Discussion:
Heroes
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Ken Kennedy's(KENNEDY!) Number One Fan
2006-06-14 13:11:56 UTC
Permalink
HEROES (NBC)
(Mondays at 9:00/8:00c this fall)

The network's description: "The epic drama "Heroes" chronicles the lives of
ordinary people who discover they possess extraordinary abilities. As a
total eclipse casts it shadow across the globe, viewers follow a genetics
professor (Sendhil Ramamurthy, "Blind Guy Driving") in India whose father's
disappearance leads him to uncover a secret theory -- there are people with
super powers living among us. A young dreamer (Milo Ventimiglia, "The
Bedford Diaries") tries to convince his politician brother (Adrian Pasdar,
"Judging Amy") that he can fly. A high school cheerleader (Hayden
Panettiere, "Ice Princess") learns that she is totally indestructible. A Las
Vegas stripper (Ali Larter, "Final Destination"), struggling to make ends
meet to support her young son (Noah Gray-Cabey, "My Wife & Kids"), uncovers
that her mirror image has a secret. A prison inmate (Leonard Roberts, "Buffy
the Vampire Slayer") mysteriously finds himself waking up outside of his
cell. A gifted artist (Santiago Cabrera, "Empire"), whose drug addiction is
destroying his life and the relationship with his girlfriend (Tawny Cypress,
"Third Watch"), can paint the future. A down-on-his-luck beat cop (Greg
Grunberg, "Alias") can hear people's thoughts, including the secrets of a
captured terrorist. In Japan, a young man (Masi Oka, "Scrubs") develops a
way to stop time through sheer will power. Their ultimate destiny is nothing
less than saving the world."

What did they leave out: Leonard Roberts and Greg Grunberg's characters
(D.L. Hawkins and Matt Parkman respectively) actually don't appear in the
first hour of the show's two-hour pilot. Unfortunately only the first half
was available for screening.

The plot in a nutshell: Scrolling intro text tells us that "a seemingly
random group of individuals has emerged with what can only be described as
'special abilities.'" And that "these individuals will not only save the
world, but change it forever." From here we make the rounds on the show's
rather large ensemble cast: there's Peter Petrelli (a surprisingly upbeat
Milo Ventimiglia), a nurse who has dreams that he can fly; his skeptical
brother Nathan (Adrian Pasdar), who's running for office; Niki Sanders (Ali
Larter), a Vegas webcam stripper who catches her own reflection moving; her
prodigy son Micah (Noah Gray-Cabey); Claire Bennet (Hayden Panettiere), a
Texas cheerleader who finds she's literally unbreakable; Isaac Mendez
(Santiago Cabrera), a junkie artist whose paintings reveal the future; and
Hiro Nakamura (Masi Oka), a corporate drone who thinks he can move space and
time. Tying them all together is Mohinder Suresh (Sendhil Ramamurthy), a
professor in India whose controversial theories about evolution have drawn
the attention of a mysterious figure (known only as "Horn Rimmed Glasses" in
the script). It seems said beliefs also led to his father's death and,
fearing for his life, he flees to New York to seek out one of the
evolutionary leaps he's been tracking. There, undercover as a cab driver, he
stumbles upon Peter, who's now convinced himself he can fly and is willing
to literally take the leap to prove it. We also begin to see the various
connections between our "special" people, such as the daughter of one of
Peter's patients (Tawny Cypress) is dating Isaac, one of Hiro's friends is a
regular "viewer" of Niki and in the pilot's final big reveal - who "Horn
Rimmed Glasses" actually is. Oh, and did I mention this all is happening
during a solar eclipse?

What works: The show's large, multiethnic (and multinational) cast - not to
mention its supernatural elements - will undoubtedly draw comparisons to
"Lost" - and for once, that's not a bad thing. What "Heroes" gets that the
various "clones" out there don't is that the characters come first and the
overarching plot comes second. And even then it's only when we've warmed up
to the characters that the show starts to reveal its potentially large,
multi-year plot. In fact, my favorite part about the show is simply that
(for the most part) the characters don't treat their abilities as a curse,
but rather as their salvation - Peter, a dreamer by nature, finally has
something real to stand up for; Niki, constantly under the thumb of the loan
shark she used to pay for her son's tuition, finally has a way to fight
back; and Hiro, desperate to stand out, finally gets to break free from
being a cog in the machine. It's their "discovery" that powers the show and
it's very intoxicating. Further livening things up is David Semel's
feature-level direction - from big moments like Peter leaping off a building
to small character bits like Hiro standing out from his ant-like co-workers
during company mandated exercises. There's just plenty to love about this
show. NBC really is swinging for the fences on the drama front this fall.

What doesn't: Those hoping for quick explanations about how these people got
their powers, why "Horn Rimmed Glasses" is after them and so forth are going
to be very disappointed. To its credit thought, the show doesn't let such
questions hang over the proceedings (unlike say "Invasion," "Surface" or
"Threshold") and wisely makes the action about the characters instead of
some global quest for answers.

The challenges ahead: Simply put, are NBC viewers ready to embrace a sci-fi
drama?

COMING TOMORROW: FOX's "Standoff"
--
Spreading the gospel of Kennedy one post at a time.


MRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRR....KENNEDY........KENNEDY!
Alastor2602
2006-06-14 17:55:39 UTC
Permalink
[...]
Mhm?
Yes that's it!

..Deja vu..
--
~ Alastor2602 // Hoka Hey
-> http://alastor2602.altervista.org

"Con ogni pensiero, tentare di conoscere i propri difetti e correggersi
per tutta la vita: questa e` la via"
Gordon Mulcaster
2006-06-14 18:22:09 UTC
Permalink
In article <***@news.supernews.com>,
"Ken Kennedy's\(KENNEDY!\) Number One Fan"
Post by Ken Kennedy's(KENNEDY!) Number One Fan
HEROES (NBC)
(Mondays at 9:00/8:00c this fall)
The network's description: "The epic drama "Heroes" chronicles the
lives of ordinary people who discover they possess extraordinary
abilities.
X-Men Lite!

Isn't there already a show about mutants with special powers?
Barnabas Collins
2006-06-14 20:39:01 UTC
Permalink
On Wed, 14 Jun 2006 08:11:56 -0500, "Ken Kennedy's\(KENNEDY!\) Number
Post by Ken Kennedy's(KENNEDY!) Number One Fan
HEROES (NBC)
(Mondays at 9:00/8:00c this fall)
The network's description: "The epic drama "Heroes" chronicles the lives of
ordinary people who discover they possess extraordinary abilities.
You mean like KC who had the extaordinary ability on Charmed to drive
fans like me up the wall, accross the ceiling, and down the other
side?
Post by Ken Kennedy's(KENNEDY!) Number One Fan
As a
total eclipse casts it shadow across the globe, viewers follow a genetics
professor (Sendhil Ramamurthy, "Blind Guy Driving")
Blind Guy Driving? After coming home from work today how come i think
some of those blind guys were driving today?


in India whose father's
Post by Ken Kennedy's(KENNEDY!) Number One Fan
disappearance leads him to uncover a secret theory -- there are people with
super powers living among us. A young dreamer (Milo Ventimiglia, "The
Bedford Diaries") tries to convince his politician brother (Adrian Pasdar,
"Judging Amy") that he can fly.
ADA David McClaren

A high school cheerleader (Hayden
Post by Ken Kennedy's(KENNEDY!) Number One Fan
Panettiere, "Ice Princess") learns that she is totally indestructible. A Las
Vegas stripper (Ali Larter, "Final Destination"), struggling to make ends
meet to support her young son (Noah Gray-Cabey, "My Wife & Kids"), uncovers
that her mirror image has a secret. A prison inmate (Leonard Roberts, "Buffy
the Vampire Slayer") mysteriously finds himself waking up outside of his
cell.
Forrest Gates, brother of David Gates and Bill Gates.




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Julio Laredo
2006-06-15 21:23:28 UTC
Permalink
Sounds a lot like "Rising Stars" or "New Universe."

"Ken Kennedy's(KENNEDY!) Number One Fan"
Post by Ken Kennedy's(KENNEDY!) Number One Fan
HEROES (NBC)
(Mondays at 9:00/8:00c this fall)
The network's description: "The epic drama "Heroes" chronicles the lives
of ordinary people who discover they possess extraordinary abilities. As a
total eclipse casts it shadow across the globe, viewers follow a genetics
professor (Sendhil Ramamurthy, "Blind Guy Driving") in India whose
father's disappearance leads him to uncover a secret theory -- there are
people with super powers living among us. A young dreamer (Milo
Ventimiglia, "The Bedford Diaries") tries to convince his politician
brother (Adrian Pasdar, "Judging Amy") that he can fly. A high school
cheerleader (Hayden Panettiere, "Ice Princess") learns that she is totally
indestructible. A Las Vegas stripper (Ali Larter, "Final Destination"),
struggling to make ends meet to support her young son (Noah Gray-Cabey,
"My Wife & Kids"), uncovers that her mirror image has a secret. A prison
inmate (Leonard Roberts, "Buffy the Vampire Slayer") mysteriously finds
himself waking up outside of his cell. A gifted artist (Santiago Cabrera,
"Empire"), whose drug addiction is destroying his life and the
relationship with his girlfriend (Tawny Cypress, "Third Watch"), can paint
the future. A down-on-his-luck beat cop (Greg Grunberg, "Alias") can hear
people's thoughts, including the secrets of a captured terrorist. In
Japan, a young man (Masi Oka, "Scrubs") develops a way to stop time
through sheer will power. Their ultimate destiny is nothing less than
saving the world."
What did they leave out: Leonard Roberts and Greg Grunberg's characters
(D.L. Hawkins and Matt Parkman respectively) actually don't appear in the
first hour of the show's two-hour pilot. Unfortunately only the first half
was available for screening.
The plot in a nutshell: Scrolling intro text tells us that "a seemingly
random group of individuals has emerged with what can only be described as
'special abilities.'" And that "these individuals will not only save the
world, but change it forever." From here we make the rounds on the show's
rather large ensemble cast: there's Peter Petrelli (a surprisingly upbeat
Milo Ventimiglia), a nurse who has dreams that he can fly; his skeptical
brother Nathan (Adrian Pasdar), who's running for office; Niki Sanders
(Ali Larter), a Vegas webcam stripper who catches her own reflection
moving; her prodigy son Micah (Noah Gray-Cabey); Claire Bennet (Hayden
Panettiere), a Texas cheerleader who finds she's literally unbreakable;
Isaac Mendez (Santiago Cabrera), a junkie artist whose paintings reveal
the future; and Hiro Nakamura (Masi Oka), a corporate drone who thinks he
can move space and time. Tying them all together is Mohinder Suresh
(Sendhil Ramamurthy), a professor in India whose controversial theories
about evolution have drawn the attention of a mysterious figure (known
only as "Horn Rimmed Glasses" in the script). It seems said beliefs also
led to his father's death and, fearing for his life, he flees to New York
to seek out one of the evolutionary leaps he's been tracking. There,
undercover as a cab driver, he stumbles upon Peter, who's now convinced
himself he can fly and is willing to literally take the leap to prove it.
We also begin to see the various connections between our "special" people,
such as the daughter of one of Peter's patients (Tawny Cypress) is dating
Isaac, one of Hiro's friends is a regular "viewer" of Niki and in the
pilot's final big reveal - who "Horn Rimmed Glasses" actually is. Oh, and
did I mention this all is happening during a solar eclipse?
What works: The show's large, multiethnic (and multinational) cast - not
to mention its supernatural elements - will undoubtedly draw comparisons
to "Lost" - and for once, that's not a bad thing. What "Heroes" gets that
the various "clones" out there don't is that the characters come first and
the overarching plot comes second. And even then it's only when we've
warmed up to the characters that the show starts to reveal its potentially
large, multi-year plot. In fact, my favorite part about the show is simply
that (for the most part) the characters don't treat their abilities as a
curse, but rather as their salvation - Peter, a dreamer by nature, finally
has something real to stand up for; Niki, constantly under the thumb of
the loan shark she used to pay for her son's tuition, finally has a way to
fight back; and Hiro, desperate to stand out, finally gets to break free
from being a cog in the machine. It's their "discovery" that powers the
show and it's very intoxicating. Further livening things up is David
Semel's feature-level direction - from big moments like Peter leaping off
a building to small character bits like Hiro standing out from his
ant-like co-workers during company mandated exercises. There's just plenty
to love about this show. NBC really is swinging for the fences on the
drama front this fall.
What doesn't: Those hoping for quick explanations about how these people
got their powers, why "Horn Rimmed Glasses" is after them and so forth are
going to be very disappointed. To its credit thought, the show doesn't let
such questions hang over the proceedings (unlike say "Invasion," "Surface"
or "Threshold") and wisely makes the action about the characters instead
of some global quest for answers.
The challenges ahead: Simply put, are NBC viewers ready to embrace a
sci-fi drama?
COMING TOMORROW: FOX's "Standoff"
--
Spreading the gospel of Kennedy one post at a time.
MRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRR....KENNEDY........KENNEDY!
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