Free Newsletter Subscription
        MCN All Access

Deadwood Movie Not Dead Yet

But HBO Executives Haven't Given Green Light to Western Finale

By R. Thomas Umstead -- Multichannel News, 7/12/2007 6:17:00 PM

TCA Photo Gallery

Beverly Hills, Calif. -- Fans of HBO's Western drama,Deadwood, have a 50-50 chance of seeing the series revived on screen.

That’s according to HBO co-president Richard Plepler, who addressed the media for the first time Thursday since taking over the pay service’s programming reins last month from ousted CEO Chris Albrecht.

Speaking during the network’s Television Critics Association tour executive session here, Plepler said the David Milch-produced series still hasn’t received a green light for the much anticipated movie finale. President of the programming group and West Coast operations Michael Lombardo and Plepler said there was a 50-50 chance that Deadwood would have a final theatrical sendoff, adding that the prospects for the film are “complicated” given Milch’s current work on HBO surfer series John from Cincinnati and the availability of the Deadwood actors. “It’s doable … but daunting,” Lombardo added.

As for a Sopranosmovie, Plepler said that’s a decision the show’s director, David Chase, will have to make. Regarding the show’s controversial ending, Plepler -- who admitted that he, too, was duped by the show’s surprising black-screen ending that left no true resolution of Tony Soprano’s fate -- said there was as much intrigue about the finale as there was disappointment.

“The conversation that took place after that show was startling to us,” Plepler said. “But the truth of the matter is that there were just as many people that who were passionately intrigued about the ending as were angry at the show, both in the media and on the consumer side.”

Overall, Plelper said the network continues to provide a compelling lineup of original content for its 28 million subscriber base -- which includes original series Big Love, Entourage and Rome, as well as documentaries and sports content -- sans The Sopranos, which ended its six-year run on the network last month. He added that HBO isn’t diverting much from the original programming strategy laid out by Albrecht, who left the company in May days after getting arrested in Las Vegas for assaulting his girlfriend.

In fact, Lombardo said the network has spent more money on original programming than any other year and will most likely top that figure again next year, although he would not reveal specifics.

“Truthfully there will never be anything that will top The Sopranos,” Plepler said. “The question is: Can we continue to put on excellent programming across a wide range of genres so that our subscribers feel they have something worth paying for? The best is yet to come.” 

Talkback
Related Content

No related content found.

More >>>

Newbay Business Information Resource Center

Featured Company


Most Recent Resources

Advertisement
More Content
  • Voices
  • Photos
  • Podcasts

John Eggerton

Capital Letters

John Eggerton
May 21, 2010
Google's Gaffe?
Show of hands, here. How many people are still looking for the indignity and...
More

Todd Spangler

BIT RATE

Todd Spangler
May 21, 2010
Google to Cable: We Come in Peace
Is Google TV a cable operator’s friend or foe? The Internet behemoth would...
More

SEEING IN 3D

THE CABLE SHOW-DAY 1

Snapshots from the first day of the National Cable & Telecommunications Association's annual gathering in Los Angeles on May 12. (Photos by John Staley)
THEY'VE GOT THE NEWS

FREEZE FRAME

Parties, meetings and events for the week of April 26.
DIVERSE BUNCH

FREEZE FRAME

Parties, conferences and events for the week of April 19.



Advertisement
About Us   |   Advertising Info   |   Site Map   |   Contact Us   |   Subscription   |   Affiliate Links   |   RSS
© 2011 NewBay Media, LLC. 28 East 28th Street, 12th floor, New York, NY 10016 T (212) 378-0400 F (212) 378-0470
Use of this website is subject to its Terms of Use | Privacy Policy