Rob Jensen <
Shut...@aol.com> wrote:
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>>. . . Creatively, the finale offered an incredible launch for a series of
>>fascinating storylines, so we're hoping that The CW recognizes that and
>>gives the show another chance. We'll find out for sure in just a few
>>days, when The CW announces their Fall schedule, but in the meantime,
>>we wrestled as much information as we could from Miller, so here are
>>5 things to expect from Season 2.
>>1. Faye will discover that having her individual magic isn't all it's
>>cracked up to be. Phoebe Tonkin asked Miller to give Faye a "Matilda"
>>moment in the finale, hence her champagne celebration with Melissa --
>>but this is television, and the celebration can't last too long. "Next
>>year, The Circle will be completely fractured," Miller says. "They
>>know what it is to be bound, they've struggled through being connected
>>to people when you don't want to be, and this next people is about
>>being apart and finding strength that way. Faye is going to very
>>quickly run out of 'Matilda' moments, because it won't be enough,
>>especially with Cassie and Diana having so much more power than her."
>Phoebe Tonkin is hysterical as Faye. it would be interesting to see
>her become the voice of reason that the archetypal foundations of the
>characters would suggest that Diana should be (but shouldn't.)
Absolutely agree. She's the most memorable newcomer in this dreary
television season, newcomer at least to American television. I'll assume
she's done fine work in Australia as a child actress for a number of
years, though I'm not likely to see it.
>>2. The Balcoin kids are going to add a whole new element to the show.
>>That shot of the four figures overlooking Chance Harbor was a perfect
>>tease. So what kind of people will these new characters be? "A. Sexy,
>>B. sexy, and C., interesting," Miller laughs. "Those four characters
>>are not all Balcoin. We'll find that this goal of putting a perfect
>>circle together won't be as easy as Blackwell had hoped. They'll bring
>>some moral ambiguity to the battle between good and evil in Chance
>>Harbor at a time when the witches that we have are at a crossroads
>>with their own sense of right and wrong."
>>They'll be particularly intriguing to Faye. "She'll be the lynchpin
>>between these Balcoin kids coming in and the existing Circle. She'll
>>seek out the Balcoins, she'll utilize the Balcoins and their power in
>>a very manipulative way."
>My problem with that reveal is that it was all four of remaining
>Balcoin kids rather than just one or two. That mass introduction makes
>it look like these kids are going to be considered as one villainous
>unit rather than characters that can be introduced separately to stand
>on their own as characters regardless of their moral alignments or
>even that they can be swayed from what will likely be a dark
>alignment.
That's a potential problem with the story telling, sure.
>By comparison, the show's older sister, The Vampire Diaries,
>introduced the entire Original Family gradually over the course of the
>first season and a half and their alignments and personal morals vary
>wildly, with Elijah and Rebecca being the most sympathetic and even,
>especially in the case of Elijah, likable.
Eh. I hated the Originals, who pretty much ruined a nice little story
about a pretty girl with misplaced empathy who thinks she means well,
but falls in love with the wrong boy and destroys the lives of all around
her because her love for him is all-consuming.
Seemed to me that the writers decided that one Original wasn't taking the
story any place interesting, so let's keep piling them on, till we
introduce their parents.
>I fear that, by introducing all four Balcoins at the same time, in a
>way that will likely mean that they don't get to breathe as characters
>in the same way that the Originals do, the show will have nowhere to
>go when it burns through its plotlines as relentlessly as The Vampire
>Diaries does.
Perhaps this would have been an accurate prediction.
>>3. Jake will take his grandfather's note very, very seriously. "Royce
>>was more right than anyone wanted to believe, though he was still a
>>bit crazy. Jake is going to take up his struggle to stop the darkness
>>from seeping into his world and the people he loves. The warning is
>>going to position Jake to be the most badass good guy of all time. An
>>avenging angel with the kind of anger issues that Jake has is going to
>>be really fun to see once he faces the Balcoin kids."
>They've got to have Jake own up to and *really* come to terms with the
>fact that he's klled other witches, not the least of them being that
>shopkeeper that he toasted (literally) at midseason. His killing the
>hunter, Eben, in last night's finale was effective as a step in his
>storyline with respect to his willingness to kill, to be sure, but
>being brainwashed by the Hunters beforehand only goes so far when it's
>rooted in his misplaced (self-)hatred of witches for the deaths of his
>parents. He should still have some sort of clear comeuppance and sense
>of penance inflicted on him. Perhaps by the ghost of that shopkeeper.
Eh. I didn't like Jake's newly discovered mission, and why the hell is
he walking around with a Mezuzah? It's a retcon.
Jake was the weakest character on the show, because they pretty much
wrote him into a corner from his introduction, so every time they
gave him something new emotionally, it felt like a retcon. I couldn't
suspend disbelief that the rest of the characters would ever trust him.
>>4. Adam's vulnerabilities will bring his dark side to the surface. As
>>Jake fights the darkness, Adam has, interestingly enough, invited it
>>in. When we first met Adam, he was the good guy. He always did the
>>right thing. "When push came to shove, and he went to rescue the two
>>huge loves of his life, Cassie and Diana, he was a useless piece of
>>shit to Blackwell's dark magic. It was like he was the skinny kid on
>>the beach getting sand kicked on him by the bullies, and he sends away
>>from the back of a comic book to be a muscle man so he can never be in
>>that position again. They thought that he was the best guy to take
>>care of the skull, but in fact, he was the worst. He was the most
>>emotionally vulnerable, the most fragile, and the most susceptible to
>>the seductive power of that skull."
>I just think that htey need to have another male character in the
>Circle to counterbalance Adam's too-seriousness. Jake's too old to
>work in that way as a peer. It would be interesting to see if the show
>could come up with a reason to bring someone who isn't from one of the
>Six Families into the circle just to a) define whether or not the
>Circle can and b) to get away from the whole "the circle is six"
>thing, which has never made numeric sense to when juxtaposed against
>the five of a Pentagram or the lucky number 7.
I suppose. It might have been an interesting development if he
turned naughty, while still rationalizing excessively.
>>5. Grant is genuinely a nice guy... but he's got some secrets. We love
>>Diana's sweet, rom-com love affair with the hot yacht guy, and though
>>Miller tells us that Grant won't suddenly be revealed to be an evil
>>witch, he is involved in some shady stuff. "I couldn't break Diana's
>>heart that much by turning him into a complete bad guy," he says.
>>"However, I can tell you that Grant works on a yacht for some guy who
>>seems to be coming in and out of Chance Harbor more than anybody with
>>a yacht should be coming in and out of Chance Harbor. Grant is
>>involved with more than he's letting on, and the people he's working
>>with are perhaps more interesting than you'd expect."
>My first thought: "So *that's* how the Hunters are sneaking into
>Chance Harbor!"
Hahahahahaha
For Diana's sake, I hope he's good in the sack. I'm not sure he was
going to be given all that much of a personality.
>>We've got more Season 2 scoop for you on the way... and of course, we
>>promise to update you immediately when we get word of whether there
>>will be a Season 2. Keep those fingers crossed!
>If the show gets a second season, I think they need to do a couple of
>things not already suggested above:
>1) They need to shift the focus of the show away from Cassie and onto
>Diana. Between Life Unexpected and this first season of Cicle, Britt
>Robertson has shown that, like Alexis Bledel on Gilmore Girls, she
>just doesn't have a lot of depth and has therefore failed to make the
>script's case that Cassie is both intelligent enough to lead the group
>and credulous enough to fail to ask Blackwell the type of questions
>that Diana was asking even before she found out that she was a Balcoin
>and even before Charles warned her to be skeptical.
I think Britt Robertson has more acting chops than you do. I really liked
her on Life Unexpected, and I thought she did something interesting with
those appalling scripts. She was the main reason to watch. The one who
gave a poor performance on that show was Shiri Appleby, whom I used to
think could act but it seems I'm terribly wrong about that.
I'd compare Cassie to Elena on VD, but much more naive. I think it must
be a common theme in L.J. Smith novels that teenage girls must never be
given power because they are stupid, and the powerful ones are extremely
dangerous.
Therefore, I must disagree. The script made no attempt to show that she
was more intelligent than the others. She got her way because Adam did
her bidding, and she mostly bullied Diana, and Melissa didn't even try.
>Conversely, Shelly Henning is a real find, able to play a lot of the
>colors of internal emotional conflict that Robertson hasn't been able
>to play as either Cassie or the much more complex Lux. She's played
>Diana's free-floating disappointment at no longer being the sole
>leader of the Circle with a deftness that has made her character
>immensely likeable because she's tempered Diana's disappointment with
>a sure-footed resilience. The writers also made a nifty course
>adjustment at midseason, having Diana confront what it means to be
>single again after breaking up with Adam that avoided some typical
>melodramatic pitfalls like acting out ala Marissa on The O.C. or just
>going completely whiny like Serena on Gossip Girl or falling
>completely apart like Jen on Dawson's Creek.
I'll agree partly, because I don't think Diana was tightly written.
Some early episodes, I bought that she was in love with Adam, but most
weeks, it seemed like the end of a relationship that had fallen apart,
which was not what the writers were supposed to be conveying all the
time. We never really saw them together as a strong couple when they
were supposed to be a strong couple.
>She's kinda beguiling like Joey Potter, so it would make more sense
>that since this is a younger show than Dawson's Creek was at the time
>that it fully embraced Joey as *the* central character (season 3,
>IMO), for this show to shift its focus from its Dawson (Cassie) to its
>Joey (Diana).
Joey was beguiling only because Dawson put her on a pedestal. It wasn't
thanks to Katie Holmes' performance but how she was reflected through
James Van Der Beek's eyes. Miss Holmes brought mostly adorable cheeks
and bright eyes and a lovable girl-next-door image, but she's in
desperate need of decent dialogue (a la Wonder Boys) and a strong male
to play off of to seem like she's creating any sort of character at all.
>Also, they've gotta change that damn theme song! The melody is fine,
>but the elementary-school-ish dah-dah vocal arrangement has *got* to
>go. It's so fucking annoying to hear at the start of the episode that
>I've got to believe that it single-handedly turned off viewers that it
>shouldn't have lost at the top of the season.
Hahahahahaha
The finale impressed me. I thought they'd built up to it nicely over
several episodes, and as a viewer, I was left satisfied that they
wrapped up major plot points without dragging them into next season.
It pleased me that Diana left town. Why do so many tv character lack
self preservation instincts? You're in constant danger. You get out of
constant danger by avoiding the source of danger, in this case, letting
Cassie make truly dumb decisions that lead to disastrous consequences
for you.
The major aspect of bad writing throughout the season was Charles Meade's
character, clearly the Cassie of his generation's circle. The writers
simply couldn't decide if he was tragic or evil. They started with
evil, with the murder of Cassie's mother, and then went to tragic,
with the necessary killing of Nick, but then it turned out that he
could have saved Nick since he removed four demons from Eben but
couldn't remove one from Nick?
Charles would have worked so much better as tragic and not evil. The
evil should have been Natasha Henstridge.
I liked Cassie with her grandmother. It was the only moment on the show
in which we saw the teenagers interacting with adults who are supposed to
be caring for them. Adam's father was useless, and most episodes, we
forgot that Faye was Dawn's daughter. Charles and Diana had a few nice
scenes together, but it wasn't enough. Melissa didn't ever interact
with a responsible adult that I recall, nor did Nick.
Really, the previous generation leaving a bunch of teenagers to discover
magic with no guidance whatsoever was beyond stupid, and I still have
no idea at all what Dawn's plan was to use their circle to regain power,
since she appeared to know nothing about creating a Crystal Skull. Also,
why did Dawn's own mother have to transfer her power to Dawn? Why the
hell couldn't she just act?
I really hated the script in which Charles gave Cassie's grandmother what
appeared to be a stroke that led to dementia. She got out of hospital,
which didn't make any sense considering she was still cursed. It became
impossible to believe that Cassie was left on her own. No, Balcoin wasn't
raising her.
I didn't quite buy Dawn in episodes in which she wasn't selfish.
I want to emphasize that my complaints are somewhat minor as the good
about this show so greatly exceeded the bad. For a modern day tv show
with story arc, the plotting was relatively tight and, again, major
story arcs from this season were wrapped up. The two performances from
the kids that we discussed were very strong, and that made up for a lot.