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#highlander the series#studies in light#tessa noel#richie ryan#gregor powers#problematic fave guest immie#alexandra vandernoot#stan kirsch#jh wyman
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Now showing on my 90's Fest Stevegoolie Saturday Night...Prom Night IV: Deliver Us From Evil (1991) on glorious vintage VHS 📼 #movies #movie #horror #promnight #promnight4 #promnight4deliverusfromevil #nicoledeboer #brocksimpson #JHWyman #joytanner #alleghadban #jamescarver #vintage #VHS #90s ##90sfest #durandurantulsas4thannual90sfest #Stevegoolie #svengoolie #metv
#movies#movie#horror#prom night#prom night 4#prom night iv deliver us from evil#Nicole de Boer#brock simpson#jh wyman#joy tanner#alle ghadban#james carver#90s#90s fest#duran duran tulsa's 4th annual 90s fest#Stevegoolie#svengoolie#me tv
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Debris Reviews round-up, Is it as good as the showrunner's Fringe?
New Post has been published on https://filmreviewonline.com/2021/03/01/debris-reviews-round-up-is-it-as-good-as-the-showrunners-fringe/
Debris Reviews round-up, Is it as good as the showrunner's Fringe?
We covered what the stars thought of being in the show yesterday, today we check out the Debris reviews. Is it as good as the showrunner, Joel Wyman’s Fringe?
The story has wreckage from a destroyed alien spacecraft scattering across the Western Hemisphere. However, it soon becomes apparent the pieces are messing with the laws of physics! It’s changing lives in ways we can’t comprehend…
Two agents from different continents, and different mindsets, are tasked to work together to recover the debris, whose mysteries humankind is not quite ready for.
The cast includes Jonathan Tucker, Riann Steele, Norbert Leo Butz and Scroobius Pip. Creator and showrunner JH Wyman writes and executive produces.
Debris, 101 “Pilot” – Jonathan Tucker as Bryan Benventi, Riann Steele as Finola Jones ©2021 NBC, photo by Sergei Bachlakov
Wall Street Journey‘s Debris review by John Anderson
It’s hard not to warm to NBC’s ambitious Debris, which may just sweep viewers off their feet.
The black, animated shards of spacecraft seem to tap into people’s grief, resurrecting their loved ones—in some ephemeral form
It’s in no rush to provide details, only mood
Plays hard-to-get
Full Review here
4 out of 5 stars from our reading
Roger Ebert‘s Debris review by Brian Tallerico
Debris [is] another show about interstellar visitors but one that seeks to be more Arrival than Independence Day.
The concept and cast are strong enough that it could become another Fringe, or it could run out of ideas in a couple of weeks
Two decades ago, Debris would have felt new
Could go either way
Full Review here
2.5 out of 5 stars from our reading
TV Guide‘s Debris review by Kelly Connolly
We��re meant to gaze in awe as human bodies hover above the ground, but it’s hard to swoon when our heroes are too busy gathering data
It’s clear from the pilot that, if nothing else, the show thinks that’s pretty cool
it’s a bad sign that the first episode of the series is more emotionally invested in the stand-alone parts of the story than it is in its mythology, much less its leads
Nothing to say
Full Review here
2 out of 5 stars from our reading
TV Line‘s Debris review by Dave Nemetz
I’ve officially got my hopes up for Debris, which gets off to a great start and is packed with potential.Debris springs from the mind of Fringewriter
JH Wyman, and it briskly chugs along with the same geeky, goofy energy that beloved show had.
It is hard to get too excited, though. I’ve only seen one episode, after all, and we’ve all been down this road before, with sci-fi dramas setting up intriguing mysteries, only to be cancelled before we get any answers.
Smart and strange
Full Review here
Rated B+ = 4 out of 5 stars
Debris reviews summary
Wall Street Journey‘s Debris review by John AndersonRoger Ebert‘s Debris review by Brian TallericoTV Guide‘s Debris review by Kelly ConnollyTV Line‘s Debris review by Dave Nemetz
Reviewers Ratings
Average review of the group is 3.1 Stars. A good starting point but will it continue this way?
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Debris 1x13 "Celestial Body": rewatch Reaction'd, questions and comments
So if all those people are experiencing emotional convergence, who are they converging from? Who's sending the emotional signal that the debris is channeling, or is it the debris manifesting it's "consciousness" in a way that we can understand it by way of human conduits?
Maddox is clearly trading debris pieces with Irina (perhaps the piece that he took out of storage off the books), and Irina is on the phone with presumably her handler/ boss to negotiate this trade. She gives him lateral (which I assume means latitudinal) readings and then he asks for longitudinal readings which we don't get to hear. They are: Lateral 105, 112, 115, 120, 113, 110, 109
What's the significance of these measures? Latitude goes from 0° to 90° from the equator, so that doesn't track unless the scene is cut wrong and they're meant to be longitudinal (E/W) readings, which go to 180° relative to the prime meridian. That would make more sense, because after Irina is done with the first set of readings, the unknown caller on the phone says "drop to level two for vertical" and latitudes are North/South.
If we're talking Western longitudes, notable landmarks include: Denver, Salt Lake City UT / Phoenix AZ / nearly Sedona AZ - aka where the telesphere went, Las Vegas, Lake Tahoe/ Nevada border, Great Salt Lake, Alberta-Saskatchewan border, and the Utah-Arizona border.
Or perhaps they're not part of terrestrial measurement at all. The act of "lateral reading" could just mean verifying your sources/accuracy as you go, where as vertical reading is reading for content first to see if something is worth evaluating for sources.
However, if they are part of coordinates, then is the fragment that Maddox is trading with Irina a legitimate "mapmaker" piece like George previously said Influx was seeking? Ya know, when he lied to his daughter. Can a mapmaker piece track moving/animate debris akin to the telesphere? Are those black dust cloud beings George is running from made up of animate debris?
Bryan: After becoming a parent you're in a heightened emotional state, emotionally raw.
George: Higher highs, lower lows, the joy of having a child, the postpartum depression, and the fear of getting it wrong.
Me: Are we in a pensive, self-reflective mood, George? Are you practicing your pub trivia Bryan, delivering exposition, or are you speaking from personal character experience? Seriously, how would you know?!
John Noble as Otto, man why does he always make such a good villain?
What is with the cryptic vagueness when Maddox tells Irina, "You know I can't let you leave with that case right? I mean you know that. There's another door for you Irina, one that only you can go through." They seemed almost on good terms in a previous episode, like friends or something more in a past life "nice car, i almost left / no you didn't", he wouldn't kill her, would he? Or is it more like a code between them, a sort of "I'm being watched, take the back exit"?
Hey, so why is it that sometimes George's eye seems opaque and damaged from the debris implant, but then when he's talking to Finola after he distracts Bryan while being Debris whisperer, his eye seems fine? PS: I googled Tyrone Benskin just to see what he looks like when he's not playing George Jones and I didn't know he's a former member of Canadian Parliament. Don't trust the government, eh?
George: "You're such a compassionate person, you always have been. So much of your mother in you." That's the second time that Finola's mother has been mentioned in the series, back from the pilot. Is it a coincidence that the first piece of debris that chose to interact with Finola resonated her mom? More than just Finola's desire being reflected by the debris, but the debris emoting it's first impression of her as someone compassionate that it can trust?
It also raises my heckles that George repeats, almost word for word, something that Finola said in episode 3. "If we can't help people, we do not deserve this debris / if we don't use this debris on these people, we are not worthy to have it." Are father and daughter that ideologically similar, or has he been spying on her progress this whole time, or both?
George: "I took my life to allow myself a rebirth, I paid the price. I want you to know that not one day goes by that I don't think of you and your sister. I want you to know this." This coincides with my initial impression that George staged his death to get away from Orbital after he assessed how his research was being used/abused.
George: "You never wanted to go into the pool, I had to throw you in, and you kicked and screamed, but you always did better that way." Immabout to throw you George, just keep talking!!!! I'm sorry, this charicature of absentee father reminiscing about the good old days really ticks me off from personal experience.
Also, as a person with a disability, I am not particularly pleased with the use of Dario as a plot device instead of a thoughtful character with a backstory at this point in the show for 13 whole episodes now. Pretty pissed off actually, so they better do something phenomenal and pivotal with Christian Rose (Dario) in season 2 [maybe have his character interact with debris in a similar way to Caroline]. But that's another rant about ableism in screenwriting for another angry day....
George: "A telesphere was born yesterday. It came from a pocket dimension inside Orbital. I think it's birth may have triggered the debris." This is perhaps the one-ish episode that I find George remotely interesting and also infuriating, particularly because of the way he speaks, like he's finally taken off the guise of the old, well-meaning eccentric and turned into a sharp, cunning, and at times calculatingly ruthless individual. I find it peculiar that he says a telesphere is born. Makes me think that the debris is not just part of a spacecraft, but a hybrid of the beings piloting that craft.
I get tremendous satisfaction from Finola head-butting people. This should continue.
I'm not familiar with all of the work of JH Wyman to know if this is a running theme or an ongoing joke. But does he keep his writing staff in a constant state of starvation? Is that why pieces of debris are called "Nachos", and why Influx has "Beans" to shield them from debris side effects, and why Bryan is always eating junk food? Should I be worried about the writer's room and start sending them healthy snacks?!? Just give me an SOS in the credit roll.
Speaking of: is the "Bean" that Finola ingested a piece of debris? Similar to the pieces of debris that fused with Anson Ash? Will it impart some physical benefits to her moving forward?
"I won't lose you again...you belong with me." What are you talking about George Jones, you made the conscious decision to leave your family. You didn't lose Finola, she lost you. In this version of reality at least. Or (unscripted backstory) did Jones and his wife separate prior to her death / was Finola brought up mostly by her mother? That doesn't seem the case if she was buying her father birthday presents and took it upon herself to settle his affairs after his death.
Why do the Influx Operatives Otto and Anson have tattoos on their hands, but not Loeb? Is he like the low end of the totem pole FNG who hasn't earned his stripes, hence why Otto gives him s***: aka "Careful you cretin. All the finesse of a butcher."
What is the hierarchy of Influx anyway? Despite being an anti-government "for the people/ elevate the human consciousness" organization they do still seem to have a governing hierarchy and Otto and George seem to be on the same level, pretty high in rank / they talk with confidence to each other like they go back a while.
What is that weird thing that Otto does with his hands to Bryan's head? What are all the weird things Otto does, including his massacre at the petrol station? Ick.
Why is it that Leob and George are freaked out by the black smoke (debris particle?) man, but Anson and Otto aren't? They seem to see them(?), but don't overtly react.
Bryan: "It seems like we're entering some kind of new phase." Gee where have I heard that one before? Oh yeah, the story of "Blackwater grandfather" and the black wind that they're still teasing endlessly while refusing to tether it into some kind of world building lore. Agggghh!
Lololol, Bryan and Finola's dynamic even in the midst of a very serious episode makes me laugh. "Devon Reese / two e's? / Two e's!" "This one smells like baby diapers. Almost as bad as the tech section of the plane/ You mean your section of the plane. / Almost." That zinger 👍
Paraphrasing Bryan: "[recapping, recap, and did I mention recap]...something about George doesn't feel right." Personal pet peeve: I HATE IT when episodes have intentional explanatory lines like this to point out the fact that we as audience are privy to information that the main characters aren't. Not only does it make the main characters seem less intelligent, it breaks the fourth wall a little bit and gives the impression that the audience, which is ahead of the plot, is not as intelligent and needs a reminder that we're ahead. Lackadaisical writing drives me nuts!!! I can't outright say that it's "bad" dialogue, but it's not a choice I would make if I wanted uninterrupted viewer immersion.
Finola: "My instincts are good" Me: You are an emotionally intelligent decision maker with gaping personal blind spots.
George: You belong with me, your father.
Finola: My father died six months ago, and you are not him.
Me: Chef's kiss 👏👏👏
Otto: "It would never have worked out with that girl [Finola], not in any iteration." Definitely makes me lean towards the fan theory that the alt!Finola in (presumably) suspensia in Sedona Arizona got plucked from another reality.
Surprisingly, the ending credit roll has no voiceover as all the previous episodes of the season have. Disappointed that there's no potential teaser to a season 2 if the show gets renewed. But I find it curious that the extras who were demonstrating emotional convergence were credited as: chess board persons. Not sure if that's relevant, but I definitely feel like this show is playing games with me and my emotions.
#nbc debris#debris 1x13#debris spoilers#george jones#finola jones#bryan beneventi#celestial body#sci fi#high concept sci fi#questionable execution#this show guys#renew debris#but also I need to talk with JH Wyman
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Did you just hang up on Capt. Maldonado? Yeah. Boring conversation anyway. I just love that you wear your insubordination like it’s a virtue.
#almost human#sandra maldonado#john kennex#dorian#valerie stahl#a lotta likes and reblogs for this show in the last couple of weeks#i miss this show too#where's the reboot#whatever happened to jh wyman#//
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Celestial Body, Debris, 1.13
Eagle Egilsson (D), JH Wyman (S), 24/05/21
Et où je découvre, avant même de regarder l’épisode, que NBC a annulé la série qui n’aura pas donc de saison 2 et va donc rejoindre les limbes où échouent les séries prometteuses dont des financiers à courte vue ont trop tôt coupé les ailes… et donc, je ne saurai jamais le fin mot d’une des fictions télévisées les plus excitantes depuis bien longtemps…
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"Debris" Review: NBC's New Series is Sci-Fi Mystery At Its Finest
It’s been so long since we’ve had a great science fiction mystery to get the water cooler gossip going, but if anyone can pull it off, it’s JH Wyman. The former Fringe and Almost Human mastermind has cooked up one of this season’s hottest new mysteries in Debris, the latest NBC series poised to join the ranks of Manifest and The Blacklist as one of the most interesting thrillers on the network,…
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UGH WIGGGGGGGGG
#ABSOLUTE MADMAN#JH WYMAN YOU ARE A GENIUS#CINEMATIC EXCELLENCE#it's late and i'm drunk but alas it do be#oli rewatches fringe
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Why NBC’s Debris Should Get Picked Up By Another Network
Description: The NBC show Debris was sadly canceled by the network after a 13 episode first season run. Debris is the story of a new task force known as Orbital tasked with finding and securing pieces of a fallen alien spaceship, each piece of debris yields a different effect on the environment and people around them, meaning every episode is a new mystery. Debris is emotive and weighty in that the episodes are driven by the main characters Finola (a MI6 operative) and Bryan (a CIA operative) and their very personal connections to the debris around them and their intrapersonal work relationship. The first season did a good job of demonstrating what the debris can mean to individuals and humanity as a whole. This article will detail how and why another network or streaming service should pick up the show.
Sources: • https://collider.com/debris-review-nbc-jonathan-tucker/ • https://deadline.com/2021/05/debris-finale-spoilers-recap-jh-wyman-jonathan-tucker-interview-nbc-renewal-1234763390/
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so I guess Joel has something new coming out soon. I guess I’m having a hard time caring.
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What's a hero if not for its journey.
J.H. Wyman
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NBC's Gravity Defying New Series "Debris" Drops Eerie New Teaser
Television is finally starting to come back and NBC just thickened the plot with a new teaser for their latest sci-fi thriller, “Debris.” The series, which hails from former “Fringe” show runner JH Wyman, tells the tale of a mysterious wreckage falling from the sky, causing a secretive international agency to step in and find out what it is, where it came from and most importantly, what it can…
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