Английская Википедия:Fallen Angels (American TV series)
Шаблон:Short description Шаблон:About Шаблон:Use mdy dates Шаблон:Infobox television Fallen Angels is an American neo-noir anthology television series that ran from August 1, 1993 to November 19, 1995 on the Showtime pay cable station and was produced by Propaganda Films. No first-run episodes were shown in 1994.
The series was executive produced by Sydney Pollack and produced by Steve Golin and others. The theme song was written by Elmer Bernstein and the original music was written by Peter Bernstein.
Each episode is based on a story by a noted hardboiled crime writer, including Raymond Chandler, Jim Thompson, Cornell Woolrich, James Ellroy, Evan Hunter, Mickey Spillane, Dashiell Hammett and Walter Mosley.
Period torch songs by performers like Patti Page and Billie Holiday were used periodically.
In Europe, the show is known as Perfect Crimes and shown in France on Canal +, and in the United Kingdom.
Crew
Directors:
- Peter Bogdanovich
- Tom Cruise
- Alfonso Cuarón
- John Dahl
- Keith Gordon
- Tom Hanks
- Agnieszka Holland
- Tim Hunter
- Phil Joanou
- Jonathan Kaplan
- Michael Lehmann
- Jim McBride
- Steven Soderbergh
- Kiefer Sutherland
Writers:
- Jon Robin Baitz
- Scott Frank
- Steven Katz
- Don Macpherson
- C. Gaby Mitchell
- Frank Pugliese
- Howard A. Rodman
- Allan Scott
- David Siegel & Scott McGehee
- Amanda Silver
- Alan Trustman
- Richard C. Wesley
- Donald E. Westlake
Guest stars
First Season (1993)
- Gary Oldman, Gabrielle Anwar, Dan Hedaya, Wayne Knight and Meg Tilly
- Tom Hanks, Marg Helgenberger, Jon Polito and Bruno Kirby
- Joe Mantegna, Vinessa Shaw, Patrick Breen, J.E. Freeman, Kathy Kinney, Peter Gallagher and Bonnie Bedelia
- Nancy Travis, John C. Reilly and Isabella Rossellini
- Laura Dern, Alan Rickman, Robin Bartlett, Michael Vartan and Diane Lane
- Gary Busey, Tim Matheson, David Bottomley, Aimee Graham, Dick Miller, Elaine Hendrix, Ken Lerner and James Woods
Second Season (1995)
- Mädchen Amick, Johnathon Schaech, Danny Trejo, Edward Bunker and Kiefer Sutherland
- Brendan Fraser, Bruce Ramsay and Peter Coyote
- Eric Stoltz, Richard Portnow, Estelle Harris and Jennifer Grey
- Dana Delany, Marcia Gay Harden, William Petersen, Adam Baldwin and Benicio del Toro
- Bill Pullman, Dan Hedaya, Kim Coates, Jon Favreau, Dean Norris, Jack Nance, Bert Remsen, Grace Zabriskie and Heather Graham
- Miguel Ferrer, Grace Zabriskie, Lucinda Jenney, Peter Dobson and Peter Berg
- Michael Rooker, Laura San Giacomo, Peter Berg, Arnold Vosloo, Kristin Minter, Darren McGavin and Christopher Lloyd
- Danny Glover, Kelly Lynch, Ron Rifkin, Dan Hedaya, Miguel Sandoval and Valeria Golino
- Bill Nunn, Giancarlo Esposito, Cynda Williams and Roger Guenveur Smith[1]
Episodes
Season 1 (1993)
Season 2 (1995)
Reprints
Stories from the second season are reprinted in various volumes:
- "Flypaper" in The Big Knockover, and several Hammett collections.
- "Dancing Detective" in the Ibooks edition of Rear Window.
- "Professional Man" published in New Crimes, edited by Maxim Jakabowski.
- "No Escape!" published in As Tough as they Come, edited by Will Oursler.
- "Tomorrow I Die" in A Century of Noir.
- "Red Wind," in several Chandler collections.
Reception
When it debuted, Fallen Angels received mixed to critical notices. In his review for the Associated Press, Scott Williams wrote, "We're asking a lot of TV to deliver entertainment about that stylish, moral abyss. Fallen Angels delivers. It lets us look over the edge and measure our souls against the darkness".[2] The Chicago Sun-Times gave the series two out of four stars and Ginny Holbert wrote, "Part of the problem is the series' arch, self-conscious obsession with style. Instead of a '90s interpretation of film noir, Fallen Angels offers contrived, full-color cliche noir, replete with cocked fedoras, plumes of curling smoke and harsh sunlight sliced by venetian blinds".[3] In his review for The New York Times, John J. O'Connor called it, "uneven but diverting, even when just hovering around film-school level".[4] In his review for the Houston Chronicle, Louis B. Parks wrote, "The big problem with film noir homages is they usually overdo the ingredients, with none of the subtlety of the great originals. Fallen Angels has a touch of that. But the directors and actors play straight, and the adaptations, taken from the real McCoy writers, are pretty good stuff".[5]
In his review for The Washington Post, Tom Shales wrote, "Creating period pieces out of their period seems to be fairly easy now for the gifted artisans of Hollywood. Even by today's commonplace high standards, however, the look and feel of the six Fallen Angels films seem transportingly authentic and sensuous, stylized in ways that evoke the milieu without spoofing it. Occasionally, the films veer into the arch and ridiculous, but overall, they at least look darn good".[6] Newsweek magazine's David Gates wrote, "no show this summer will do a better job of whisking you away from the increasingly unacceptable '90s. These half hours are all too short".[7] Entertainment Weekly magazine's Lisa Schwarzbaum wrote, "One unintended result of all this happy, naughty cigarette-puffing, however, is that, at their weakest, these films look like the work of boys (and don't be fooled, this is a boys' fantasy production) dressed up in their dads' big suits".[8]
Home media
In the United States the first season was released in a two volume VHS set. The second season was released in Europe (DVD region 2) in 1999 and Australia (DVD region 4) under the title Perfect Crimes.
Other media
Grove Press released a companion book, Six Noir Tales Told for Television, (1993) with all the original stories and the screenplays from the first season. A soundtrack was also released.
References
External links
- Шаблон:IMDb title.
- Fallen Angels at Thrilling Detective Guide
- Fallen Angels Шаблон:Webarchive cinematography article at Entertainment Weekly
- Fallen Angels film clip at YouTube ("Dead End for Delia" segment)
- Английская Википедия
- 1990s American anthology television series
- 1993 American television series debuts
- 1995 American television series endings
- Neo-noir television series
- Showtime (TV network) original programming
- Television series by CBS Studios
- Television series by Universal Television
- Television series set in the 1940s
- Television series set in the 1950s
- Television shows set in Los Angeles
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