Last week’s episode of Sleepy Hollow began with Abbie Mills extolling the virtues of baseball for Ichabod Crane. Of course, Sleepy Hollow being Sleepy Hollow, where subtext is as conspicuous as a catcher flashing signs, Abbie wasn’t only talking about the American Pastime. She was talking about America, too. Or America as it should be. “For me, baseball is about three things,” she told the 18th-century Rip Van Winkle, recently awakened from a 232-year-long dirt nap. “First, tradition. Rules never change. You can always count on the grass to be green, the lines to be white. No matter how crazy the world gets,...
- 11/11/2013
- by Jeff Jensen
- EW - Inside TV
Sleepy Hollow Episode 106
“The Sin Eater”
Teleplay By: Alex Kurtzman & Mark Goffman
Story By: Aaron Rahsaan Thomas
Directed By: Ken Olin
Original Airdate: 4 November 2013
In This Episode...
Abbie takes Ichabod to a neighborhood baseball game. He decides to walk home, and stops by Katrina’s grave. He is shot in the neck with a tranquilizer dart and abducted by a man who puts a black hood over his head.
That evening, Abbie is driving home when she starts to doze / hallucinate. She is in the creepiest of creepy haunted houses, long abandoned. The Horseman is there, and chases Abbie into a room where she finds Katrina. She introduces herself and explains that she can reach the witnesses (Ichabod and Abbie) through this dream space. She tells Abbie that Ichabod has been abducted, but he is in a place that is warded so she cannot locate him. The Horseman returns tonight,...
“The Sin Eater”
Teleplay By: Alex Kurtzman & Mark Goffman
Story By: Aaron Rahsaan Thomas
Directed By: Ken Olin
Original Airdate: 4 November 2013
In This Episode...
Abbie takes Ichabod to a neighborhood baseball game. He decides to walk home, and stops by Katrina’s grave. He is shot in the neck with a tranquilizer dart and abducted by a man who puts a black hood over his head.
That evening, Abbie is driving home when she starts to doze / hallucinate. She is in the creepiest of creepy haunted houses, long abandoned. The Horseman is there, and chases Abbie into a room where she finds Katrina. She introduces herself and explains that she can reach the witnesses (Ichabod and Abbie) through this dream space. She tells Abbie that Ichabod has been abducted, but he is in a place that is warded so she cannot locate him. The Horseman returns tonight,...
- 11/5/2013
- by Alyse Wax
- FEARnet
Sleepy Hollow, Season 1, Episode 6, “Sin Eater”
Written by Aaron Rahsaan Thomas, Alex Kurtzman, and Mark Goffman
Directed by Ken Olin
Airs Mondays at 9pm Est on Fox
After a couple of weeks’ hiatus, Sleepy Hollow returns and opens with Abbie (Nicole Beharie) and Crane (Tom Mison) enjoying a baseball game. Abbie says she loves baseball because of its tradition, teamwork, and because it doesn’t discriminate. This scene is the foundation for the themes that Thomas, Kurtzman, and Goffman choose to develop in this episode. They focus on Crane’s past and give a glimpse of the man he was before he became George Washington’s spy and met Katrina (Katia Winter). There are lot of flashbacks in this episode, but they do an excellent job of showing Crane’s development from skeptic and loyal British soldier to one of the leading fighters in a bigger war between good and evil.
Written by Aaron Rahsaan Thomas, Alex Kurtzman, and Mark Goffman
Directed by Ken Olin
Airs Mondays at 9pm Est on Fox
After a couple of weeks’ hiatus, Sleepy Hollow returns and opens with Abbie (Nicole Beharie) and Crane (Tom Mison) enjoying a baseball game. Abbie says she loves baseball because of its tradition, teamwork, and because it doesn’t discriminate. This scene is the foundation for the themes that Thomas, Kurtzman, and Goffman choose to develop in this episode. They focus on Crane’s past and give a glimpse of the man he was before he became George Washington’s spy and met Katrina (Katia Winter). There are lot of flashbacks in this episode, but they do an excellent job of showing Crane’s development from skeptic and loyal British soldier to one of the leading fighters in a bigger war between good and evil.
- 11/5/2013
- by Logan Dalton
- SoundOnSight
Chicago – Family secrets seems to be a specialty of Director Andrew Jarecki. He made a big splash with his 2003 Oscar nominated documentary, “Capturing the Friedmans,” which explored the real life matters of the title family, and in his debut feature film narrative he uncovers a prominent New York City family in “All Good Things.”
All Good Things is a fictionalized account of New York City real estate mogul Seymour Durst, called Stanford Marks (Frank Langella) in the film, and his family. His son, David Marks (Ryan Gosling), is a classic black sheep, preferring to open up a country health food store in called “All Good Things” with his new wife Katie (Kirsten Dunst), than participate in the family business. David is a dark soul, prone to inappropriate behavior, which becomes worst when he does finally come back to New York City. A mystery develops when his wife goes missing, beginning another round of odd circumstances.
All Good Things is a fictionalized account of New York City real estate mogul Seymour Durst, called Stanford Marks (Frank Langella) in the film, and his family. His son, David Marks (Ryan Gosling), is a classic black sheep, preferring to open up a country health food store in called “All Good Things” with his new wife Katie (Kirsten Dunst), than participate in the family business. David is a dark soul, prone to inappropriate behavior, which becomes worst when he does finally come back to New York City. A mystery develops when his wife goes missing, beginning another round of odd circumstances.
- 12/23/2010
- by adam@hollywoodchicago.com (Adam Fendelman)
- HollywoodChicago.com
Could your dreams make you a millionaire?
"Twilight" author Stephenie Meyer says the story came to her in a dream. "In my dream, two people were having an intense conversation in a meadow in the woods," Stephenie writes on her website. "One of these people was just your average girl. The other person was fantastically beautiful, sparkly, and a vampire."
She continues: "They were discussing the difficulties inherent in the facts that A) they were falling in love with each other while B) the vampire was particularly attracted to the scent of her blood, and was having a difficult time restraining himself from killing her immediately."
At the time of her dream, Stephenie was a stay-at-home mom who had written very little up to that point, but the dream was so compelling that she began to write ... and write ... and write. And the rest is history.
Is having a dream like Stephenie's unusual?...
"Twilight" author Stephenie Meyer says the story came to her in a dream. "In my dream, two people were having an intense conversation in a meadow in the woods," Stephenie writes on her website. "One of these people was just your average girl. The other person was fantastically beautiful, sparkly, and a vampire."
She continues: "They were discussing the difficulties inherent in the facts that A) they were falling in love with each other while B) the vampire was particularly attracted to the scent of her blood, and was having a difficult time restraining himself from killing her immediately."
At the time of her dream, Stephenie was a stay-at-home mom who had written very little up to that point, but the dream was so compelling that she began to write ... and write ... and write. And the rest is history.
Is having a dream like Stephenie's unusual?...
- 11/17/2009
- Momlogic
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