Rhetorica June 13, 2014 Share June 13, 2014 I hope this is good and veers away from stereotypical depictions. It looks promising. From Wiki: While the show is filmed throughout various cities in Israel such as Kfar Saba, Petakh Tikva, and Tel Aviv, the fictional Arab country of "Baladi" is deliberately compiled from mixed elements of a few different actual countries, in order not appear to simulate a particular nation or situation. The producers of the series have also said that no particular sects or clans will be named while relating details. Executive producer Howard Gordon stated, "We do want to stay away from reality and yet hew to it as long as sort of it feels emotionally correct and culturally correct. I think we’re going to try to stay away from names as much as possible." Link to comment
scrb June 14, 2014 Share June 14, 2014 Good background here on the series. http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/fxs-tyrant-dramatic-backstory-709209 1 Link to comment
formerlyfreedom June 14, 2014 Share June 14, 2014 Some previews from vod.fxnetworks.com - First Look Running Barry There are a few more there, but they seem to be a bit more arty. Link to comment
MrsRafaelBarba June 14, 2014 Share June 14, 2014 Everytime I see the promo, Oded Fehr comes to mind. Looks like a project he would've been perfect for IMHO. They get side eye for casting Adam Raynor in the lead, trying to pass him off as Middle Eastern. With that said, it does look interesting and I'm glad to see Ashraf Barhom involved. He was excellent in the 2007 film The Kingdom. Link to comment
SimoneS June 19, 2014 Share June 19, 2014 They really could not find a talented Arab actor to play the lead or they did not care enough to bother looking for one? Link to comment
scrb June 19, 2014 Share June 19, 2014 The Hollywood Reporter article I linked above kind of explains the casting decision ... May not be a satisfactory explanation but it's an explanation. Link to comment
xaxat June 24, 2014 Share June 24, 2014 They really could not find a talented Arab actor to play the lead or they did not care enough to bother looking for one? Seeing that Dominic West was an early option, I don't think they tried to hard. ". . . the producers wanted an actor who looked more authentically Middle Eastern." As compared to someone who actually is Middle Eastern. Also from the article, If they had it to do over again, the pilot likely would have been shot in Israel, but the idea was nixed in 2013 for the awkward political optics. But casting a white guy as the lead was OK. Link to comment
annlaw78 June 24, 2014 Share June 24, 2014 The matriarch of the family is English, similar to King Abdullah of Jordan's mother, so I think the show expects that to explain why the lead may look more "European." That, and the kingdom is supposed to be set in the Mediterranean-adjacent region of Lebanon/Jordan/Syria, and not a Gulf state. But I get the beef -- there are not a ton of roles for actors from that region or with Arab heritage, so a little more casting authenticity wouldn't hurt. 1 Link to comment
voiceover June 24, 2014 Share June 24, 2014 (edited) Yeah. As a half-breed Persian, I'm having a bit of an Anna May Wong/Luise Rainer/The Good Earth moment here. But if he's good, I'll get over it. Shout out to the Oded Fehr shout-out! In sh'allah, we'll get a guest appearance. Edited June 24, 2014 by voiceover Link to comment
MrsRafaelBarba June 24, 2014 Share June 24, 2014 They can miss me with that explanation. Nobody thought of Alexander Siddig either huh? Link to comment
annlaw78 June 24, 2014 Share June 24, 2014 (edited) Yeah. As a half-breed Persian, I'm having a bit of an Anna May Wong/Luise Rainer/The Good Earth moment here. But if he's good, I'll get over it. I'm willing to give a bit of benefit of the doubt (largely because I like Adam Rayner in the other stuff he's been in, some more high brow (Hunted) than others (Mistresses UK), and I'm glad to see him land another show). I doubt his portrayal is going to be a Mickey Rooney in Breakfast at Tiffany's abomination. And the sad reality of American TV is that for some reason, TPTB think that Americans only want to watch shows about Americans, with American accents, in America (it's hard to tell from the previews for this show, but it seems like Rayner has ditched his natural English accent). How many remakes of popular foreign shows do we need (including, inexplicably, British shows, like Broadchurch, Mistresses, Coupling, etc., wherein the cast is, you know, speaking English), rather than simply broadcasting the originals -- especially given the advent of truncated "prestige TV" seasons, which are more in line with typical English "series" runs. Edited June 24, 2014 by annlaw78 Link to comment
Constantinople June 24, 2014 Share June 24, 2014 From Wiki: While the show is filmed throughout various cities in Israel such as Kfar Saba, Petakh Tikva, and Tel Aviv, the fictional Arab country of "Baladi" is deliberately compiled from mixed elements of a few different actual countries, in order not appear to simulate a particular nation or situation. The producers of the series have also said that no particular sects or clans will be named while relating details. Executive producer Howard Gordon stated, "We do want to stay away from reality and yet hew to it as long as sort of it feels emotionally correct and culturally correct. I think we’re going to try to stay away from names as much as possible." Makes we wonder what they're going to call Israel. Hebrewia? The Republic of Judah? Link to comment
Tara Ariano June 24, 2014 Share June 24, 2014 I guess they changed it from Baladi: the press kit says the country's name is Abbudin. Link to comment
xaxat June 25, 2014 Share June 25, 2014 I agree with a lot of this article that explains the problem of casting Rayner as the lead. Link to comment
wanderingstar June 26, 2014 Share June 26, 2014 Everytime I see the promo, Oded Fehr comes to mind.Looks like a project he would've been perfect for IMHO. Yes - he would have been perfect! Also, I find him kinda hot! Link to comment
eejm June 29, 2014 Share June 29, 2014 Adam Rayner talks about his new role in Interview magazine. Nothing really groundbreaking, but it seems as though Bassam may not have "run away" from his father in the literal sense, but went abroad to finish school and avoided going back to his home country until now. It's interesting that Bassam went to the US rather than the UK, having a British mother and all. Link to comment
SimoneS June 30, 2014 Share June 30, 2014 (edited) Alexander Siddig would have been the perfect choice to be Bassam and far more age appropriate for the role. He would be far more recognizable to the U.S. audience and he would have brought his Star Trek fans with him. Given the show's initial low 18-49 demo of 0.6, they desperately need those fans. Talk about allowing shooting yourself in the foot. I agree with a lot of this article that explains the problem of casting Rayner as the lead. Great article. Thanks for posting the link. Edited June 30, 2014 by SimoneS 2 Link to comment
eejm July 1, 2014 Share July 1, 2014 Alexander Siddig would have been the perfect choice to be Bassam and far more age appropriate for the role. He would be far more recognizable to the U.S. audience and he would have brought his Star Trek fans with him. Given the show's initial low 18-49 demo of 0.6, they desperately need those fans. Talk about allowing shooting yourself in the foot. Great article. Thanks for posting the link. Siddig is working on a British series now, so he may not have been available. While he's of the right age and look, I'm not sure how he'd have played Barry's more cold, calculated side. Along with Star Trek I've seen him in just a few things, usually playing a gentle and/or heroic character. Has he ever played someone with a bit more of a villainous side? Link to comment
SimoneS July 1, 2014 Share July 1, 2014 (edited) Siddig is working on a British series now, so he may not have been available. While he's of the right age and look, I'm not sure how he'd have played Barry's more cold, calculated side. Along with Star Trek I've seen him in just a few things, usually playing a gentle and/or heroic character. Has he ever played someone with a bit more of a villainous side? From the interviews with the producers, it is clear that they never seriously considered casting an Arab actor. They have no excuse for their stereotyping and limited vision. As for Siddig, Tyrant was filmed last year so he very well might have been available if the producers were remotely interested in casting him in the role. Also, we will never know about Siddig's acting range as long as producers refuse to cast him in roles for which he ideally suited. Edited July 1, 2014 by SimoneS Link to comment
scrb July 1, 2014 Share July 1, 2014 Reality is that American shows are primarily made for a North American audience, with sales to European markets for additional revenues. It's one thing to have Arab or other ethnic members in the cast but to have one be the central character? It really shouldn't be that surprising. Link to comment
MrsRafaelBarba July 1, 2014 Share July 1, 2014 Alexander Siddig..... Excuse me, while I mentally drool over that foine ass man. 1 Link to comment
annlaw78 July 1, 2014 Share July 1, 2014 (edited) Reality is that American shows are primarily made for a North American audience, with sales to European markets for additional revenues. It's one thing to have Arab or other ethnic members in the cast but to have one be the central character? It really shouldn't be that surprising. Yeah, how many different ethnicities has Alfred Molina (a Brit with Spanish/Italian heritage) played? He's been Iranian, French, South American (whatever he was in Raiders of the Lost Ark), Russian, Belgian, Spanish, English, Mexican, German, etc.). For years, if you had brown hair, you were good to play any part. That said, I think Rayner "looks" the part of a half English-half Syrian-ish dude fine. Bashar Assad has blue eyes, too. I think they're going for a comparison with him -- a Western-educated physician who lived abroad and avoided the "family business" who is drawn back in. Part of the shock is how can someone who spent years as a mild-mannered physician living in a democratic society can flip into despot-mode. I do get why it chafes that a central role that could have been filled with a non-white guy went to the white guy. I hope Rayner proves his casting was worth the controversy. Edited July 1, 2014 by annlaw78 1 Link to comment
Rhetorica July 15, 2014 Share July 15, 2014 The shooting (no pun intended) is moving out if Israel. http://m.deadline.com/2014/07/fxs-tyrant-moves-production-from-israel-to-turkey-amid-gaza-violence/ Link to comment
dubbel zout July 15, 2014 Share July 15, 2014 Also, we will never know about Siddig's acting range as long as producers refuse to cast him in roles for which he ideally suited. Watch him in Cairo Time, and you'll get an excellent idea of his range. 1 Link to comment
MrsRafaelBarba July 18, 2014 Share July 18, 2014 I love Cairo Time, Siddig and Particia Clarkson sizzled. Link to comment
Mozelle July 18, 2014 Share July 18, 2014 (edited) Watch him in Cairo Time, and you'll get an excellent idea of his range. My goodness, yes! I love that movie to pieces. I first saw it a month before the protests happened in Egypt, and it spurned in me such desire to travel to Egypt. I watched it again later in the year after the Arab Spring had kicked off. I watched it most recently a few months back. Each and every time I see the movie, I think 1) Alexander Siddig is such a fine, fine, foine man and 2) Alexander Siddig is a wonderful actor. Edited July 18, 2014 by Mozelle 1 Link to comment
VLove August 12, 2014 Share August 12, 2014 Due to my boyfriend's urging, I just binge watched the series. I'm a bit confused and have a serious question: Amria Al Fayeed is supposed to be English, correct? If so, I can *kinda* buy Bassam being half English/half Middle Eastern (kinda)... but is Amira supposed to be Jamal's mother as well? In my head, Jamal's mother died in childbirth or something and he and Bassam are half brothers. They don't look related at all (imho). It's distracting. I'm an American viewer and them speaking English all the time is driving me nuts. I can understand them speaking to Bassam's family, or the US diplomat in English - but c'mon. But I guess they would have had to come up with a fake language for the fake country. I, for one, would have loved to see some Persian actors. That would have been amazing. Link to comment
scrb August 15, 2014 Share August 15, 2014 Any word on the ratings? Wondering if this will be renewed. Probably the producers need to get an idea of how to plot season 2 and beyond. Link to comment
Chrissytd August 16, 2014 Share August 16, 2014 (edited) Any word on the ratings? Wondering if this will be renewed. Probably the producers need to get an idea of how to plot season 2 and beyond. The premiere got 2.1 million, Episode 2 dropped to 1.385. The lowest rating so far is Episode 7's 1.336. All of the episodes have pulled 0.5-0.6 share in the 18-49 demographic. It's not doing as well The Strain but it's not doing as bad as The Bridge. I think it could go either way. Edited August 16, 2014 by Chrissytd Link to comment
TheRabbi August 21, 2014 Share August 21, 2014 I agree it could go either way. Another 0.6 this week, which has actually been an extremely steady audience. As noted, every episode has been 0.5 or 0.6. It's doing about the same, or a tiny bit better, than Fargo did in the slot a few months back. It's doing slightly better than The Americans, also on FX, which got renewed. And its doing better than The Bridge, whose fate is currently unknown. If I had to guess, I'd give it a 60/40 chance of coming back. The raw numbers tell me it should eke out a renewal, but cost also has to be a driving force, and if something like The Bridge is cheaper to produce (I have no idea if filming in Israel or Turkey drives up or lowers costs), then it could be one or the other. Link to comment
scrb August 21, 2014 Share August 21, 2014 Is it a bad sign that they haven't renewed it already? Don't they often renew while in season? We're already up to the finale. Presumably The Strain is renewed. Link to comment
TheRabbi August 21, 2014 Share August 21, 2014 Hard to tell. FX has done both scenarios, most recently renewing The Americans and The Strain mid-season, and Fargo post-season. Though I think a good PR move would be to renew it next Monday, saying "FX renews Tyrant for season 2 - be sure to catch the finale tomorrow!" If we don't hear about it by Monday or Tuesday, I'd say the odds go down a bit. Link to comment
dubbel zout August 21, 2014 Share August 21, 2014 (edited) The Americans has had a lot of critical praise and attention, which I'm sure contributed to its renewal. Plus, I think it's a much better show in all respects than Tyrant. There's a good idea here, but the follow-through has been shaky. The Bridge won a Peabody Award in 2013, so I think its next season is guaranteed. Edited August 21, 2014 by dubbel zout 1 Link to comment
lonestar August 25, 2014 Share August 25, 2014 I keep reading about middle eastern characters being miscast or that white people were playing some of the roles. People should look around the middle east, Syria is filled with extremely pale skinned people with light eyes and light brown hair, same with Jordan. Viewers are so used to seeing dark, olive skinned people with thick features, dark hair and hairy bodies as being the norm when it isn't. Link to comment
bluebonnet September 1, 2014 Share September 1, 2014 I keep reading about middle eastern characters being miscast or that white people were playing some of the roles. People should look around the middle east, Syria is filled with extremely pale skinned people with light eyes and light brown hair, same with Jordan. Viewers are so used to seeing dark, olive skinned people with thick features, dark hair and hairy bodies as being the norm when it isn't. Er, I'm pretty sure it has to do with Adam Rayner not being Middle Eastern, regardless of his looks. More importantly, the problems with casting that have been very much advertised is also cause for concern. His appearance is easily explained by his mother being English and having light eyes. Still, as you point out, light eyes isn't uncommon to the Middle East. Sharbat Gula was the face of Afghanistan for quite some time, after all. The difference here is that Sharbat Gula is decidedly Middle Eastern while Adam Rayner is not. Explaining the problem with this would take pages and pages but there are some really good articles online that go into great detail about why the casting for this show was so problematic. It doesn't have to do with skin or eye color. 2 Link to comment
xaxat September 7, 2014 Share September 7, 2014 (edited) The Tyrant, in real life. Syrian politics were far from Suzanne Hitto’s mind when her husband called last year to tell her to hire a lawyer. She had not seen him in months, and he had already surprised her by quitting his job. Her first thought, sitting alone in her home in the Dallas suburb of Murphy, Tex., was that he wanted a divorce.“The reason it’s so urgent,” her husband, Ghassan Hitto, went on, “is that two things may happen next week. First, I am likely to become the prime minister of Syria. And then, there is a chance, I may be assassinated." Mr. Hitto, most recently the director of operations for a Texas-based telecommunications company, became interim prime minister of the Syrian opposition coalition a few days later. What was supposed to have been a two-week trip had evolved into something far more complicated. Edited September 7, 2014 by xaxat 1 Link to comment
Ferniesfreckles September 9, 2014 Share September 9, 2014 Wow! Fascinating. Thanks for posting this. Link to comment
paulvdb September 18, 2014 Share September 18, 2014 'Tyrant' Renewed for Season Two by FX 3 Link to comment
dubbel zout September 18, 2014 Share September 18, 2014 (edited) Here's hoping they realize Bassam's family is an albatross, and Molly and the kids stay in the U.S. Otherwise, good news. I hope Leila gets more to do, too. Edited September 18, 2014 by dubbel zout 2 Link to comment
Ferniesfreckles September 18, 2014 Share September 18, 2014 Wonderful news! I get to keep looking at Barry's beautiful blue eyes for a while longer. 1 Link to comment
thuganomics85 September 18, 2014 Share September 18, 2014 (edited) From a ratings perspective, this makes sense, because it's been constant enough, plus it's higher then other shows (poor, more then likely doomed The Bridge). I think the only reason it might have taken so long to make a decision was cost and maybe creative decisions, but it sounds like it all worked out. As I said in the finale thread, I'll be back for Ashraf Barhom and Moran Atias, but I hope they fix some of the other issues. Mainly Molly and the fucking family. And, maybe give Alice Krige more to do. And allow Adam Rayner to have more then two facial expressions. If not, then I'll just keep riding the Team Jamal train, and root for evil! Edited September 18, 2014 by thuganomics85 1 Link to comment
dubbel zout September 18, 2014 Share September 18, 2014 I think the only reason it might have taken so long to make a decision was cost and maybe creative decisions, They probably had to figure out where they'd film the next season, given how things are in Israel. Looks as if Turkey might become the go-to Middle East stand-in for a while. Link to comment
MrsRafaelBarba September 19, 2014 Share September 19, 2014 I'll be back for Ashraf and Moras Correction, Moran Atias. Link to comment
Rhetorica September 20, 2014 Share September 20, 2014 Great news! I guess we need a spoiler thread for season two now. Link to comment
Artsda September 22, 2014 Share September 22, 2014 So happy to hear they'll be a second season. Since it was taking so long I didn't have much hope. 1 Link to comment
eyetotelescope September 23, 2014 Share September 23, 2014 I'm surprised that this was renewed. I'll tune in for the next season, though I really have no idea why I keep watching it, considering how many complaints I have every episode. I think it's just the premise that I really like and can't let go of, rather than the actual show. Link to comment
scrb February 12, 2015 Share February 12, 2015 Assad gave an interview to some English journalist, denying some of the atrocities he's accused of. Made me think of Tyrant, since Syria would be one of the models. Of course ISIL has captured the imagination since the end of Tyrant S1, becoming the new number one Islamic enemy of the US, as well as inspire some Muslims from Europe to join them, as well as boast in their grisly videos and dubious social network campaigns. If they air season 2 about a year after season 1, you'd expect production to be happening now, since they're going to do 13 episodes instead of the 10 they got for S1. You wonder if they'll somehow try to integrate what ISIL is doing. This past week, Jordan executed some ISIL prisoners after they burned a Jordanian pilot alive. Supposedly the US is trying to get Arab countries to form ground forces to go to war. Then you have the plunge in oil prices, which might affect Jamal's reign. Link to comment
Artsda March 12, 2015 Share March 12, 2015 Anne Winters has joined an ABC pilot. Not sure what this means for role on Tyrant. http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/live-feed/gossip-girl-alum-play-creepy-781019 http://www.digitalspy.co.uk/ustv/news/a635062/gabriel-luna-and-anne-winters-cast-in-abc-drama-pilot-la-crime.html#~p6KSoPFBsJsIGB Link to comment
dubbel zout March 13, 2015 Share March 13, 2015 Hopefully it means Barry's kids will be a minimal part of the next season. 1 Link to comment
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