sad attempt to keep the same story and characters limping along like a traditional episodic TV show spelled its doom towards silliness pretty much from the beginning of the second season.
Beat me to it. Seriously anyone who hasn't seen American Horror Story go watch it.
Glad to here it.
I thought Heroes started out great but then it seemed like they just made it up as they went from week to week.
I know the writers strike in season 2 messed up the original plans but by then it was still too late.
Since Heroes there have been countless TV and even movies that tried to do the same thing.