If the idea of the future presented in “Moonhaven” doesn’t feel like anything else in recent sci-fi storytelling, it’s probably because the list of visual and spiritual inspirations for the show is short on other examples of sci-fi storytelling.
Most of the six-episode opening season of the AMC+ drama concerns itself with the goings-on at a lunar colony centuries in the future. Removed from the preconceptions (and mounting strife) of Earther society, the third generation of isolated, AI-guided moon inhabitants have flourished, and are ready to share their secrets with those back on the Blue Dot in their sky.
It’s an easy enough premise to grasp, but creating this alternate world of “Moonhaven” meant sifting through an endless number of visual and logistical possibilities. Showrunner Peter Ocko looked to some Earthly examples as a spiritual guide.
“In the beginning, we were saying, ‘What does this city look like?...
Most of the six-episode opening season of the AMC+ drama concerns itself with the goings-on at a lunar colony centuries in the future. Removed from the preconceptions (and mounting strife) of Earther society, the third generation of isolated, AI-guided moon inhabitants have flourished, and are ready to share their secrets with those back on the Blue Dot in their sky.
It’s an easy enough premise to grasp, but creating this alternate world of “Moonhaven” meant sifting through an endless number of visual and logistical possibilities. Showrunner Peter Ocko looked to some Earthly examples as a spiritual guide.
“In the beginning, we were saying, ‘What does this city look like?...
- 8/1/2022
- by Steve Greene
- Indiewire
AMC Networks has given a six-episode series order to Moonhaven, a drama from writer-producer Peter Ocko (Lodge 49, Black Sails) about a utopian colony on the Moon that may hold the keys to preserving life on Earth, which has become increasingly perilous. The series, produced by AMC Studios, is slated to debut on AMC and AMC+ next year.
Moonhaven was developed under AMC’s scripts-to-series model, which includes the commissioning of a writers’ room to develop additional material and produce backup scripts for projects the network brass are high on. AMC Studios opened a writers room for Moonhaven earlier this year.
Ocko, who is under an overall deal with AMC Studios, created Moonhaven and will serve as showrunner on the series, which he executive produces with Deb Spera.
The suspense thriller focuses on Bella Sway, a lunar cargo pilot and smuggler 100 years in the future who finds herself accused of a crime and marooned on Moonhaven,...
Moonhaven was developed under AMC’s scripts-to-series model, which includes the commissioning of a writers’ room to develop additional material and produce backup scripts for projects the network brass are high on. AMC Studios opened a writers room for Moonhaven earlier this year.
Ocko, who is under an overall deal with AMC Studios, created Moonhaven and will serve as showrunner on the series, which he executive produces with Deb Spera.
The suspense thriller focuses on Bella Sway, a lunar cargo pilot and smuggler 100 years in the future who finds herself accused of a crime and marooned on Moonhaven,...
- 5/11/2021
- by Nellie Andreeva
- Deadline Film + TV
UTA announced today that Jason Richman will co-lead its Media Rights Group, which represents an expansive roster of authors, books, articles, podcasts, journalists, estates and life rights. Richman will co-run the division alongside long-time motion picture literary partner Keya Khayatian, who has helped lead the group since 2017.
“I am thrilled to co-lead the Media Rights division with Keya Khayatian,” Richman said in a statement. “We share a dedication to ensuring the artists we represent at UTA have the broadest opportunities to develop and adapt their work for the screen, particularly in this moment when the world needs the comfort of great content more than ever. I’m incredibly proud to be a part of UTA, which does this work on behalf of artists better than anyone in the creative community, and look forward to helping lead this team forward in this new position.”
Richman has worked at UTA since 2010, with...
“I am thrilled to co-lead the Media Rights division with Keya Khayatian,” Richman said in a statement. “We share a dedication to ensuring the artists we represent at UTA have the broadest opportunities to develop and adapt their work for the screen, particularly in this moment when the world needs the comfort of great content more than ever. I’m incredibly proud to be a part of UTA, which does this work on behalf of artists better than anyone in the creative community, and look forward to helping lead this team forward in this new position.”
Richman has worked at UTA since 2010, with...
- 1/12/2021
- by Angelique Jackson
- Variety Film + TV
Jason Richman has been named Co-Head of UTA’s Media Rights Group, and he will run the division with longtime motion picture lit partner Keya Khayatian, who has helped lead the group since 2017.
The Media Rights department represents a roster of authors, books, articles, podcasts, journalists, estates, life rights and thought leaders, and it has closed over 250 deals in the past 12 months, and nearly 200 since the beginning of the global pandemic, the agency said. That includes a Netflix deal for film adaptations of Tanya Smith’s memoir Ghost In The Machine, with Issa Rae and David Heyman producing, and Jesse Q. Sutanto’s novel Dial A for Aunties; Hulu’s series adaptations of Charles Yu’s National Book Award-winning novel Interior Chinatown and Zakiya Dalila Harris’ upcoming novel The Other Black Girl; Amazon’s series adaptation of National Book Award winner Kacen Callender’s novel Felix Ever After; SunnyMarch’s...
The Media Rights department represents a roster of authors, books, articles, podcasts, journalists, estates, life rights and thought leaders, and it has closed over 250 deals in the past 12 months, and nearly 200 since the beginning of the global pandemic, the agency said. That includes a Netflix deal for film adaptations of Tanya Smith’s memoir Ghost In The Machine, with Issa Rae and David Heyman producing, and Jesse Q. Sutanto’s novel Dial A for Aunties; Hulu’s series adaptations of Charles Yu’s National Book Award-winning novel Interior Chinatown and Zakiya Dalila Harris’ upcoming novel The Other Black Girl; Amazon’s series adaptation of National Book Award winner Kacen Callender’s novel Felix Ever After; SunnyMarch’s...
- 1/12/2021
- by Mike Fleming Jr
- Deadline Film + TV
Here are many more movies to watch when you’re staying in for a while, featuring recommendations from Jim Gavin, Karyn Kusama, Matt Christman, and Jonah Ray.
Please support the Hollywood Food Coalition. Text “Give” to 323.402.5704 or visit https://hofoco.org/donate!
Show Notes: Movies Referenced In This Episode
Three Tough Guys (1974)
Two Gentlemen Sharing (1969)
Tower of Evil a.k.a. Horror on Snape Island (1972)
Blow-Up (1966)
Blow Out (1981)
Body Double (1984)
Rififi (1955)
The Big Clock (1948)
No Way Out (1987)
Funeral In Berlin (1966)
The Ipcress File (1965)
Billion Dollar Brain (1967)
The Innocents (1961)
Miracle Mile (1988)
Femme Fatale (2002)
Main Street Women (1980)
Sleepwalkers (1992)
A Nightmare On Elm Street (1984)
Dracula’s Dog (1977)
Moneyball (2011)
Together (2000)
Contagion (2011)
Panic In The Streets (1950)
The Killer That Stalked New York (1950)
The Satan Bug (1965)
A Prophet (2009)
Point Break (1991)
The Thing (1982)
Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1978)
Hit! (1973)
Outbreak (1995)
The Island (2005)
6 Underground (2019)
Pain And Gain (2013)
The Invitation (2015)
High-Rise (2015)
The ’Burbs (1989)
To My Great Chagrin: The Unbelievable...
Please support the Hollywood Food Coalition. Text “Give” to 323.402.5704 or visit https://hofoco.org/donate!
Show Notes: Movies Referenced In This Episode
Three Tough Guys (1974)
Two Gentlemen Sharing (1969)
Tower of Evil a.k.a. Horror on Snape Island (1972)
Blow-Up (1966)
Blow Out (1981)
Body Double (1984)
Rififi (1955)
The Big Clock (1948)
No Way Out (1987)
Funeral In Berlin (1966)
The Ipcress File (1965)
Billion Dollar Brain (1967)
The Innocents (1961)
Miracle Mile (1988)
Femme Fatale (2002)
Main Street Women (1980)
Sleepwalkers (1992)
A Nightmare On Elm Street (1984)
Dracula’s Dog (1977)
Moneyball (2011)
Together (2000)
Contagion (2011)
Panic In The Streets (1950)
The Killer That Stalked New York (1950)
The Satan Bug (1965)
A Prophet (2009)
Point Break (1991)
The Thing (1982)
Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1978)
Hit! (1973)
Outbreak (1995)
The Island (2005)
6 Underground (2019)
Pain And Gain (2013)
The Invitation (2015)
High-Rise (2015)
The ’Burbs (1989)
To My Great Chagrin: The Unbelievable...
- 4/3/2020
- by Kris Millsap
- Trailers from Hell
It’s closing time at Lodge 49 — this time for good, it appears. After about six weeks of attempting to shop the quirky comedy after its cancellation by AMC, series creator Jim Gavin threw in the towel via social media today. The two-season series wasn’t able to find a new home.
“It breaks my heart to announce that Lodge 49 won’t be going forward,” Jim Gavin tweeted to fans this afternoon. “We tried very hard to find a new home, but there were no takers. Ratings, metrics, algorithms…que sera, brah.”
He and showrunner Peter Ocko and executive producer Paul Giamatti had tried to find a landing place for the acclaimed series, but today Gavin vowed to “write a proper postscript soon” and followed up with a series of tweets. Read them all below.
Lodge 49 was a light-hearted modern fable set in Long Beach, south of Los Angeles,...
“It breaks my heart to announce that Lodge 49 won’t be going forward,” Jim Gavin tweeted to fans this afternoon. “We tried very hard to find a new home, but there were no takers. Ratings, metrics, algorithms…que sera, brah.”
He and showrunner Peter Ocko and executive producer Paul Giamatti had tried to find a landing place for the acclaimed series, but today Gavin vowed to “write a proper postscript soon” and followed up with a series of tweets. Read them all below.
Lodge 49 was a light-hearted modern fable set in Long Beach, south of Los Angeles,...
- 12/17/2019
- by Erik Pedersen
- Deadline Film + TV
Lodge 49, one of our favorite shows of both this year and this decade, is officially finished. Yes, we reported on its AMC cancellation back in October, but, nearly two months later, Jim Gavin, who co-created the show with Peter Ocko, has taken to Twitter to share that the team’s efforts to find a new home for the…...
- 12/17/2019
- by Randall Colburn on News, shared by Randall Colburn to The A.V. Club
- avclub.com
“Lodge 49” is closed for good. The drama, which was canceled by AMC in October after two seasons, did not find a new home.
Creator Jim Gavin tweeted the news in a lengthy thread on Tuesday: “Dear Lynx, it breaks my heart to announce that Lodge 49 won’t be going forward. We tried very hard to find a new home, but there were no takers. Ratings, metrics, algorithms…que sera, brah. I will write a proper postscript soon, but for now a few thoughts.”
Dear Lynx, it breaks my heart to announce that Lodge 49 won't be going forward. We tried very hard to find a new home, but there were no takers. Ratings, metrics, algorithms…que sera, brah. I will write a proper postscript soon, but for now a few thoughts. (thread)
— Jim Gavin (@jimatdeltaco) December 17, 2019
Also Read: 'Lodge 49' Canceled by AMC After 2 Seasons
Gavin...
Creator Jim Gavin tweeted the news in a lengthy thread on Tuesday: “Dear Lynx, it breaks my heart to announce that Lodge 49 won’t be going forward. We tried very hard to find a new home, but there were no takers. Ratings, metrics, algorithms…que sera, brah. I will write a proper postscript soon, but for now a few thoughts.”
Dear Lynx, it breaks my heart to announce that Lodge 49 won't be going forward. We tried very hard to find a new home, but there were no takers. Ratings, metrics, algorithms…que sera, brah. I will write a proper postscript soon, but for now a few thoughts. (thread)
— Jim Gavin (@jimatdeltaco) December 17, 2019
Also Read: 'Lodge 49' Canceled by AMC After 2 Seasons
Gavin...
- 12/17/2019
- by Tim Baysinger
- The Wrap
Lodge 49 will not open its doors again after all.
Efforts to find the critically praised-yet-canceled AMC drama have failed, per creator Jim Gavin, who shared the news Tuesday in a lengthy and heartfelt Twitter thread.
"It breaks my heart to announce that Lodge 49 won't be going forward. We tried very hard to find a new home, but there were no takers. Ratings, metrics, algorithms ... que sera, brah," he wrote.
Gavin noted that he had hoped Lodge 49's place on multiple "best TV of 2019" critical lists would have given AMC second thoughts about its decision ...
Efforts to find the critically praised-yet-canceled AMC drama have failed, per creator Jim Gavin, who shared the news Tuesday in a lengthy and heartfelt Twitter thread.
"It breaks my heart to announce that Lodge 49 won't be going forward. We tried very hard to find a new home, but there were no takers. Ratings, metrics, algorithms ... que sera, brah," he wrote.
Gavin noted that he had hoped Lodge 49's place on multiple "best TV of 2019" critical lists would have given AMC second thoughts about its decision ...
- 12/17/2019
- The Hollywood Reporter - Film + TV
Lodge 49 was recently canceled by AMC after two seasons, but those behind the series are fighting to save the series and bring it back to the small screen. Paul Giamatti, Dan Carey, Jim Gavin and Peter Ocko are shopping the series to other networks, and many high profile names, including Tom Hanks, have taken to social media to help save the series.
Read More…...
Read More…...
- 11/18/2019
- by TVSeriesFinale.com
- TVSeriesFinale.com
Network: AMC.
Episodes: 20 (hour).
Seasons: Two.
TV show dates: August 6, 2018 — October 14, 2019.
Series status: Cancelled.
Performers include: Wyatt Russell, Brent Jennings, Sonya Cassidy, Linda Emond, David Pasquesi, and Eric Allan Kramer.
TV show description:
A drama from creator Jim Gavin, the Lodge 49 TV show is a modern-day fable that's set in Long Beach, California. The series centers on Sean Dudley (Russell). Dud, as he is known, is a former surfer, who is still trying to come to grips with the loss of his father.
After his father dies and the family business goes belly up, Dud's middle-class life is in tatters. He then winds up at Lodge 49, the home...
Episodes: 20 (hour).
Seasons: Two.
TV show dates: August 6, 2018 — October 14, 2019.
Series status: Cancelled.
Performers include: Wyatt Russell, Brent Jennings, Sonya Cassidy, Linda Emond, David Pasquesi, and Eric Allan Kramer.
TV show description:
A drama from creator Jim Gavin, the Lodge 49 TV show is a modern-day fable that's set in Long Beach, California. The series centers on Sean Dudley (Russell). Dud, as he is known, is a former surfer, who is still trying to come to grips with the loss of his father.
After his father dies and the family business goes belly up, Dud's middle-class life is in tatters. He then winds up at Lodge 49, the home...
- 11/10/2019
- by TVSeriesFinale.com
- TVSeriesFinale.com
If you haven’t had the chance to watch “Lodge 49” yet, let Paul Giamatti sell you on the show.
“I’ve never had a hugely challenging time describing it,” Giamatti told IndieWire. “It’s a show about people who join a secret society to confront mysteries and riddles of the cosmos and their own lives — trying to pay their fucking bar tab and trying to make shit into gold, you know?”
Along with a team of executive producers including creator Jim Gavin and writer Peter Ocko, Giamatti and his producing partner Dan Carey are part of the push to find “Lodge 49” a new home. After two seasons on AMC, the series was not renewed for Season 3. With what amounts to half of the series’ story still left to tell, this quartet is part of an ongoing push to keep the series alive and finish charting the respective journeys...
“I’ve never had a hugely challenging time describing it,” Giamatti told IndieWire. “It’s a show about people who join a secret society to confront mysteries and riddles of the cosmos and their own lives — trying to pay their fucking bar tab and trying to make shit into gold, you know?”
Along with a team of executive producers including creator Jim Gavin and writer Peter Ocko, Giamatti and his producing partner Dan Carey are part of the push to find “Lodge 49” a new home. After two seasons on AMC, the series was not renewed for Season 3. With what amounts to half of the series’ story still left to tell, this quartet is part of an ongoing push to keep the series alive and finish charting the respective journeys...
- 11/6/2019
- by Steve Greene
- Indiewire
Alec Bojalad Oct 30, 2019
Lodge 49 of the Ancient and Benevolent Order of the Lynx is closing up shop, with AMC canceling the series after two seasons.
Television just became a less charmingly weird place.
According to Deadline, AMC has canceled its sun-soaked dramedy Lodge 49 after two seasons. Lodge 49 season 2 concluded on October 14 with something of a cliffhanger. Now it remains to be seen if the adventures of Dud, Liz, and the rest of Lodge 49's Long Beach will get to finish their stories elsewhere.
"We are so proud to have had Lodge 49 on our air," AMC said Tuesday in a statement. "This wonderful show gave audiences fresh and unforgettable characters in a world that did not exist anywhere else on television. Thanks to the stellar cast including Wyatt Russell, Sonya Cassidy and Brent Jennings and to our partners in this unique labor of love, Jim Gavin, Peter Ocko and Paul Giamatti...
Lodge 49 of the Ancient and Benevolent Order of the Lynx is closing up shop, with AMC canceling the series after two seasons.
Television just became a less charmingly weird place.
According to Deadline, AMC has canceled its sun-soaked dramedy Lodge 49 after two seasons. Lodge 49 season 2 concluded on October 14 with something of a cliffhanger. Now it remains to be seen if the adventures of Dud, Liz, and the rest of Lodge 49's Long Beach will get to finish their stories elsewhere.
"We are so proud to have had Lodge 49 on our air," AMC said Tuesday in a statement. "This wonderful show gave audiences fresh and unforgettable characters in a world that did not exist anywhere else on television. Thanks to the stellar cast including Wyatt Russell, Sonya Cassidy and Brent Jennings and to our partners in this unique labor of love, Jim Gavin, Peter Ocko and Paul Giamatti...
- 10/31/2019
- Den of Geek
AMC is closing the book on Lodge 49: The cable network has cancelled the modern fable series after two seasons, TVLine has confirmed.
The low-rated but critically acclaimed dramedy starred Wyatt Russell as ex-surfer Sean “Dud” Dudley, who’s kind of aimless after getting dealt a series of setbacks by the universe. His life changes when he stumbles upon a local chapter of a fraternal lodge, where Dud finds a fraternal brotherhood… and also starts to unravel the wild mysteries that lie inside the lodge’s secret passages. In Season 2, which wrapped up its run two weeks ago, Dud’s...
The low-rated but critically acclaimed dramedy starred Wyatt Russell as ex-surfer Sean “Dud” Dudley, who’s kind of aimless after getting dealt a series of setbacks by the universe. His life changes when he stumbles upon a local chapter of a fraternal lodge, where Dud finds a fraternal brotherhood… and also starts to unravel the wild mysteries that lie inside the lodge’s secret passages. In Season 2, which wrapped up its run two weeks ago, Dud’s...
- 10/30/2019
- TVLine.com
“Lodge 49” has been canceled by AMC after two seasons. The show’s second season ended earlier this month.
The series, starring Wyatt Russell, is set to be shopped to other platforms and networks, an individual with knowledge tells TheWrap.
“We are so proud to have had ‘Lodge 49’ on our air,” AMC said in statement to TheWrap. “This wonderful show gave audiences fresh and unforgettable characters in a world that did not exist anywhere else on television. Thanks to the stellar cast including Wyatt Russell, Sonya Cassidy and Brent Jennings and to our partners in this unique labor of love, Jim Gavin, Peter Ocko and Paul Giamatti for two remarkable seasons that initiated the world into The Ancient and Benevolent Order of the Lynx.”
Also Read: 'Lodge 49' Season 2 Trailer: No One Knows What That Door Is Doing There (Video)
“Lodge 49” is described as “a light-hearted, endearing modern fable set in Long Beach,...
The series, starring Wyatt Russell, is set to be shopped to other platforms and networks, an individual with knowledge tells TheWrap.
“We are so proud to have had ‘Lodge 49’ on our air,” AMC said in statement to TheWrap. “This wonderful show gave audiences fresh and unforgettable characters in a world that did not exist anywhere else on television. Thanks to the stellar cast including Wyatt Russell, Sonya Cassidy and Brent Jennings and to our partners in this unique labor of love, Jim Gavin, Peter Ocko and Paul Giamatti for two remarkable seasons that initiated the world into The Ancient and Benevolent Order of the Lynx.”
Also Read: 'Lodge 49' Season 2 Trailer: No One Knows What That Door Is Doing There (Video)
“Lodge 49” is described as “a light-hearted, endearing modern fable set in Long Beach,...
- 10/29/2019
- by Jennifer Maas
- The Wrap
“Lodge 49” has been canceled after two seasons at AMC, Variety has confirmed.
The series aired its second season finale on Oct. 14, which will now serve as the series finale.
“We are so proud to have had ‘Lodge 49’ on our air,” AMC said in a statement. “This wonderful show gave audiences fresh and unforgettable characters in a world that did not exist anywhere else on television. Thanks to the stellar cast including Wyatt Russell, Sonya Cassidy and Brent Jennings and to our partners in this unique labor of love, Jim Gavin, Peter Ocko and Paul Giamatti for two remarkable seasons that initiated the world into The Ancient and Benevolent Order of the Lynx.”
The series was described as modern fable set in Long Beach, California about a disarmingly optimistic local ex-surfer, Dud (Russell), who’s drifting after the death of his father and collapse of the family business. Dud found himself...
The series aired its second season finale on Oct. 14, which will now serve as the series finale.
“We are so proud to have had ‘Lodge 49’ on our air,” AMC said in a statement. “This wonderful show gave audiences fresh and unforgettable characters in a world that did not exist anywhere else on television. Thanks to the stellar cast including Wyatt Russell, Sonya Cassidy and Brent Jennings and to our partners in this unique labor of love, Jim Gavin, Peter Ocko and Paul Giamatti for two remarkable seasons that initiated the world into The Ancient and Benevolent Order of the Lynx.”
The series was described as modern fable set in Long Beach, California about a disarmingly optimistic local ex-surfer, Dud (Russell), who’s drifting after the death of his father and collapse of the family business. Dud found himself...
- 10/29/2019
- by Joe Otterson
- Variety Film + TV
Exclusive: AMC has opted not to renew its acclaimed series Lodge 49 for a third season. The news comes two weeks after the series’ second season ended its run on the network. I hear Lodge 49, from creator Jim Gavin, showrunner Peter Ocko and executive producer Paul Giamatti, will be shopped to other outlets shortly.
“We are so proud to have had Lodge 49 on our air,” AMC said in a statement to Deadline. “This wonderful show gave audiences fresh and unforgettable characters in a world that did not exist anywhere else on television. Thanks to the stellar cast including Wyatt Russell, Sonya Cassidy and Brent Jennings and to our partners in this unique labor of love, Jim Gavin, Peter Ocko and Paul Giamatti for two remarkable seasons that initiated the world into The Ancient and Benevolent Order of the Lynx.”
Lodge 49 has been a modest linear ratings performer...
“We are so proud to have had Lodge 49 on our air,” AMC said in a statement to Deadline. “This wonderful show gave audiences fresh and unforgettable characters in a world that did not exist anywhere else on television. Thanks to the stellar cast including Wyatt Russell, Sonya Cassidy and Brent Jennings and to our partners in this unique labor of love, Jim Gavin, Peter Ocko and Paul Giamatti for two remarkable seasons that initiated the world into The Ancient and Benevolent Order of the Lynx.”
Lodge 49 has been a modest linear ratings performer...
- 10/29/2019
- by Nellie Andreeva
- Deadline Film + TV
[Editor’s Note: The following review contains spoilers for the “Lodge 49” Season 2 finale, Episode 10, “The Door.”]
If “Lodge 49” is a family — and it certainly is — the last episode of Season 2 feels like a grand reunion. After the chaos of the show’s wild Mexico diversion in the previous two episodes, Long Beach’s beloved Lynxes gather at Lodge 49 for the coronation of Ernie (Brent Jennings) as Sovereign Protector. He and Scott (Eric Allan Kramer) bury the hatchet as they both realize they want different things from life. Connie (Linda Emond) forges the beginning of a literary career and Liz (Sonya Cassidy) even takes her first steps inside Lodge confines.
Leading up to the finale, Season 2 is filled with moments that emphasize how much these disparate characters have become united by circumstance. The beginning of a communal van ride, a collective thanksgiving around a table at a restaurant known for its dumplings, one wild escape to secure the scrolls that have been the seasons-long...
If “Lodge 49” is a family — and it certainly is — the last episode of Season 2 feels like a grand reunion. After the chaos of the show’s wild Mexico diversion in the previous two episodes, Long Beach’s beloved Lynxes gather at Lodge 49 for the coronation of Ernie (Brent Jennings) as Sovereign Protector. He and Scott (Eric Allan Kramer) bury the hatchet as they both realize they want different things from life. Connie (Linda Emond) forges the beginning of a literary career and Liz (Sonya Cassidy) even takes her first steps inside Lodge confines.
Leading up to the finale, Season 2 is filled with moments that emphasize how much these disparate characters have become united by circumstance. The beginning of a communal van ride, a collective thanksgiving around a table at a restaurant known for its dumplings, one wild escape to secure the scrolls that have been the seasons-long...
- 10/15/2019
- by Steve Greene
- Indiewire
“Lodge 49” sets up a world, much like our own, where each new answer comes with a handful of new questions. The journey to find some of those answers occasionally brings its central characters across ideas and discoveries in line with mythic traditions that stretch back centuries, and there’s something almost magical in the way this show makes each of those pursuits feel relatable.
Sometimes, as an artful way of underlining the way that these lofty goals are still grounded in something that has the power to connect, the show takes its collective breath and gives one of its main players a chance to explain the world as they see it.
“We don’t shy away from giving speeches to our characters, partly because our cast can deliver. I think it’s satisfying in a moment where a character, in their own way, can distill what’s been going on.
Sometimes, as an artful way of underlining the way that these lofty goals are still grounded in something that has the power to connect, the show takes its collective breath and gives one of its main players a chance to explain the world as they see it.
“We don’t shy away from giving speeches to our characters, partly because our cast can deliver. I think it’s satisfying in a moment where a character, in their own way, can distill what’s been going on.
- 9/9/2019
- by Steve Greene
- Indiewire
AMC’s “Lodge 49” is a dramady series that recently began its second season. It was created by Jim Gavin and premiered in October 2016. The title alludes to a 1966 novella by Thomas Pynchen, “The Crying of Lot 49”. That book was about a woman’s search for a secret postal delivery service and the eccentric characters she meets along the way. “Lodge 49” is about an ex-surfer who has had a terrible year including the death of his dad and loss of the family business. Wyatt Russell is in despair but optimistic and determined to find his way back to
Meet the Cast of AMC’s “Lodge 49”...
Meet the Cast of AMC’s “Lodge 49”...
- 9/5/2019
- by Aiden Mason
- TVovermind.com
Alec Bojalad Aug 11, 2019
We head behind the scenes of Lodge 49 season 2 to learn about dragons, trolls, and the search for scrolls.
“Don’t ask me about the Mariachi costume,” Lodge 49 star Brent Jennings says as he settles into one of the ancient wooden seats in Atlanta’s haunted Fox Theatre. Sure enough, he is wearing a full-on black and red Mariachi suit.
It’s the day after Game of Thrones season 8’s massive Battle of Winterfell episode, “The Long Night” and Jennings and his costars are filming the ninth and penultimate episode of a show that at first glance seems to be on the opposite end of the pop cultural spectrum of the swords, shields, and dragons mega hit.
Lodge 49 wandered onto the television scene last August as a fully formed and tonally confident Monday night follow up to AMC’s other fully formed tonally confident drama, Better Call Saul.
We head behind the scenes of Lodge 49 season 2 to learn about dragons, trolls, and the search for scrolls.
“Don’t ask me about the Mariachi costume,” Lodge 49 star Brent Jennings says as he settles into one of the ancient wooden seats in Atlanta’s haunted Fox Theatre. Sure enough, he is wearing a full-on black and red Mariachi suit.
It’s the day after Game of Thrones season 8’s massive Battle of Winterfell episode, “The Long Night” and Jennings and his costars are filming the ninth and penultimate episode of a show that at first glance seems to be on the opposite end of the pop cultural spectrum of the swords, shields, and dragons mega hit.
Lodge 49 wandered onto the television scene last August as a fully formed and tonally confident Monday night follow up to AMC’s other fully formed tonally confident drama, Better Call Saul.
- 8/6/2019
- Den of Geek
Paul Giamatti revealed Thursday that despite not appearing in the first season of “Lodge 49” — well, not physically, anyway — he will appear in Season 2, premiering August 12 on AMC.
“I’m in a couple of episodes in the second season. I can’t talk much beyond that… but I can talk about the fact that I’m in it,” Giamatti told TheWrap after the network’s presentation at the Television Critics Association summer press tour. “I am present in the first season, but not in my body or face. Just my voice is present in the first season.”
A rep for AMC confirmed Giamatti’s statement. Up until this point, the “Sideways” actor was only credited as an executive producer on the series.
Giamatti declined to go into more detail about his character in Season 2, except to say that “he’s a writer” and that “he’s very bizarre.”
“If you see the first season,...
“I’m in a couple of episodes in the second season. I can’t talk much beyond that… but I can talk about the fact that I’m in it,” Giamatti told TheWrap after the network’s presentation at the Television Critics Association summer press tour. “I am present in the first season, but not in my body or face. Just my voice is present in the first season.”
A rep for AMC confirmed Giamatti’s statement. Up until this point, the “Sideways” actor was only credited as an executive producer on the series.
Giamatti declined to go into more detail about his character in Season 2, except to say that “he’s a writer” and that “he’s very bizarre.”
“If you see the first season,...
- 7/25/2019
- by Margeaux Sippell
- The Wrap
AMC’s Lodge 49 is a complicated show to explain — and the creators and cast are certainly aware of that. Creator Jim Gavin and executive producers Paul Giamatti and Peter Ocko took the TCA stage with actors Wyatt Russell and Sonya Cassidy to talk about the show and attempt to unpack the dramedy.
On paper, the series created by author Gavin is described as a modern fable set in Long Beach, CA that centers on likable “Squire” and ex-surfer Sean “Dud” Dudley (Russell), whose beloved fraternal order — the Ancient and Benevolent Order of the Lynx — is suffering under new rule by an ill-suited leader. Despite his “Knight” and mentor Ernie’s (Brent Jennings) lost faith, and his twin sister Liz’s (Cassidy) struggle with their past, Dud believes he is the key to restoring the Lodge to its former grandeur and putting the rightful king on the throne.
When asked to elaborate on that,...
On paper, the series created by author Gavin is described as a modern fable set in Long Beach, CA that centers on likable “Squire” and ex-surfer Sean “Dud” Dudley (Russell), whose beloved fraternal order — the Ancient and Benevolent Order of the Lynx — is suffering under new rule by an ill-suited leader. Despite his “Knight” and mentor Ernie’s (Brent Jennings) lost faith, and his twin sister Liz’s (Cassidy) struggle with their past, Dud believes he is the key to restoring the Lodge to its former grandeur and putting the rightful king on the throne.
When asked to elaborate on that,...
- 7/25/2019
- by Dino-Ray Ramos
- Deadline Film + TV
Exclusive: Actor and musician Tyson Ritter has been upped to series regular for the fourth season of AMC’s Preacher.
The All American Rejects frontman plays the dual role of Humperdoo and Jesus on the cult hit series. He has appeared in five episodes as recurring.
In Season 4, it’s finally Humperdoo’s turn to take center stage as God’s Chosen One — and key to His apocalypse. Only one problem: Nobody knows where he is. The race is on — and the apocalypse is off — until this unusual Messiah can be found
Based on the popular cult comic book franchise, Preacher follows West Texas preacher Jesse Custer (Dominic Cooper), his badass ex-girlfriend Tulip (Ruth Negga), and an Irish vampire named Cassidy (Joseph Gilgun) as they embark on a road trip to find God and are thrust into a twisted battle spanning Heaven, Hell and everywhere in between.
Ritter was most...
The All American Rejects frontman plays the dual role of Humperdoo and Jesus on the cult hit series. He has appeared in five episodes as recurring.
In Season 4, it’s finally Humperdoo’s turn to take center stage as God’s Chosen One — and key to His apocalypse. Only one problem: Nobody knows where he is. The race is on — and the apocalypse is off — until this unusual Messiah can be found
Based on the popular cult comic book franchise, Preacher follows West Texas preacher Jesse Custer (Dominic Cooper), his badass ex-girlfriend Tulip (Ruth Negga), and an Irish vampire named Cassidy (Joseph Gilgun) as they embark on a road trip to find God and are thrust into a twisted battle spanning Heaven, Hell and everywhere in between.
Ritter was most...
- 2/28/2019
- by Denise Petski
- Deadline Film + TV
Pollyanna McIntosh (The Walking Dead) has booked a recurring role on the second season of AMC’s Lodge 49, from creator Jim Gavin, showrunner Peter Ocko and executive producer Paul Giamatti. Lodge 49 is a lighthearted modern fable set in Long Beach, CA, starring Wyatt Russell as disarmingly optimistic local ex-surfer Sean “Dud” Dudley, who’s drifting after the death of his father and collapse of the family business. McIntosh will play Clara, a British emissary who meets and befriends Connie at Lodge 1 in England. McIntosh is best known for her role as Jadis on The Walking Dead. On the film side, she had a lead role in Sundance pic The Woman. Gavin, Ocko, Giamatti, Dan Carey and Jeff Freilich executive produce. Lodge 49 is an AMC Studios production. McIntosh is repped by Insurge Entertainment.
Glynn Turman (How to Get Away With Murder) is set for a recurring role on...
Glynn Turman (How to Get Away With Murder) is set for a recurring role on...
- 2/27/2019
- by Denise Petski
- Deadline Film + TV
Are you overwhelmed by how much television is available right now? Is life getting in the way of keeping up with the shows you wanna try out? We feel your tube-related pain. Here’s a handy feature that’ll help you locate the hidden gems in this era of Peak TV.
Lodge 49
Network | AMC
Created By | Jim Gavin
Number Of Episodes | 10
Episode Length | 60 mins.
Premise | Wyatt Russell stars in AMC’s goofy mystical dramedy as Dud, a laid-back surfer dude who’s kind of aimless after getting dealt a series of setbacks by the universe. (He can’t even surf anymore,...
Lodge 49
Network | AMC
Created By | Jim Gavin
Number Of Episodes | 10
Episode Length | 60 mins.
Premise | Wyatt Russell stars in AMC’s goofy mystical dramedy as Dud, a laid-back surfer dude who’s kind of aimless after getting dealt a series of setbacks by the universe. (He can’t even surf anymore,...
- 12/30/2018
- TVLine.com
As movie stars flock to the TV universe, series creators are now faced with a dilemma: Do you look for a big name to anchor your show, or trust that new talent can break out as well? Some of this year’s most high-profile projects have featured actors more familiar to film: “Maniac,” starring Emma Stone and Jonah Hill; “Sharp Objects,” toplining Amy Adams; “Kidding,” with Jim Carrey at the helm; and “Homecoming,” featuring Julia Roberts in her first role as a series regular.
There’s a simple answer to why having an Academy Award winner, America’s Sweetheart or a world-class comedian as the lead of your show works: It’s good for business.
“If you have someone like Julia Roberts attached to a project, people are going to pay attention in a very different way than if it’s a script that they are pitching with no one attached,...
There’s a simple answer to why having an Academy Award winner, America’s Sweetheart or a world-class comedian as the lead of your show works: It’s good for business.
“If you have someone like Julia Roberts attached to a project, people are going to pay attention in a very different way than if it’s a script that they are pitching with no one attached,...
- 11/15/2018
- by Carita Rizzo
- Variety Film + TV
Take one look at Wyatt Russell — the shaggy blond hair, the Southern California drawl, those blues eyes, that beard that sometimes fluctuates between handsomely masculine to Father-John-Misty bushy — and you can see why folks might want to cast him as a stoner heartthrob. To be fair, he does not necessarily have a problem with that. “Look, man, smoking weed is great!” the 32-year-old actor says, chuckling. The publicist sitting 10 feet away from Russell looks up from his phone for a second, shooting him a look that veers between friendly and dude-what-the-fuck-did-you-just-say-to-a-journalist?...
- 11/7/2018
- by David Fear
- Rollingstone.com
Alec Bojalad Oct 4, 2018
AMC is picking up its intriguing and successful Better Call Saul time slot companion, Lodge 49, for Season 2.
Lodge 49 Season 2 was not inevitable.
Despite having a solid Better Call Saul lead-in, Lodge 49 was a real risky proposition for AMC. The first season of the show was about as experimental as TV show offerings can get. It came from longtime fiction writer yet TV novice, Jim Gavin. It starred relative unknowns Wyatt Russell and Brent Jennings. It was a quirky, light-hearted comedy, but also danced around the edges of some real mystical stuff. Today, however, that initial risk pays off for AMC as the network has announced that it was renewed Lodge 49 for Season 2.
"Lodge 49 tells a funny, wise and meaningful story that immediately and deeply resonated with critics and viewers alike,” AMC President of programming David Madden said in a statement. “With a talented cast including Wyatt Russell,...
AMC is picking up its intriguing and successful Better Call Saul time slot companion, Lodge 49, for Season 2.
Lodge 49 Season 2 was not inevitable.
Despite having a solid Better Call Saul lead-in, Lodge 49 was a real risky proposition for AMC. The first season of the show was about as experimental as TV show offerings can get. It came from longtime fiction writer yet TV novice, Jim Gavin. It starred relative unknowns Wyatt Russell and Brent Jennings. It was a quirky, light-hearted comedy, but also danced around the edges of some real mystical stuff. Today, however, that initial risk pays off for AMC as the network has announced that it was renewed Lodge 49 for Season 2.
"Lodge 49 tells a funny, wise and meaningful story that immediately and deeply resonated with critics and viewers alike,” AMC President of programming David Madden said in a statement. “With a talented cast including Wyatt Russell,...
- 10/4/2018
- Den of Geek
Ahead of its season one finale on Monday, AMC has ordered a 10-episode second season of its critically praised series Lodge 49, from creator Jim Gavin, showrunner Peter Ocko and executive producer Paul Giamatti, for premiere in 2019.
Lodge 49 is a light-hearted modern fable set in Long Beach, California, starring Wyatt Russell as disarmingly optimistic local ex-surfer Sean “Dud” Dudley, who’s drifting after the death of his father and collapse of the family business.
In season one, Dud found himself on the doorstep of a rundown fraternal lodge, where a middle-aged plumbing salesman and “Luminous Knight” of the order welcomes him into a world of domestic beer, easy camaraderie and the promise of Alchemical mysteries that may — or may not — put Dud on the path to recover the idyllic life he’s lost.
Gavin returns for Season 2, along with Ocko as executive producer and showrunner.
Lodge 49 is a light-hearted modern fable set in Long Beach, California, starring Wyatt Russell as disarmingly optimistic local ex-surfer Sean “Dud” Dudley, who’s drifting after the death of his father and collapse of the family business.
In season one, Dud found himself on the doorstep of a rundown fraternal lodge, where a middle-aged plumbing salesman and “Luminous Knight” of the order welcomes him into a world of domestic beer, easy camaraderie and the promise of Alchemical mysteries that may — or may not — put Dud on the path to recover the idyllic life he’s lost.
Gavin returns for Season 2, along with Ocko as executive producer and showrunner.
- 10/4/2018
- by Denise Petski
- Deadline Film + TV
AMC has given its Paul Giamatti-produced “Lodge 49” a second season, the network said on Thursday.
The series, which has had the benefit of airing behind “Better Call Saul” on Mondays, airs its season finale on Oct. 8.
Wyatt Russell will reprise his starring role as Sean “Dud” Dudley. Creator, writer and executive producer Jim Gavin returns as does Peter Ocko as executive producer and showrunner.
Also Read: 'Walking Dead': Andrew Lincoln Says He Almost Left in Season 8
“Lodge 49” is a light-hearted, endearing modern fable set in Long Beach, California, about a disarmingly optimistic local ex-surfer, Dud (Russell), who’s drifting after the death of his father and collapse of the family business.
“‘Lodge 49’ tells a funny, wise and meaningful story that immediately and deeply resonated with critics and viewers alike,” said David Madden, president, programming, AMC, SundanceTV and AMC Studios. “With a talented cast including Wyatt Russell,...
The series, which has had the benefit of airing behind “Better Call Saul” on Mondays, airs its season finale on Oct. 8.
Wyatt Russell will reprise his starring role as Sean “Dud” Dudley. Creator, writer and executive producer Jim Gavin returns as does Peter Ocko as executive producer and showrunner.
Also Read: 'Walking Dead': Andrew Lincoln Says He Almost Left in Season 8
“Lodge 49” is a light-hearted, endearing modern fable set in Long Beach, California, about a disarmingly optimistic local ex-surfer, Dud (Russell), who’s drifting after the death of his father and collapse of the family business.
“‘Lodge 49’ tells a funny, wise and meaningful story that immediately and deeply resonated with critics and viewers alike,” said David Madden, president, programming, AMC, SundanceTV and AMC Studios. “With a talented cast including Wyatt Russell,...
- 10/4/2018
- by Tim Baysinger
- The Wrap
“Lodge 49” has been renewed for a second season at AMC ahead of its Season 1 finale.
The series is described as modern fable set in Long Beach, California about a disarmingly optimistic local ex-surfer, Dud (Wyatt Russell), who’s drifting after the death of his father and collapse of the family business.
In the first season, Dud found himself on the doorstep of a rundown fraternal lodge, where a middle-aged plumbing salesman and “Luminous Knight” of the order welcomes him into a world of domestic beer, easy camaraderie and the promise of Alchemical mysteries that may or may not put Dud on the path to recover the idyllic life he’s lost.
In addition to Russell, Jennings, and Cassidy, the series also stars Linda Emond, David Pasquesi, Eric Allan Kramer, Avis-Marie Barnes, Njema Williams, and Jimmy Gonzales.
Series creator, writer and executive producer Jim Gavin will return for Season 2 along with showrunner Peter Ocko.
The series is described as modern fable set in Long Beach, California about a disarmingly optimistic local ex-surfer, Dud (Wyatt Russell), who’s drifting after the death of his father and collapse of the family business.
In the first season, Dud found himself on the doorstep of a rundown fraternal lodge, where a middle-aged plumbing salesman and “Luminous Knight” of the order welcomes him into a world of domestic beer, easy camaraderie and the promise of Alchemical mysteries that may or may not put Dud on the path to recover the idyllic life he’s lost.
In addition to Russell, Jennings, and Cassidy, the series also stars Linda Emond, David Pasquesi, Eric Allan Kramer, Avis-Marie Barnes, Njema Williams, and Jimmy Gonzales.
Series creator, writer and executive producer Jim Gavin will return for Season 2 along with showrunner Peter Ocko.
- 10/4/2018
- by Joe Otterson
- Variety Film + TV
In the third episode of “Lodge 49,” Sean “Dud” Dudley (Wyatt Russell) is working his temp job when a man emerges from the office next door. Dud knows the guy from his lodge, where they both meet up to drink, play games, and explore existential yearnings. But it’s a surprise to see him there, in a working environment, from which he’s just been fired. The unnamed man asks Dud why he’s there, and when he’s told it’s just for a temp job, the guy says, “Smart. Temps are the only ones with any job security.”
Dudley’s reaction is muted; a common response from the former surfer, and one that, in itself, is telling. He’s just heard a thought-provoking statement, given that it sounds counterintuitive on first read yet stands up to closer scrutiny when given the room to breathe, and “Lodge 49” isn’t shy about letting scenes breathe.
Dudley’s reaction is muted; a common response from the former surfer, and one that, in itself, is telling. He’s just heard a thought-provoking statement, given that it sounds counterintuitive on first read yet stands up to closer scrutiny when given the room to breathe, and “Lodge 49” isn’t shy about letting scenes breathe.
- 8/6/2018
- by Ben Travers
- Indiewire
In the latest sign of networks being willing to experiment with new forms of distribution, AMC Networks will make all 10 episodes of the new AMC series Lodge 49 available on its ad-free service AMC Premiere.
The drama (check out a review Here by Deadline’s Dominic Patten) stars Wyatt Russell and is executive produced by Paul Giamatti and Jim Gavin.
AMC Premiere customers will be able to see all 10 episodes of Lodge 49, as of its linear premiere on AMC on August 6. AMC Premiere is available as an upgrade option for Comcast Xfinity and YouTube TV subscribers for an additional $4.99 per month.
Past AMC shows The Terror and McMafia were made available for full-season binges timed to their network TV premieres earlier this year. The company said those moves spurred strong subscriber gains and usage.
Every programmer is in the midst of a historic recalculation of the norms of distribution...
The drama (check out a review Here by Deadline’s Dominic Patten) stars Wyatt Russell and is executive produced by Paul Giamatti and Jim Gavin.
AMC Premiere customers will be able to see all 10 episodes of Lodge 49, as of its linear premiere on AMC on August 6. AMC Premiere is available as an upgrade option for Comcast Xfinity and YouTube TV subscribers for an additional $4.99 per month.
Past AMC shows The Terror and McMafia were made available for full-season binges timed to their network TV premieres earlier this year. The company said those moves spurred strong subscriber gains and usage.
Every programmer is in the midst of a historic recalculation of the norms of distribution...
- 8/3/2018
- by Dade Hayes
- Deadline Film + TV
“When I’m out there, I feel like I’m all alone,” Sean “Dud” Dudley (Wyatt Russell) says. “But it’s different in here. I can see what this place is. I can feel it. Can’t you?”
The sweetly dim surfer at the center of AMC’s Lodge 49 (premiering August 6th) is describing both the Pynchonesque, Paul Giamatti-produced dramedy and the organization that gives the show its name — waxing about how joining his late father’s local fraternal order provides both a new purpose for this hopelessly hopeful...
The sweetly dim surfer at the center of AMC’s Lodge 49 (premiering August 6th) is describing both the Pynchonesque, Paul Giamatti-produced dramedy and the organization that gives the show its name — waxing about how joining his late father’s local fraternal order provides both a new purpose for this hopelessly hopeful...
- 8/2/2018
- by Alan Sepinwall
- Rollingstone.com
Some series can be summed with a simple logline — and then there’s “Lodge 49,” AMC’s new “modern-day fable” set to debut on August 6th.
Executive producers Peter Ocko and Jim Gavin (who created the show) admit their series defies any concise elevator pitch. But therein lies the charm, they say. “I had this image in my head for a long time of a young man knocking on a door, and an old man opening it. And that was it,” says Gavin. “The meaning of that moment is the whole show.”
The drama, which premiered last month at SeriesFest in Denver, traces the unlikely friendship between Dud (Wyatt Russell), a down-and-out ex-surfer, and Ernie (Brent Jennings), a middle-aged plumbing salesman who meet when Dud shows up at Ernie’s lodge in Long Beach, CA.
“Our characters are probably the least aspirational characters on television,” says Ocko, who also serves as showrunner.
Executive producers Peter Ocko and Jim Gavin (who created the show) admit their series defies any concise elevator pitch. But therein lies the charm, they say. “I had this image in my head for a long time of a young man knocking on a door, and an old man opening it. And that was it,” says Gavin. “The meaning of that moment is the whole show.”
The drama, which premiered last month at SeriesFest in Denver, traces the unlikely friendship between Dud (Wyatt Russell), a down-and-out ex-surfer, and Ernie (Brent Jennings), a middle-aged plumbing salesman who meet when Dud shows up at Ernie’s lodge in Long Beach, CA.
“Our characters are probably the least aspirational characters on television,” says Ocko, who also serves as showrunner.
- 7/30/2018
- by Debra Birnbaum
- Variety Film + TV
AMC first described “Lodge 49” as “a show that defies easy categorization,” and that’s certainly true. It’s technically a drama thanks to its hour-long runtime, but otherwise feels more like a stretched out hangout sitcom with startling moments of nihilism baked in where the laugh track should be. It doesn’t just defy easy categorization as a TV show unto itself; it defies expectations of what an AMC might, or should, look like, not quite fitting into any of the network’s previously established tones.
Created by author Jim Gavin, “Lodge 49” follows a group of people working through their frustrations and longing for something — anything — more in Long Beach, California. Twins “Dud” (Wyatt Russell) and Liz (Sonya Cassidy) are reeling and flailing after the sudden, mysterious death of their father, but their coping mechanisms and way of tackling problems send them spinning in opposite directions. Liz, who co-signed...
Created by author Jim Gavin, “Lodge 49” follows a group of people working through their frustrations and longing for something — anything — more in Long Beach, California. Twins “Dud” (Wyatt Russell) and Liz (Sonya Cassidy) are reeling and flailing after the sudden, mysterious death of their father, but their coping mechanisms and way of tackling problems send them spinning in opposite directions. Liz, who co-signed...
- 7/16/2018
- by Caroline Framke
- Variety Film + TV
Sonya Cassidy (Humans), David Pasquesi (Veep), Eric Allan Kramer (Mike & Molly), Brent Jennings (Shameless) and Linda Emond (The Big Sick) have been case as series regulars opposite star Wyatt Russell in AMC's upcoming comedic drama series Lodge 49, from creator Jim Gavin, showrunner Peter Ocko and executive producer Paul Giamatti. The series is slated to air in 2018. Written and created by Gavin, the straight-to-series Lodge 49 is a modern fable set in Long Beach and…...
- 8/22/2017
- Deadline TV
Wyatt Russell is coming to AMC. Recently, the network announced the Black Mirror star has joined their upcoming TV series Lodge 49.From Peter Ocko and Jim Gavin, the drama "is a modern fable set in Long Beach and centered on Dud (Russell), a deadbeat but charming ex-surfer who joins a fraternal order hoping to reclaim the simple, happy lifestyle he lost when his father died."Read More…...
- 11/16/2016
- by TVSeriesFinale.com
- TVSeriesFinale.com
Wyatt Russell will play Sean “Dud” Dudley in the Lodge 49 TV show. The ten episode drama will premiere on AMC in 2018. Showrunner Peter Ocko, writer and creator Jim Gavin, Paul Giamatti, and Dan Carey executive produce the Long Beach-set modern-day fable.Lodge 49 follows charming deadbeat "Dud." After the death of his father disrupts the ex-surfer's simple, happy existence, he joins a fraternal order, in an attempt reset his life.Read More…...
- 11/4/2016
- by TVSeriesFinale.com
- TVSeriesFinale.com
Did you ever think you'd live to see the day Cubs fans count stop counting down the years since their team had won a world series??
More on that in a moment.
First up, Suits Season 6 has set its return date. There are six episodes remaining after the massive cliffhanger leaving Pearson Specter Litt in the hands of Harvey Specter and Louis Litt when Jessica Pearson left to pursue her heart and her passion.
Suits is already renewed for Season 7, so we know the story will last a while. What about the firm? USA Network dangled a little teaser out for excited fans to hold tight to the vest until the midseason premiere on Wednesday, January 25.
Suits Season 6: Sneak Peek at Final Six Episodes
Today was a great day for Wyatt Russell (Black Mirror), who was just cast as the lead in AMC's upcoming drama, Lodge 49.
Written...
More on that in a moment.
First up, Suits Season 6 has set its return date. There are six episodes remaining after the massive cliffhanger leaving Pearson Specter Litt in the hands of Harvey Specter and Louis Litt when Jessica Pearson left to pursue her heart and her passion.
Suits is already renewed for Season 7, so we know the story will last a while. What about the firm? USA Network dangled a little teaser out for excited fans to hold tight to the vest until the midseason premiere on Wednesday, January 25.
Suits Season 6: Sneak Peek at Final Six Episodes
Today was a great day for Wyatt Russell (Black Mirror), who was just cast as the lead in AMC's upcoming drama, Lodge 49.
Written...
- 11/3/2016
- by Carissa Pavlica
- TVfanatic
Black Mirror actor Wyatt Russell had landed the lead role in AMC’s upcoming drama series Lodge 49, from creator Jim Gavin, showrunner Peter Ocko and executive producer Paul Giamatti. Written and created by Gavin, Lodge 49 is a modern fable set in Long Beach and centered on Dud (Russell), a deadbeat but charming ex-surfer who joins a fraternal order hoping to reclaim the simple, happy lifestyle he lost when his father died. Through the Lodge and his newfound connection…...
- 11/3/2016
- Deadline TV
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