Boardwalk Empire, the 'new Sopranos' from HBO

 
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luke



Joined: 11 Feb 2007
Location: by the sea

PostPosted: Sun Jan 09, 2011 7:47 pm    Post subject: Boardwalk Empire, the 'new Sopranos' from HBO Reply with quote

Boardwalk Empire, the 'new Sopranos' from HBO
Its pilot episode is the most expensive ever made - and Martin Scorsese is directing it. Tom Shone catches up with HBO's lavish new crime epic, starting soon on Sky Atlantic.


Boardwalk Empire: Steve Buscemi stars as Enoch "Nucky" Thompson in the new crime drama from HBO

"This was where it all happened,” Terence Winter says. “The birth place of organised crime in this country.”

The Emmy-winning writer-director is standing in the middle of what used to be a disused car lot in Brooklyn. Now, after three months of furious work by an army of set builders, it is a 300ft recreation of the Atlantic City boardwalk circa 1920.

Stretching into the distance are tattoo parlours, nightclubs, sherbet-hued shops peddling palm readings, postcards and saltwater taffy; above them period-perfect billboards advertise Gillette and Chesterfield cigarettes (“that’s satisfying”).

On the other side of the walkway, wrought-iron railings look out onto a beach of trucked-in sand; a pier juts out and ends abruptly at the foot of a giant blue screen, on which the show’s editors will digitally insert footage of the Atlantic Ocean.

“All this will be filled in digitally, so if you see it on TV, it’ll go out another eighth of a mile of pier,” Winter says proudly. “You won’t be able to tell where the set ends and the digital world begins.”

The set, which cost $3 million to construct, is the centrepiece of the lavish new crime drama Boardwalk Empire, which HBO is hoping will replace The Sopranos as its flagship show. Employing 300 crew members, 225 actors and 1,000 extras, and shot over 200 days, twice what a standard network drama would take, it traces the fortunes of Enoch “Nucky” Thompson, a corrupt political boss played by Steve Buscemi.

“Half gangster, half politician”, he never declared more than $5,000 in income, effectively running Atlantic City from the eighth floor of the Ritz-Carlton, raking in money from the illegal liquor trade.

“It’s an exploration of the American dream, the extent to which people will go to attain it,” Winter says as we walk his elaborate set. “We call this the land of opportunity. It’s a look at what opportunity means and what lines people will cross to be successful.

“The illegal alcohol business was very much akin to the drug business today. Overnight, something that was legal became illegal, something everybody wanted and had to have. If your next-door neighbour was selling it you looked the other way. The police were susceptible to bribes.

“With the amount of liquor coming into the country I think they were able to stop like six per cent of it. All they did was make millionaires of Al Capone and the Lucky Lucianos of this world,” Winter adds.

The series kicks off with a dinner on the eve of Prohibition, at which Nucky toasts “the distinguished gentlemen of our nation's Congress — those beautiful, ignorant bastards”. And if you think he sounds like something out of a Martin Scorsese movie, then well done: so did Scorsese, who directed the first episode.

He was originally attached as producer. Winter was then a writer on The Sopranos and was winding down on the show’s final season when HBO approached him about the option they had on Nelson Johnson’s history of Atlantic City. They said: “Why don’t you read it and see if there’s something in there that feels like a series to you?” They were almost out the door when they added: “By the way, Martin Scorsese is attached to this if you find a series there.”

“I assure you I will find a series here,” Winter replied.

Scorsese was at that point in the early stages of getting a greenlight for Shutter Island, but after reading Winter’s drafts for the pilot, the old mob bug bit him once again, and he asked Winter to his apartment on the Upper West Side for dinner.

“You know, this is something I might like to direct,” he told Winter. “How would we go about making that happen?” Winter laughs at the memory. “I told him, if you were to ring up the head of HBO tomorrow and tell him what you told me, I think that might move things along.”

It turned out to be television on an epic scale. Scorsese brought with him a host of his collaborators from The Aviator and Casino, and screened Elia Kazan’s Splendor in the Grass, to give the producers a feel for the period.

Initially wary of whether they would be able to bring off the lavishness described in his script, Winter then saw Paul Giammatti strolling through a period-perfect Versailles in the HBO miniseries John Adams, and realised that the technology had caught up with them.

Initial reports in the New York Post estimated the price of the first episode at $50 million, making it “the most expensive pilot in history”; HBO said it cost $20 million; people familiar with the budget put it closer to $30  million.

“The number that you read on the internet is grossly over-exaggerated,” Winter says. “It may be the most expensive pilot ever made but it’s nowhere near what they say it was. That said… it’s not cheap.”

Scorsese is not the only director on the HBO bandwagon; in recent months Michael Mann, David Fincher and Jonathan Demme have all declared deals to direct television shows for HBO, thus proving that the cable channel has become a kind of breakaway republic from Hollywood — a fiefdom of talent unto itself.

With movie studios too entranced with making movies about comic books and superheroes to make the kind of epics cinema used to excel at — The Godfather, Once Upon a Time in America — the job has instead fallen to HBO, which, with series like Band of Brothers, The Sopranos, Deadwood, The Wire, and now Boardwalk Empire, has become the place you go to see a mirror held up to America.

At a recent press conference, Scorsese compared the creative freedom at the studio with that enjoyed by the New Wave directors in the Sixties. “What’s happened over the past nine to 10 years, particularly at HBO, is what we had hoped for in the mid-Sixties… We’d hoped there would be this kind of freedom and also the ability to create another world and create longform characters and story. HBO is a trailblazer in this.”

Already drawing excellent reviews, Boardwalk Empire looks set to become the must-see television event of the year. Winter hopes it will get picked up for further seasons; ultimately, he hopes to get as far as the stock market crash of 1929, thus taking in the entire decade.

“They haven’t told us to take it down,” he says, looking around his giant set. “God bless HBO.”

Boardwalk Empire begins on Sky Atlantic at 9.00pm on Tuesday 1 February

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/tvandradio/8244306/Boardwalk-Empire-the-new-Sopranos-from-HBO.html

i've just finished watching the first series and really liked it thumbs
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faceless
admin


Joined: 25 Apr 2006

PostPosted: Sun Jan 09, 2011 8:37 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

nice one, I'd not heard of it but it sounds great - I'm getting the episodes now.
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Aja
Reggae Ambassador


Joined: 24 Jun 2006
Location: Lost Londoner ..Nr Philly. PA

PostPosted: Fri Jan 14, 2011 3:16 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Dammit face I Thought I had told u about this series !!! Its great ..U will love it ;)
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luke



Joined: 11 Feb 2007
Location: by the sea

PostPosted: Mon Sep 24, 2012 5:07 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

season 3 has started Smile

here are the first two episodes ( not my uploads )

episode 1 - http://filecloud.io/rowvixfq
episode 2 - http://filecloud.io/47fhpnjm
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Twirley



Joined: 29 Apr 2006
Location: North Carolina

PostPosted: Tue Sep 25, 2012 4:29 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Gotta love Nucky!!
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