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Title: Season 2 **Potential spoilers**


Powdered Water - September 16, 2007 04:50 PM (GMT)
Tim Kring told season one’s storyline will be concluded in season finale and we’ll experience new stuff in season 2, but we thought same heroes-different story kinda thing, we’re wrong,..

Tim Kring, creator of NBC’s hit series Heroes, told SCI FI Wire that the upcoming second season will constitute a new volume in the multi-volume series, with new characters and an entirely new storyline. “If you remember, the opening of the pilot pronounced the episode as the beginning of Volume One,” Kring said in an interview. “Volume One comes to a conclusion at the end of episode 23, and Volume Two starts with the opening of season two. And Volume Two is a different story.”

Kring added: “We could have new people and new storylines and new ideas and new threats and new bad guys and new heroes. So I would prepare the audience for that idea, that it’s not just a continuing serialized storyline about only these people. It’s a little more the 24 model than the Lost model.”

The first season of Heroes is exploring what happens when a disparate group of ordinary people discover they have extraordinary abilities and attempt to save New York from disaster.

“Heroes needs to evolve, and if we are positing an idea that this is happening all over the world to many, many people, then we get to see some of those people and see how their story fits in.”

Kring also confirmed that some of the current heroes just might not survive this season, but added: “Many of your favorites will live to fight again.”

prophecy girl - November 5, 2007 10:50 AM (GMT)
TV Guide.com reported that producers of NBC's Heroes are shooting an alternate ending to the Dec. 3 episode that will wrap up the second season early in the event an expected writers' strike prevents the show from continuing with new episodes.

Citing anonymous sources, the site reported that the episode will function as a season finale; originally, the episode was supposed to serve only as the conclusion to the current "Generations" story arc. Should an 11th-hour agreement be reached and a strike averted, the alternate ending would likely be scrapped, the site reported.

TV Yank - November 5, 2007 08:16 PM (GMT)
QUOTE (Powdered Water @ Sep 16 2007, 08:50 AM)
Tim Kring, creator of NBC’s hit series Heroes, told SCI FI Wire that the upcoming second season will constitute a new volume in the multi-volume series, with new characters and an entirely new storyline.

“Heroes needs to evolve, and if we are positing an idea that this is happening all over the world to many, many people, then we get to see some of those people and see how their story fits in.”

He lied. So far, the storyline has mostly been a reprise of Season 1. He had added a couple newbies, but one -- the Hondurans' story -- is written so unimaginatively that it bores.

He right: HEROES needs to evolve. Evidently, he's doesn't know how to do that. For example, the producers/writes have taken the most fun character of Season 1 -- Hiro -- and mired in a story that is devoid of excitement and interest.

Hopefully, the feedback from the fans is slopping into his fan.

prophecy girl - November 19, 2007 05:02 PM (GMT)
QUOTE
Heroes creator apologises to fans
The creator of hit TV show Heroes has apologised to fans in the US for a slow start to the second series.
Tim Kring admitted to Entertainment Weekly that mistakes had been made on the choice of storylines, but promised to get the show back on track.

The second series has seen falling ratings in the US, where the programme is now eight episodes in.

Viewers in the UK can see the conclusion of the first series on BBC Two on 5 December.

'Mistake'

The superhero show, starring Hayden Panettiere and Masi Oka, was the top-rated new drama in the US last year.

But recent programmes have seen audiences slip away - with one recent episode placing 30th in the overall ratings.

The drop-off has been attributed to an influx of new characters and sluggish story-telling. Kring admitted the pace had been too slow.

"We assumed the audience wanted season one - a build up of intrigue about these characters and the discovery of their powers. They wanted adrenaline.

"We made a mistake - we took too long to get to the big-picture story," he added.


The 50-year-old writer also told Entertainment Weekly he regretted introducing a number of romantic storylines saying: "In retrospect, I don't think romance is a natural fit for us."

The show has been hit by the current writer's strike in Hollywood and there are only three more shows left to screen in the US before the episodes run out.

Kring said he hoped to begin with a "clean slate" when production resumes.

'"The message is that we've heard the complaints and we're doing something about it."

In the UK, BBC Two struck a deal with NBC to screen future series of the science-fiction drama, including series two.

The station's terrestrial premiere of the programme attracted an audience of 4.3 million viewers earlier this year.


Story from BBC NEWS


:ermm:

prophecy girl - May 21, 2008 06:23 PM (GMT)
Dana Davies interview (aka monica)

link




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