DARK SHADOWS FORUMS

General Discussions => Current Talk Archive => Current Talk '24 I => Current Talk '13 I => Topic started by: Patti Feinberg on April 08, 2013, 11:52:44 PM

Title: '90 Series Question
Post by: Patti Feinberg on April 08, 2013, 11:52:44 PM
In the 1990/91 series, may I ask when it takes place?

Is it 'current' (ie, c. 1990) or true to period (ie 1966-1970)?

Thanks!

Patti
Title: Re: '90 Series Question
Post by: quentincollins on April 09, 2013, 12:34:51 AM
It was set in the 1990/1991 time period - except for the time travel story to 1791.
Title: Re: '90 Series Question
Post by: Cousin_Barnabas on April 09, 2013, 04:53:06 AM
It would be interesting to see a new Dark Shadows set in the original time period a la Mad Men and not a la Depp Shadows.   [easter_wink]  But, no...  1991 is definitely very '80s -- in all of the ways that the original is very '60s, only more so.  And that's a good thing... most of the time.   [easter_grin]
Title: Re: '90 Series Question
Post by: Lydia on April 09, 2013, 11:58:29 AM
At some point in the 1991 series, Vicky is asked when she was born.  I can't remember the exact date she gave, but if I remember correctly, the year she gave was 1966.
Title: Re: '90 Series Question
Post by: MagnusTrask on April 09, 2013, 06:28:35 PM
Ane she was right!  If another DS were done now, they could have her born in 1991.
Title: Re: '90 Series Question
Post by: Gerard on April 09, 2013, 06:45:20 PM
Vicki born in 1991!  That means that Vicki from the '91 series would be her mother, and Vicki from '66 would be her grandmother.  Now I really feel old.  Pass the Geritol shooter - it's time to watch the six o'clock news followed by Wheel of Fortune and head off to bed.  Don't any of you even bring up watching Matlock reruns.

Gerard
Title: Re: '90 Series Question
Post by: Patti Feinberg on April 11, 2013, 01:29:25 AM
Who needs to watch eps of 1795, 1840, etc when we provide our own Time Travel Trips!!

And kudos to Cousin_Barnabas; in his funny prior post, he his 1000th post!!
[headbang]

Mazeltov!

Patti
Title: Re: '90 Series Question
Post by: Cousin_Barnabas on June 11, 2013, 10:33:30 PM
Thank you, Patti!  I totally missed the celebration for some reason!  But now I have found it, haven't I?   [ghost_cheesy]
Title: Re: '90 Series Question
Post by: Nicky on June 11, 2013, 11:56:51 PM
While watching Joanna Going on Mad Men a few weeks ago I was struck by the thought that she would now be an AMAZING Elizabeth Collins Stoddard.
Title: Re: '90 Series Question
Post by: Cousin_Barnabas on June 12, 2013, 02:07:28 AM
Nicky, if a new TV series ever got off the ground, she would certainly be one of my top choices! 
Title: Re: '90 Series Question
Post by: quentincollins on June 15, 2013, 02:56:07 AM
I was really hoping that KLS would play Liz in the Depp/Burton movie, although Michelle Pfeiffer was really good, and I have no complaints there.
Joanna Going would be forty something, so a little young for Liz, but not by too much. I haven't seen her in anything new in a long time, but I really liked her as Vicki, so I'd definitely support that. Makes me want a new DS tv series all over again. Since Liz and Vicki always had a resemblance, it does make sense that JG would look right as Liz, and I think she could do the character justice.
Title: Re: '90 Series Question
Post by: KMR on June 15, 2013, 04:07:39 AM
KLS would have been old enough to play Liz's mother. Joanna Going would have been just the right age for Liz. Should they ever mount another series, that might be interesting casting, but I think they would probably go for someone with a much higher profile (Joanna isn't an actor known to very many people).
Title: Re: '90 Series Question
Post by: michael c on June 16, 2013, 12:11:08 AM
with the exception of the bland and hopelessly miscast blair brown in the ill-fated 2004 version it seems almost like a given that liz will be a bit of glamourpuss stunt casting.


bennett. simmons. pfieffer. it's traditionally been a big, slightly past her prime "star" that lends the project a needed touch of class to counterbalance the outrageousness. a rather "grande dame" type of presence.


so any potential projects in the future would likely continue that tradition.
Title: Re: '90 Series Question
Post by: quentincollins on June 16, 2013, 01:39:08 AM
KLS is probably in her 60s I'd think, just still in the right age bracket to play Liz. But that ship has sailed.
Joanna Going is certainly beautiful and classy enough to play Liz, but she's not really a big enough name to fill the historic qualifications.
Veering the topic slightly, it occured to me that I think Anne Heche would make an interesting Julia, and I think Zachary Quinto would be amazing as Barnabas.
Title: Re: '90 Series Question
Post by: michael c on June 16, 2013, 01:56:38 AM
while KLS certainly has the pedigree for liz I feel she lacks the requisite imperiousness...


even in her 60's there's still something of the girl-next-door(albeit one with a rather pushy touch of salesmanship)about her.


I wasn't sure if pfieffer had the right note of grandeur to pull off the role but I think she ended up doing admirably. I doubt anyone could ever top bennett when it comes to haughtiness and regality but she put her mark on the character.
Title: Re: '90 Series Question
Post by: quentincollins on June 16, 2013, 02:24:44 AM
I think Pfeiffer did a good job as Liz. She had her own spin on the character, and had a lot of new stuff to play with, her knowledge of what Barnabas was, and how she accepted him, and in her own way used him, were all interesting developments.
Makes me think of how Jean Simmons's Liz was so different from Joan Bennett. I think Simmons had the right touch of old money class and warm maternal side, but I don't think she had the air of tragedy that Joan Bennett had. I think Pfeiffer did have a similar air of tragedy about her, although she was more pragmatic at dealing with her problems.
Title: Re: '90 Series Question
Post by: michael c on June 16, 2013, 02:36:28 AM
true...


while simmons' liz went hugely underdeveloped as a character she did lack the note of tragedy bennett brought to the role. nothing we learned about her indicated anything along the lines of what OS liz went through in terms of her husband and her reclusiveness.


I suppose such a backstory could have been established for her in future seasons had they progressed but as it stood it wasn't hinted at and simmons herself didn't lend the character that quality.
Title: Re: '90 Series Question
Post by: quentincollins on June 16, 2013, 02:54:40 AM
Jean Simmons's Liz was really underdeveloped. We know so little about her. We know nothing of her husband/Carolyn's father. Was he dead, did he leave her like Paul in the original series? The whole reclusive story was dropped, and I don't remember there being the business and financial problems that were important in the tv series and movie. Liz and Roger had a niece Daphne, but we know nothing more about their family. Presumably they had another brother. The mystery of Victoria's origins and Liz's involvement also were dropped on the tv show, but one of the Innovation comics, I think it was the last one, did have Roger ask Liz when she was going to tell Vicki that Liz was her mother. If the comic series had continued we probably would've learned about her past in that format anyways.
But on the tv show there are no hints of Liz having marital problems, a secret illigitimate child, her torment over thinking she had killed Paul, and yes, there is no subtext in the performance for any of that. I don't mean it as any criticism of Simmons, she played the character as written, and none of those elements were part of the 91 series, but her character didn't get as much depth because of it, although I still liked her. 
I feel that she had more to do with Naomi at least, with a cold husband, the deaths of two children and her son the vampire, and going mad.
Even in just two hours Pfeiffer's Liz got a lot of development, she had a crumbling family fortune she was trying to hold togather single handed at the begining, a troubled teen with a secret and a disturbed nephew, an odd but mature and believable friendship with Julia, and her character's ruthless traits as she accepted a vampire, turning a blind eye to the deaths Barnabas brought about, because she needed him. Pfeiffer really was one of the best parts of the movie imo.
Title: Re: '90 Series Question
Post by: michael c on June 16, 2013, 11:47:07 AM
the 91 series in not my forte but to my recollection the family business was barely referenced if referenced at all...


I certainly don't remember the word "cannery" being tossed around with any frequency. nor any mention of financial difficulties. the main family sort of carried on like inherited wealth socialites.

I really got the impression liz and roger were just part of an establishing "presence" much like they were in the OS's later years more than the types of characters that would actually drive the narrative.


getting more OT if I recall in lara parker's atrocity 'the salem branch' liz(who, again, went unused completely as a character)either rented out Collinwood as a bed and breakfast or else had it shown to tour groups. either way it was as idiotic as the rest of the book.


Title: Re: '90 Series Question
Post by: Gothick on June 17, 2013, 03:34:16 PM
I agree that Pfeiffer was the best part of the Burton/Depp film.  I have no interest in seeing the film itself ever again but I would enjoy seeing a reel of Pfeiffer and HBC's outtake scenes, if such were ever released (seems unlikely).

I thought Jean Simmons was utterly wasted in the 1990 redaction.  She's a gifted actress and there could have been some wonderful moments for her, but with DC calling the shots, it became all about how much gore, fanging, and carnage they could get away with in each episode. DC would have loved the current era of HBO and other network serial killer dramas with all the loving slo-mo close-ups of manglings, stabbings, dismemberments, gougings etc.

Just my two drachmae.

G.
Title: Re: '90 Series Question
Post by: Mysterious Benefactor on June 17, 2013, 03:42:57 PM
DC would have loved the current era of HBO and other network serial killer dramas with all the loving slo-mo close-ups of manglings, stabbings, dismemberments, gougings etc.

I think you're totally right there. I shudder to think of what a DS might be like if DC were still alive and able to helm a version on HBO or, potentially worse yet, Starz!!  [ghost_shocked]
Title: Re: '90 Series Question
Post by: KMR on June 17, 2013, 11:05:42 PM
I thought Jean Simmons was utterly wasted in the 1990 redaction.  She's a gifted actress and there could have been some wonderful moments for her,

The character of Liz seemed totally pointless in the 1991 series.  While she had a few lines here and there, nothing at all figured into any of the plots, at least as far as I can remember.  Jean Simmons had one moment that was exceptional, though, and that was in 1790, at the end of the duel scene.  Watching her play a grieving Naomi was heartbreaking.  While one could say that even here her character was still only reacting to things going on around her, it was all about the human tragedy that was at the core of the best of DS.
Title: Re: '90 Series Question
Post by: Gothick on June 17, 2013, 11:33:34 PM
I agree, Jean did have some wonderful moments as Naomi.  Unfortunately I found how the 1990 redaction did the 1790s storyline to be really hard to take, in general, but it's hard to blame anyone other than Brandon Tartikoff for that since apparently he forced them to accelerate the plot to the point where it became utterly ridiculous.  and DC really should not have been encouraged to pack MORE blood-and-thunder action/posturing into a shorter space.  But, anyway...

Another wasted actress (IMO) was Lysette Anthony.  I do wish they had done the second season just to have seen Lysette's take on Laura Collins.  I bet *that* would have been something to see.

G.
Title: Re: '90 Series Question
Post by: Mysterious Benefactor on June 18, 2013, 12:01:29 AM
Yes, Tartikoff did limit the amount of eps that could take place in the past, but I honestly blame DC more than I do Tartikoff for 1790 being rushed. It wouldn't have been an issue if DC had listened to Tartikoff and the writers because they wanted the '91 DS to stay in the present for the entire 13 hour run and to do 1790 in a second season - but DC was adamant that they absolutely had to do the flashback in the 13 hours. Tartikoff did finally agreed to that, but one of his stipulations to allowing it was that, unlike in the original DS, time would not be suspended in the present and in the eps that took place in the past there would also be scenes that took place in the present in order to keep the audience connected to the present day characters while events also unfolded in the past. One might only imagine how things might have turned out had DC not gotten his way.
Title: Re: '90 Series Question
Post by: Gothick on June 18, 2013, 03:10:05 AM
That's really too bad, MB.  But so typical of various stories I have heard about DC and how he operated over the years.

I know it's common to give Curtis all the credit for Shadows having been as fabulous as it was, but at least where the original series (which has my heart) is concerned, I've said before and I'm saying now--the project attained greatness DESPITE the "input" and interference of Dan Curtis.  The best periods were often when he was away working on other projects--such as the introduction of Barnabas (and maybe the preceding Laura Collins storyline, too).

G.