As an Amazon associate we earn from qualifying purchases. Thanks for your support!                               
×

Best TV Deals


Best Blu-ray Movie Deals, See All the Deals »
Top deals | New deals  
 All countries United States United Kingdom Canada Germany France Spain Italy Australia Netherlands Japan Mexico
Dan Curtis' Classic Monsters (Blu-ray)
$21.31
5 hrs ago
Creepshow: Complete Series - Seasons 1-4 (Blu-ray)
$68.47
 
Peanuts: Ultimate TV Specials Collection (Blu-ray)
$72.99
 
Demon Slayer: Kimetsu No Yaiba Hashira Training Arc (Blu-ray)
$54.45
 
Dan Curtis' Late-Night Mysteries (Blu-ray)
$19.99
 
Batman: The Complete Animated Series (Blu-ray)
$28.99
 
The Walking Dead: Dead City - Season Two (Blu-ray)
$18.99
 
Naruto Shippuden: Set 8 (Blu-ray)
$39.95
 
Chucky (Blu-ray)
$59.99
 
Curb Your Enthusiasm: The Complete Series (Blu-ray)
$122.99
 
Arcane: Season Two 4K (Blu-ray)
$45.99
 
The Penguin: The Complete First Season (Blu-ray)
$19.49
 
What's your next favorite movie?
Join our movie community to find out


Image from: Life of Pi (2012)

Go Back   Blu-ray Forum > Movies > TV Shows


Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
Old 12-04-2009, 10:50 PM   #1
tommyboy81 tommyboy81 is offline
Blu-ray Count
 
tommyboy81's Avatar
 
Oct 2007
Savannah, GA
17
93
3
2
Send a message via MSN to tommyboy81 Send a message via Yahoo to tommyboy81
Default Martin Scorsese's Boardwalk Empire

Figured the title would get your attention. Yep HBO and Martin Scorsese are putting out a HBO series called Boardwalk Empire. Saw a little preview on HBO about it. It's suppose to come out sometime next year
________________________________________________



A bustling little city by the seashore, totally dependent upon money spent by tourists, Atlantic City’s popularity rose in the early 20th century and peaked during Prohibition. The resort’s singular purpose of providing a good time to its visitors—whether lawful or not—demanded a single mentality to rule the town. Success of the local economy was the only ideology, and critics and do-gooders weren’t tolerated.

By 1900, a political juggernaut, funded by payoffs from gambling rooms, bars, and brothels, was firmly entrenched. For the next 70 years, Atlantic City was dominated by a partnership comprised of local politicians and racketeers. This unique alliance reached full bloom in the person of Enoch “Nucky” Johnson—the second of three bosses to head the Republican machine that dominated city politics and society.

In Boardwalk Empire, Nucky Johnson, Louis “the Commodore” Kuehnle, Frank “Hap” Farley, and Atlantic City itself spring to life in all their garish splendor. Author Nelson Johnson traces “AC” from its humble beginnings as Jonathan Pitney’s seaside health resort, through the notorious backroom politics and power struggles, to the city’s astonishing rebirth as an entertainment and gambling mecca where just about anything goes.

Boardwalk Empire is a colorful, irresistible history of a unique city and culture. Here is proof positive that truth is stranger—and more compelling—than fiction.

Here's the site in which I got the info
http://boardwalkempire.com/

______________________________________________



The following updated cast list includes a number of new and exciting additions, roughly in the announced order. Note that Plexus Publishing, Inc. is not involved in the production of Boardwalk Empire on HBO except as publisher of the book on which it is based and accepts no responsibility for errors or omissions in regard to any of the following details, which are subject to change without notice.

■Steve Buscemi starring as Nucky Johnson
■Kelly Macdonald as Margaret, an enterprising Irish immigrant
■Michael Pitt as Jimmy Darmody, an ambitious punk in Nucky’s gang
■Michael Shannon as federal agent Van Alden
■Stephen Graham as Al Capone
■Vincent Piazza as Lucky Luciano
■Aleksa Palladino as Angela Darmody, Jimmy’s wife
■Paul Sparks as a bootlegging funeral director
■Shea Whigham as Eli Johnson, a corrupt county sheriff
■Anthony Laciura as Louis Kessel
■Charisma Carpenter in an as-yet unnamed role
■Ann Marie Seall as Babette

Last edited by tommyboy81; 12-04-2009 at 10:54 PM.
  Reply With Quote
Old 12-04-2009, 10:55 PM   #2
bluRazor bluRazor is offline
Expert Member
 
bluRazor's Avatar
 
Oct 2008
twin city area
8
569
1
Default

sounds good.
  Reply With Quote
Old 12-04-2009, 10:55 PM   #3
saprano saprano is offline
Blu-ray Champion
 
saprano's Avatar
 
Oct 2007
Bronx, New York
495
2
9
Send a message via AIM to saprano
Default

The title sure did get my attention.

I'll watch anything he makes. woody allen to.
  Reply With Quote
Old 12-04-2009, 11:06 PM   #4
tommyboy81 tommyboy81 is offline
Blu-ray Count
 
tommyboy81's Avatar
 
Oct 2007
Savannah, GA
17
93
3
2
Send a message via MSN to tommyboy81 Send a message via Yahoo to tommyboy81
Default

here's alittle more story on the series
http://www.nj.com/entertainment/tv/i..._sets_jer.html
_______________________________

HBO’s next set of New Jersey wiseguys will be conducting business out of a parking lot in Brooklyn.



Steve Buscemi as Nucky Thompson“Boardwalk Empire,” which debuts sometime next year, deals with gangsters in Atlantic City at the dawn of Prohibition in the 1920s. (Steve Buscemi plays a character based on famed Atlantic City fixer Nucky Johnson.) It comes from both Martin Scorsese (who directed the pilot) and key “Sopranos” producer Terence Winter. But where Winter’s old boss, David Chase, insisted on filming Jersey exteriors in the Garden State whenever possible, “Boardwalk Empire” has recreated the classic Atlantic City boardwalk in Greenpoint.

Winter and his team — including a host of fellow “Sopranos” alums like director Tim Van Patten and production designer Bob Shaw — initially wanted to follow tradition and find a Jersey location.

The real Atlantic City boardwalk is too built up and modern to be usable, but Van Patten says, “Asbury Park was very tempting. Existing architecture on the water.”

In the end, production wound up in New York because the state provided a 15 percent larger tax break, and because the depressed real estate market gave them a good lease price on an undeveloped Greenpoint lot.

But no matter what state “Boardwalk Empire” was filmed in, the boardwalk set that Shaw and his team constructed — and which reporters got to tour on Monday afternoon — is among the more impressive exteriors ever built for a TV series. (The town on “Deadwood” and the whole of “Rome” are the only ones I can think of that come close.)

The boardwalk isn’t an exact recreation of the real thing circa 1920, but Winter describes it as “historically accurate in that the architecture is what the architecture of the period looked like ... it’s an amalgam of what was there.”

Nucky Johnson, for instance, lived in the Ritz-Carlton Hotel, which was a plain brick building. Buscemi’s character (named Nucky Thompson, so Winter won’t have to be completely bound by history) also will live in the Ritz, but the show’s version is modeled on the more ornate Glenham hotel of the period.

The set features more than a dozen storefronts and other exteriors, including the Ritz, Fralinger’s Salt Water Taffy, a fortune teller’s space and a hospital-turned-tourist-destination where people could look at premature babies in incubators for a 25-cent admission.

Buscemi is the only “Sopranos” veteran in the cast — other actors include Dabney Coleman, Kelly Macdonald, Michael Pitt, Michael Shannon and Michael K. Williams from “The Wire” — because Winter wanted to help distinguish the two series. For the same reason, he chose to write about Nucky’s era when HBO brought him a copy of Nelson Johnson’s “Boardwalk Empire” book, which takes a more sweeping look at Atlantic City history.

“The Skinny D’Amato years of the 1950s started to feel too close to ‘The Sopranos,’ ” he says. “I worried, ‘This is going to feel like Tony’s dad’s show.”

Skinny’s Atlantic City would have been simpler to recreate than Nucky’s, but the production team was excited by the challenge of going back almost 90 years.

Though the boardwalk sits on pillars above several tons of trucked-in sand, the Atlantic Ocean and part of the skyline will be created through visual effects. The Empire State Building looms in the background of the arcade set at the end of the boardwalk, but can be digitally erased if it turns up in a shot.

Advances in digital effects make a show like this possible. When Winter was writing the script, he would describe lavish backdrops and scenes with dozens, if not hundreds, of extras, never expecting to be able to pull it off on a TV budget.

“Then I saw (the HBO miniseries) ‘John Adams,’ ” he says, “and there’s Paul Giamatti going to Versailles,” and he realized technology allowed for the scope he and Scorsese wanted.

Still, “this would have been a lot cheaper if (Nucky’s) office had been two blocks off the boardwalk,” Van Patten admits.

As with any period piece, the intermingling of past and present can be disorienting.

The extras wander around in heavy wool and argyle, yet stop to pose for digital pictures with each other. A crew member with a walkie-talkie takes a catnap under the boardwalk, briefly creating the illusion of the Atlantic City of a different era.

Some of the storefront sets are big enough to film scenes inside, but most interior filming is done at a nearby studio.

“Building sets is just fine,” says Shaw (who also designed the original “Mad Men” sets, including the Sterling Cooper offices), “but location shooting is sheer terror” because of modern architecture, cars and other things they have to shoot around or else hide digitally. “If a script mentions someone’s home, you live in fear of the day when we have to show them walking out the front door.”

Scorsese filmed the pilot months ago. Van Patten is simultaneously directing the next two episodes right now, and production of the first season (the pilot, plus 11 additional episodes) will continue for months, going right through the winter on a location next to the East River and its winds.

“I believe this is the first outdoor set built in New York City since the 1920s, or possibly the teens,” says Shaw. “Give us time, maybe we’ll find out why the movie business was wise to move out to California.”



  Reply With Quote
Old 12-04-2009, 11:08 PM   #5
tommyboy81 tommyboy81 is offline
Blu-ray Count
 
tommyboy81's Avatar
 
Oct 2007
Savannah, GA
17
93
3
2
Send a message via MSN to tommyboy81 Send a message via Yahoo to tommyboy81
Default

Rumor is Scorsese is directing the Pilot.
  Reply With Quote
Old 12-04-2009, 11:27 PM   #6
Offender_Mullet Offender_Mullet is offline
Blu-ray Samurai
 
Offender_Mullet's Avatar
 
Nov 2008
Illinois
6
4
10
Thumbs up

Great news! "The Master" is back to gangsters.
  Reply With Quote
Old 12-05-2009, 06:44 PM   #7
Decado Decado is offline
Expert Member
 
Dec 2009
Default

I'm really glad to see HBO getting back to shows with interesting premises and settings. Hopefully this show and A Game of Thrones won't share the same fate as Deadwood, Carnivale and Rome :|
  Reply With Quote
Old 12-05-2009, 07:23 PM   #8
SquidPuppet SquidPuppet is offline
Blu-ray Duke
 
SquidPuppet's Avatar
 
Dec 2007
Club Loop
277
27
Default

Tommy, is this a series, or a miniseries?
  Reply With Quote
Old 12-05-2009, 08:11 PM   #9
tommyboy81 tommyboy81 is offline
Blu-ray Count
 
tommyboy81's Avatar
 
Oct 2007
Savannah, GA
17
93
3
2
Send a message via MSN to tommyboy81 Send a message via Yahoo to tommyboy81
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by SquidPuppet View Post
Tommy, is this a series, or a miniseries?
From what I've heard its a series. I'll confirm it when I hear something. Or see it.
  Reply With Quote
Old 12-05-2009, 08:22 PM   #10
tommyboy81 tommyboy81 is offline
Blu-ray Count
 
tommyboy81's Avatar
 
Oct 2007
Savannah, GA
17
93
3
2
Send a message via MSN to tommyboy81 Send a message via Yahoo to tommyboy81
Default

It's a Series

Trying to find everything I can so if these are the same as I posted earlier then sorry.

http://www.hbo.com/news/

Tricky Timing
Martin Scorsese has had a lot of experience depicting mobsters in various eras. But even for the master, creating a giant 1920s seashore on the riverbank of Brooklyn makes for a pretty ambitious start to the new HBO series 'Boardwalk Empire.' Production designer Bob Shaw — who also worked on 'The Sopranos' — describes the never-ending battle against anachronism like this: "Building sets is just fine, but location shooting is sheer terror. If a script mentions someone's home, you live in fear of the day when we have to show them walking out the front door." There are other reasons to dread the great outdoors as well — especially when you're shooting on the windy East River in the middle of January. "I believe this is the first outdoor set built in New York City since the 1920s, or possibly the teens. Give us time, maybe we'll find out why the movie business was wise to move out to California." (photo: Dimitrios Kambouris/WireImage.com


http://www.hbo.com/news/archives/2007_03_09.html

Good Fellas
Martin Scorsese is reteaming with Mark Wahlberg — but not for a 'Departed' sequel (yet). The two have signed on to develop (as executive producers) a series for HBO about Atlantic City. Based on the book 'Boardwalk Empire: The Birth, High Times, and Corruption of Atlantic City' by Nelson Johnson, the series will follow the birth and growth of Atlantic City — from seaside resort to gambling mecca, and all the backroom struggles that entails. (photo: Kevin Mazur/WireImage.com)

http://www.hbo.com/news/archives/2009_11_20.html

It's Bottoms Up for Buscemi
Steve Buscemi is headed back to Jersey, but this time he'll be playing a gangster circa 1920, rather than Tony Soprano's ill-fated cousin. Buscemi is currently filming the role of Enoch "Nucky" Johnson in HBO's new series 'Boardwalk Empire,' about Atlantic City during Prohibition. Nucky is based on a real person, but has been fictionalized by creator Terence Winter who describes him as AC's "beloved treasurer. He was the guy who really ran everything....He went from being a corrupt politician who basically engaged in low-level election rigging, to the big leagues of alcohol," says Winter. "The world changed completely." (photo: Astrid Stawiarz/Getty Images)
  Reply With Quote
Old 03-17-2010, 04:19 AM   #11
tommyboy81 tommyboy81 is offline
Blu-ray Count
 
tommyboy81's Avatar
 
Oct 2007
Savannah, GA
17
93
3
2
Send a message via MSN to tommyboy81 Send a message via Yahoo to tommyboy81
Default

new trailer.

http://www.nj.com/entertainment/tv/i...e_trailer.html
  Reply With Quote
Old 03-24-2010, 07:54 PM   #12
WyldeMan45 WyldeMan45 is offline
Banned
 
WyldeMan45's Avatar
 
Oct 2008
Western Washington
49
15
Default



HBO’s ‘Boardwalk Empire’ Cost $50 Million: How They Gonna Make It Back?
Quote:
Ever since David Chase blacked out Tony Soprano's life mid-meal, HBO has been searching for the next Sopranos—a search rendered more desperate after AMC found it. So now, HBO is on the hunt for the next Mad Men, and it looks like it might have found it in Boardwalk Empire, a Sopranos/Mad Men mash-up that effectively cribs from both gangster and period genres. The first promo teaser hit the web yesterday, and it looks like the most cinematic show HBO has done to date. It all makes sense, since Martin Scorsese directed the pilot and will have a major creative role in the series' genesis. This morning, Page Six ran an item pricing the pilot episode at $50 million, easily making it HBO's most expensive show ever. Even in Movieland, that's a fairly hefty price tag. You'd have your marquee stars, maybe some CG, and a major marketing push. But in television terms, Empire probably needs to be a Sopranos-size phenomenon to ever recoup that kind of investment.

Set at the dawn of Prohibition, Boardwalk Empire follows Atlantic City’s birth and the gangsters, bootleggers, and rum-runners who spawned it. Steve Buscemi stars as the gangster Nucky Johnson, and Gretchen Mol, Michael Shannon, and Michael Pitt also appear. With Scorsese behind the camera, and Sopranos scribe Terence Winter as creator, the show’s pedigree is unrivaled. HBO has already proven it can do crime better than anyone in entertainment, and it has the luxury of a post-Mad Men TV landscape, with everyone just eating up that show’s period details.

But to put the $50 million price tag into perspective, the two-hour Lost pilot was the most expensive in ABC’s history, and it reportedly cost the network somewhere between $10 and $14 million. Page Six’s source does acknowledge that the rest of the series will drop in cost, “since they’ll reuse props, sets and costumes.” But in an age when many of us stream our shows online (especially our paid cable shows), it’s still a major risk. The last time HBO funneled this kind of cash into a show, it lasted just two seasons. That show was Rome, and HBO only spent $85 million for the first season (although the BBC did contribute $15 million). Although execs claimed that show’s two-season run as premeditated, insiders claim it was money that led to the fall of Rome, which Broadcasting & Cable called “notoriously expensive.” In the show’s afterlife, HBO has done everything they can to recoup their money spent by airing “sanitized” episodes of the show in Italy, ultimately angering that country’s audiences with its historical deviations.

However, HBO may not be modeling their expectations on The Sopranos, but another historical epic with a different legendary filmmaker as its driving promotional force. Band of Brothers was the ten-part, WWII miniseries that cost the network $125 million to produce, winning it six Emmy Awards and attracting some of the best ratings in network history. Of course, it had Steven Spielberg and Tom Hanks’ names and imprint all over it, which might explain why it’s currently the 19th highest grossing DVD of all time. Boardwalk Empire was created by Terence Winter and is loosely based off Nelson Johnson’s book of the same name, but this is “Martin Scorsese’s new show.”

So what’s HBO spending all this money on? Back in November, Speakeasy payed a visit to the elaborate and minutely detailed Brooklyn set:

the built-from-scratch boardwalk set took three months to construct and features era-appropriate storefronts for fake businesses such as the Canton Tea Parlor (serving chop suey, of course), a spiffed-up Ritz Carlton, Babette’s Supper Club (where Thompson & Co ring in the start of Prohibition), and one of Winter’s favorites, a baby incubator display, which passersby could check out premature babies (”Come and see babies that weigh less than 3 lbs — 25 cents!”). Truckloads of sand were driven in to recreate the Atlantic City coastline, and a giant green screen (that’s actually blue) faces the length of the 300-foot boardwalk, which will allow the production team to digitally add in the ocean later.

Sounds expensive to us! The bottom line is, HBO probably wouldn’t be spending this kind of money on a show if it wasn’t going to be incredible (so far, only three episodes have been shot), and as we mentioned earlier, they’re desperate to take back the internet from Matthew Weiner and John Hamm. It’s been a while since HBO’s Sopranos/Six Feet Under/The Wire drama heyday, but if Boardwalk Empire lives up to its budget, the tides could be shifting. This can’t hurt, either.
  Reply With Quote
Old 10-18-2011, 03:50 AM   #13
Bizdady Bizdady is offline
Blu-ray Duke
 
Bizdady's Avatar
 
Nov 2007
8 1 8 Biatch!! L.A.
21
209
1
38
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by MosHighDef View Post
come on guys lets keep this thread alive at the top instead of these wack shows everyones into..

How about last nights episode? It will probably be the slowest episode of the season but it still setup some nice stuff. Commodre got a stroke and then beatup hahaahah. Anyone notice in next weeks preview that the guy with half a face has sex with jimmys wife?
Can't say I didn't see that coming. Great ending to tonights episode, I love how Jimmys mom Was laying down the law on the commodore.
  Reply With Quote
Old 10-18-2011, 04:07 AM   #14
bainbridge's_stache bainbridge's_stache is offline
Special Member
 
Dec 2010
412
1772
259
Default

I'm looking forward to seeing how Nucky will take advantage of the Commodore's stroke and testing Jimmy on his assumption of the 'family business'.

I also wonder when Chalky will finally lash out at Nuck or the Klan for all of the recent transgressions. I could see it boiling over in all of his scenes, but especially that last shot in the shed.

Last edited by bainbridge's_stache; 10-18-2011 at 04:13 AM.
  Reply With Quote
Old 10-18-2011, 05:02 AM   #15
BJ Blazkowicz BJ Blazkowicz is offline
Senior Member
 
BJ Blazkowicz's Avatar
 
Jun 2011
-
-
-
Default

It looks like Jimmy's supply that he was going to sell Manny Horvitz is now gone in that explosion. Should make for some suspenseful storytelling given Horvtiz's warning that his freezer was full of pieces of men who have tried to screw him. Jimmy took his money up front. With Nucky's supply now also coming through Philly via Lucky and Lansky things should get very interesting over there.
I think eventually this season Chalky is going to seek revenge on his own against the Klan and we might also get a clash between Jimmy and Sleater.
  Reply With Quote
Old 10-24-2011, 05:09 AM   #16
Bizdady Bizdady is offline
Blu-ray Duke
 
Bizdady's Avatar
 
Nov 2007
8 1 8 Biatch!! L.A.
21
209
1
38
Default

[Show spoiler] omg that scalping scene was awesome! Eli going crazy!


Can't wait for next episode.
  Reply With Quote
Old 10-24-2011, 06:53 PM   #17
jimbean jimbean is offline
Expert Member
 
jimbean's Avatar
 
Jul 2010
UK
109
520
Default

Best episode yet i reckon.
  Reply With Quote
Old 10-26-2011, 08:02 AM   #18
FC THE P.COCK FC THE P.COCK is offline
Junior Member
 
FC THE P.COCK's Avatar
 
Sep 2011
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by jimbean View Post
Best episode yet i reckon.
Agreed, best one yet. Looks like it will start to get more MOB organized, in the coming weeks.
  Reply With Quote
Old 11-07-2011, 03:59 PM   #19
MosHighDef MosHighDef is offline
Banned
 
Feb 2008
socal
38
112
12
Default

bump from the depths.... i guess people on this website care more about garbage like fake zombies and vampire diaries... sad.
  Reply With Quote
Old 11-07-2011, 06:14 PM   #20
Lemmy Lugosi Lemmy Lugosi is offline
Blu-ray Ninja
 
Lemmy Lugosi's Avatar
 
Sep 2010
In a vault full of electric guitars and Batarangs.
1
8
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by MosHighDef View Post
bump from the depths.... i guess people on this website care more about garbage like fake zombies and vampire diaries... sad.
I like Boardwalk Empire just fine, I really do. I watch/DVR it every week. And I think it's a very high quality show in every respect; scripting, casting, sets, music, etc.

That said, The Walking Dead is usually a much more thrilling watch, and it has the same good qualities I mentioned about BE.

Add to this the fact that last nights' ep. of BE was pretty lackluster, and it likely deserved the "drop" down the page.

I love both shows, but I'm glad I don't have to choose between the two.....if I did, I'd choose The Walking Dead in a heartbeat, even though Boardwalk Empire is a bit more cerebral. TWD just satisifes my TV needs more.
  Reply With Quote
Reply
Go Back   Blu-ray Forum > Movies > TV Shows

Similar Threads
thread Forum Thread Starter Replies Last Post
Silence (2016) Movies blu_chaplin 369 05-25-2023 06:15 PM
What Is Martin Scorsese's Best Movie Directed So Far? Movie Polls Witch King of Angmar 48 08-22-2021 06:20 PM
HBO Picks up Scorsese's 'Boardwalk Empire' Movies broganreynik 8 09-08-2009 01:47 PM
Martin Scorsese's SHUTTER ISLAND looks awesome!! Movies Sussudio 17 04-01-2009 12:45 PM
Anyone have any information on Boardwalk Empire Movies ZackL 0 10-30-2008 08:35 AM


Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump


All times are GMT. The time now is 05:32 AM.