Showing posts with label In Treatment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label In Treatment. Show all posts

Saturday, 16 January 2010

AFI Awards and In Treatment Coming to DVD (UK)

Here they are! First pictures of Michelle Forbes in the roaring 2010!

The year has already begun with the AFI Awards' honorary luncheon in LA yesterday. Every year The American Film Institute celebrates outstanding work in film and television during the past year. True Blood has been chosen as one of the best TV programs. In its rationale, AFI singles out "Michelle Forbes' brilliant performance as Maryann Forrester[,] the magnetic center of an audacious and orgiastic season that [...] asks penetrating questions about what it is to be human - to desire, to discriminate and to dig deep into the delights of television."









Pictured below with co-stars Sam Trammell and Carrie Preston:





click onto the images for higher quality

***

Season 1 of In Treatment will be out on DVD in the UK on February 1st. You can pre-order it on amazon.co.uk.

The series has reportedly been picked up for a 3rd season. Production should begin early this year. Let's hope that Michelle will be back as Kate. :)

Sunday, 6 December 2009

En garde!


Durham County

"As great as the series is on the acting and writing side, its just as good on the filming side as well, the lighting, the flashbacks and looks into the minds of each character as they remember or imagine scenes, the ghosts that haunt them all appearing in certain places, the constant images of the powerlines, hinting that the electro magnetics of the powerlines are slowly driving everyone insane, just the whole thing is a huge iconic film noir style case study in how to shoot a film or a tv series to give it the very feel you want. Its just so brilliantly done it makes me almost slack jawed in complete and utter awe of its assault from all sides fo the creative spectrum at once. Truly a thing of wonder with no real equal."
Source: thelastangrycritic.blogspot.com

In Treatment UK

"- The first season run of 'In Treatment' ended today after 44 terrific episodes... This is one of the only shows that I have really been excited about seeing each night. I would go as far as to say; In Treatment is the best half-hour straight drama I have ever seen. I haven't done any research but, I can't honestly think of anything that it is comparable to.
- Seen them all so far - brilliant acting, scripts, direction. Top-quality drama."
Source: digitalspy.co.uk

Blog news inside

* We've got a new look&feel. Hope you like it :)
* iHelix takes a time out until Spring. Thanks, iHelix!
* In the background we're working on more 'Revisited' articles. And we'd love to plan even more. Let us know!

Saturday, 24 October 2009

Can We Start Again

Some Battlestar Galactica fans would have preferred a different story, for Laura Roslin and Helena Cain. At this point fan fiction emerges. A written text or a video.

* A Roslin-Cain fan music video:



While I usually don't read fan fiction, I like the Julianna Cox (Homicide: Life on the Street) roleplay on LiveJournal. Give it a try!

* HBO has renewed IN TREATMENT. Production on Season 3 will begin in New York in early 2010.
"HBO announced Friday that it has ordered a third season of the drama "In Treatment," which stars Gabriel Byrne as therapist Paul Weston.
A third season had been in some doubt, as Byrne has said in interviews that he finds the role (which he plays very well) quite challenging. That's understandable; his character is in almost every scene and much of his work involves reacting to and working through thorny issues with the sometimes challenging patients in his care.
The show is changing head writers again, as it has done every season so far. Anya Epstein of HBO’s “Tell Me You Love Me” and Danny Futterman (“Capote”) will take over from Season 2 showrunner Warren Leight."
Source: Maureen Ryan@chicagotribune.com

* The UK audience and critics keep raving over the first season In Treatment. But the most exciting news about IT comes from France:
"Selon Hagai Levi, BeTipul, également adaptée au Portugal et en Serbie, pourrait prochainement faire aussi l'objet d'un remake français : "J'ai bon espoir pour que ça arrive, cinq producteurs différents se sont montrés intéressés, un pilote a même été tourné, réalisé par Diane Kurys, mais il est très difficile de trouver un bon diffuseur. Je pense qu'Arte serait idéal mais rien n'est fait"."
A French adaptation of IT, the pilot already shot, and the chance that ARTE, the European Culture TV channel, will broadcast. YaYYY!!



* The human body has many parts. And several senses. I think we might be able to cook up more intriguing puzzles. Which one would you like to see? And how meeeeean do you want me to be?

Saturday, 17 October 2009

Saturday Snippets

As I'm heading to Paris and won't be back before Sunday night, your weekend entertainment comes a bit early. No legs, no fun? Wrong!

* There's a beautiful interview with Gabriel Byrne about In Treatment at guardian.co.uk:

Q: In Treatment has been a huge critical hit in America. Were you impressed by the script?
A: I immediately understood it was special. It was extremely intense; just me and another actor facing one another in our chairs. It's more like theatre than television and, like all the best drama, it shows people connecting on an emotional level. It's been seen as breakthrough television in the States because there's no action, no sex scenes, no car chases, no drugs or drink. It's just people with real problems talking to this man who has his own real problems.

* Let The Spirit Move Me - Maryann Fan video:



* Alternate Ending of Pegasus: Cain is in a bad mood



* Twitter excitement

David on Twitter: There's very little in the world that can't be improved by the simple addition of Michelle Forbes.
Sarah on Twitter: Michelle Forbes. HOLY MOTHER OF GOD.

Note: Sarah The Vampire Slyr seems to be a candidate for the Halifax pilgrimage. A cold shower may help too. --chris

* Your own Maryann Forrester Show

Two fan voices at atforumz.com:
"I saw Razor for the first time yesterday and am in love with Michelle Forbes! Cain is one of the most fascinating characters from the series and I was thrilled to see more of her...
Ah, I've seen some of the first season of TB but it didn't hold my attention at all. Perhaps I'll just youtube the Maryann parts!"


Here's how. In HD quality. 1280x720p.

Season 2:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-RsO-nUANxI
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zNd1VY9KKt8
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Db69SZV1VCU
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TFjsH-4rQc4
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a2ISsRV1m-4
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3O097_UYX0Y
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3O097_UYX0Y
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tWJFUhVgY-w

Season 1:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q__LV3J8v18

- Highlight the URL and paste it into keepvid.com, one at a time. Push the download button.
- Right click the last link (.mp4 files), save as... The files are big, it's the HQ/HD version, 100-170 MB each.
- Do it now, you never know when YT or the uploader takes the videos down.
- Sometimes keepvid.com is busy, try again later.
- You may want to convert the mp4-files to xvid/divx videos in order to burn a DVD disc and watch the Maryann Forrester show on your divx compatible DVD player.

Voilà, le show Maryann Forrester :)
La gloire, c'est l'audience.

Saturday, 10 October 2009

In Treatment in the UK - What the Critics Are Saying

The first season of In Treatment had its premiere last week in the UK. Though Kate will have her entrance not until episode 6, FYI a couple of reactions. What the critics are saying:

"[...] acted with the kind of subtlety, intelligence and smouldering power that makes you want to hug the television while you are watching it."
Source: telegraph.co.uk

"Nancy Banks-Smith in the Guardian: "Each episode is a perfect little pearl, luminous on its own but better still as a necklace... In Treatment reminds us that TV is essentially claustrophobic and intensely personal. The enormous audience is an illusion... The therapist (Gabriel Byrne) appears to do very little. It is a treat trying to catch him at it."

Brian Viner in the Independent: "It's exceedingly classy drama, reliant almost more on the pitch-perfect acting than on the excellence of the writing. It's impossible to take your eyes off Byrne's performance, which is all the more remarkable given that he has so little to say."

Benji Wilson in the Sunday Times: "You barely leave Paul's front room in the entire series, yet it is as addictive as a morphine drip."
Source: thefirstpost.co.uk

And from a negative review - yes, I kind of liked it, made me grin, though I differ in opinion. The author Rachel Cook has yet to encounter Michelle:)

"OK, cards on the table. In one sense, In Treatment (10pm, weekdays), which Sky Arts has bought from HBO following much acclaim and many awards, was never going to appeal to me. I am morbidly suspicious of therapy - where's the science bit? - and throughout my life have always found repression to be a vastly under-valued psychological tool. That and good old compartmentalisation. The inside of my brain looks not unlike the bottom of my wardrobe: basically, it's crammed with a load of old shoeboxes, some of which I'm willing to have a good rifle through now and then, and others that I would simply prefer to leave closed, thanks very much. [...]
Then the titles rolled. Oh dear. This show - which is based, sometimes word for word, on an Israeli series of the same name - is a complete disaster and I am at a complete loss as to why it has had American critics so bedazzled. Yes, its format is moderately brave, at least by the standards of US television. The saga is doled out to us in daily half-hour episodes, each focusing on a different patient, or on one of Paul's sessions with his own therapist, Gina (Dianne Wiest). In other words, each show is basically a two-hander and as static and wordy as a piece of theatre. But just because something appears to be "demanding" doesn't mean that it is also, merely by extension, good. This isn't good. The dialogue is hammy and clichéd, and you can see every kink and fold of what passes for its plot coming from about eight miles away."
Source: newstatesman.com

"In Treatment is stunning stuff that in just five half hour episodes has been shocking and thought-provoking. I can’t wait for the rest."
Source: thestage.co.uk

Pink Paper Magazine published an interview with series creator Hagai Levi:

"Given the programme's success in such a crowded TV marketplace, what makes its creator proudest when he looks at back at the first year?
Levi smiles and thinks for a moment: “The fact that, even with all this noise all around them on television, people will listen to two people sitting in a room and talking makes me very happy.”

"You wouldn't think a drama filmed almost entirely in one room could be that compelling, but this is state-of-the art dialogue and brilliantly acted. Superb."
Source: culturejunkies.blogspot.com
_____________

Some of our gentle readers may know how biased I am when it comes to In Treatment, so you won't be surprised that this is a golden opportunity for me to post screencaps:



"I knew it deep down that if I came here it would turn into this history between you two. I’m sorry, it’s really not helpful to me." Kate (Michelle Forbes) to Paul (Gabriel Byrne) & Gina (Dianne Wiest) ~leaves~





"Kate: She's Tammy Kent.
Paul: WHAT?
Gina: Who's Tammy Kent?
Paul: How-how is she Tammy Kent?
Kate: You know EXACTLY what I'm talking about.
Gina: May I ask who this is?
Kate: This was a girl that Paul was in love with when we first met....
Paul: A long, long time ago.
Kate: ...well, WHATEVER, they're EXACTLY the same type....
Paul: No they're not.
Kate: ....and he....yes they are, and he made Laura out to be this fragile little girl, and I'm telling you what I saw was this highly sexual woman who was wearing stilettos at ten in the morning....
Paul: I...
Kate: TAMMY KENT!"





Randy gave officially his OK: I'm allowed to keep posting - if I'm not hammered. We settled on the wording that my writing style is not odd nor is it weird, but it's eccentric :) And our visitors are a forgiving tribe of geeks and nerds, just as we are. Besides, this blog has become much too serious anyway, it was once meant as a simple refuge and replacement of a non-functional forum and website.
So, prepare for the next article tomorrow, titled: Lazy Sunday Afternoon. --chris

Wednesday, 30 September 2009

A Little Quiet

You may have noticed it's been a little quiet around mirandazero.blogspot lately. That's because we're having a break after our dedicated coverage of True Blood and Durham County in the past months. Both Randy and I are dealing with some personal challenges atm, but hopefully we'll be back soon!

Until then I'll try to give you a summary, every now and then. And I'd like to ask your forgiveness reg. my English grammar and spelling -- til Randy is back.

* In Treatment finally airs on British television. Season 1 starts on Monday 5 October on Sky Arts 1.

"Until quite recently, the HBO drama series In Treatment was being mysteriously shunned by British television, despite a trunk-load of Emmy and Golden Globe awards and nominations.
It's only now that it has found a home, with Sky Arts 1 as the surprise purchaser. So why the trepidation? Prestigious new American dramas, especially from HBO, are usually snapped up as fast as they can be produced, and this one's got a terrific cast, led by Gabriel Byrne, Blair Underwood and Dianne Wiest.
Well, I suppose there's the fact that outwardly nothing much happens in In Treatment – just two people sitting in a comfy room with subdued lighting, talking. What's more, it's a serious look at the psychoanalytical process, and we've never been particularly comfortable with head-doctoring in this country. In some ill-defined way, therapy is "foreign" – it doesn't sit well with our native stiff upper lip."
Source: independent.co.uk

* Michelle Forbes and Gabriel Byrne at the opening night of the Irish Film Festival in L.A. (September 24):


(Click to enlarge)

* Short version of a couple of interviews the past weeks:
- Maryann is gone for good.
- Michelle had a lot of fun with True Blood.
- She's taking a little time off now.
- BAFTA interview on Youtube: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fKDFaq9CiXg

* The second season of Durham County which was expected to start October 19 on ION TV kind of 'disappeared' from the ION schedule. I'll try to keep you posted.

Sunday, 28 June 2009

A Sense of Style

If you're impatient in waiting for the new episode of True Blood, pass some quality time at listening to two conversations with Michelle. While the first chat in April centered on In Treatment, her being too honest in Interviews and her "first gig on a bloody soap opera", in this second installment, Judith Klassen from Movie Entertainment magazine talked to Michelle Forbes about Canada, her intense experience working on the thriller Durham County and with the writer Laurie Finstad Knizhnik, and the fun of making "Vampire Porn".

You can find both podcasts with Michelle at movieentertainment.ca

Monday, 22 June 2009

Michelle Forbes Juggles Three TV Shows and Entrances



In a recent interview, Michelle Forbes sat down with IESB.net to open up about settling in with the very rewarding cast of True Blood, acting, her work with HBO (on True Blood, and In Treatment), and her intense experience in the role of Penelope Verrity in the upcoming second season of Durham County.

IESB: When and how did you know that you wanted to be an actor?

Michelle: As the story goes, I started off as a ballet dancer. I knew, pretty early on, that I needed another form of expression, and it just seemed that acting, and this idea of playing pretend and telling stories, was really fascinating to me. It was a natural progression, out of the dance world and into the world of theater and cinema.

IESB: For those who might not be familiar with the show yet, who is Maryann and how does she fit into the story?

Michelle: What I’ve been saying about Maryann is that she’s very mysterious and she likes her mischief. She has got quite an agenda, in this town, and she is going to have one hell of a time when it comes to light. She’s a wacky one. It’s been total fun to play.

IESB: What can viewers expect from Season 2, for your character?

Michelle: It’s so difficult to talk about this show without giving anything away. But, what I can say is that Maryann likes to have a lot of parties. She likes for there to be a lot of food around. She has a very strange entourage with her, at all times. She lures Tara into her world, but she’s just fascinated by everyone in Bon Temps and she wants to leave her footprints all over that town.

ESB: What was it about Maryann that you found so appealing? How can you relate to her?

Michelle: I don’t know that I can relate to Maryann, but I’m sure other people will. What I found so fascinating about her is that she’s completely liberated from everything. She has no sorrow, no guilt and no remorse. She doesn’t live with the same rules that we live with. Oddly, that was intimidating, at first. We always say that we want to be happy, free and content, and live with no rules, but when we’re given that, it’s terrifying because we tend to operate better with structure and guidelines. So, initially she was a bit frightening, but I didn’t realize what a gift she was until about half-way through the season. I had just finished doing this series in Canada, called Durham County, that was all about sorrow, remorse, guilt, regret, dead children and all sorts of light, fun things. You think you’re fine, but you don’t realize that you’re not fine until you’re back in the world, and I think if I had to go into another tortured role, I probably would have killed myself. So, playing Maryann, and experiencing her sense of fun, mischief and play, has been a lot of well-needed fun.

IESB: Now that you’ve been doing the show for awhile, do you feel like you have more of an understanding for why people are so intrigued by this genre?

Michelle: My theory is that we’re in a big national depression, with the economy and people being out of work. We have the hope of a new administration, but we don’t know what’s going to happen yet and we’re exhausted from worrying, and I think that it’s just a good bit of fun. It’s escapist, and it’s fun for smart people. Alan still asks questions about family and love, the pack mentality thinking, and how susceptible we are to judgement and having our minds changed about things we don’t understand. And, he’s able to explore these themes, but it never gets too heavy. There’s always a pratfall right behind it, or a really gross sex scene, or something that will shift the tone. There’s something to appeal to everyone, with this show. A lot of men watch this show, and they wouldn’t normally.

IESB: Can you talk about juggling True Blood, Durham County and In Treatment? How do those schedules all work out?

Michelle: I love to work. There’s an adventure that comes with every job, and you can never have too much adventure in your life. I have been busy this last year. I did the last couple of episodes on the first season of True Blood, and then I was on a plane to Montreal to do the Canadian series Durham County, which was very beautiful and I’m so pleased that I got to be a part of it. There was a possibility that I wasn’t going to be able to do it because of HBO. I was in Montreal for three months, and then I was in New York for a fitting for In Treatment, two days after I finished Durham County, and was just running on adrenalin from that job. I did a couple episodes of In Treatment, was in bed sick for the holidays, and then started on True Blood in January.

It’s wonderful. I’ll never complain about having too much work, but all three characters were so different and I’ve been living my own little repertory theater for over a year, jumping in and out of these different characters. It’s been a joy because they’ve all been such wonderful writers. Laurie Finstad-Knizknik, who wrote Durham County, is just such a brilliant woman. To jump from her pad and pencil over to Alan’s pad and pencil has just been a real joy.

IESB: Did it help that the characters were all so different?

Michelle: It really helped that they’re so different because they all helped me to shed the last one. This woman that I played on Durham County, Pen Verrity, held a lot of sadness and sorrow, and I didn’t realize how much I was carrying around with me. Maryann helped me to shed Pen, the more I became immersed in her. I think Pen would have stayed with me a lot longer, had I not been able to jump into Maryann right after.

IESB: Are there types of roles or specific genres that you’re still looking to do, that you haven’t gotten the chance to do yet?

Michelle: I want to do a period piece because I’ve never done one. I’ve always said that I just wanted to do one of everything. I got the Western out of the way. But, I have wanted to do one of every genre. I did the American cop drama, I did the British cop drama, and now, I’ve done the Canadian cop drama. I just always want new and different. I never know what I want, but I usually know what I don’t want, and what I don’t want is what I’ve already done before. I’m always just waiting to see what else is out there, to see what new adventure is going to be had.

Tuesday, 5 May 2009

Ciao Kate - In Treatment Episode 25

Einen kurzen Augenblick hatte ich befürchtet, sie würden in Episode 25 von 'In Treatment' die Figur Kate (Michelle Forbes) kompromittieren. Aber dann ging es gut aus. Bye Kate, mit einem lachenden und einem weinenden Auge - weil wir sie wohl kaum noch wiedersehen werden.
Die zweite Staffel von 'In Treatment' ist anders. Die intime, intensive Kammerspiel-Form wurde aufgeweicht. Es gibt einige fast Soap-Opera-artige Elemente. Mein Interesse an den Charakteren ist nicht sehr groß, selbst Gina ist irgendwie nicht mehr dieselbe. Die therapeutische Glaubwürdigkeit bzw. der Realitätsbezug leidet auch sehr. Ich könnte mir vorstellen, dass man mit dieser Glättung und Verflachung mehr Zuschauer erreichen will.

Hier zum Abschied einige Screencaps (mehr im Picasa-Album, einfach auf ein Bild klicken):

michelle forbes

michelle forbes

michelle forbes

(Click to enlarge)

Thursday, 30 April 2009

Be'Tipul - In Therapy - Original Series

It's simply amazing. Unbelievable. I've got 5 episodes and a Making-Of (22min video) of the original Israeli series Be'Tipul.

What a difference to the US-American adaptation!
* I don't understand one word of Hebrew/Ivrit - and am able to follow every single scene.
* I've heard that the dialogues are almost the same, but the Israeli actors, a different light, camera etc. create a complete different world. The characters are emotionally much closer to my world and my culture. For example, I was pretty 'irritated' in 'In Treatment' by the characters Paul and Laura, I've found them almost unwatchable. And I was not the only one who felt this way.- And both are wonderful and lovable in the Israeli series.
* Adding one small scene and dialogue can change everything. The US-version did this in episode 25, the ending.
* But the biggest surprise is, how incredibly close the character Kate to the original character Ya'el is, while the other characters are not, or less. The gestures, the body language, the facial expressions. Either Michelle Forbes knew the Israeli series very well or she is simply a genius. Or the director is a magician.

Ya'el (Kate):





Slideshow with screencaps (episode 25 and Making-of-BeTipul):



And here is a picture of Kate. Someone from michelleforbes.net found it on the HBO site:

michelle forbes

I hope we will see her one more time in Season 2 of In Treatment. One minute, two minutes? Oh, please.

"If the sign of a great actor is the ability to shift emotional gears abruptly, without losing a heartbeat --- from pain to indignation, from indignation to sarcasm, from confusion to surprising insight, or from self-anger to raging anger at others --- and to do it with such hard-slamming gestures, voice tone, and believability that the viewer is left full of breathless admiration, then Michelle Forbes did exactly what the previous poster claimed she did: steal every scene she was in ..."

Tuesday, 14 April 2009

Kate is back :-)

Kate (Michelle Forbes) is back. Briefly. In Treatment, season 2, episode 10:

michelle forbes

michelle forbes

michelle forbes

michelle forbes

michelle forbes



Comment by my British colleague: "Luvely".
Me: Not the blonde!
He: Ohh.--- Shiny!!!
Me: Nooo, it's not Aeryn.

Update :: Best recurring character so far in season 2: the turtle. Or is he/she a guest star? What's a TV show without a pet.

Thursday, 9 April 2009

First 'In Treatment' Impressions

1. I went back to the Kate-Paul-Gina dialogue (In Treatment, season 1):

"Kate: She's Tammy Kent.
Paul: WHAT?
Gina: Who's Tammy Kent?
Paul: How-how is she Tammy Kent?
Kate: You know EXACTLY what I'm talking about.
Gina: May I ask who this is?
Kate: This was a girl that Paul was in love with when we first met....
Paul: A long, long time ago.
Kate: ...well, WHATEVER, they're EXACTLY the same type....
Paul: No they're not.
Kate: ....and he....yes they are, and he made Laura out to be this fragile little girl, and I'm telling you what I saw was this highly sexual woman who was wearing stilettos at ten in the morning....
Paul: I...
Kate: TAMMY KENT!"


2. I looked up pictures of Kate, Tammy and Paul on the original Israeli series:






You can watch a streaming version of season 2 of the Israeli series (in Ivrit) incl. some flash backs.

3. Though I don't understand Ivrit I've got the impression that the characters (not the story and the plot) are quite different than the adapted US version. They look more 'real'.

4. The most gripping for me about In Treatment remains the unique and innovative aesthetics, combining the intimacy of a chamber play with the techniques of a screen drama.