EDITION: U.S.
Glitch
Tin Man: Part Three
by Kristin Sample, posted Dec 5th 2007 8:05AM
(E03) So, I thought that last night's Tin Man was a vast improvement from the first night. Sunday night felt like a Sci-Fi Channel rip-off of the original story -- slightly modernized with scarier special effects (scarier in comparison to the overall-wearing lollipop-holding munchkins). By contrast, Monday night proved that Tin Man had its own story to tell. This was a story that would use the Wizard of Oz as a jumping off point and rethink the classic.
Tin Man sets new ratings records for Sci Fi
by Jason Hughes, posted Dec 4th 2007 1:04PM
According to preliminary data, and as reported by Variety, Tin Man appears to have beaten virtually every record the Sci Fi channel has ever seen. It's 6.4 million viewers surpassed the 6.1 million who saw Steven Spielberg's Taken, back in 2002. Demo ratings were equally as strong, where Tin Man unseated 2000's Dune in adults 18-49, and Taken again in adults 25-54.
With reviews coming in either mid-range to downright negative, it'll be interesting to see how these numbers continue through the mini-series' three-night run.
Tin Man: Part Two
by Kristin Sample, posted Dec 4th 2007 8:41AM
(E02) After reading the comments about last night's part one of Tin Man, I'm a bit skeptical about how many people will (or won't for that matter) tune in tonight. Sure, plenty of people found it entertaining but those who hated it seemed to really loathe it. For myself, I thought it was pretty good but I like the original story enough to find almost any variation of it amusing. I also know not to expect much from a Sci-Fi channel miniseries. So, I fully anticipated that the special effects would be inconsistent and the dialogue would be insipid.
Nevertheless, the actors were good, great even. Alan Cumming is a genius and Neal McDonough is good enough as the embittered ex-Tin Man. I didn't think that Zooey Deschanel was that bad either--so many people complained about her. She does have an abrupt delivery though (which doesn't work well with some of her mediocre lines).
Tin Man: Part One
by Kristin Sample, posted Dec 3rd 2007 8:21AM
(E01) Like many people, I am a big fan of The Wizard of Oz. For a little warm fuzzy nostalgia, I'll put on the original movie with Judy Garland. I've read Gregory Maguire's The Life and Times of the Wicked Witch of the West (and loved that version too). I even own the soundtrack to Wicked (although I've yet to see the show). And who can forget The Wiz? I guess it was only a matter of time until the Sci-Fi channel added their version to the ever-evolving list of stories about Dorothy and her journey through Oz. Tin Man aired last night on the Sci-Fi channel from 9-11 p.m. ET/PT and will continue tonight and tomorrow night (same channel, same time).
We began last night with D.G., the Midwestern waitress who speeds to work on her motorcycle, has weird dreams, and believes there's something more to life than waiting tables and windy prairies. D.G., unlike the gentler Dorothy, is a little too tough at times. I don't mind her talking back to everyone but I do mind her going after longcoats with a stick when she sees the men beating up Tin Man's family.
TV Squad Hot Topics
Most Popular Articles
Most Popular Tags
From Our Partners
- TV Ratings: 'American Idol' beats 'Big Bang Theory,' but CBS wins Thursday
- 'Extreme Couponing: Black Friday Blitz' sneak peek
- 'Gossip Girl' sneak peak: Blair is looking for love...sort of
- 'American Idol': Amy Brumfield brings the plague to Group Day
- 'The Big Bang Theory': Almost perfect
- More From Zap2it
- Nikita's Melinda Clarke Previews 'Fascinating' Amanda Flashback: 'She Is a Ruthless Creature'
- Ratings: The Mentalist Sees a Season High, Grey's Rises, 30 Rock Pops and The Office Falls
- Matt's Inside Line: Scoop on NCIS: LA, Person of Interest, House, Big Bang, White Collar and More
- Vampire Diaries Boss Talks Offing Originals, Teases 'Major Jeopardy' for All by Season's End
- Project Runway All-Stars Recap: Seasonal Subjective Disorder
- More From TVLine
- ‘We Take Care of Our Own' Video: Sing Along With Bruce Springsteen
- Watch a Supercut of James Lipton's Most Absurd Questions
- Watch Gloria Estefan's Campy New Video, ‘Hotel Nacional'
- Movie Review: The Imagination-Lacking Journey 2: Mysterious Island
- DreamWorks Is Remaking Alfred Hitchcock's Rebecca
- More from Vulture
