Montreal Gazette

SMILE, PARDNER

TV networks and streaming services are presenting details about upcoming programs at the Television Critics Associatio­n’s annual summer meeting. Lynn Elber has the highlights.

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BACK TO THE BLACK HILLS

Deadwood fans can exhale.

HBO says it’s green-lighted a long-discussed movie based on the Western drama that ended a dozen years ago.

HBO programmin­g chief Casey Bloys said Wednesday that production is scheduled to begin in October. An air date has yet to be set but it could debut in spring 2019, he said.

Bloys told a TV critics’ meeting it was a logistical “nightmare” getting the ensemble cast’s schedules to align, but it finally worked out.

The critically acclaimed, award-winning Deadwood was set in the rough-and-tumble South Dakota mining town of the title. The series aired from 2004 to 2006 with stars including Timothy Olyphant, Ian McShane and Molly Parker.

It was created by David Milch, known for his work on the contempora­ry police dramas NYPD Blue and Hill Street Blues.

UNDER NEW OWNERSHIP

HBO’s programmin­g chief pushed back Wednesday against the possibilit­y the cable channel will suffer under new owner AT&T. Casey Bloys, speaking to TV critics, said there are no plans to choose volume over quality for its shows.

“No one is asking us to take pitches of a Love Boat reboot or anything like that,” he said.

As support, Bloys cited comments made during an earnings call Tuesday by John Stankey, who manages the new AT&T division that includes HBO and other Time Warner media assets. AT&T acquired Time Warner in an US$85-billion deal concluded earlier this month.

Stankey said that the aim was to invest more in premium content at HBO, home to Game of Thrones, Big Little Lies and Westworld. In contrast, he reportedly told HBO staff recently to prepare for a difficult year.

Bloys called Tuesday’s remarks “music to our ears.”

Time Warner had curtailed programmin­g investment as it readied itself for sale “so this is the first time in a long time we’ve heard anybody talking about investing in programmin­g,” Bloyssaid.

HBO has long held the high ground in acclaimed shows but is facing challenges from bigspendin­g newcomers including streaming services Netflix and Amazon. In the recently announced Emmy nomination­s, Netflix ended HBO’s 17-year streak as the most-nominated outlet by snagging 112 bids to HBO’s 108. The outcome was unsurprisi­ng given the overall volume of programmin­g, Bloys said, a reference to the phenomenon dubbed “peak TV” that has given viewers nearly 500 series.

Getting four fewer nomination­s “is not going to change the type of programs that we develop and produce at all,” he said, but added that HBO does face the challenge of creating more programmin­g without changing its approach.

“So that’s what we’re in discussion now. What’s the right level for us with this increased funding ?” he said.

FONDA STILL HEARS FROM CRITICS

Jane Fonda says she’s still confronted by Vietnam War veterans over her 1970s antiwar activism and welcomes the encounters.

The actress drew bitter criticism after being photograph­ed atop an anti-aircraft gun during a controvers­ial 1972 visit to North Vietnam. Meeting with TV critics Wednesday to discuss a new HBO documentar­y on her life, she expressed regret for that moment.

She said it was thoughtles­s to perch on the gun and called it “horrible” to think about the message her action sent to soldiers and their families, she said.

It was an earlier meeting with U.S. soldiers in Paris that sparked her activism, Fonda said. Her belief that America always fought on “the side of the angels” was shaken by what she heard and later read. Her late father, the famed actor Henry Fonda, was a Second World War veteran and Jane Fonda had served as Miss Army Recruiter in 1954.

She felt betrayed and lied to by America’s leadership over the war and decided she would do everything possible to help stop it, Fonda said.

At age 80, Fonda looks back at her life in HBO’s Jane Fonda in Five Acts, from director-producer Susan Lacy and debuting this fall. Fonda continues to work, starring opposite Lily Tomlin on the Netflix series Grace and Frankie and working with Tomlin and Dolly Parton on a sequel to their hit 1980 movie 9 to 5.

 ?? KEVORK DJANSEZIAN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Deadwood — which was created by David Milch, left, and starred Larry Cedar and Peter Jason — is coming back as a movie. The award-winning HBO series was a critical hit and production on the movie is scheduled to begin later this year.
KEVORK DJANSEZIAN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Deadwood — which was created by David Milch, left, and starred Larry Cedar and Peter Jason — is coming back as a movie. The award-winning HBO series was a critical hit and production on the movie is scheduled to begin later this year.
 ?? FREDERICK M. BROWN/GETTY IMAGES ?? Actress Jane Fonda says she’s still criticized for her 1970s antiwar activism by Vietnam War veterans.
FREDERICK M. BROWN/GETTY IMAGES Actress Jane Fonda says she’s still criticized for her 1970s antiwar activism by Vietnam War veterans.

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