JasonOmara-related stories
Posted Apr 2nd 2009 1:12AM by Brad Trechak
Filed under: Episode Reviews, Reality-Free, Life on Mars
(S01E17) It's the last episode ever of the American version of this show. I'm not sure if it's appropriate or not, but it happened on April Fool's Day, as well. They certainly took the show to its most literal conclusion possible. As I write this, I'm still processing a lot of the story.
Comparisons are inevitable, and the ending of the British series was hands-down better. However, this one was good for a couple of laughs and wasn't completely outrageous (close, but not completely).
Continue reading Life on Mars: Life is a Rock (series finale)
Posted Mar 26th 2009 1:38AM by Brad Trechak
Filed under: Episode Reviews, Reality-Free, Life on Mars
(S01E16) In our second-to-last episode, we get a few revelations about Sam and the reason behind his trip to 1973. Nothing conclusive, of course, but that's probably been saved for next week. Will Sam get back to 2009? Will he die? Will he get hit by another car and wake up in 1938? The mind boggles.
Sam is really adapting to his environment and becoming more brutal in his police work. Being stuck in a 1973 cop show is really rubbing off on him. On the plus side, even a bullet can't keep Michael Imperioli from delivering a great performance while in surgery. I think I'll miss you the most, Ray.
Continue reading Life on Mars: Everyone Knows It's Windy
Posted Mar 19th 2009 12:31AM by Brad Trechak
Filed under: Episode Reviews, Reality-Free, Life on Mars

(S01E15) Well, that was quite an ending, wasn't it? I admit I wasn't expecting that one. One cannot help but wonder if at that stage of filming, the creators were aware of the cancellation of the series and decided to throw in a few curve balls to create an "anything can happen" atmosphere and keep the loyal viewers on their toes.
Continue reading Life on Mars: All the Young Dudes
Posted Mar 12th 2009 1:06AM by Brad Trechak
Filed under: Episode Reviews, Reality-Free, Life on Mars

(S01E14) The more I watch this show, the more I think Sam is not stuck in the past. I'm not sure where he is. It's definitely somewhere fictional. My guess is some virtual reality thing. However, they further proved how unrealistic the show is by pulling out the old "identical twin from the middle of nowhere" trick. It saves casting time and money by using the same actor or actress for two different roles.
I don't care how similar two people look. There are minor differences in things such as voice and mannerisms that anybody who even remotely knew Valerie would have picked up that Annie was not her. Also, if Valerie was such a loner, how is it that she worked with her two roommates yet supposedly they didn't know her that well? If they saw her both at home and work and didn't figure out the switch, then I'm sorry, but they are a few bricks short of a load.
Continue reading Life on Mars: Coffee, Tea or Annie
Posted Mar 5th 2009 2:27AM by Brad Trechak
Filed under: Episode Reviews, Reality-Free, Life on Mars
(S01E13) Now that it has been made public of
the imminent demise of
Life on Mars, it certainly makes any sort of analysis kind of moot. Hopefully, when the series ends (a mere one episode longer than the series that spawned it), it will offer some sort of satisfying closure to its fans (all three of them).
Tonight's episode was a good one with a twist I didn't see until just before it actually happened. Once again, it focused more on the cop mystery of the week rather than Sam's predicament (which was only touched upon with the strange freeze frames in the beginning). The creators will likely have a hell of a lot of exposition about Sam in the final episode.
Continue reading Life on Mars: Revenge of the Broken Jaw
Posted Mar 3rd 2009 10:02AM by Jason Hughes
Filed under: Programming, Cancellations, Life on Mars

You know how those wacky British like their shows in short bursts with beginnings, middles and ends? Well maybe that's what ABC is thinking of when they announce that
Life on Mars will finish its run with its 17th episode. They're promising a satisfying sense of closure, including answers as to why Detective Sam Tyler finds himself in 1973.
One theory that we're told can be ruled out is the coma that the UK original used to explain Sam Tyler's time travel. It would make the mystery kind of anticlimactic if they used the same explanation. We're also not told if Annie will finally punch Ray once and for all for being a misogynist bastard
The UK version of the series was an actual hit, but designed for the limited format completing two eight-episode runs. Meaning the US iteration, which is being canceled due to low ratings, will still run one episode longer than its successful predecessor. It was a creative decision to end the UK series after two seasons.
Continue reading Life on Mars promising closure in series finale (yeah, it's canceled)
Posted Feb 26th 2009 3:02AM by Brad Trechak
Filed under: Episode Reviews, Reality-Free, Life on Mars
(S01E12) To begin, I know exactly where they shot the opening scene for tonight's episode. It was in the
New York Transit Museum. It's an old subway station that was converted into a museum and includes subway cars from different decades. I visited there recently, which allowed me to recognize some of the background advertisements from the scene.
In the original British series, it was determined that Sam was in a coma. In this series, I think he's in some sort of shared virtual reality. This is simply a hunch based on what we've learned so far.
On to the actual episode...
Continue reading Life on Mars: The Simple Secret of the Note in Us All
Posted Feb 18th 2009 11:55PM by Brad Trechak
Filed under: Episode Reviews, Reality-Free, Life on Mars

(S01E11) It's been a while since Sam had his visions. I missed them. However, I think tonight's episode overdid it a little with the
Wizard of Oz references. Sam is over the rainbow. We got it. We just don't know why.
I'm glad the creators wrapped up the Maria storyline as quickly as they did. They could only milk her daddy issues for so long, and Sam and Gene have way too much for a bromance going on of their own to let a little thing like sleeping with the boss' daughter interfere.
Continue reading Life on Mars: Home Is Where You Hang Your Holster
Posted Feb 12th 2009 1:02AM by Brad Trechak
Filed under: Episode Reviews, Reality-Free, Life on Mars
(S01E10) Every dramatic series has the occasional "comedy" episode, and
Life on Mars is no exception. This one was definitely intended for humor which could be confirmed by the cameo appearance of Wallace "Inconceivable" Shawn, who apparently ran
The X-Files a few decades before Mulder and Scully investigated the paranormal.
This was a good episode and served several purposes. The first of which was to determine that whatever happened to Sam is not any sort of alien-related experience, thereby getting the most silly and cliché theories out of the way. My only question at this stage is whether the explanation for Sam's predicament is going to be scientific, magical or a combination of both (technomancy, perhaps?). The episode added to the confusion about this by nicknaming Wallace Shawn's forensic investigator "The Sorcerer."
Continue reading Life on Mars: Let All the Children Boogie
Posted Feb 5th 2009 4:39AM by Brad Trechak
Filed under: Episode Reviews, Reality-Free, Life on Mars
(S01E09) Finally, we get a continuation of the cliffhanger phone call ending from November! Mind you, it was kind of weird (notice that the song about the white room with black curtains played while Sam walked into a white room with black curtains). I wish they showed this episode first, as it was the better episode of the two and really showcased Michael Imperioli's talent as Detective Ray Karling.
Gene Hunt seems to be a big fan of 70's pop culture, as he keeps referring to it in his interview. Ray, on the other hand, keeps using the pseudo-profanity that Disney only permits. Ray also thinks of very colorful and amusing metaphors. It becomes cartoonish after a while. The episode also prodigiously used the slo-mo effect to the point where I thought they must have had to fill time.
Continue reading Life on Mars: The Dark Side of the Mook
Posted Jan 28th 2009 11:55PM by Brad Trechak
Filed under: Episode Reviews, Reality-Free, Life on Mars
(S01E08) This show has found a new directive. That directive is: deviate from the original British series as quickly as possible. It was bound to happen. I just didn't think it would happen so soon or to such a large extent.
To begin: WTF??? When we last left Sam Tyler, he was answering a mysterious phone call. Now we have a jump in time out of
Lost and he's at the scene of a suicide in mid-attempt. That's page one of sloppy serial storytelling.
Continue reading Life on Mars: Take a Look at the Lawmen
Posted Dec 15th 2008 5:13PM by Kona Gallagher
Filed under: OpEd, House, Video, Grey's Anatomy, Festivus, Chuck, Reality-Free, Gossip Girl, Fringe, Life on Mars, The Mentalist
...Nine foreign AmericansWith all of the starry-eyed, out-of-work Midwesterners who litter Sunset Blvd., one would assume that our television landscape would be similarly populated with corn-fed blonds. You would, however, be wrong. In fact, there are a ton of non-Americans who have come to Hollywood to take all of our primetime show-starring jobs.
What's fun for me is watching the shows to see who does a good version of an American accent, and who needs to spend a little more time with their dialect coaches. Below are nine stars who've jumped the pond to come to the good ol' U. S. of A.
Continue reading On the 9th day of Festivus, TV gave to me... - VIDEOS
Posted Nov 21st 2008 12:54AM by Brad Trechak
Filed under: Episode Reviews, Reality-Free, Life on Mars
(S01E07) In what would have been the season finale if this were the British version of the show, Sam finally meets his father (and talks to himself as well, in an amusing timey-wimey sort of way). Originally, his father left him on his fourth birthday right after the party. Now, something else happened.
On a tangential note, I do wish this show had theme music of some sort. Preferably something akin to the style of '70s police television dramas. The opening montage seems to go too quickly. At least, this is what I thought while listening to the '70s-style music during the opening chase scene.
Life on Mars does has a slower pace than most of the other shows on television. Fortunately, it is kept interesting by being filled with eye candy such as wide shots and different colors. The shirts and the wallpapers alone fascinate me. I even got a laugh from Gene Hunt's loafers.
Continue reading Life on Mars: The Man Who Sold the World
Posted Nov 7th 2008 12:24AM by Allison Waldman
Filed under: Episode Reviews, Reality-Free, Life on Mars

(S01E05) "Have you died and gone to moron heaven?" - Gene HuntWhat we had here, my friends, was a real theological episode. There were lots of references to angels, miracles, prayer and the question of whether or not Sam is dead. If so, is he in purgatory or hell or heaven? Does that explain his predicament? And is the old gray beard a vagrant or a heavenly messenger?
Overall, what I really thought made the show percolate was the teaming up of Sam and Clams. "Clams" we learn is Fletcher Bellow, Sam's mentor, and he pops up in the middle of a potentially explosive riot, with African-Americans going after Puerto Ricans when a little girl plummets from a rooftop at the hands -- or so it seems -- of Angel Ramirez.
Continue reading Life on Mars: Things to Do in New York When You Think You're Dead
Posted Oct 22nd 2008 5:11PM by Patricia Chui
Filed under: Video, Interviews, Celebrities, Reality-Free
Jason O'Mara is the star of the new ABC drama
Life on Mars, but the show features a few other actors who look even more familiar ... such as
Michael Imperioli, otherwise known as Christopher Moltisanti (or as I always think of it, "Christapha") on HBO's
The Sopranos.
O'Mara and Imperioli sat down for an
Outside the Box: Life on Mars interview to talk about the show -- which, at the time they taped the interview, was getting its pilot completely scrapped and redone -- and some other stuff, including guilty pleasure shows, their worst acting jobs ever, and what TV family they wish they could be a part of. (And no, Imperioli doesn't want to be a member of The Sopranos. Again.)
In this clip exclusive to TV Squad, it's again with the Sopranos! This time, O'Mara asks Imperioli about the difference between filming an HBO series and a network series -- and they ALMOST bust out the swear words. Darn it, maybe we should have given them some beer.
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