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Paul Haggis, Crash
I like Dennis Hopper's character in Crash - VIDEO
by Jane Boursaw, posted Sep 12th 2008 10:03AM
I posted last week about the new series Crash, premiering on Starz on Oct. 17. It's been a long time coming. I started hearing buzz about a TV series shortly after the film debuted in May, 2005, and the cast looks good (though I know some of you disagree with me). The lineup of the ensemble drama includes Dennis Hopper, D.B. Sweeney, Ross McCall, Clare Carey, and Luis Chavez, among others. I also appreciate the fact that Paul Haggis and Don Cheadle, who worked on the film, are producing the TV series. So whatever else happens, I have to think they'll keep the integrity of the film intact.
The Crash press kit is now online, and it's interesting to watch the trailer and hark back to the movie. Some of it looks the same -- like the shot of a cop feeling up a woman -- and the racial tension is definitely in place.
Tom Sizemore in for Crash
by Jane Boursaw, posted Sep 8th 2008 9:24AM
I've been waiting for Crash the TV series to materialize ever since I heard about it shortly after the movie premiered in May, 2005. The Starz/Lionsgate series will feature 13 episodes with a different cast of characters from the film. Now I have even more reason to be excited, because Tom Sizemore has joined the series in a recurring role. He'll play Detective Adrian Cooper, whose unorthodox methods cause havoc when he investigates a police-involved shooting. Sizemore joins Dennis Hopper in the series, with Paul Haggis serving as executive producer.
I've had a major crush on Sizemore since he played Sgt. Vinnie Ventresca on China Beach during the 1989-1990 season. Sure, he's had some challenging times. According to his IMDB.com page, in February, 2005, he failed a court-ordered drug test after he was caught trying to use a prosthetic penis to fake the results. And that was the second time he was caught trying that.
Dennis Hopper to star in Crash
by Kristin Sample, posted Jun 5th 2008 9:02PM
Dennis Hopper is set to star in the new original series Crash, produced by Starz and Lionsgate. This is the first drama series for the network. Based on the Academy Award-winning movie, Crash has begun filming in New Mexico and Los Angeles. Sanford Bookstaver (Jericho, Bones, The O.C.) will direct the premiere episode. According to the press release, the show "will continue to focus on an ensemble cast of characters" and "will explore the complexities of social tolerance in contemporary America by digging at the meaning of what it takes to reach the American dream." Hopper will play Ben, a veteran, maverick producer in the music biz who is looking for his last big score. Other stars include Clare Carey, Luis Chavez, Ross McCall, Jocko Sims, Brian Tee, and Arlene Tur. Crash will come to Starz in October.
Watch your backs, HBO and Showtime! This show looks good. And Paul Haggis is on the team of executive producers. He didn't just give us Crash. He gave us thirtysomething and The Black Donnellys. Don't mess with the Hag.
Crash gears up with cast
by Jane Boursaw, posted May 30th 2008 8:22AM
Shortly after the release of 2005's Crash in theaters, I remember reading that a TV series based on the film was in the works. I even pitched the story to a TV trade magazine, but the editor didn't go for it. She must have guessed the show would be years in the works, and she was right. Three years later, a TV series is finally starting to gain some steam. The Hollywood Reporter just posted a story that five actors have joined the cast of the series produced by Don Cheadle, Paul Haggis (pictured), Mark R. Harris, Robert Moresco, Tom Nunan, and Bob Yari, all of whom were involved with the movie. Produced by Lionsgate, the series is anticipated to premiere on Starz in 2009.
Here's a rundown on the actors who've just signed. It's interesting that most of these folks are not big-name actors, which I find refreshing in an era where many mega-movie stars are crossing over into TV:
Starz first series will be Crash
by Allison Waldman, posted Feb 26th 2008 10:38AM
Starz, the cable network, is getting into original production and their first project will be based on the 2005 Best Picture Oscar-winning film Crash. Glen Mazzara, whose credits include Life, The Shield, Stand-Off and Nash Bridges, has been named executive producer/showrunner for the drama series. Lionsgate TV will co-produce with Starz, and they've greenlighted 13 episodes. The controversial film, which dealt with the intersecting lives of a myriad of people living in Los Angeles in just 48 hours, centers on the character of Detective Graham Waters. Waters, a police detective, is struggling with his career, his drug addict mother and a criminal brother. The role was played by Don Cheadle (Picket Fences), who was also one of the film's producers. He is expected to reprise the part in the Starz production and may even direct a few episodes. In addition, director/co-writer/producer Paul Haggis and others from the film are also on board for Starz.
Who are The Black Donnellys?
by Elizabeth Chan, posted Feb 26th 2007 10:05AM
There are a lot of initial discrepancies about NBC's The Black Donnellys from the moment you watch the show. If you are a born and raised New Yorker, you might find it initially hard to relate to the creators insistence on piecing together different but real geographical areas and their claim that it's one fictional neighborhood, unlike other shows using a New York backdrop such as The Sopranos, Law and Order or even Sex and the City.
If you are Canadian, you might be even more confused by the creators choice of the title, which until recently has been a famous historical reference to one of the most gruesome murders in Canadian history.
Bobby Moresco and Paul Haggis, the Oscar winning team behind Crash and the creators of The Black Donnellys implore you to throw pre-conceived notions out the window when you watch the premiere Monday night and want to remind us that although the show is heavily based on their personal experiences growing up in New York City's Hell Kitchen, the story and places are indeed fictional and should feel timeless.
NBC places orders for two new dramas
by Anna Johns, posted Mar 17th 2006 10:32AM
While the upfronts are still a few weeks away, NBC has placed early orders for two
new dramas, Kidnapped and The Black Donnellys. Kidnapped stars Dana Delany and Timothy
Hutton as parents whose son is abducted. The show is in the same style as FOX's Prison Break, where it's meant
to stretch out only one season. It will be told from three views: the family, the FBI agents, and the kidnappers.Perhaps Crash's win at the Academy awards solidified NBC's love for The Black Donnellys. It is written and created by Crash screenwriters Paul Haggis and Bobby Moresco. The Black Donnellys is about four Irish-American brothers involved in the Irish mob.
Each drama received a 13-episode order from NBC.
In TV land, pilots never die
by Anna Johns, posted Feb 7th 2006 10:27AM
If you're going to pitch a
pilot to television network execs in L.A., one key word is 'patience'. Another is 'persistence'. Here
is an interesting article about a handful of pilots that are finally getting picked up by the networks, after their
creators have re-worked and re-tooled them for years. One example is Numb3rs, which didn't make the cut the
first time around. The creators went back to the drawing board, pitched it the next year, and now it's a successful
series. Another example is Monk, which was originally created for ABC but never got off the ground. A network
exec moved from ABC to USA, where Monk found a following.One of the most extreme cases comes this year. For eight years, writer Paul Haggis (Crash & Million Dollar Baby) has been trying to get the series, The Truth About Joey Ice Cream on the air. It's a show about four Irish brothers who keep finding themselves tangled up in the mob. Sound familiar? It should. We reported on it last month, when NBC finally picked it up as The Black Donnellys. I actually kind-of prefer the original title because it's quirky. Did the show really change that much or is it just because Haggis is hot right now? Probably the latter. It's the same for Shonda Rhimes, the creator of the very-hot-right-now Grey's Anatomy. She developed a journalism-themed series one year before Grey's and now has been asked to re-develop it.
Million Dollar Baby, Crash writer signs with NBC
by Anna Johns, posted Jan 23rd 2006 9:45AM
NBC is banking on gritty writer Paul Haggis for one of its new fall dramas, called The Black Donnellys.
Haggis wrote the screenplays for Million Dollar Baby and Crash, and has also won two Emmys for his
writing on Thirtysomething. The new series, created by Haggis and Bobby Moresco, is about four Irish brothers
in New York's Hell's Kitchen and their lives in organized crime. It's one of those "they keep pullin' me back
in" kind of things. The series will actually be shot in New York. With The Sopranos concluding next year, NBC must be hoping that we'll still want our violent mobster fix.
Lessons in modern language usage from Oprah Winfrey
by Karina Longworth, posted Dec 27th 2005 8:02PM
Today's Oprah – actually, I think it was a repeat - featured the entire cast of Paul
Haggis' Crash (which Oprah, as she reminded us ad nauseum, "looooooooovvvvvvvvvvvvvved") talking
about racism. I tuned in late (all the better to misinterpret out of context, my pretties), but I caught an ... um ...
interesting segment about linguistics. When I turned the TV on, Oprah and Don Cheadle were talking over, and almost yelling at, each other. Apparently they were right in the middle of an intense debate over the proper use of the "N Word". Then Terrence Howard (who, the cynics amongst us will point out, is campaigning for Oscar nods on at least 2 performances and, as such, probably wants to be seen as Nice Guy) tells Oprah that he's decided to stop using it; Cheadle vehemently explains why he's opposed to pressuring people into limiting their linguistic choices. As if to bully him into breaking the tie for her side, Oprah turns to Ludacris. "Cris, would you consider not using The Word?" Visibly uncomfortable., Luda smiles. "Uh, I feel the same way Don does about it." Then, all of a sudden, out of nowhere, Sandra Bullock pipes up:
"As long as we're going to stop using words," she says (and I'm totally paraphrasing), "Can we stop with the bitch and the ho, for women?"
The crowd goes wild. Completely silent during the previous portion of the conversation, all of a sudden there are 200 mild-mannered housewives gone wild, hooting and cheering and stomping their feet. And then ...
Ludacris: We can stop when women stop calling themselves bitches.
Sandra Bullock: I don't call any woman a bitch. (pause, then, totally straight-facedly) Unless she is one.
Cut to some kind of language expert, sitting in the crowd. "80 years ago, you could call a woman a broad. We don't do that anymore."
Oh. Really? Whoops.
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