Legend of the Seeker (Spoilers)

Started by Geekyfanboy, January 29, 2008, 10:13:56 AM

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Rico

Looks very cool!  We need a fun, fantasy adventure on TV again.

Geekyfanboy

Q&A: Seeker Producers Spill!

Sam Raimi and Rob Tapert, executive producers of the upcoming syndicated fantasy show Legend of the Seeker, told reporters it was their goal to capture the essence of and remain true to the spirit of its source material, Wizard's First Rule, the first book in author Terry Goodkind's Sword of Truth series of books.

Legend of the Seeker follows the adventures of Richard Cypher (Craig Horner), a seemingly average young man who discovers that he is a child of prophecy and possesses magical powers. Helping him harness those powers is a Confessor, the mysterious and gorgeous Kahlan (Bridget Regan), and an old Wizard, Zedd (Bruce Spence). On a weekly basis, amid action, romance and magic, the trio must face off against Darken Rahl (Craig Parker), an evil emperor who plots to enslave the world.

SCI FI Wire was on the line on Oct. 15 when Raimi and Tapert--who'd previously produced such shows as Hercules: The Legendary Journeys, Cleopatra 2525 and Xena: Warrior Princess--joined reporters for a conference call. The following is part one of a two-part Q&A featuring edited excerpts of the conversation. A nationally syndicated first-run series, Legend of the Seeker will premiere on Nov. 1.

Kahlan seems different yet similar to Xena (Lucy Lawless). Xena was bigger and stronger than some of the guys she was fighting. Kahlan kicks butt, too, but she looks smaller, and because of her white, flowing dress, there's a lyrical quality about her. Can you comment on the concept of female heroes?

Raimi: Well, this is Sam. Rob, maybe you should answer this, since you're the co-creator of Xena and were actually the main man on that show.

Tapert: Well, briefly, I think we were very fortunate with Xena, the right place at the right time with the birth of the Internet. It was the first female action hero, really, to be on TV at that time since Cagney and Lacey or Bionic Woman and Wonder Woman in the '70s. So Universal took a real chance. Sid Sheinberg at that time said that none of those shows had done particularly well in syndication on reruns for him. But we were fortunate. It really opened the door at that time for the woman as the hero and as the protagonist. And that really mushroomed. And I think we see that carrying through.

You know, we were a reflection of society, probably, at the time. But we've seen that Buffy and Alias and numerous shows with women in the lead as very strong characters have come since then. And regarding this, Kahlan is very different than Xena. Kahlan is drawn from the great book that Terry Goodkind wrote; Wizard's First Rule was the first one. And Sam and I fell in love with this character. And she's a female action hero for 2009, so she has a different complexity, a different secret, a different reason for doing what she does. And yes, she's perhaps more feminine at the same time as being as ruthless as Xena was.

There's a beautiful visual element to Legend of the Seeker. That's especially the case when it comes to Kahlan. She's in this white dress, and whatever she does--ride a horse, walk towards Richard, fight the bad guys with her sword--she seems to swirl in a white glow. Would you agree that creates a unique visual image?

Raimi: I think our director did a great job in working with Bridget Regan, who is the woman who plays Kahlan. And she's got a grace and a style of movement that is unique. And I think it reflects some of what Terry Goodkind put into the book, that she is actually a high priestess. She's much renowned as a religious figure in the book, we're to find out eventually. So she's been raised a very particular way, and I think her movements are not common, like a lot of the other characters in the book, frankly, that come from ...

There are three basic lands in Terry Goodkind's story of Wizard's First Rule. And she is the high priestess of her land and much revered by all the people, and almost a religious figure. So I like the fact that the director and Bridget developed a grace and a style of movement that fits a royal persona. I think it's fitting to the character that Terry created.

Keeping with Kahlan, what was it about Bridget that drew you to her for the role?

Raimi: Rob was the one who found Bridget and showed her to me. He'll have to say how he originally discovered her, but when I saw her I just thought that she was ... I believed her. I believed the things that she said. Obviously, she's striking. She's quite beautiful to look at, but a lot of actresses are beautiful. But she made these fantastic situations and fantasy situations, ... she grounded them by being very human and real. And when she expressed emotion, I was moved by her, and I believed her, and I thought we couldn't ask for anything more. Because these are stories of friendship and loyalty and self-sacrifice. And if you don't really believe the people in the center of the characters--if you don't really believe that they're rooted and someone really exists in a three-dimensional way--then those stories won't have the weight. It won't work at all. So it was her, I guess, ability to just convey that she was a solid, soulful individual. That's what convinced me. But Rob, how did you come upon her?

Tapert: I couldn't have said what appealed to us about Kahlan, about Bridget, more eloquently than Sam did. And it was just a casting call. She was in New York and showed up on the tapes that we got. And myself and people involved really liked her. And I went over one Sunday afternoon and showed her to Sam. And we all kind of concurred that she would bring to life the Kahlan that we had read in the books and loved.

Will we see any of the Renaissance Pictures regulars making guest appearances on Legend of the Seeker?

Tapert: Ted Raimi [Sam's brother and a regular on Xena] is in the next episode after [the pilot].

Raimi: And if Bruce Campbell would ever, ... his show is so successful, [USA Network's] Burn Notice. It's a wildly great success. But if he ever, if that show ever gave him a break, Rob and I would love to have him on Legend of the Seeker.

What was it about the Goodkind books that made you want to turn them into a TV series?

Raimi: I didn't know how popular they were. ... They have, like, an intense following of people who are really dedicated and in love with the characters, and I guess it wasn't the popularity that I knew about when I read the books. But Rob and my other partner who we sometimes team up with--Josh Donen, a very good guy--said to me one day, "My son has read this book, and he just loves it. He's been reading the series, and he can't put it down. Do you want to take a look at it?" And I said, "Yes, please." And I read it, and I was just swept away like I am during the best of the original William Shatner Star Trek episodes. I mean, it has all the classical elements of sword-and-sorcery types of adventures. But I just was so attracted to the characters that Terry Goodkind created.

He tells the story of this young boy who is thrust into this world that he's unfamiliar with. He tells the story of how the boy has to become quickly adept at matching these skills to survive and to help others. And ... you connect with the boy, and you really respect him in the writing. I really like the person that is the hero. He has a very good heart, a good soul. He strives to do the right thing. And he falls very much in love throughout the course of many of these books with Kahlan. She has secrets that will prevent this love, and I just got swept up in the love story, also, between the two of them. And they were such noble characters I really wanted them to be together. And I wanted to know what this terrible secret was that kept them apart. What was she hiding that wouldn't allow them to be together?

And I also really like a great villain, and Terry came up with Darken Rahl. [He's] just the most nasty, terrible villain, [and] I really felt threatened. I felt our main character is threatened whenever Darken Rahl would send his [emissaries] or villains after our heroes and heroines. So I think [it has] all the classic reasons why you like a great story: great characters, great friendships. That's one of my favorite aspects, actually, the friendship between Zedd, the wizard, the older man in the story, the wizard who is like a father figure to our hero, and I like the story of a boy and his father and the classic influence that a wise man has on the hero. And I like the love story between Kahlan and Richard and the adventure and wondering whether he'll survive his next terrible trap so that he could succeed, so that he could continue the love story that I'm so interested in. So it's all those things that I think every reader of Wizard's First Rule and the rest of the sort of series was attracted to, just great storytelling, great characters, great friendships depicted by the author.

Q&A, Part Two: More Legend Secrets

In part two of our Q&A with Sam Raimi and Rob Tapert, executive producers of the upcoming syndicated television series Legend of the Seeker, they talk about diverging from the books, how the first-run syndication landscape has evolved since they produced Xena: Warrior Princess and Cleopatra 2525 and how and why Raimi and Tapert work together so often.

Legend of the Seeker is a fantasy-adventure-romance show based on Terry Goodkind's Wizard's First Rule. It stars Bridget Regan, Craig Horner and Bruce Spence and kicks off with a two-hour premiere on Nov. 1. The following are edited excerpts from Raimi and Tapert's Oct. 15 conference call with reporters.

How free are you to diverge from the books--or book, since you're primarily adapting Wizard's First Rule--and maybe take those characters in another direction? Or are you planning on following them pretty closely?

Tapert: We've actually remained true to the characters, and what we've done is we've taken aspects of the book, storylines from the book, and blended those into episodes that differ from the book or run tangentially. ... We've had to, in the world of television, create events that were not portrayed in the book but still remained true to the characters, the theme and what's happening within the overarching story within the book.

Raimi: I think it's because of just the nature of the format of television. We wanted to satisfy the viewers completely, and in this sense we need to have a beginning, a middle and an end in each hour story that the viewers come to see. And yet no novel is really constructed that way--in 50-page beginning, middle and ends that ends at page 50 and then begins again from page 50 to 100, then from page 100 to 150. They're just not constructed that way. So obviously we had to take some license with the book as far as the plot of them so that each episode had a conflict for the main character, each episode had a theme and a beginning, a middle and an end. Whereas, [with a] linear novel, it may just be one beginning, middle and end over the course of the 800-page book.

So I think that is to be expected. I think that there's no television program that could work any other way with a closed format. But I think the most important thing--at least for me--is that we remain true to the heart and soul of the characters, what they represent, what they stand for, the good things that they're fighting for, what their weaknesses are and how they overcome them, what the villain represents to the hero, the nature of this love story. Those will all be intact and brought as faithfully as possible by our team of writers to the screen. The actual plot events, though, they're going to be happening in a slightly different order. And ... different. Sometimes different stories will be told.

First-run syndicated shows are rarely done anymore. How has the television landscape changed from what it was when you guys did Cleopatra 2525, Hercules and Xena? It's totally different, right?

Tapert: Yes, it is. You know, we've been very fortunate to be partnered with ABC Studios to have great faith in the source material--the book--and put great faith in Sam and [me] and our two partners, Josh Donen and Ned Nalle, and Ken Biller, in going back into something that really may not exist, which is first-run syndicated original programming of action-fantasy. Nothing has been on the air for a few years. There's a real question mark. "Hey, is that a viable world?" And ABC Studios said, "We believe in you guys, and we believe that that market can be resurrected." And we'll tell you at the end of November, after our first five or six episodes. But I believe that it wasn't that the audience went away. I believe that eventually there was a flood of subpar product, and the audience wised up to that and moved on looking for something else. And so I think in returning to first-run syndication our belief--and ABC Studios' belief--is that if you make something well and honor the audience and give them something new and exciting, that they will come.

The two of you have worked together for many years. Sam, what makes Rob an ideal creative producing partner? And Rob, to you, what makes Sam an ideal partner?

Raimi: It's not Rob's good looks, I'll tell you that. I've known Rob since our days together at Michigan State University, and I think we have a respect for each other. Rob is very smart. He's a good businessman. He's honest. I think honesty and respect for one another have been the keys to our long and profitable and very happy relationship. That's probably the same thing that would make a good marriage.

Tapert: It is like a good marriage. And additionally, Sam understands heroes and heroines and what makes people want to watch movies and television. That's the journey that people go on the screen with, and certainly I've benefited and learned from that and continue to gain insight into how you can tell a story, a classic story, in a new and different way. And that's one thing that I continue to learn from this long association as partners. --Ian Spelling

Geekyfanboy

#18
Don't forget this premieres this weekend..

Rico

My TIVO is already set.  Showing here on WGN on Saturday.

Burbfan

Meanwhile, maybe this will tide you over!

Premiere week PR and we now have a clip for BOTH of them from Tuesday....

CRAIG/RICHARD (thanks to the Aussies!)
http://legend.ausxip.com/multimedia/Interviews/2008/regisandkelly/

BRIDGET/KAHLAN:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hw3pAZTETSU


But remember--Show your friends! Tell your friends ! And their friends!

It's a pre-Election Day GOTV: "get out the viewers," not voters, rally --- LOL

Watch it on local stations to help the ratings, too. We need to keep SOME fantasy show n TV.

Burbfan

OK, Halloween survivors --it's premiere day!

Gather the clans to watch and then...
Post comments here after you see it.

:cheering


Rico


Geekyfanboy

I still have an hour and a half until it premieres here.. can't wait...

Bryancd


Vartok

Want to know more?
Click Here
http://www.legendoftheseeker.com/videos.html
Premieres both November 1 and 2.  The above site has a zip code ap to show when and where in your area.

Vartok

Rico

WOW!  Watched the first two episodes and really loved it!  I'll talk a bit more about it on the podcast tomorrow.

Bryancd

OK, this is not playing on the channel listed here in Phoenix! Oh, wait, it starts tomorrow here...  :wacko

Rico

Check that link above that Vartok gave.  Put your zip code in Bryan and see what pops up. 

The show is very beautiful.  I want to visit New Zealand so badly!


Bryancd

New Zealand is Heaven on Earth. Jamie and I are going to retire there...for real. :)