Jump to content

Melrose Place


Recommended Posts

  • Replies 1.1k
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

Top Posters In This Topic

Posted Images

  • Members

They could do a reboot that’s set in a 55-and-over community. Alison and Billy relocate to a Margaritaville-like community and persuade their old pals to join them. Drama ensues when Amanda buys the community and moves in!

Edited by Chris 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

Did they ever reference Amanda's mother again after Models Inc?

IIRC, there was scene where Amanda told her mother never to contact her again, which explained their lack on interaction between the two shows.  But, I stopped watching before the final seasons when they derived stories from Amanda's youth, so I was wondering if they talked about her Mom?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

No. I think they might've referenced Amanda's step-mom in the season 7 plot, but from memory they did focus a lot more Mrs Damarr (Julia Adams, famous from Creature from the Black Lagoon). It has always been my guess that if the show hadn't been cancelled that she would've been involved with the murder of her son (like him surviving the fall from the bleachers and she coming in later, clearing Amanda and Eve) since they cast a a somewhat noteable horror movie star in a role that turned out to be so small.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

This is the type of reboot that should've always been done. With 90210, I get the desire to set it in high school since that was initially a high school show, but people liked Melrose Place for the characters, not the location. I would've kept it in the neighborhood, but not necessarily at the apartment complex. Now with the premise they had, there are ways they could've done it that would've worked better (like putting Taylor in Sydney's place and using her son with Michael instead of creating a new one), but that would take people who knew the show.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

I think bringing Sydney back was a great idea; I think she has more cachet with the audience than Taylor (though Lisa Rinna could definitely be a draw). I think killing her immediately and embroiling her and many other characters (including Amanda) in some nonsensical art theft mystery was stupid as hell.

The David character Shaun Sipos played was intended until the eleventh hour to be Jake's son with Colleen (Stacy Haiduk), who he left the show to be with - even the name is the same. At the last moment they decided they needed a direct tie to a more popular character and made him Michael's son with some fling.  I didn't mind that because Michael is far more interesting than Jake. But either way, I do agree any potential revival now would have to be about the characters, not the complex, and how LA has changed for people like them.

Edited by Vee
Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

Well, I think a huge charm of Melrose Place (especially before they started islanding characters) was that they lived so close together and got embroiled with each others lives (one of my favourite examples of this is an episode in season 2 when Sydney has started hooking and Jo starts noticing that's something is "off" with Sydney's "modelling" career - two unexpected characters that never really interacted starts unexpectedly interacting because they live next to each other). I think the idea could work with a new cast - LA Complex was proof of that and more Melrose than the reboot. It just needed better writing and drop the entire premise of a murder mystery. The new creators clearly wanted to do their own show rather than reboot Melrose Place - they weren't even fans of the old one!

Edited by te.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

I agree in concept, and having lived near the fictional address for most of my late 20s, I watched it religiously, but upon reflection I have some thoughts.

1.  An inherent weakness in setting a soap in an apartment complex is that there's no opportunity for stories about upward mobility without "islanding" the characters.  Amanda is a perfect example. When she bought the building it made sense that she wanted to be close to Billy, but, in reality, after two months without off street parking and central air any person wealthy enough to buy the complex would have hightailed it out of there as soon they had to exchange quarters with Jake for the laundromat.

2.  It is a known fact that in Los Angeles once someone moves to Malibu (or anywhere west of the 405 freeway) you will not maintain a relationship with that person.  It takes 75-90 minutes to drive from West Hollywood to Malibu on a good day, so nobody is casually dating someone there because they are geographically undesirable.  Fans of Vanderpump Rules will recall that once Sheena moved to Marina Del Rey her friends found any excuse not to visit her because the drive is too exhausting.  So, it was like setting a soap where half the cast lives in Chicago and the other half lives in Dallas, writers would have to invent increasingly unrealistic ways for them to interact.

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

I thought the fun thing about MP was that it was a soap, but about characters much younger than the ones featured on the 80s soaps. They were just starting out in their lives. Once everyone became successful - running ad agencies and jazz clubs and what not - I lost interest.

What you said about moving west of the 405 is really interesting. Maybe what they should have done was gradually phase the characters out as they grew older and got wealthier. And then bring in new, younger residents to replace them. It could have kept the show fresher longer. Instead everyone hung around a season or two too long, and then there was a mass exodus at the end of season 5.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

To be fair, the show itself never brought up that there was some major distance between the apartment complex and Michael's beach house, so I think it's a case of Convenient Soap Distances where it's sort of fuzzy where everything's located. Most watchers won't have ever been in Los Angeles, much less know how long it takes in real life to travel from one distance to another. Beverly Hills 90210 also did this sort of thing where things would either be located just around the corner/walking distance or miles away depending on what the plot was that week.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Unfortunately, your content contains terms that we do not allow. Please edit your content to remove the highlighted words below.
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.



  • Recent Posts

    • https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/composer-leonard-bernstein-s-children-request-his-music-be-played-in-the-kennedy-center-in-rebuke-to-trump
    • And, to me it is a little bit hilarious that AW fans all over continue to refer to it as Egyptian Dust Recently elsewhere I've been running polls. When did you stop watching AW or What storyline caused you to stop watching AW. You may be interested to know that sticking it out till the bitter end is winning by a landslide. Next highest vote getter is - no surprise - Frankie's murder. So that covers like 60% & next 20%. Then the votes drop way down to 10% and well below but a wide array of reasons are given, including but not limited to  Justine Lumina Rachel having twins at her age, how ridiculous Mac's death the 90 minute show firing JC, George R & Dwyer Hmm, I know there are a few more, in the 1%-3% range but I cannot think of what they are. Sorry, my bad. Should have made notes but I didn't know I would be posting about it. LOL!!  
    • A kind angel has added both episodes to the vault (UK Diva TV broadcast version). 
    • Yes, I think that is the most likely situation.  TPTB were unhappy with the offer(s) they got from the tourism board in Finland, and decided the trip was going to be too expensive for P&G/NBC to finance alone.   I would also speculate a similar situation likely occurred a few years later with the planned location shoot in Egypt, which was also cancelled after the storyline had already started, and changed to Arizona.  
    • What else? #May4th

      Please register in order to view this content

       
    • In my usual account on my most used video hosting site with the video title  DAYS 1-8-15 Will & Paul Sex This is an edit I began when I was first teaching myself to edit & at that time I couldn't make it do what I wanted it to do. I pulled it up & finished it this morning. 
    • Or Megan is shot as retaliation for Dave's unpaid gambling debts...while Julie confesses she's the biological mother of Special Guest Star Barry Bostwick's little boy.
    • Finland seemed such an odd choice for a location shoot. ATWT went to Greece and later Spain while GL had Tenerife and there were others in that timeframe. But Finland not being a known tourist destination or offering the tropical/sunny atmosphere usually associated with location shoots seems off brand. Maybe they were negotiating a deal with a tourist association and it fell through.
    • I was talking about 1986, but the glimpses of 1982 are about the same. 
    • I skimmed some of the 1982 synopses; Steve was planning on an opening an office in Finland, and I think Jim went there as part of the preparation. That probably was a big issue; AW had already gone to San Diego that year, with Rachel/Steve/Mitch. And to upstate NY with Pete and Diana. I wonder if upstate was as expensive lol  AW in 1982 has always fascinated me, because of how messy it was 
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

By using this site, you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy