More ‘Dollhouse’ Woes
Joss Whedon’s new series Dollhouse cannot seem to avoid being examined in great depth. Yesterday, Fox consigned it to the dreaded Friday night at 9 p.m. slot and then the Los Angeles Times ran a report on continuing production delays and concerns.
The show shut down production for two and a half weeks in September as Whedon and his team rewrote scripts and refocused the direction. The initial pilot was scrapped in favor of an all new introductory episode.
The Times wrote, “On Thursday, it became obvious that the problems persist. Production on the seventh episode, which is supposed to begin Monday, is being delayed at least a day because the script was in such bad shape, according to a source who requested anonymity. The script for the sixth episode also had big problems, causing production delays that left the cast and crew very frustrated, the source said.”
The article went on to note that Whedon is rarely seen on the set, instead spending his time with the writers. "We have yet to gain any momentum," an inside source told the Times. "The network wants to tone things, and Joss is trying to figure out how to give them that and still do the show he wants to do."
Fox President of Entertainment Kevin Reilly was an early supporter of the series, telling the Times, "He had me at ‘hello’ I was kinda drunk with the surprise of it all. He laid out the whole concept but I think it was one of those things where I heard every other word of it."
That ardor may have cooled given the time slot. Meantime, a new teaser ad went live earlier this week so you can get a feel for the premise for yourself.

John Carpenter’s eagerly awaited next film may well be a thriller without horror elements. According to iF Magazine, Carpenter will direct Nicholas Cage in Riot for Nu Image/Millennium Films.
Nat Gertler and his About Comics company is celebrating its tenth anniversary this month. Gertler has been an active participant as a fan then publisher, a recognized figure in the community and has helped shine the spotlight on little known talent or forgotten works.
Following his work on Tintin, director Steven Spielberg is expected to work alongside Will Smith on an English-language remake of the 2003 Korean film Oldboy.
Batman’s next animated incarnation will take on the form of Batman: The Brave and the Bold debuting on the Cartoon Network wnext Friday night. This is based the DC Comics titles that evovled into a team-up title between super-heroes and ultimately featured Batman as its co-host from issues #73 though its cancellation with issue #200 in 1983. The animated series targets a younger demographic than the most recent animated incarnation.

The studios and networks are asking their producers to save money on their shows. ABC yesterday ordered a 2% across the board cut for all their prime time programming. Other networks have ordered similar trims as the economy makes the advertising revenue iffier.
While too expensive to pickup new episodes, Cartoon Network has purchased the off-network rights to King of the Hill and will add it to their Adult swim programming. As a result, Adult Swim will now be expanded by an hour, beginning at 10 p.m. and running through till 6 a.m. seven days a week.
Director Sam Mendes chatted briefly with

We love NBC’s Chuck. It’s a fresh take on spies and nerds that is appealingly cast and produced. The show has a great ensemble headed by Zachary Levi, Yvonne Strahovski, and Adam Baldwin. That it continues to perform well in a television season that most call tepid is a good thing.
