RobinsonCrusoe-related stories
Posted Oct 18th 2008 8:38AM by Jason Hughes
Filed under: Other Drama Shows, Episode Reviews, Reality-Free

(S01E01) I'm reading all over the place that this is a thirteen-part series. That sounds very ... British. In fact, it's a pretty damned promising idea. Imagine if more television shows in the US were allowed to have one season or even half a season and then be done. If they wanted to take a real-time approach it could run twenty-eight seasons! I wonder if this will inspire comparisons to
Lost.
I figure a lot of people, in fact most people, won't have read the source material. So their idea of people stranded on an island is going to either be
Lost or
Gilligan's Island. If we're lucky, they'll stretch so far as
Lord of the Flies. Certainly this is an ambitious project, promising us swashbuckling excitement. And yet even though the cold opening featured a potential dramatic rescue and gunfire, when the credits started I realized it hadn't raised my heart rate a bit. In fact, it was possibly the dullest action scene I'd ever seen.
Continue reading Crusoe: Rum and Gunpowder (series premiere)
Posted May 22nd 2008 8:31PM by Kristin Sample
Filed under: Other Drama Shows, News, Celebrities, Casting, Reality-Free

Today, NBC released
more casting news for its new fall drama / adventure series Crusoe, and it looks like some more big screen actors are finding a home on the small screen. Sam Neill (
Jurassic Park), Sean Bean (
The Lord of the Rings) and Joss Ackland (
Lethal Weapon 2) will join the cast.
Crusoe, based on Daniel Defoe's novel, is due to film in the UK, South Africa, and the Seychelles. The show will follow the title character (played by Philip Winchester) on his island adventures while flashing back to his life before he was a castaway. Sean Bean will play Crusoe's widower father and appear in scenes that depict his tragic childhood. Sam Neill will play Jeremiah Blackthorn, a family friend who keeps a close watch on Robinson Crusoe's business ventures.
I will definitely be tuning in and checking this show out. I like that it's based on a classic novel. Sam Neill, no stranger to television work, was great in
The Tudors, and I've had the biggest crush on Sean Bean since his Boromir days in
LOTR.
Does
Crusoe look interesting to you?
Posted Mar 31st 2008 4:41PM by Allison Waldman
Filed under: Industry, Pickups and Renewals

Well, here's hoping that the powers that be were reading
TV Squad after the two-hour
Knight Rider movie premiered last February. Then, at least they'll know how to fix the show, because
NBC has picked up Knight Rider as a series for the 2008-2009 schedule, and it's going to need some re-tooling.
That's the phrase they love to use in the business to describe all the work that's needed to turn a turkey -- albeit one with great ratings -- into a successful series. And
Knight Rider, as conceived in that TV movie/back door pilot, needs some major work.
Continue reading Knight Rider series officially a go
Posted Feb 25th 2008 2:40PM by Allison Waldman
Filed under: Other Drama Shows, Survivor, Pickups and Renewals

NBC is going classic, with a twist.
The network has ordered 13 episodes of a new drama series based on the Daniel Defoe classic
Robinson Crusoe. This is far from the first time Defoe's 1719 novel has been filmed. The most recent incarnation was a 1997 Pierce Brosnan feature. In 1964, it was the basis for a French TV series.
This version is going to be a new take on the old story of a man who sets sail from England, his ship is wrecked in a storm and he's thrown overboard winding up alone on a deserted island where he has to fen for himself. In time, he is joined by an escaped slave whom he names Friday. Ben Silverman, NBC's head honcho, described the proposed series in this way: "It's part
MacGyver, part contemporary morality tale about race and personal discovery, part comedy and part
Castaway meets
Survivor." As envisioned, this
Robinson Crusoe will need to be clever indeed. It's going to keep the time period 1650's, but when Crusoe finds Friday, he'll presumably be treating him as if it were today with regard to race relations.
Continue reading Robinson Crusoe pilot coming to NBC