Not at HBO anymore. So disappointing..
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rmn_gonzalez — 12 years ago(November 26, 2013 10:58 AM)
Actually I believe it was the other way around: HBO felt that Gaiman had distanced himself too much from the book, adding too much new material.
On the other hand, I wonder how the hell they would have filled six seasons on this one book.
I have also been waiting a long time for this to get done. I hope it still will. -
AlayneStone — 12 years ago(November 26, 2013 12:09 PM)
I just realized I misunderstood what you wrote, sorry about that. Either way, I completely trust Gaiman's instincts so I think I'd welcome any additions. I also agree about the length, I was also wondering how they'd make 6 seasons out of it. I know he has said many times he definitely wants to do a sequel, so hopefully that's something he does soon also.
All in all, I just can't wait until it's definitely a reality and they start casting. I'm dying to see the cast they get for this. -
LemurCat — 12 years ago(December 09, 2013 01:53 PM)
Marvel is entrusting several of their properties to Netflix. I think Gaiman would do well to do the same.
After the tepid production of Agents of SHIELD and the supposedly very good pilot for The Magicians not getting picked up by FOX two years ago, I don't think traditional television - even cable television - is the right platform for this kind of high-concept, fantasy-driven production. Maybe now HBO will re-think their stance on Franzen's The Corrections. -
pronetorevelation — 12 years ago(December 27, 2013 05:09 AM)
The only two networks I could see pulling this off are AMC or Netflix. While I love FX's lineup,
American Gods
would be a poor fit sandwiched between shows like
Justified
&
Sons of Anarchy
.
Based on
The Walking Dead
's success, AMC has been looking to expand their sci-fi/fantasy offerings. Netflix has
Hemlock Grove
, which wasn't met with much critical acclaim, though their deal with Marvel/Disney displays a similar interest to delve into the genre.
Here's hoping one of these two - consistently the top two in terms of new show success & creative freedom - see fit to give AG a home. -
littlerivers — 12 years ago(January 09, 2014 10:40 AM)
Seems as though AMC is a great fit. They've really expanded the diversity of their series'. It would fit very well with The Walking Dead, Breaking Bad (or now, Better Call Saul), and Mad Men. I also wouldn't count out A&E. With Bates Motel, and acquiring a remake of Sundance's French series, The Returned (which IMO was the best television series hands down in 2013), A&E seems like a logical choice for American Gods.
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Kay_Rock — 10 years ago(July 12, 2015 12:58 PM)
I thought I understood that fuller signed on for AG before Hannibal even got the axe. Looks like hannibal was sacrificed in blood to the american gods.
Movies are IQ tests; the IMDB boards are how people broadcast their score. -
SoundscapeMN — 10 years ago(August 15, 2015 08:02 PM)
it would be nice if this show had some humor like Pushing Daisies, Wonderfalls and Dead Like Me. But with the tone and interest Hannibal has given him, I fear it won't.
http://allmediareviews.blogspot.com
http://psychiccrapfest.blogspot.com -
prydain17 — 10 years ago(April 01, 2016 11:34 AM)
Every single Bryan Fuller production has significant humor, even Hannibal, and everything I've ever read by Neil Gaiman, including American Gods, has lots of humor.
Of course this show is gonna have humor Alongside the horrific. Which sounds perfect to me.
"No! He is imprinted on you like a gay duckling. If you don't wean him off you slowly, he'll die." -
theunopeneddoor-697-442391 — 10 years ago(August 22, 2015 11:28 PM)
Actually he was going to work on both, Hannibal got cancelled due to low ratings.
Joseph Chastain
me
www.twitter.com/sinnersbible -
xriotheatx — 9 years ago(December 01, 2016 06:08 AM)
I don't want it to go on any network that is ad supported because I am sick of censorship and also I am tired of corporate fat cat executives interfering with the creative process of TV shows.
It should go on Netflix. Netflix allows creative freedom even moreso than HBO. And they aren't prudes over naughty words like ad supported networks are.