Jump to content

A New Day in Eden


Recommended Posts

  • Members

Are you talking about the one starring Powers Boothe as Jim Jones?  Because, if you are, then I agree with you 1000%.  It was late '70's TV trash.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Replies 163
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

Top Posters In This Topic

Posted Images

  • Members

Yes and yes. I know DRW is a fan. I enjoy many of the performances but it is pure sleaze. IIRC Madge played the character analog to real-life Christine Miller, who was one of the few who protested on the final day in Jonestown. Anyway, we're way OT!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

 

I think the first part is decent in building up the decay and delusion and introducing the central players, but the second part is a horror show, especially when Brenda Vacarro arrives and it officially becomes the Love Boat for cult murders. The runway shootout is so godawful it still makes me cringe from memory. Beyond the performances and maybe the big scene, the only other thing to really remember in the second part is the chemistry between Powers Boothe and Brad Dourif, who would have a lot of fancams if the film was made today. 

(This is off topic, I know, but we may as well talk a bit while we wait a decade for another episode)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

Offing everyone left in the cast at the runway (where the characters representing Tim and Grace Stoen, who both survived IRL, get gunned down) was the issue for me. Little stories like LeVar Burton and Madge Sinclair's family or the Brenda Vaccaro subplot (she really goes for it) are one thing but I just can't believe they took that kind of liberty with such a recent and serious tragedy.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

You know, when I was very, very, VERY young, I used to watch Powers Boothe play Philip Marlowe on HBO, so it was a little weird to see him play someone SO not like Marlowe years later in my high school sociology class.

Anyways.  Speaking of trash, that's pretty much how I would sum up ANDIE after viewing just one, complete episode: it was trash.  I mean, I think Douglas Marland put a ton of great elements into it that, under other circumstances, would have made for a very compelling show.  But Marland was let down by the "actors" (not to mention, by the production team, who likely thought his writing was not "sexy" enough and would've turned it into straight-on hardcore porn if given the opportunity).

Edited by Khan
Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

I thought it was mostly kind of dull, aside from some odd performance choices by Francie, Biff and Miranda, but then this wasn't a "big" episode. What I've seen of this and of Loving Friends suggests they were both struggling to fit between a traditional soap and the racier format for Showtime. I hope we might get to see more. Either way, the scripts and synopses were much more interesting to me.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

Maybe it's just my conservative, Midwestern/Great Plains background rearing its' ugly head again, but I can't think of a way to introduce the kind of content that a network like Showtime would've wanted in a soap without it feeling gratuitous and exploitative.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

I think there could have been a way but admittedly I'm not sure how. What I've watched of Eden (the Playboy Channel soap) is a little better at being cohesive, but that was more along the lines of a trashy primetime soap with bonus nudity.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

How sad is it that of all the roles that Jack Armstrong has played on television, his role in "Eden" is probably his most memorable (and most likely due to that iconic shot of him in a tight, white speedo)?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

What was the shooting schedule for NDIE?

By the looks of it they probably had a very tight timeline-not much time for rehearsals or retakes.

The same for script editing and revisions.

As many episodes in the can as possible  in the shortest amount of time.

Budgets were TIGHT in those days for cable shows.

Edited by Paul Raven
Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 3 weeks later...
  • Members

@EricMontreal22 in case you missed this as I don't remember how far across the soap sphere this travelled outside this board. 

The entire show finished shooting before January, 1983. They shot a script a day, which was basically two half hour episodes. The shooting of scripts 26-33 were all done in December, 1982. 

When it was cancelled,  Paul Kent and Dana Halstad came back and shot the conclusion to the serial killer plot when Francie found out that her father Frank had been the rapist/serial murderer and had been faking his paralysis. This was probably in June/July, 1983. 

 

 

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

    • For all I care, the boy can parade around in a g-string.  It won't make this show suck any less.
    • AMC was about a decade later so things may have changed by then, although maybe they never approached her anyway. She joined Santa Barbara in 1985, when they didn't seem interested in bringing back Hope. SB ended in late 1992, so JFP could have asked her back, but I doubt she did. For as much as JFP clearly had some use for Rick Hearst given that she hired him on GH and kept him around as often as she could, I don't think she ever used Alan-Michael well. I can't see Elvera as Delia, but she could have worked well as Faith - she had a glimpse of a strong personality alongside warmth, which only one Faith ever managed (Catherine Hicks).
    • IIRC, FC reruns aired for awhile on Lifetime, way before the network became the Women in Peril Channel, lol.
    • PAM!! YES!!! You have jogged my memory. She worked at Cedars. She's mentioned in a write-up of Tim's history in the show. It says she was a nurse, but I seem to remember she was a secretary at Cedars, working for either Ed or Sarah. (It's almost 50 years ago, so I definitely could be wrong). I'm certain she was an unwed mother. I recall reading an interview with the actress, Maureen Silliman (I looked it up, that's her correct name, LOL). She started on the show just before the Dobsons started writing it. She was shocked to get a script that said her character had been pregnant since she hit town. I remember a scene where she told Tim she was going to leave SF for a better job for her daughter's sake (really, I think she was upset he was serious about Rita). I don't remember them getting married and leaving town, but according to "Who's Who in Springfield" that's how the characters were written out. Mattson did All My Children for several years, so she might have been persuadable. Here's an interesting factoid I recently learned on these message boards: Elvera Roussel was in the running to play Delia on RH when the show first hit the air. How wild is it that Mattson played Delia for a while? (Though from what I saw of her performance, she was miscast). It's hard to know if Roussel would have been a good Delia. You'd think she would have been better suited to playing Faith Coleridge, but who knows? She didn't get to show a whole lot of range as Hope.
    • If I were to do an EON reboot, I think I would start at the beginning, with Mike Karr leaving the police force in order to begin a new career as an attorney, and dealing with his wife, Sara's, crooked family.
    • I don't know if it was the writing or performance but I felt like we finally got to see the real Ted. Especially the way he talked to Martin when confronted, felt like a completely different person. He felt darker and like a total liar who was mad he got caught. I expected him to be remorseful and want to apologize to each and every family member who he came into contact with but he seemed like he didn't care. It completely changed how I view him and it makes me wonder if this is the direction they're going to take Ted in with the recast.
    • Tessa clarified a few years ago that she is gay and not bi.   I find it offensive that the show is teasing her with Daniel. Mariah told Sharon she went emotionally/mentally to a dark place, and while she was out of town on business she got drunk and did something bad.  But Mariah didn't say she cheated.  The show wants us to assume that, but she didn't say that.  She could have taken drugs or who knows what.  All we know is that she feels shame and doesn't want Tessa to know.  Mariah says the inner darkness is due to the longterm influence of Ian in the past, and she hasn't healed from that. With a *good* writer, we could have organic conflict in the Teriah marriage, without cheating.  But JG isn't a good writer.  
    • Was that before his accident? I think it was. Most of us have never seen him before it happened.
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

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