Summer Haze
Banned
Really enjoyed the pilot. Good cast and the show looks great too.
Checked out the pilot and enjoyed it. I hope SNF doesn't hurt ratings too much.
You should go! No time like the present.
Curtis Mayfield intro theme, yessss.
I think that the decision to not show the darker side of the pimps until later in the episode very much was a intentional creative decision and a good one at that. The point was to show how and why the women stay with them, yes the show does humanise and glamorise the pimps quite a bit (arguably too much) but what that also allows for is the humanisation of the women. If they had started with the knifing people would have had a harder time sympathising with the women for staying with them, even blaming them for being in that situation. And people do love blaming women, especially in sexual contexts.storafötter;248411345 said:I thought the pilot was off to a good start. I thought at first that the show kinda glamorized pimps (it kinda does until the end of the pilot). Maggie Gyllenhaal plays well as usual. I look forward to seeing more. Been clamoring another "The Wire" show as Treme wasnt for me.
God bless Maggie Gyllenhaal.So I asked to be a producer on the project because I thought it would be that kind of guarantee that my mind would be included in the storytelling process, not just my body.
The intro song was good but the visuals were lacking. Felt a bit boilerplate.
So much better than Vinyl it's not even funny (though any and all mentions of Vinyl are still funny to me)/10
Yeah, but they did a great job with the visuals throughout the entire episode.
Personally not a fan of all the eps going up at once because I don't feel like I can even read this thread.
All episodes aren't going up at once. It's airing weekly.
This is one show where ratings almost certainly don't matter.
- NY Post: How ‘The Deuce' turned a quiet NYC neighborhood into porn-tastic Times SquareMaggie Gyllenhaal and James Franco are highlights, but the real star of ‘The Deuce' is the Rotten Apple, as David Simon and George Pelecanos bring the cultural upheaval and criminal enterprise of early '70s New York City to life
I just took a quick look and I couldn't find one.Does the show have a twitter? Can't seem to find it, does have a FB though.
- SVG News: Vanja Cernjul Shoots HBOs The Deuce With Panasonic VariCam 35 CamerasBehind the scenes with the real people who inspired George Pelecanos and David Simon's meaty new drama.
Lots of technical detail in the article, for those of you that are interested.After reading some of the scripts, one of the challenges was figuring out how to move quickly from one location to another in New York City. Cernjul wanted to capture as much of New York for free because he knew he wouldnt be able to shoot in the distance for blocks since it was a period piece. The production had already created two sets and Cernjul wanted them to feel the same as the actual locations, so ceilings and practical lights were built into the sets.
For the look of the series, Cernjul had to decide whether to simulate the movies of the 1970s with a faded look, or make it feel like youre shooting on location with cutting-edge digital tools. Rather than trying to impose a found footage style, I thought it would be more interesting to make it look real, as if it were happening today, explains Cernjul. That was one of the early choices we made.
I looked at all of the films that were shot in New York during the 70s, which is probably the most amazing period in American cinema, continues Cernjul. I used all of those films intimately, but I didnt want to simulate that look. I looked at them mostly to see what the reality of New York City streets looked like during the period. What kind of light sources were there and how did the city feel? I really tried to eliminate the filter of the medium it was captured on.
The Sunday night premiere of HBOs The Deuce did well, considering preview streaming, Hurricane Irma coverage and Sunday Night Football. The premium cablers new drama series has drawn over 2.2 million viewers so far, according to HBO.
That number includes 1.1 million viewers that watched early on HBO platforms and over 1.1 million viewers tuning in across two plays on Sunday night (830,000 viewers for 9 PM, 342,000 viewers for 12:15 AM). This puts The Deuce slightly ahead of last years start for The Night Of, which had the same early viewing strategy on digital platforms.
The Night Of premiere episode tallied 2.1 million viewers in the same timeframe and went on to average a gross audience of 8.2 million viewers.
She was a hooker there and came to new york to workSo why did the girl from Minnesota literally get off the bus and start hooking right away? Did I miss something?
Well ok then. Guess I shouldn't have watch so tiredShe was a hooker there and came to new york to work
Well ok then. Guess I shouldn't have watch so tired
Thanks
Yup it all clicked for me when she said something to the extent of needing a pimp to keep her motivated. Thats when I realized ok it definitely isn't her first time on the block.They established this with her making fun of that back seat wardrobe setup, then the sudden realization from the pimp that she is totally in on it. (and into it).
This is further established in her scene on the corner the the other girls, where she's asking who does what.
is this a mini-series?
It's an actual series, tentatively planned (though not actually renewed) for three seasons.
David Simon and George Pelecanos made The Wire and Treme together, among other shows, and now they've teamed up to create The Deuce, a new HBO drama about prostitution and the rise of the porn industry in New York's Times Square. Set in 1971, when prostitution took place out in the open on Times Square's grubby streets, the show stars Maggie Gyllenhaal, James Franco (as twins!) and a huge cast of character actors who help form an ambitious web of stories. It's a lot to take in, and the first eight-episode season which premiered Sept. 10 spends far more time on character development than on rapid-fire plot advancement.
On this week's Pop Culture Happy Hour, Glen Weldon and I tackle The Deuce with the help of Weekend Edition's Barrie Hardymon and writer Katie Presley. The show sparks a whole lot of discussion about seedy scene-setting, great supporting performances, the role of women in making the show, unsexy sex scenes, public health nightmares, the "David Simon-ness" of it all, self-pitying pimps and much more.
Where did they say it would only be three seasons?It's an actual series, tentatively planned (though not actually renewed) for three seasons.
Where did they say it would only be three seasons?
Q: Is the story open-ended?
A: It will eventually encompass three different eras in Times Square history. So we hope to get three seasons out of it. Check that, because Im an optimist: We will get three seasons. We already have it mapped out in our heads.