Desperate Housewives: Season 4 Discussion
- Rowlf_The_Dog
- Special Edition
- Posts: 753
- Joined: Mon Aug 01, 2005 5:04 pm
- Location: Miami, FL (more than just a beach LOL)
Lynette (aka MM1) ... I think it's time we batten down the hatches on our Wisteria Lane homes ...
and OOPS! @ Victor!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
and OOPS! @ Victor!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
<img src="http://papichuloproductions.net/disneyresort.jpg">
- MadonnasManOne
- Collector's Edition
- Posts: 2748
- Joined: Tue Jan 18, 2005 4:08 pm
- Rowlf_The_Dog
- Special Edition
- Posts: 753
- Joined: Mon Aug 01, 2005 5:04 pm
- Location: Miami, FL (more than just a beach LOL)
Well ... how about this ... You don't watch it ... and then I will tell you all about it in a private message LOL
<img src="http://papichuloproductions.net/disneyresort.jpg">
- lord-of-sith
- Collector's Edition
- Posts: 2288
- Joined: Wed Jul 14, 2004 7:03 pm
- Gender: Male (He/Him/His)
So I realized,MadonnasManOne wrote:I don't think the tornado is this week. According the R_T_D, it is supposed to be the next episode. At any rate, I'm excited about that episode, as well!lord-of-sith wrote:I'm super excited for the tornado this week! I haven't been so excited for a DH episode since "Bang"!
At any rate, tonights episode was very nice! Bree is by far the most interesting week by week. But the others are also entertaining to watch too. Next weeks is going to be nuts!
- MadonnasManOne
- Collector's Edition
- Posts: 2748
- Joined: Tue Jan 18, 2005 4:08 pm
-
dvdjunkie
- Signature Collection
- Posts: 5613
- Joined: Wed Nov 10, 2004 10:05 am
- Location: Wichita, Kansas
Very interesting episode tonight.
Gaby is going to go off the deep end, now that she realizes that Victor remembers everything, but is saying nothing to the police. Wow, do I love this storyline.
Susan again had her suspicions, and then acted on them, I think that this is going to drive a wedge between her and Mike. And her matchmaking scene was hilarious.
Bree, I agree, has the best storyline so far. She is such an interesting character, and her last scenes with her son were very moving, and very subtle in their message.
And poor Lynette, now she has a gay step-father, who is going to help with her mom, and let her stay with him in his cozy little cottage. This should be get interesting.
Next week, the start of a two-week episode, interrupted by a week-off for another soap opera Sunday night movie. Let's hope the writer's strike is over by then.

Gaby is going to go off the deep end, now that she realizes that Victor remembers everything, but is saying nothing to the police. Wow, do I love this storyline.
Susan again had her suspicions, and then acted on them, I think that this is going to drive a wedge between her and Mike. And her matchmaking scene was hilarious.
Bree, I agree, has the best storyline so far. She is such an interesting character, and her last scenes with her son were very moving, and very subtle in their message.
And poor Lynette, now she has a gay step-father, who is going to help with her mom, and let her stay with him in his cozy little cottage. This should be get interesting.
Next week, the start of a two-week episode, interrupted by a week-off for another soap opera Sunday night movie. Let's hope the writer's strike is over by then.
The only way to watch movies - Original Aspect Ratio!!!!
I LOVE my Blu-Ray Disc Player!
I LOVE my Blu-Ray Disc Player!
- PeterPanfan
- Diamond Edition
- Posts: 4553
- Joined: Thu Apr 19, 2007 1:43 pm
- Location: USA
- Contact:
- Rowlf_The_Dog
- Special Edition
- Posts: 753
- Joined: Mon Aug 01, 2005 5:04 pm
- Location: Miami, FL (more than just a beach LOL)
Actually ... Part 2 ... better known as Episode 10 ... Isn't even on the schedule because of the strike ...
It was supposed to air the week after the Oprah movie ...
But ... It will more than likely air in January ... because so far the schedule has DH going into repeats in December ...
It was supposed to air the week after the Oprah movie ...
But ... It will more than likely air in January ... because so far the schedule has DH going into repeats in December ...
<img src="http://papichuloproductions.net/disneyresort.jpg">
- MadonnasManOne
- Collector's Edition
- Posts: 2748
- Joined: Tue Jan 18, 2005 4:08 pm
I found a great article about the tornado hitting Wisteria Lane, of which part 1 is scheduled for tomorrow. It's also pretty much confirmed that, while part 2 has been filmed, it is a cliff hanger, and ABC and Marc Cherry want it to kick off a new run of episodes. Since they have no episodes filmed after part 2, it's likely we will not see part 2 for quite some time. So, we'll be left in suspense!
Be warned that some slight spoilers are contained in this article:
http://tv.msn.com/tv/article.aspx?news=286309>1=7703&
Tornado Hits 'Desperate Housewives'
Nov. 30, 2007, 2:42 PM EST
The Associated Press
LOS ANGELES -- Something is very wrong on Wisteria Lane, and not just behind closed doors.
Overturned cars, splintered trees and wrecked furniture fill the once picture-perfect street at the center of "Desperate Housewives." Windows and roofs are smashed and Mrs. McCluskey's house, oh my, has been reduced to rubble. Death is in the air.
The aftermath of a hissy fit by a stressed homemaker or jealous lover? No, it's a tornado that has savaged suburbia — and series creator Marc Cherry is reveling in the destruction and, of course, the drama.
"Causing all sorts of havoc, that's when I'm at my happiest," a mischievous Cherry said of the two-part episode that brings the ABC drama its cruelest crisis yet, for viewers as well as characters.
The first hour airs Sunday, with a cliffhanger ending (Who died? Who lived?) that won't be resolved anytime soon: The following episode is completed but has yet to be scheduled.
Filming wrapped just as the screenwriters' strike began Nov. 5, shutting down "Desperate Housewives" and other network dramas and comedies. ABC and Cherry want the second hour to kick off a run of new episodes — which would require the strike to wrap before the season does.
Meanwhile, fans will have to live with agonizing uncertainty. That's something most cast members, aside from stars Teri Hatcher, Felicity Huffman, Marcia Cross and Eva Longoria, are accustomed to.
"With the exception of the four women, I don't know that anyone can ever take their job completely for granted," Cherry told The Associated Press.
"Good heavens, I killed off Mary Alice in the pilot, Mrs. Huber in episode seven of the first season. My attitude is, that's life. People come and go."
Inspiration for the big-ticket episode came, in part, from the success of last season's hostage crisis, in which Lynette (Huffman) was shot and other characters were killed.
"It taught me the value of doing something exciting," Cherry said. "Very often, if you're just trying to show the lives of ordinary women and trying to make the small events of their lives interesting or big, you get in trouble. Sometimes you can overwrite, sometimes people get too silly."
A natural disaster, on the other hand, provides "a perfect backdrop so that the stakes are high for everyone on every single level," he said.
As they were for production designer Thomas Walsh and the crew, who had the job of pulling off a big-screen sequence with a small-screen budget and time constraints: Although there was an extra $500,000 or so for production (an average hourlong TV episode costs roughly $2 million), the usual nine-day shooting schedule was unchanged.
Organization and planning were key in the transformation of the Universal Studios make-believe neighborhood.
A few miles away, a parking lot in an industrial section of Glendale was designated as a collection site for debris — and the scavenging began. When Steven Spielberg finished with a set for the Indiana Jones sequel also being shot at Universal, "truckload after truckload" of lumber was carried away, Walsh said.
Set dressers raided thrift stores for household goods that were destined to be trashed, while tree cuttings from the studio lot and elsewhere were added to the pile.
"We were good stewards. We actually recycled," Walsh said.
The designer debris ultimately was carted back to the lot and attached to 4-by-8-foot wood pallets to allow for repositioning during filming and quick removal in case of emergency (there was none, Walsh said, and no injuries during filming).
When it came to simulating the tornado and its destructive path, the approach was strictly old school since computer-generated effects would be costly and time-consuming. Wind machines created impressive gusts; cranes lifted and dropped cars and air mortars sent flotsam flying.
The house occupied by Karen McCluskey (Kathryn Joosten) fell victim to an earth excavator. It was the only one destroyed; other damage, such as apparent gashes in roofs, was largely simulated.
There was Hollywood history attached to the demolished house, which was featured in "Father Knows Best," and to others: Gabrielle's (Longoria) home was seen in the movie "Harvey," while "The Munsters," "Marcus Welby, M.D." and "The Hardy Boys" — "depending on what generation you are," Walsh said — also used the structures that once occupied another part of the lot.
Was Walsh at all troubled by wiping away a bit of TV's past?
"Sets are amazingly disposable; that's a fact of life," he said. Besides, he said, "we're visual storytellers, not architects."
Cherry admitted to a pang when he saw the tattered set.
"I thought, 'Oh, my God, what have we done? It really kind of hurt my heart a little bit to see my street so banged up," he said.
But he's more sanguine about erasing remnants of TV tradition.
"To me, it's kind of like my street to destroy at this point," Cherry said. "Even if we shut down production tomorrow, it's Wisteria Lane now. That street is Wisteria Lane."
Be warned that some slight spoilers are contained in this article:
http://tv.msn.com/tv/article.aspx?news=286309>1=7703&
Tornado Hits 'Desperate Housewives'
Nov. 30, 2007, 2:42 PM EST
The Associated Press
LOS ANGELES -- Something is very wrong on Wisteria Lane, and not just behind closed doors.
Overturned cars, splintered trees and wrecked furniture fill the once picture-perfect street at the center of "Desperate Housewives." Windows and roofs are smashed and Mrs. McCluskey's house, oh my, has been reduced to rubble. Death is in the air.
The aftermath of a hissy fit by a stressed homemaker or jealous lover? No, it's a tornado that has savaged suburbia — and series creator Marc Cherry is reveling in the destruction and, of course, the drama.
"Causing all sorts of havoc, that's when I'm at my happiest," a mischievous Cherry said of the two-part episode that brings the ABC drama its cruelest crisis yet, for viewers as well as characters.
The first hour airs Sunday, with a cliffhanger ending (Who died? Who lived?) that won't be resolved anytime soon: The following episode is completed but has yet to be scheduled.
Filming wrapped just as the screenwriters' strike began Nov. 5, shutting down "Desperate Housewives" and other network dramas and comedies. ABC and Cherry want the second hour to kick off a run of new episodes — which would require the strike to wrap before the season does.
Meanwhile, fans will have to live with agonizing uncertainty. That's something most cast members, aside from stars Teri Hatcher, Felicity Huffman, Marcia Cross and Eva Longoria, are accustomed to.
"With the exception of the four women, I don't know that anyone can ever take their job completely for granted," Cherry told The Associated Press.
"Good heavens, I killed off Mary Alice in the pilot, Mrs. Huber in episode seven of the first season. My attitude is, that's life. People come and go."
Inspiration for the big-ticket episode came, in part, from the success of last season's hostage crisis, in which Lynette (Huffman) was shot and other characters were killed.
"It taught me the value of doing something exciting," Cherry said. "Very often, if you're just trying to show the lives of ordinary women and trying to make the small events of their lives interesting or big, you get in trouble. Sometimes you can overwrite, sometimes people get too silly."
A natural disaster, on the other hand, provides "a perfect backdrop so that the stakes are high for everyone on every single level," he said.
As they were for production designer Thomas Walsh and the crew, who had the job of pulling off a big-screen sequence with a small-screen budget and time constraints: Although there was an extra $500,000 or so for production (an average hourlong TV episode costs roughly $2 million), the usual nine-day shooting schedule was unchanged.
Organization and planning were key in the transformation of the Universal Studios make-believe neighborhood.
A few miles away, a parking lot in an industrial section of Glendale was designated as a collection site for debris — and the scavenging began. When Steven Spielberg finished with a set for the Indiana Jones sequel also being shot at Universal, "truckload after truckload" of lumber was carried away, Walsh said.
Set dressers raided thrift stores for household goods that were destined to be trashed, while tree cuttings from the studio lot and elsewhere were added to the pile.
"We were good stewards. We actually recycled," Walsh said.
The designer debris ultimately was carted back to the lot and attached to 4-by-8-foot wood pallets to allow for repositioning during filming and quick removal in case of emergency (there was none, Walsh said, and no injuries during filming).
When it came to simulating the tornado and its destructive path, the approach was strictly old school since computer-generated effects would be costly and time-consuming. Wind machines created impressive gusts; cranes lifted and dropped cars and air mortars sent flotsam flying.
The house occupied by Karen McCluskey (Kathryn Joosten) fell victim to an earth excavator. It was the only one destroyed; other damage, such as apparent gashes in roofs, was largely simulated.
There was Hollywood history attached to the demolished house, which was featured in "Father Knows Best," and to others: Gabrielle's (Longoria) home was seen in the movie "Harvey," while "The Munsters," "Marcus Welby, M.D." and "The Hardy Boys" — "depending on what generation you are," Walsh said — also used the structures that once occupied another part of the lot.
Was Walsh at all troubled by wiping away a bit of TV's past?
"Sets are amazingly disposable; that's a fact of life," he said. Besides, he said, "we're visual storytellers, not architects."
Cherry admitted to a pang when he saw the tattered set.
"I thought, 'Oh, my God, what have we done? It really kind of hurt my heart a little bit to see my street so banged up," he said.
But he's more sanguine about erasing remnants of TV tradition.
"To me, it's kind of like my street to destroy at this point," Cherry said. "Even if we shut down production tomorrow, it's Wisteria Lane now. That street is Wisteria Lane."
- Rowlf_The_Dog
- Special Edition
- Posts: 753
- Joined: Mon Aug 01, 2005 5:04 pm
- Location: Miami, FL (more than just a beach LOL)
Yippy ... destroy them all! LOL
I can't wait!
I can't wait!
<img src="http://papichuloproductions.net/disneyresort.jpg">
- MadonnasManOne
- Collector's Edition
- Posts: 2748
- Joined: Tue Jan 18, 2005 4:08 pm
A new episode (which looks likely to be the last new episode shown for a while) airs tonight at 9/8 Central! Here is the summary:
Something's Coming
Episode Number: 79 Season Num: 4 First Aired: Sunday December 2, 2007 Prod Code: 409
A tornado comes to Wisteria Lane, forcing residents into basements, cellars and safe rooms, and destroying homes and lives.
TV.com also has video from the episode:
http://www.tv.com/media_player/11925/4/ ... t_id=24641
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
I'm so excited about this episode, but, at the same time conflicted. I know that the outcome is likely to have some sad consequences. I will be watching, with a box of Kleenex right next to me.
Something's Coming
Episode Number: 79 Season Num: 4 First Aired: Sunday December 2, 2007 Prod Code: 409
A tornado comes to Wisteria Lane, forcing residents into basements, cellars and safe rooms, and destroying homes and lives.
TV.com also has video from the episode:
http://www.tv.com/media_player/11925/4/ ... t_id=24641
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
I'm so excited about this episode, but, at the same time conflicted. I know that the outcome is likely to have some sad consequences. I will be watching, with a box of Kleenex right next to me.
- Rowlf_The_Dog
- Special Edition
- Posts: 753
- Joined: Mon Aug 01, 2005 5:04 pm
- Location: Miami, FL (more than just a beach LOL)
- PeterPanfan
- Diamond Edition
- Posts: 4553
- Joined: Thu Apr 19, 2007 1:43 pm
- Location: USA
- Contact:
- Rowlf_The_Dog
- Special Edition
- Posts: 753
- Joined: Mon Aug 01, 2005 5:04 pm
- Location: Miami, FL (more than just a beach LOL)
LOL ...
If anyone wants to know who dies ... You can message me ...
Four people will die tonight ...
If anyone wants to know who dies ... You can message me ...
Four people will die tonight ...
<img src="http://papichuloproductions.net/disneyresort.jpg">
- PeterPanfan
- Diamond Edition
- Posts: 4553
- Joined: Thu Apr 19, 2007 1:43 pm
- Location: USA
- Contact:
- MadonnasManOne
- Collector's Edition
- Posts: 2748
- Joined: Tue Jan 18, 2005 4:08 pm
- Rowlf_The_Dog
- Special Edition
- Posts: 753
- Joined: Mon Aug 01, 2005 5:04 pm
- Location: Miami, FL (more than just a beach LOL)
- PeterPanfan
- Diamond Edition
- Posts: 4553
- Joined: Thu Apr 19, 2007 1:43 pm
- Location: USA
- Contact:
- Rowlf_The_Dog
- Special Edition
- Posts: 753
- Joined: Mon Aug 01, 2005 5:04 pm
- Location: Miami, FL (more than just a beach LOL)
MM1 pass PeterPan the Kleenex ... and maybe a brown paper bag ...
<img src="http://papichuloproductions.net/disneyresort.jpg">
- MadonnasManOne
- Collector's Edition
- Posts: 2748
- Joined: Tue Jan 18, 2005 4:08 pm