HBO orders "Boardwalk Empire" to Series
#4
DVD Talk Limited Edition
Re: HBO orders "Boardwalk Empire" to Series
Fantastic news. I have really high hopes for the series. When does the pilot air?
#5
DVD Talk Gold Edition
Re: HBO orders "Boardwalk Empire" to Series
Scorsese's "Empire" Built At HBO
By Garth Franklin
HBO has given the greenlight to 11 episodes of the period drama "Boardwalk Empire" says Variety.
Terence Winter ("The Sopranos") created the series which revolves around the life of 1920s Atlantic City bigwig Nucky Thompson (Steve Buscemi"), a man said to be "equal parts politician and gangster".
Michael Pitt, Kelly Macdonald, Michael Shannon, Shea Whigham, Dabney Coleman and Stephen Graham will star in the series which begins production later this Fall in New York City for airing next year..
Scorsese directed the pilot and will serve as executive producer on the series.
By Garth Franklin
HBO has given the greenlight to 11 episodes of the period drama "Boardwalk Empire" says Variety.
Terence Winter ("The Sopranos") created the series which revolves around the life of 1920s Atlantic City bigwig Nucky Thompson (Steve Buscemi"), a man said to be "equal parts politician and gangster".
Michael Pitt, Kelly Macdonald, Michael Shannon, Shea Whigham, Dabney Coleman and Stephen Graham will star in the series which begins production later this Fall in New York City for airing next year..
Scorsese directed the pilot and will serve as executive producer on the series.
I couldn't be any more excited for this.
#7
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#8
DVD Talk Ultimate Edition
Re: HBO orders "Boardwalk Empire" to Series
They are making a pilot but haven't ordered a full season yet.
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Re: HBO orders "Boardwalk Empire" to Series
So will it be 11 episodes AND a pilot or just 11 episodes?
Either Way this sounds amazing. Buscemi and Scorsese alone is too good of a deal and the cute as a button Kelly McDonald is just icing on the cake.
Either Way this sounds amazing. Buscemi and Scorsese alone is too good of a deal and the cute as a button Kelly McDonald is just icing on the cake.
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#12
DVD Talk Ultimate Edition
Re: HBO orders "Boardwalk Empire" to Series
Yeah. Martin mentioned something abot them setting an HBO record for regular cast members in a pilot.
#13
Suspended
Re: HBO orders "Boardwalk Empire" to Series
Lots of press on this today for some reason.
http://www.usatoday.com/life/televis...alk17_ST_N.htm
http://www.pressofatlanticcity.com/n...cc4c03286.html
Scorsese's 'Boardwalk Empire' roars back to the 1920s on HBO
By Gary Levin, USA TODAY
BROOKLYN, N.Y. — A nondescript parking lot here is the unlikely home for a re-created Atlantic City Boardwalk of the Roaring '20s, a key setting for Boardwalk Empire, a drama due next fall.
The series from Martin Scorsese, who directed the pilot, is part of a programming push by HBO, emerging from a slump since The Sopranos left town in 2007.
Boardwalk zeroes in on Enoch "Nucky" Johnson, a true-life figure whom writer/executive producer Terence Winter calls the town's "beloved treasurer. He was the guy who really ran everything."
The 12-episode season begins with Prohibition in 1920, which opens new avenues for the fictionalized Nucky Thompson (Steve Buscemi). "He went from being a corrupt politician who basically engaged in low-level election rigging, to the big leagues of alcohol," says Winter, who worked on The Sopranos. "The world changed completely."
The series includes real-life Mob characters Al Capone, "Lucky" Luciano and Arnold Rothstein, and up to 200 extras in period garb, with lots of tweed and flapper dresses.
Nucky is "very charming, smart, shrewd," Winter says, "equal parts politician and gangster. He can work both sides of the street."
So can Winter, who is revisiting Garden State crime with Shaw and several other Sopranos veterans.
"The challenge was 'how do I make this different?' The '20s felt far enough away," he says. And as his old boss, Sopranos creator David Chase, used to say, "South Jersey and North Jersey may as well be on two different planets."
The 300-foot-long set, with trucked-in sand, is a step back in time to storefronts of palm readers, human cannonballs and tea parlors. "The building-it-from-scratch part is just complete fun," says production designer Bob Shaw. "Going out on location trying to shoot a (historical) period is an exercise in sheer terror."
By Gary Levin, USA TODAY
BROOKLYN, N.Y. — A nondescript parking lot here is the unlikely home for a re-created Atlantic City Boardwalk of the Roaring '20s, a key setting for Boardwalk Empire, a drama due next fall.
The series from Martin Scorsese, who directed the pilot, is part of a programming push by HBO, emerging from a slump since The Sopranos left town in 2007.
Boardwalk zeroes in on Enoch "Nucky" Johnson, a true-life figure whom writer/executive producer Terence Winter calls the town's "beloved treasurer. He was the guy who really ran everything."
The 12-episode season begins with Prohibition in 1920, which opens new avenues for the fictionalized Nucky Thompson (Steve Buscemi). "He went from being a corrupt politician who basically engaged in low-level election rigging, to the big leagues of alcohol," says Winter, who worked on The Sopranos. "The world changed completely."
The series includes real-life Mob characters Al Capone, "Lucky" Luciano and Arnold Rothstein, and up to 200 extras in period garb, with lots of tweed and flapper dresses.
Nucky is "very charming, smart, shrewd," Winter says, "equal parts politician and gangster. He can work both sides of the street."
So can Winter, who is revisiting Garden State crime with Shaw and several other Sopranos veterans.
"The challenge was 'how do I make this different?' The '20s felt far enough away," he says. And as his old boss, Sopranos creator David Chase, used to say, "South Jersey and North Jersey may as well be on two different planets."
The 300-foot-long set, with trucked-in sand, is a step back in time to storefronts of palm readers, human cannonballs and tea parlors. "The building-it-from-scratch part is just complete fun," says production designer Bob Shaw. "Going out on location trying to shoot a (historical) period is an exercise in sheer terror."
History meets fiction in HBO’s version of 1920s in Atlantic City
By JULIET FLETCHER Staff Writer | Posted: Tuesday, November 17, 2009
In a wicker rolling-chair, two well-heeled tourists spent Monday wheeling along the Atlantic City Boardwalk.
But the cheery teenage boy at the chair’s helm, dressed in red-and-cream diamond-checked socks, kept having to make U-turns — because this boardwalk — in Brooklyn — is just 300 feet long.
These tourists are just extras in Martin Scorsese’s imagined version of Atlantic City — a place where meticulous historical detail meets fiction head-on.
A place where you may see old-time posters advertising performances by boxing cats — true to Atlantic City’s past — but won’t see the ocean. (Artists will paint it in later.)
In the summer, Scorsese directed the pilot episode of “Boardwalk Empire,” the newest series now picked up by HBO for the 2010 season.
But while the show’s title alludes to a book by prominent local attorney and now judge, Nelson Johnson, who spent years researching the rise of Atlantic City and its colorful fraudsters, the TV show has its sights set higher than just adapting the written account.
It isn’t even shot in New Jersey: New York outbid the Garden State in promised tax-credits to the show’s makers if they filmed their first season this fall and spring in the five boroughs.
“The book was a jumping-off point,” said Terence Winter, one of the show’s executive producers, recently known for his work on another New Jersey gangster drama — The Sopranos. Winter and the other writers decided to focus on the volatile years during Prohibition — which take up just a few of Johnson’s chapters.
Then they took creative license with the names of instantly recognizable characters: Johnson’s book charts the rise of Nucky Johnson (no relation) — the real-life Atlantic County official-turned-powerbroker who capitalized on 1920s Prohibition to turn Atlantic City into a rum-running, bootlegging paradise.
But by the time Nucky actor Steve Buscemi steps out onto the recreated Boardwalk set Monday afternoon, we know his character as Nucky Thompson.
“I wanted to fictionalize these people,” Winter said. “So theoretically, with our Nucky, anything can happen.”
With that loose interpretation, visitors at the set Monday — seeing a boardwalk built from scratch in a Brooklyn parking lot — may have expected designers to bend the rules.
What it certainly does is bend perspective.
With the boardwalk’s shortened length, production designer Bob Shaw said it also had to be narrower than in real life — 45 feet, not 60.
“Or else our buildings would look too short,” he said with a laugh.
That would be a shame — since the set crowds together some of the most famous names in the city’s oceanfront history.
Buscemi paced back and forth in front of a recreated taffy shop with a hybrid identity.
“That’s sort of a combination,” Shaw said, looking at the recognizable Fralinger’s sign. “Because Fralinger’s has that interesting name, but James’ had the better facade.”
In the same way, the true-life Babette’s nightclub received the better-than-life-size treatment: In reality, Shaw said, the bar was made of half a wooden boat. But the show’s early set-piece, where Nucky and crowds of partiers gather in the pilot episode, Shaw said,“We made it a large boat! We had some fun with that.”
Want a 10-cent frankfurter? Maurice I. Saul’s diner will happily serve you. Faded posters offer curative baths, fortune-tellers, minstrels and countless sideshows.
Atlantic City historian Vicki Gold Levi, who was not consulted on this production, said she was unfazed by the show taking some creative license.
“Everyone’s going to be glued to this show,” she said excitedly. “I mean, Scorsese’s producing it!”
Levi gave a thumbs-up to the presence of an old-time photo studio — Dittrich’s — and the absence of a convention hall, which did not exist at that time.
But she did wonder about one big-picture detail: “Do they have a Steel Pier?”
As Tim Van Patten, who is now directing episodes two and three, put it: “We built a tin pier.”
But the defining detail remains an illusion: The Atlantic Ocean will be added offshore, as a digital effect.
And the show’s stars may do a lot of gazing off at the sea.
In one pointed detail, the benches on the recreated boardwalk face out to sea, rather than onto the promenade, Shaw said: “I think because Scorsese wanted them that way.”
By JULIET FLETCHER Staff Writer | Posted: Tuesday, November 17, 2009
In a wicker rolling-chair, two well-heeled tourists spent Monday wheeling along the Atlantic City Boardwalk.
But the cheery teenage boy at the chair’s helm, dressed in red-and-cream diamond-checked socks, kept having to make U-turns — because this boardwalk — in Brooklyn — is just 300 feet long.
These tourists are just extras in Martin Scorsese’s imagined version of Atlantic City — a place where meticulous historical detail meets fiction head-on.
A place where you may see old-time posters advertising performances by boxing cats — true to Atlantic City’s past — but won’t see the ocean. (Artists will paint it in later.)
In the summer, Scorsese directed the pilot episode of “Boardwalk Empire,” the newest series now picked up by HBO for the 2010 season.
But while the show’s title alludes to a book by prominent local attorney and now judge, Nelson Johnson, who spent years researching the rise of Atlantic City and its colorful fraudsters, the TV show has its sights set higher than just adapting the written account.
It isn’t even shot in New Jersey: New York outbid the Garden State in promised tax-credits to the show’s makers if they filmed their first season this fall and spring in the five boroughs.
“The book was a jumping-off point,” said Terence Winter, one of the show’s executive producers, recently known for his work on another New Jersey gangster drama — The Sopranos. Winter and the other writers decided to focus on the volatile years during Prohibition — which take up just a few of Johnson’s chapters.
Then they took creative license with the names of instantly recognizable characters: Johnson’s book charts the rise of Nucky Johnson (no relation) — the real-life Atlantic County official-turned-powerbroker who capitalized on 1920s Prohibition to turn Atlantic City into a rum-running, bootlegging paradise.
But by the time Nucky actor Steve Buscemi steps out onto the recreated Boardwalk set Monday afternoon, we know his character as Nucky Thompson.
“I wanted to fictionalize these people,” Winter said. “So theoretically, with our Nucky, anything can happen.”
With that loose interpretation, visitors at the set Monday — seeing a boardwalk built from scratch in a Brooklyn parking lot — may have expected designers to bend the rules.
What it certainly does is bend perspective.
With the boardwalk’s shortened length, production designer Bob Shaw said it also had to be narrower than in real life — 45 feet, not 60.
“Or else our buildings would look too short,” he said with a laugh.
That would be a shame — since the set crowds together some of the most famous names in the city’s oceanfront history.
Buscemi paced back and forth in front of a recreated taffy shop with a hybrid identity.
“That’s sort of a combination,” Shaw said, looking at the recognizable Fralinger’s sign. “Because Fralinger’s has that interesting name, but James’ had the better facade.”
In the same way, the true-life Babette’s nightclub received the better-than-life-size treatment: In reality, Shaw said, the bar was made of half a wooden boat. But the show’s early set-piece, where Nucky and crowds of partiers gather in the pilot episode, Shaw said,“We made it a large boat! We had some fun with that.”
Want a 10-cent frankfurter? Maurice I. Saul’s diner will happily serve you. Faded posters offer curative baths, fortune-tellers, minstrels and countless sideshows.
Atlantic City historian Vicki Gold Levi, who was not consulted on this production, said she was unfazed by the show taking some creative license.
“Everyone’s going to be glued to this show,” she said excitedly. “I mean, Scorsese’s producing it!”
Levi gave a thumbs-up to the presence of an old-time photo studio — Dittrich’s — and the absence of a convention hall, which did not exist at that time.
But she did wonder about one big-picture detail: “Do they have a Steel Pier?”
As Tim Van Patten, who is now directing episodes two and three, put it: “We built a tin pier.”
But the defining detail remains an illusion: The Atlantic Ocean will be added offshore, as a digital effect.
And the show’s stars may do a lot of gazing off at the sea.
In one pointed detail, the benches on the recreated boardwalk face out to sea, rather than onto the promenade, Shaw said: “I think because Scorsese wanted them that way.”
#14
DVD Talk Gold Edition
Re: HBO orders "Boardwalk Empire" to Series
I don't have HBO, but this is a definitely a blind buy in my eyes, unless for some strange reason it gets horrible reviews, otherwise, you know this will be quality television.
#16
DVD Talk Hero
Re: HBO orders "Boardwalk Empire" to Series
Here's the spot thats been running on HBO
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Re: HBO orders "Boardwalk Empire" to Series
#24
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Re: HBO orders "Boardwalk Empire" to Series
newest trailer
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