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DR.MID-NITE
04-19-2006, 03:36 PM
NBC is showing why they are going to be kings of the TV ratings when on May 21....The sequel to the made-for-tv miniseries 10.5 airs....




NEW YORK – April 19, 2006 – Just when you thought it was safe to go back to the West Coast, NBC returns with the sequel to its smash-hit disaster film "10.5" with the premiere of the thrill ride "10.5: Apocalypse" (Sunday, May 21 and Tuesday, May 23 at 9-11 p.m. ET/PT).
The two-part movie event features returning stars Emmy Award winner Kim Delaney ("NYPD Blue" and "CSI Miami"), Emmy Award and Golden Globe winner Beau Bridges ("The Ballad of Jack and Rose") and David Cubitt ("Medium")-who reprise their roles as controversial scientist Dr. Samantha Hill, the President of the United States, and Hill's boyfriend and fellow scientist Dr. Jordan Fisher, respectively. They are joined by an impressive roster of new faces to include Dean Cain ("The Perfect Husband: The Laci Peterson Story"); Oliver Hudson ("The Mountain"); Garcelle Beauvais-Nilon ("NYPD Blue"); Carlos Bernard ("24"); Frank Langella ("Superman Returns"); Carly Pope ("Popular"); Barbara Eve Harris ("Ignition"); Melissa Sue Anderson ("Little House on the Prairie"); and Tamara Hope ("Shall We Dance").
In "10.5: Apocalypse," the deadly seismic activities that peaked with a 10.5 earthquake and devastated the West Coast in the first miniseries have altered the core structure of the earth and now threaten to jeopardize North America and the Western hemisphere, causing catastrophic events. Filmed exclusively in HD, "10.5: Apocalypse" achieves a whole new level of visual effects and style that has not previously been achieved on network television.
In a desperate bid to save lives – and the country – President Hollister (Bridges) calls once again upon one of the nation's top seismologists, controversial scientist Dr. Samantha Hill (Delaney) and her supervisor and former boyfriend Dr. Jordan Fisher (Cubitt), to interpret the latest onslaught of quakes. At a loss for how to interpret this continued seismic and now volcanic disruption, Hill re-discovers her seismologist father's (Langella, as Dr. Earl Hill) much-discredited hypothesis from years past that if correct, predicts even greater ruin and a complete altering of the North American Continent – a Continental Divide of the land mass.
Joining them in their valiant attempt to save lives is FEMA field commander Natalie Warner (Beauvais-Nilon), who is eager to once again prove herself in the field after a poor decision a year ago caused the death of some men under her command. Despite the concerns of her mother Stacy (Barbara Eve Harris, "Ignition"), who is the Acting Director of the organization, Natalie is sent to co-run the field operation. Also called into action is FEMA's untested network of volunteer rescue teams that include firefighters Brad Malloy (Cain), a cocky and charismatic bachelor hungry to join the action and his brother Will (Hudson), who is more level-headed and torn between his obligations to his country, brother and new wife, Laura (Pope). Offering assistance and aid on the front lines is Dr. Miguel Garcia (Bernard), a warm and intense field medic and Amy Hollister (Hope), a young and idealistic civilian Red Cross volunteer and daughter of the President. Rounding out the cast, Anderson plays the First Lady of the United States. "10.5 Apocalypse" is produced by Pearl Pictures in association with Jaffe/Braunstein Films. Howard Braunstein, Michael Jaffe ("Elvis"), and Gary Pearl ("Liberty Stands Still") – whose childhood nightmare served as the basis of the original "10.5" – are executive producers. John Lafia ("Child's Play," "The Dead Zone") is writer, director and co-executive producer.

:p

Peter Paltridge
04-19-2006, 03:42 PM
Why don't they cut out all the boring stuff and just make it 2 hours of landmarks blowing up?

Temple Fugate
04-19-2006, 03:55 PM
You fooled me for a minute. I thought the network had finally found a sitcom to replace Friends and Seinfeld.


Filmed exclusively in HD, "10.5: Apocalypse" achieves a whole new level of visual effects and style that has not previously been achieved on network television.I have little faith in press releases that don't bother to check if they used the same verb twice in a sentence.

10.5 was a "smash hit?" I guess you can't keep people away from a disaster flick. If the continent DOES split in half, I'll be watching. Never liked what I saw of 10.5, though. The president was unconvincing (something about his squirmy voice) and aside from the cool mass destruction, the melodrama stole precious air time.

Lord Dalek
04-19-2006, 04:06 PM
Oh god, not THIS again.

TnAdct1
04-19-2006, 11:20 PM
..and the executives at NBC wonder why people aren't watching their network. :rolleyes:

BigLouMan20
04-20-2006, 12:18 AM
Expect for Conan:)

Condiment King
04-20-2006, 05:01 PM
You fooled me for a minute. I thought the network had finally found a sitcom to replace Friends and Seinfeld.
NBC already has Scrubs and The Office. Millions love My Name is Earl, even though I'm not one of them. This might just be my extreme hatred of Friends talking though. I'd say NBC has the best looking sitcom lineup of all of the networks, considering ABC's, FOX's, WB's, and UPN's are awful, while CBS's is hit or miss.

But this is all off topic, we all know television movies suck, and the premise for 10.5 is terribly unoriginal and contrived.

Aquadementia
04-20-2006, 09:01 PM
I can barely get through the synopsis.

So it's like a tectonic plate is stalking the attractive seismologist who rejected it, destroying houses, cities, continental divides, until the handsome ex-boyfriend stands up to it, the only man who can tame her earth shaking passion?
NBC already has Scrubs and The Office. Millions love My Name is Earl, even though I'm not one of them. This might just be my extreme hatred of Friends talking though. I'd say NBC has the best looking sitcom lineup of all of the networks, considering ABC's, FOX's, WB's, and UPN's are awful, while CBS's is hit or miss. I agree, except I love My Name Is Earl.
In the time between Seinfeld and Scrubs, I almost never watched the network.