• Establish a new heartbeat — if romance drives TVD, family drives The Originals. “People are always asking how will it be different, and why should I care about watching two versions of the same world. And that is the key: You just can’t retell the same story with different players in a different location,” Plec says. While The Vampire Diaries is best known for Damon and Stefan battling for Elena’s heart, the war in The Originals is over control of New Orleans’ French Quarter. Marcel (Charles Michael Davis), a former protégé of vicious vampire-werewolf hybrid Klaus, has created a community where vampires rule by exiling the werewolves and oppressing the witches. When the witches demand that Klaus do their bidding against Marcel, noble Elijah sees a chance to reunite his bickering family in a town they used to call home. “The Originals want it because they helped build it. Marcel wants it because he’s developed a community of vampires who can run around without a lot of restrictions. The witches can’t leave without giving up access to all their ancestral magic. And the humans are like, ‘Hands off, everybody. We’ve been here just as long as you have. It’s still a human’s town,’” Plec says. “Everybody’s fighting for a home to call their own and a place to plant their roots for themselves and for their family.”
• Respect the old fans, but welcome new ones — introduce the characters as if we’ve never met them before. “If you are telling a story as though only the people who’ve spent the last five years watching your other show are tuning in, then you’re doing it wrong. But I will tell you, creatively it is one of the hardest things to execute. The audience could be somebody who’s seen one episode of The Vampire Diaries, zero episodes of The Vampire Diaries, or 89 episodes of The Vampire Diaries but can’t remember anything — how do you introduce these people and this world in a way that is exciting and understandable and palatable to a new audience when, specifically in our case of the fractured Original family, they’re hateful little minxes?” That’s particularly tricky with Klaus, who had two-plus seasons to earn goodwill among TVD fans, but who’ll be presented in the premiere as Elijah’s “potentially psychopathic brother,” Plec says. “You’ve got to find a way to say to the audience, ‘You need to care about Klaus because Elijah cares about Klaus’ — because Klaus is about to do some really nasty stuff, like be told he’s about to have a baby [with Phoebe Tonkin's werewolf, Hayley] and say, ‘Kill it. I don’t care.’ That’s not a hero move in the first episode of a TV show.”
• Honor the history — we’re not erasing the impact of people like Katherine, Caroline, and the legendary Matt Donovan. “It would be unfair to get an audience so invested in couplings and relationships and the histories of these characters that we’re taking to their own world and act as though they never happened,” Plec says. “So the goal is to, without alienating a new audience who has no clue who these people are, still be respectful. If we were just breaking this first episode clean without all the history, there would be romance in it for Klaus. But because there’s still unfinished business with Caroline — even if he doesn’t mention her by name in the first episode or two — he is by no means going to be jumping into any kind of romantic relationship in the very beginning. So we’ve had to find romance and passion and those beautiful moments that I love so much in other ways.” Rebekah and Matt, who’ll have spent a steamy summer abroad, agreed their time together was finite. And Elijah, Plec says, “has a long history of sacrificing his own happiness in pursuit of salvation or redemption for his brother and efforts to bring the family closet together. Katherine was the latest in a long line of those kind of situations.” Translation: They’re single and could be ready to mingle.
• Always be open to crossover potential: “There are sub rules to the crossover,” Plec says, “which is don’t do it to be stunty. Don’t do it for publicity reasons. Don’t do it to be too clever for your own good. Do it because it feels right for story and it feels right for character.” Also, don’t do it too soon: “First, you’ve got to make sure you get all these characters that you’re serving firmly planted.”
Source: Full Interview @ EW
• Respect the old fans, but welcome new ones — introduce the characters as if we’ve never met them before. “If you are telling a story as though only the people who’ve spent the last five years watching your other show are tuning in, then you’re doing it wrong. But I will tell you, creatively it is one of the hardest things to execute. The audience could be somebody who’s seen one episode of The Vampire Diaries, zero episodes of The Vampire Diaries, or 89 episodes of The Vampire Diaries but can’t remember anything — how do you introduce these people and this world in a way that is exciting and understandable and palatable to a new audience when, specifically in our case of the fractured Original family, they’re hateful little minxes?” That’s particularly tricky with Klaus, who had two-plus seasons to earn goodwill among TVD fans, but who’ll be presented in the premiere as Elijah’s “potentially psychopathic brother,” Plec says. “You’ve got to find a way to say to the audience, ‘You need to care about Klaus because Elijah cares about Klaus’ — because Klaus is about to do some really nasty stuff, like be told he’s about to have a baby [with Phoebe Tonkin's werewolf, Hayley] and say, ‘Kill it. I don’t care.’ That’s not a hero move in the first episode of a TV show.”
• Honor the history — we’re not erasing the impact of people like Katherine, Caroline, and the legendary Matt Donovan. “It would be unfair to get an audience so invested in couplings and relationships and the histories of these characters that we’re taking to their own world and act as though they never happened,” Plec says. “So the goal is to, without alienating a new audience who has no clue who these people are, still be respectful. If we were just breaking this first episode clean without all the history, there would be romance in it for Klaus. But because there’s still unfinished business with Caroline — even if he doesn’t mention her by name in the first episode or two — he is by no means going to be jumping into any kind of romantic relationship in the very beginning. So we’ve had to find romance and passion and those beautiful moments that I love so much in other ways.” Rebekah and Matt, who’ll have spent a steamy summer abroad, agreed their time together was finite. And Elijah, Plec says, “has a long history of sacrificing his own happiness in pursuit of salvation or redemption for his brother and efforts to bring the family closet together. Katherine was the latest in a long line of those kind of situations.” Translation: They’re single and could be ready to mingle.
• Always be open to crossover potential: “There are sub rules to the crossover,” Plec says, “which is don’t do it to be stunty. Don’t do it for publicity reasons. Don’t do it to be too clever for your own good. Do it because it feels right for story and it feels right for character.” Also, don’t do it too soon: “First, you’ve got to make sure you get all these characters that you’re serving firmly planted.”
Source: Full Interview @ EW
There are so many quotes in this interview from Plec that I could nitpick, dissect, overanalyze, and straight-up bitch about but I'm not going to. Instead, I'll just say that I wish this new show the best of luck and hope it finds itself a big audience. I hope it succeeds.
ReplyDeleteI'm really hoping that she does less writing for The Originals than The Vampire Diaries. I keep watching that show for some reason... although, I just rewatched season one on Netflix a few weeks ago, and I was deeply saddened, because while I remembered that season one was really great I didn't realize just far The Vampire Diaries has fallen over the past few seasons. I love the greater focus on witches and the New Orleans locale so I reallly hope I dig The Originals.
ReplyDeleteI don't think TVD really fell off that much, for me anyway, until the second half of season 4. Everything after 4x10 (After School Special) was pretty excruciating to watch. It really is a chore to rewatch most of season 4.
ReplyDeleteAs for the level of involvement Plec has, I'm not sure if she'll be showrunner on both TVD and Originals or just TVD. The answer to that will go a long way toward figuring out how involved she'll be on The Originals as compared to TVD.
i am hoping that if she is going to be heavily involved in the writing of the the originals that she views this as a new opportunity to do the great things that have not being done in TVD for a long time or at least as a start of something new. i am not agaisnt crossovers but i do not want them in the first seasons because that is just going to say that the originals is struggling and needs to be breastfed by its mother. i do think that she has a chance to do something great with this show but please respect the fans like you said and the biggest show of respect would be that she respectfully not listen to everything they have to say or complain about. and please avoid the cliches.
ReplyDeletei want this show to do good, and i want there to be crossovers. if it happens in the first season, i really don't see the problem. It worked out great for Angel,(when Buffy showed up) and it became a success. The show became a success. Idk if The Originals will have that much luck, but i'm hoping it won't get cancelled too quickly. Personally (and i know i'll get a lot of heat for this) i wanted Klaus dead long ago. I used to love him, then i loved to hate him, then i hated him for a long time, still do actually. (but i love Jomo) Sometimes i can tolerate him now, like the Graduation episode when he cut the witches head off with a freaking graduation cap!! I thought that was great. Elijah i love, but Hayley i REALLY can't stand her and it bugged me soo much that she didn't get killed off TVD. When i found out she was going to be in this spinoff, i said ugh!! There's going to be more of her, whyyyyyyy?!?!?!? However, i am looking forward to Klaus' child. I would like to see how Rebekah reacts to that. I think it would make her feel more human actually. I could see her trying to be a good aunt. Well as good of an aunt as she could be. I also hope JP won't write too much of the script either. Sigh! I just want KW to come back...hopefully he'll return for a few episodes. But i'm crossing my fingers for this show. I hope it does well/
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