Dead Like Me
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Dead Like Me | |
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Dead Like Me's intertitle |
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Format | Bangsian fantasy Dramedy workplace comedy |
Created by | Bryan Fuller |
Starring | Ellen Muth Laura Harris Callum Blue Jasmine Guy with Cynthia Stevenson and Mandy Patinkin |
Theme music composer | Stewart Copeland |
Country of origin | United States |
No. of seasons | 2 |
No. of episodes | 29 (List of episodes) |
Production | |
Executive producer(s) |
John Masius |
Running time | approx. 47 minutes |
Broadcast | |
Original channel | Showtime |
Original run | June 27, 2003 – October 31, 2004 |
External links | |
IMDb profile | |
TV.com summary |
Dead Like Me is an American television comedy-drama starring Ellen Muth and Mandy Patinkin as grim reapers in Seattle, Washington. The show was created by Bryan Fuller for the Showtime network, where it ran for two seasons in 2003 and 2004 before cancellation. Fuller left the show after five episodes due to creative differences; he went on to co-create Wonderfalls and create Pushing Daisies. Creative direction of Dead Like Me was taken over by executive producers John Masius and Stephen Godchaux. SCI FI has rerun the series on Tuesday evenings;[1] the series is also being rerun Sundays at 2:00 AM on Detroit's local WADL.[2] A direct-to-DVD movie has completed filming and is to be released in 2009;[3] depending on the movie's success, the series may be picked back up again.[4]
Eighteen-year-old Georgia "George" Lass (played by Muth) is the show's protagonist and narrator. George dies early in the pilot episode, leaving her mother (Cynthia Stevenson) and rest of her family behind at a point when her relationships with them were on shaky ground. She becomes one of the "undead", a grim reaper. George soon learns that a reaper's job is to remove the souls of people, preferably right before they die, and escort them until they move on into their afterlife. The show explores the "lives" and experiences of a small team of such reapers — led by Rube (played by Patinkin) — as well as the post-mortem changes in George and her family as they deal with George's death.
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[edit] Synopsis
Georgia Lass is aloof and emotionally distant from her family and shied away from her life. After dropping out of college, she takes a job at Happy Time Temporary Services. On her lunch break of her first day, she is hit and killed by a toilet seat from the de-orbiting of the Mir space station.[5] She is informed shortly after her death that, rather than moving on to the "great beyond", she will become a grim reaper in the "external influence" division[6], responsible for reaping souls of people who die in accidents (many of which are of Rube Goldberg-style complexity[7][8]), suicides and homicides.
Through the first season, George has trouble adjusting to her circumstances: collecting souls, while holding a day job at Happy Time. By the second season, she has mostly adjusted to her new role, though still has unresolved issues with her life and her afterlife.
George's family is struggling to deal with her death. Her mother, Joy, is depressed, and visibly repressing it, while Clancy, her father, is cheating on Joy. George's sister, Reggie, acts out — stealing toilet seats from neighbors and school, and hanging them on a tree — before being sent to therapy by Joy. She clings to the belief that George visits her, but is starting to lie to cover this up. At the start of the second season, the family began to break apart as divorce proceedings began.
Nearly all of the main characters have some form of depression, however, they cope with it in different ways: Mason resorts to alcohol and drugs, Daisy puts on a veneer of perkiness, and Roxy is physically and verbally aggressive. Rube and George are more open about their sadness.
[edit] Cast and characters
[edit] Reapers
- Georgia "George" Lass (Ellen Muth): The show's protagonist, 18 years-old, and a college dropout. In addition to being a grim reaper she has a day job at Happy Time Temporary Services, under the assumed name "Millie Hagen". She was killed when a toilet seat from the Mir space station fell on her.
- Rube Sofer (Mandy Patinkin): The head of the group of reapers. He is responsible for passing out reaping assignments, nearly always on yellow post-it notes. He becomes a father figure for George (whom he calls "Peanut") in her grim-reaping afterlife, and had a daughter named Rose ("Rosie"). The manner of his death is never revealed.
- Mason (Callum Blue): A drug/alcohol addict and thief, but a likable person. He acts as an "older brother" figure to George, and is attracted to Daisy. He is originally from London, UK, and he died in 1966 by drilling a hole in his head to achieve the permanent high.
- Roxy Harvey (Jasmine Guy): A strong-willed, sassy, independent character. Her day job is initially as a meter maid, but she later becomes a cop. While physically the second oldest reaper in the group, Roxy is the second newest to the afterlife. She was strangled to death with leg warmers – which she had invented – in 1982 by a jealous roommate.
- Daisy Adair (Laura Harris): A spoiled actress who often tells stories about her (alleged) sexual escapades with classic film stars. She died on December 13, 1938 of asphyxiation/smoke inhalation in Marietta, Georgia, (supposedly on the set of Gone with the Wind). Her last thought before she died was, "Why has nobody ever loved me?"
- Betty Rohmer (Rebecca Gayheart): A confident, well-adjusted reaper. She keeps Polaroids of each of the souls she reaped in department store shopping bags, organized by personality type. George begins to bond with her early in the first season, but she "hitches a ride" with one of the souls George had reaped and is never seen again. She died in 1926 while cliff-diving with her fiancé. Rube was present at her death as shown in the season 1 episode "Reaping Havoc".
[edit] Family
- Reggie Lass (Britt McKillip): George's younger sister. Though George ignored her while she was alive, Reggie is very much affected by the death of her sister. She believes that George's ghost still roams about the city and visits their home from time to time (technically, she is right). Due to her eccentric, borderline-pathological way of grieving her sister's death, Reggie is placed in therapy.
- Joy Lass (Cynthia Stevenson): George's mother. A Virgo who has a pathological fear of balloons and who hates the word moist because "it sounds pornographic". She likes to have order, rules, and control in her life. Other characters in the show, such as her own mother, mention that her obsession with control is how she copes with denial of her own out-of-control life: her daughter George's death; her younger daughter's rather unconventional style of grieving George's death; and her divorce from Clancy Lass.
- Clancy Lass (Greg Kean): George's father. He is an English Professor at the University of Washington. His relationship with Joy begins to seriously deteriorate after the death of George. He has an affair with one of his Shakespeare class students, which becomes the final death knell to his marriage.
[edit] Happy Time Temporary Services
- Delores Herbig (Christine Willes): George's boss. Delores dislikes George, but becomes friends with "Millie", for whom she becomes something of a maternal figure, offering advice and support, and on one occasion bailing Millie out of jail. Delores is optimistic, dynamic, and motivated; she has an active Internet presence through various social and dating sites, and runs a website (her home life on webcam) called 'Getting Things Done With Delores'.
- Crystal Smith (Crystal Dahl): Happy Time's mysterious receptionist whose Happy Time record indicates that she speaks several languages and previously served as a special forces operative in Southeast Asia[9]. Crystal once helped the reapers organize into computer files a collection of souls' last thoughts[10]. She steals office supplies, specifically Post-it notes. She also dressed as a reaper for Halloween. There is a strong suggestion that Crystal is either a reaper herself or is otherwise aware of their activities.
[edit] Misc. characters
- Kiffany (Patricia Idlette): The Reaper's usual waitress at "Der Waffel House." She is a quiet observer of the Reaper group. It is hinted[who?] that she knows more about them than she should. She is said[who?] to be psychic.
[edit] Episodes
Each episode lasts approximately 45 minutes and usually follows the events of a single day.
[edit] DVD releases
Season | Release dates | Includes |
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Season 1 |
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Season 2 |
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[edit] Direct-to-DVD film
On April 18, 2007, MGM announced that they are developing several direct-to-DVD movies and sequels. Included among them is a brand new film based on Dead Like Me. [15] The movie is to be set two years after the last series episode.[16] The movie's release date was originally set for July 22, 2008, but was pushed back to 2009.[17]
[edit] Grim reapers
In the world of Dead Like Me, Grim reapers do not wear black cloaks or carry scythes (cloaks and scythes are only featured during the opening credits), but their role remains traditional: they remove the souls of the living shortly before death and escort them into their afterlife.
Death has a list of who is scheduled to die and when. Each Reaper is given a non-transferable assignment to collect particular souls.[18] Sometimes finding that assignment is difficult because the Reapers only receive the first (and sometimes middle) initial and last name of the person about to die, the place, and time of death. That person must be reaped at the time of their intended death, or the soul will remain in the dead body until reaped.
If the events surrounding a person's death are interfered with by a reaper and they do not die at their appointed time, the soul will "wither and die and rot inside" them.[18] Deaths can be stopped without risk to the soul by interfering well in advance, thus reapers would not be interfering with the events that lead to the death, however such actions might have unintended consequences, such as more people dying before their time.
Reapers have a physical body and may interact with the living and the dead. The only special abilities Reapers have besides collecting souls are the powers to remain ageless and to heal quickly.[19][20] When seen by the living, a reaper's physical appearance is different from the one they had when alive (except on Halloween when the living see them as they were in life[21]), though fellow reapers see their original appearances.[22] Laura Boddington portrays lead character George's 'undead' appearance in six episodes.[23]
The passage into the afterlife is shown as a brightly lit scene towards which the newly-deceased is drawn. The portal is unique to each soul: for a child, it may be a wonderful carnival, but for a yoga master, it may be a Deva beckoning from within a Divine Lotus. Souls cannot be forced to enter the portals, so part of the Reapers' job is to convince such souls to do so.
[edit] Gravelings
In the show, Reapers do not actually kill people. Instead, deaths are arranged by 'gravelings'.[24]
Gravelings are mischievous gremlin-like creatures that cause the accidents and mishaps that kill people. The living generally cannot see them, though in one episode, a schizophrenic seems to do so. Reapers can see and interact with them to some extent: Daisy once shushed a graveling; Rube yelled "Get outta here!" when he saw gravelings playing on a cemetery statue; George chased gravelings around her flat. Gravelings do not communicate verbally with Reapers, and talk to each other in a hushed and unintelligible babble.
In one episode it is noted that if a Reaper does not take a soul which they are meant to, a "hunting season" will be declared on them until that soul is taken and order is restored. Throughout the series, some of the Reapers, including George, Roxy, Mason, and Daisy have been plagued by the wrath of Gravelings.
A graveling rose from the body of Ray in "Forget Me Not" (Season 2, Episode 12) following his death at the hands of a reaper,[25] implying that gravelings result from either evil or rotted souls, or from the un-reaped souls of people who die before their destined time.
The graveling that arose from Ray's body was later "killed" by George. Since reapers have the ability to remove souls, and gravelings are simply semi-physical incarnations of rotted/lost/dead souls, when George touched it, it turned to dust. There are no living souls present in graveling thus touching it removed it from existence. This suggests that either Reapers are more powerful than gravelings, that George has a special relationship with them or at the very least, that she has something 'more' to her than explained in the series. The episode entitled "The Shallow End" (Season 2, Episode 4) shows gravelings appearing to hesitate from claiming a young Georgia's life.
[edit] Behind the scenes
[edit] Awards and ratings
The series was nominated for a total of eight awards including two Emmys for "Outstanding Music Composition for a Series" and "Outstanding Special Visual Effects for a Series" and three Saturn Awards.[26] The show's complete ratings were not released, though executives had claimed to at least one reporter that Dead Like Me had ratings three times Showtime's primetime average.[27] This contradicts the network's statement that the ratings were not high enough for a third season.[28] When questioned by critics about the ratings in January 2005, Showtime Chairman and CEO Matthew Blank responded "I really don't think we know...."[29]
[edit] Fuller's departure
Bryan Fuller left early in the first season due to conflicts with MGM Television, including disagreement over major script and storyline cuts considered important to the main theme. He stated that the "lack of professionalism...made it really difficult...It was like being at war...They were constantly trying to strong arm me. It was the worst experience of my life." According to Fuller, Showtime canceled the show because of "a loss of quality and a sense the problems would continue."[30]
[edit] References
- ^ SciFi.com Dead Like Me. Sci Fi. Retrieved on 2007-09-06.
- ^ What's On. WADL38. Retrieved on 2008-06-06.
- ^ Dead Like Me Movie Set Back… D’oh!!. Retrieved on 2008-05-11.
- ^ MGM Resurrects Dead Like Me. Reed Business Information. Retrieved on 2008-05-11.
- ^ "Pilot". Dead Like Me. Showtime. No. 1, season 1. 13 minutes in.
- ^ "Pilot". Dead Like Me. Showtime. No. 1, season 1. 24 minutes in.
- ^ "Pilot". Dead Like Me. Showtime. No. 1, season 1. (Special Features: The Music of Dead Like Me) 2 minutes in.
- ^ Zyber, Joshua (May 20, 2004). "Dead Like Me: The Complete First Season" (English). DVDFILE.com. DVDFile, LLC. Retrieved on 2006-10-06. “The outlandish Rube Goldberg-style chain reactions that cause each victim's death are a riot.”
- ^ "Always". Dead Like Me. Showtime. No. 14, season 2. 18 minutes in.
- ^ "Vacation". Dead Like Me. Showtime. No. 13, season 1.
- ^ Dead Like Me - Complete Season 1 @ EzyDVD. EzyDVD. Retrieved on 2007-07-15.
- ^ Amazon.com Dead Like Me Season 1 DVD: Product details. Retrieved on February 3, 2007.
- ^ Dead Like Me - Complete Season 2 @ EzyDVD. EzyDVD. Retrieved on 2007-12-30.
- ^ Amazon.com Dead Like Me Season 2 DVD: Product details. Retrieved on February 3, 2007.
- ^ "MGM Announces SF DVD Slate", Sci Fi Wire, SciFi.com, 18 April 2007. Retrieved on 2007-05-17.
- ^ "Dead Like Me movie and series news", TV Squad, 2007-07-09. Retrieved on 2007-09-23.
- ^ "Dead Like Me the Movie release date moved back", Ellen-Muth.com.
- ^ a b "Pilot". Dead Like Me. Showtime. No. 1, season 1. 67 minutes in.
- ^ "Dead Girl Walking". Dead Like Me. Showtime. No. 2, season 1. 24 minutes in.
- ^ "Rites of Passage". Dead Like Me. Showtime. No. 7, season 2. 19 minutes in.
- ^ Haunted, Season 2 http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List_of_Dead_Like_Me_episodes&oldid=177322672
- ^ "Pilot". Dead Like Me. Showtime. No. 1, season 1. 39 minutes in.
- ^ Laura Boddington. IMDb. Retrieved on 2007-09-08.
- ^ "Pilot". Dead Like Me. Showtime. No. 1, season 1. 29 minutes in.
- ^ "Forget Me Not". Dead Like Me. Showtime. No. 26, season 2. 44 minutes in.
- ^ Awards for "Dead Like Me". IMDB.com. Retrieved on 2007-08-19.
- ^ Science Fiction Delivers Mainstream Hits. MultiChannel.com. Retrieved on 2007-08-19.
- ^ MGM's wants to bring 'Dead' back to life. Variety.com. Retrieved on 2007-08-19.
- ^ MGM Resurrects Dead Like Me. MultiChannel.com. Retrieved on 2007-08-19.
- ^ Dead Like Me Creator Bryan Fuller Speaks Out on Showtime, MGM and the Future. Retrieved on 2007-07-29.
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- Dead Like Me at MGM
- Dead Like Me Movie Latest News about the Dead Like Me Movie
- Dead Like Me at Scifi Channel
- Dead Like Me at Showtime
- Dead Like Me at IMBD
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