Thanks to DarthLocke for the heads up.
1. It's a version of the world we live in. The pilot actually kicks off in modern-day Chicago just as all of the world's televisions, cars, freezers, light bulbs, phones and -- gasp! -- even iPads simultaneously flicker and turn off. While there's no attempt to explain the globe's sudden rejection of physics, even when events quickly move forward to 15 years after the great blackout, it is hinted that some have information that they aren't sharing with others.
2. Listen up, Twilight fans. There may not be any vampires or werewolves in Revolution, but it does count franchise star Billy Burke (aka Forks police chief Charlie Swan) as its lead actor. Burke is joined by frequent Good Wife guest Tim Guinee, Breaking Bad creep Giancarlo Esposito, David Lyons (The Cape), Andrea Roth (Rescue Me), Tracy Spiridakos (Being Human), Anna Lise Phillips and a slew of others.
3. Don't get attached to anyone on that roll call. Revolution doles out causalities early in the pilot, and the series seems prepared dispatch most of the primary players without much hesitation. And aside for notable deaths, there's also just a good deal of carnage. Fight sequences and often gruesome demises take up a solid 10 or 15 percent of the first episode.
4. Prepare for flashbacks. As has been the custom with most complicated, arc-based serials in this post-Lost world, the first look at Revolution includes asides to the day the power went out. Given the mortality rate, and the how little attention is given to the events surrounding the black-out, the series seems poised to pepper the occasional time warp as the story moves forward.
5. Twist! The genre all but guarantees a few gotcha moments as the story warms up and Revolution delivers several. The pilot ends with one relatively expected revelation and two rather surprising ones.
Source: Hollywood Reporter


Looking forward to this.
ReplyDeleteThe more I hear about this the more excited I get!
ReplyDeleteI think this sounds interesting and will definitely be checking it out. Crossing fingers it isn't another The Event/Flashforward case...
ReplyDeleteDefinitely going to be checking this out, but it's going to be on in a tough timeslot, but that's what dvrs are for... lol
ReplyDeleteFlashbacks in this type of show are almost a necessity honestly. So I'm glad they are not avoiding them.
ReplyDeleteI like hearing that characters die and even the more prominent roles aren't safe! That is how a dangerous world would be and it adds to the reality of their world.
Gotcha moments are so hit and miss.... have to wait to give an opinion on that, but I'm not a fan more often than not. So many seem like forced drama and not revealed in any organic manner related to the plot....
This series has a lot of potential to be brilliant, but it also has just as much potential to be terrible.... Neither of the major players on the creative team make me feel more secure honestly. I hope it is almost as good as many anticipate it to be... and better than I expect it to be! XD
It sounds like it could be interesting, I am definitely going to be checking this show out.
ReplyDeleteI still predict it'll go the way of The Event/Flashforward, a good start followed by a steady decline. But since NBC's renewal ratings standard is low I wouldnt rule out a second season.
ReplyDeleteThis is sounding pretty awesome!
ReplyDeleteHave you watched Supernatural? I strongly believe Eric Kripke is a major player on the creative team.
ReplyDeleteConsidering he was the only poor soul in Twilight that actually acted, I'm glad Billy Burke got himself a series. XD
ReplyDeleteI'm really hoping this show ends up being more LOST than Flashforward, Event and the rest flukes.
I thought that was interesting too! -It also means we could get a lot of cast!
ReplyDeleteThe more I read, the more I think I will love it! -I am glad that the main cast might not be safe, because, as Daque also said, it adds an element of realism and really gives into that idea that 'a revolution' is about "fighting" for or against something...I think Abrams and Kripke will keep it also family orientated, so I don't imagine T.S.'s character, Charlie, is going to disappear too quick, as I like to think her relationship with her Uncle might be the hallmark relationship of the series...Of course even if a character gets killed, doesn't mean they weren't apart of the events leading to the black out, which means we could still see them in those flash backs!
ReplyDeleteThis is one show I'm really looking forward to, mostly because of Kripke. I hope it meets my expectations and does well.
ReplyDeleteI am psyched for this,the more i read the more i like! I hope it makes it..
ReplyDeleteOf course he's a player in this..
ReplyDeleteYep,i agree! Bring on the flashbacks! Honestly i don't think the story could be told w/o them.
ReplyDeleteAnd i have to agree with you and Darque on this....It does sound good,even better than that really,lets hope it works,and that its a hit. I think at least in the beginning it will have a large audience because of the Kripke factor.Depending on how the SPN fans react to this show it could be an enormous hit,or another show that's a hit but with a smaller audience,like what we have now with Fringe....
ReplyDeleteI have watched it.... up until last season, both he and Abrams are the two major players I meant. Both can be good and both can be mediocre to me.
ReplyDeleteWhile I liked SPN I never loved it and I never felt the writing was as stellar as most do I guess. I always felt SPN was one of those series that was greater than the sum of its parts. No single aspect was brilliant, but the pieces fit together very well and made for a much better series than any individual aspect.
Agree with you, Supernatural writing other than 'brotherly love'(NO SLASH REFERENCES PLEASE) is mediocre. Monster story-lines many a times are just, meh! Brotherly love is the most important piece that binds everything together.
ReplyDeleteBut IMO, its better than shows like Lost where the parts are still parts, even after series finale!
I think it will be so hard to tell, because Kripke only has one work to compare this too, so it really is Russian roulette, if one, Supernatural was completely in his control through and through, and/or two, if there are things he wanted to do, but couldn't because of the other writers/network involved, let alone how much influence will be Abrams/Bad Robots, but conceptually and the way the female lead seems to be, the cast diversity, and even the epicness of the trailer leans towards Bad Robot's influence a great deal.
ReplyDeleteCAN! NOT! WAIT!!!!
ReplyDeleteYes it does look like Bad Robot/ JJ's work! I don't watch SPN i tried a couple of times,maybe at the time i wasn't into it,but it didn't seem all that great..Don't know much about him,just the Fans.
ReplyDeleteI am pretty much in the same boat. I have seen a few episodes, but for whatever reason haven't been able to get into it, but what I do like about Supernatural is how they comes up interesting culture/tech to go along with all the different beings, and like Abrams, I can tell he cares about family, as even the trailer suggest this story is also about "two brothers"... (;
ReplyDeleteYep,two bothers that's as much as i know. :P
ReplyDeleteThis is perfect, I'm gonna need another fix when Fringe ends
ReplyDeleteAgree with you, Supernatural writing other than 'brotherly love'(NO SLASH REFERENCES PLEASE) is mediocre. Monster story-lines many a times are just, meh! Brotherly love is the most important piece that binds everything together.
ReplyDeleteBut IMO, its better than shows like Lost where the parts are still parts, even after series finale!