Official Wayward Pines Discussion Thread (Terrence Howard, Mat Dillon)

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A Secret Service agent goes to Wayward Pines, Idaho, in search of two federal agents who have gone missing in the bucolic town. He soon learns that he may never get out of Wayward Pines alive.

 
* Surprised they gave M. Night a series but this this a great look for Terrance to produce and get TWO series on Fox. Looks a little like Twin Peaks hope M. Night can maybe channel himself and make a more Twilight zone meets X-Files feel on here.
 
Wow. This looks pretty good.:yes: I hadn't seen any promos...no clue this was coming. M. Night on the small screen, let's see how this goes.
 
Wow. This looks pretty good.:yes: I hadn't seen any promos...no clue this was coming. M. Night on the small screen, let's see how this goes.

this may actually be a better medium for him...his flicks tend to be slow moving/building tension pieces with some kind of twist..it was good for the first movie but by the third people were already like :hmm:..

having a tv show where things can play out over a longer bit of time rather than 2 hours may be a better fit for him..:yes:
 
Not sure... about this. Matt Dillon?

honestly he has been a REALLY good actor the past few years....

and had a solid career after that teen heart throb stuff

There's Something About Mary, Wild things, Crash...

and lately he been doing these action lower budget flicks like Takers and Armored.
 
this may actually be a better medium for him...his flicks tend to be slow moving/building tension pieces with some kind of twist..it was good for the first movie but by the third people were already like :hmm:..

having a tv show where things can play out over a longer bit of time rather than 2 hours may be a better fit for him..:yes:

You make an excellent point here. I was wondering to myself how long this could last as a series, but I suppose the introduction of new characters into that "roach motel" would keep it going. But how long does Matt Dillon's character last with that storyline. :dunno:
 
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* Surprised they gave M. Night a series but this this a great look for Terrance to produce and get TWO series on Fox. Looks a little like Twin Peaks hope M. Night can maybe channel himself and make a more Twilight zone meets X-Files feel on here.

more like Twin Peaks mashed up with The Prisoner IMO..

wonder if theyll get Taraji to guest star :lol:
 
Just watched the pilot on Fox.com. I hope when it premieres it's a two espiode event, because I thought this was pretty uninspiring. Really great cast, interesting setting and premise, but nothing really grabbed me. It was all by-the-numbers predictable.

Not sure how much M. Night Shyamalan is involved beyond producing and directing the first episode. In television, it's the showrunner/creator who usually sets the creative vision. Here it's Chad Hodge who is the runner and he wrote the first ep.

It's a limited series event, so I would assume the network will let it run it's full course and I really hope it picks up. I just can't imagine there isn't more there with all the firepower they have in front of the camera: Terrence Howard, Melissa Leo, Matt Dillon, Juliette Lewis, Toby Jones. That's four Oscar Nominated actors right there.
 
Saw the first 2, yeah gave me vibes of The Prisoner and Twin Peaks indeed, keeps me interested so far but this could get old quick.

This make 3 shows with fences around a town;

Under the Dome
Wayward Pines
Between...
 
I like the show so far, I'm interested in seeing what this town is all about.


Btw, fuck Terrance Howard's character and his ice cream cone.

That was some cold ass shit he did in the second episode.

 
I don't know, I tunes in last week and Terrence Howard was sitting at a desk eating ice cream for about 15 minutes so I changed the channel.
 
My girl got me watching this..at first i was like Ion wanna see this crazy ass show.....then after the first show i was like....go to on Demand and see if we missed some seasons:lol:
 
Can't say Howard's character didn't get was coming to him, but what the fuck dragged him off?

Seems like something the writers lifted off of "Lost".

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You’ve just seen episode 3, “Our Town, Our Law.” Now you’re really terrified. How many people are we going to kill around here? Juliette Lewis is gone and now Terrence Howard?

Breathe.

If we hadn’t killed Sheriff Pope, there would be no Empire.

True. We shot Wayward Pines before Empire started shooting, and if we hadn’t killed Sheriff Pope, Terrence Howard wouldn’t have been available to play Lucious Lyon. See? Everybody wins. I love that we all got to see the immensely talented Mr. Howard play two magnetic and completely different roles this season. But let me tell you something:

Terrence sang in our show, too. In this episode. You didn’t see it because it didn’t make it into the cut. Because it wasn’t in the script. But remember the first scene on Main Street when Sheriff Pope leads the entire town in the recitation of the rules? “Work hard, be happy, enjoy your life in Wayward Pines…” Well, when shooting got late that night and we were on take 7, Terrence started improvising his own town “song.” It was a spiritual chant like:

Wayward Pines…
Wayward Pines…
Be happy for Wayward Pines…

Something like that. Slow, hymnal. Up on the reckoning platform, Terrence just started singing as part of the scene. The director (Zal Batmanglij) encouraged the extras to sing back in a sort of call-and-response. And they did. It was quite astounding and oddly bewitching. It made me think about group behavior and how humans can so quickly adapt to a new situation, a new set of rules, a new paradigm, especially when it’s a shared experience.

Which is a big key to what’s going on here in our town of Wayward Pines. The real residents of Wayward Pines have adapted, in varying degrees, to a new set of rules. As psycho as it all is, they’ve learned to answer the phone when it rings, to not discuss their lives before, etc. Why would they go along with the rules of this insane town? Survival, clearly. The punishment for not following the rules here is public execution. But maybe there’s more to it than that. Maybe there’s something good about Wayward Pines. Okay, I can’t talk about that anymore or I’ll tell you too much.

In a town with a wall surrounding it, this episode is really about breaking down walls. Think about Ethan (Matt Dillon) and Kate (Carla Gugino). Up until now, Ethan hadn’t been able to get a straight answer from his ex-partner. In this episode, in a private conversation in the woods, Kate finally reveals her legitimate point-of-view. Her true self. Her harsh warning.

Think about Ethan’s family. Ethan was having an affair, yet his wife, Theresa (Shannyn Sossamon), and son, Ben (Charlie Tahan), set out to find him because they love him. And because they hate him. And when they find Ethan in Wayward Pines, he’s with Kate, the same woman he was having an affair with. Yet at the end of the episode, the family is bonded in a new and very intense way after they kill Sheriff Pope. Now they have their own secret.

And think about the wall between you and the show. In this episode we broke down a wall because we showed you a big truth. The warehouse Ethan finds as a result of his stowaway truck ride is part of the truth of Wayward Pines. We’re clearly not telling you exactly what it is yet, but you can tell it’s different from the town itself. I’ve mentioned the name Curt Beech before, but I will always invoke his name in moments like this. Curt is our production designer who meticulously designed the look of our world. If the town of Wayward Pines is Look #1 and Seattle is Look #2, this “warehouse” is Look #3. I love Curt’s use of orange in the palette. You’ll never see this color in the rest of Wayward Pines.

The director of this episode is a wildly talented man named Zal Batmanglij. Credit goes to Carla Gugino for introducing me to his work. When she boarded the project, Carla told me to check out a new film she’d just seen called The East. She thought the director, Zal, might be an exciting get for Wayward Pines. I obviously loved The East. So did my producing partners. The film is thrilling and strange and emotional and terrifying. It’s different from Wayward Pines, but not so different. It’s also about a group of people subscribed to a bizarre set of rules. Zal confidently embraced the beautiful craziness of Wayward Pines and brought this episode to such strong life.

My favorite scene in this episode? When Sheriff Pope is eating ice cream out of the freezer, terrorizing Theresa in her kitchen. Zal shot this scene with a very keen eye. Notice how we’re never in a close-up on Terrence. The distance is what makes you feel uncomfortable because you’re never sure what he’ll do. Shannyn Sossamon is his match, a sublime mixture of confidence and terror.

But perhaps the scariest part of this episode is when Ethan’s son, Ben, realizes there is no Wi-Fi anywhere in Wayward Pines. No Facebook. No Instagram. No Twitter. Nightmare.
 
Ice Cream eating motherfucker.

Im gonna stick with this to see where it goes. That bit at the end with Terrence Howards body was enough to bring me back another week. I was tempted to pick up the book today but ill hold off.
 
seriously, they need to stop with the defiant kid routine. Its always a damn white kid too. Fucking do what you are told.
 
I like the show so far, I'm interested in seeing what this town is all about.


Btw, fuck Terrance Howard's character and his ice cream cone.

That was some cold ass shit he did in the second episode.


lol, dude is Cowboy in every movie (except Best Man - he's his own dude in that one), but still you like the guy. I like the series so far. Watched them all last night. Slow ass weekend
 
If I were in Ethan Burke's shoes, I'd be questioning the whole 2000 years of suspended animation line.

Where are the new clothes coming from? Is there a textile factory in Wayward Pines making name brand jeans, boots, socks, ect...?

How'd you store those nice looking delivery vehicles for so long? The synthetic rubber in the tires, hoses, and belts would have deteriorated beyond use within a few decades.

The packaged food? Where the fuck they making boxes of Nutty Buddy's for Terrance Howard in the distant future?

We as viewers already knew it was bullshit. Toby Jones ain't time travelling back and forth between present day Seattle and future Boise in a shiny new chopper.
 
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