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| colspan="5" | '''Tru Calling: The Complete First Season'''
| colspan="5" | '''Tru Calling: The Complete First Season'''
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| rowspan="4" align="center" width="150"| [[Image:Tru Calling season 1.jpg|163px|]]
| rowspan="4" align="center" width="150"| <!-- Image with unknown copyright status removed: [[Image:Tru Calling season 1.jpg|163px|]] -->
| align="center" width="250" colspan="3"| '''Set Details'''
| align="center" width="250" colspan="3"| '''Set Details'''
| width="330" align="center" colspan="1"|'''Special Features'''
| width="330" align="center" colspan="1"|'''Special Features'''

Revision as of 07:03, 12 September 2007

Tru Calling
File:Trucalling.jpg
Tru Calling logo
Created byJon Harmon Feldman
Starringsee below
Opening theme"Somebody Help Me?" by Full Blown Rose
Country of originUnited States
No. of episodes26 (list of episodes)
Production
Running timeapprox. 43 minutes
Original release
NetworkFOX
ReleaseOctober 30, 2003 –
March 11, 2005

Tru Calling is an American television program, filmed in Vancouver, Canada which premiered on the Fox Network in October 2003. It ran for two seasons of 26 episodes in total, before being cancelled.

The show's cancellation was officially announced at a press conference in January 2005, but Gail Berman, then president of Fox, insisted that the network intended to broadcast the remaining six episodes filmed for the show's second season. Season two of Tru Calling first aired in New Zealand on TV3 beginning on February 4 2005, with the final episode airing on March 11, 2005. In Croatia, it was aired the following March and April. And, after nearly a year-long hiatus, in the U.S. beginning on March 31 2005. The second season began airing on Sky One in the United Kingdom, starting on October 12, 2006. The final episode filmed was never broadcast in the U.S.. The complete series was also aired in Argentina, Brazil, France, Germany, Hong Kong, India, Italy, Malaysia, Portugal, Singapore, and Slovakia. DVDs of both seasons have been released in the United States and the United Kingdom.

Premise

The lead character is Tru Davies, (Eliza Dushku), a young woman working the night shift at the City Morgue. Every now and then, the corpse of a newly dead person appears to awaken and ask Tru for help; she then awakens with a start at the beginning of the same day, compelled to try to stop the death, often taking the opportunity to rectify various personal situations involving family and friends along the way. Reason for death include murder, cancer, suicide, etc. Supporting characters in the series include Harrison Davies (Shawn Reaves), Tru's irresponsible younger brother (who later becomes a loyal asset to Tru at the end of the first season), and Davis (Zach Galifianakis), her friend, confidante, and supervisor at the Morgue. It is eventually revealed that, several years earlier, Davis had a fateful encounter with Tru's mother (who was, apparently, the last person to receive the "calling" before her daughter).

Supporting characters suriving only a portion of the series included Meredith Davies (Jessica Collins), Tru's drug addicted sister, Lindsay Walker (A. J. Cook), her best friend in the first season, Luc Johnston (Matthew Bomer), her love interest in the first season, and Gardez (Benjamin Benitez), her former co-worker at the morgue.

Jack Harper (Jason Priestley), a counterpart to Tru's character, is introduced midseason as a foil and potential love interest. He is there to make sure fate got its way, and introduces a philosophical aspect to Tru's endeavours: should she be saving the lives of people who may have been intended to die? In the second season, Tru and Jack compete to get to a person first — she to save them, and he to restore the order of fate, and maintain what he believes to be the balance of the universe.

Episode list

Controversy and cancellation

Tru Calling has been cited by television critics, bloggers, and science-fiction fans as an example of a series that was not given time to find an audience, or adequately to develop its premise[citation needed]. On the other hand, some websites refused even to cover the show in their "spoiler" listings, claiming it was too contrived and difficult to watch, and the addition of Jason Priestley to the cast (arguably) failed to increase ratings.[citation needed] Further hype and speculation was generated by the show's season-ending cliffhanger, with Jack revealing himself to be Tru's nemesis, and even having a working relationship with her father.

After this cliffhanger, spoilers and inquiries began hitting industry magazines, with the promise of great plot developments in store during the second season. Even odder, given the series' eventual fate, is a season one DVD release with commentary by an enthusiastic cast and crew talking up the second season of the show. In fact, the website Ain't It Cool News, which hated the show in its first year, claimed that the second season deserved praise for being the "Most Improved" show of the year[citation needed]. Fox Television could not decide what to do with Tru. First they renewed for a second season, then curtailed it to a length of 13, then, eventually, just 6, episodes. The season's broadcast date was moved from November 2004 to an undetermined date in 2005. After storing the show's set for an indefinite period of time, word finally arrived that it was being torn down, and Tru's fate appeared to be sealed. In the end, Fox replaced it with another science-fiction genre entry, Point Pleasant, which suffered even lower ratings than Tru Calling.

Finally, almost a year later, Fox Television began broadcasting the last six filmed episodes of Tru Calling in March 2005, in place of Point Pleasant, which had been cancelled. Ironically, these episodes achieved better ratings than Point Pleasant during their run, with practically no advertising[citation needed]. The second season also did very well in New Zealand during its run there in February and March.

On April 20, 2005, Fox announced that the sixth and final episode would not be aired, and that the series would end its run one week early with the episode they originally intended to show the following evening. Network executives felt it would be peculiar to show an episode with a partial Christmas theme (the show had been scheduled to debut on November 4, putting the sixth episode near Christmas) in late April. Instead, two episodes of The Simple Life were aired in its timeslot.

Comparisons

The series' use of time travel as a weekly device led some viewers to compare it to three other television series which fans feel were unfairly cancelled – Quantum Leap, Early Edition, and Sliders. Critics of the comparison note that whilst Tru Calling's "rewind" format is similar to the notions of time travel or parallel worlds, the series distanced itself from using the format to address philosophical or social issues, until near the end when it briefly touched broadly on the notion of fate.

On November 10, 2006 during a hiatus of Lost, ABC began airing another same day time repeating show Day Break where the protagonist, Detective Brett Hopper (Taye Diggs), is caught in a single day time loop in which he is framed for murdering Assistant District Attorney Alberto Garza. In each cycle he obtains clues as to who is responsible and why. Unlike Tru Callings mostly self-contained single story episodes, Day Break's first season, a 13 episode story arc, was scheduled to conclude at the end of January 2007. However, on December 15, 2006 due to falling ratings, ABC cancelled Day Break after airing only six episodes, but went on to air the final seven episodes online, with the last showing on March 2, 2007.

What might have been

After the show's cancellation, writer/producer Doris Egan posted information on LiveJournal detailing how the mythology of the series would likely have been developed, had it continued.

Salient points include:

  • There are two great Powers in the universe concerned with humanity's fate; one that laid out the original plan that history has been following since the beginning of time, and one that wants to change that plan (what ultimate goal either side is working toward remains unknown, possibly even to the show's creators). The first power is more strict and authoritarian in its view of humanity, whereas the second is "more accepting of individual freedom and choice."
  • Whenever someone dies who may be important to the overall scheme of things (and, presumably, in a way that would serve the second power's purposes), an agent of that power approaches the person and offers them a choice- they can either move on, or return and have a shot at resuming their old life. If they want a second chance, all they have to do is ask for it. If they do, Tru goes back and relives the day, with a view to saving that person's life.
  • Every time Tru saves someone who has asked for her help, she steers the destiny of our world a little further away from what the first power intended, and a little closer to what the agents of the second power want.
  • Jack, Tru's nemesis, has a very big advantage over her — his mentor, her father (who was Jack's predecessor, just as Tru's mother was hers). Tru is working in the dark, learning as she goes along, but Jack has an older, more experienced counterpart who can share knowledge and wisdom from a long line of predecessors with his young protege. Tru, of course, was robbed of this potentially crucial advantage because of her mother's untimely death.
  • Jack became Tru's counterpart after being approached by agents of the first power during his near-death experience. They offered him a choice: he could either die, or return to Earth to do their bidding. Once he got back, his memories of the encounter were hazy, and he didn't initially understand what was happening when his days started rewinding (at around the time that Tru's did). Jack eventually wound up in an asylum, which is where Tru's father found him.
  • The central conflict of the show's mythology was never meant to be perceived as a simple, straightforward "good versus evil" scenario. Rather, the creators intended to portray the battle in such a way that either side could conceivably be right — and, at the very least, to show that the soldiers on both sides certainly believe that what they're doing is right. Jack and Tru's father truly believe that she is disrupting the balance of the universe by her actions. Tru, conversely, believes otherwise. Who would have turned out to be right? These are the questions the producers of the show meant us to ponder upon.
  • A future storyline on the show would have dealt with the possible repercussions if Jack ever decided that he no longer wanted to fulfill his end of the bargain (i.e., to continue doing the first power's bidding).
  • Another storyline (which was actually in progress when the show ended) would have dealt with the consequences of Tru's saving someone who hadn't asked for her help. Because that person was either never given the choice to come back, or was and chose not to take it, he would have essentially lost his soul after being saved by Tru, and would then have begun spiralling into increasingly menacing behavior as his humanity faded away and his personality began to disintegrate.


This file may be deleted after Friday, 24 August 2007.

Cast

Main Characters

Special Guest Stars

Season two featured some recurring "Special Guest Stars", notably:

Guest Stars

Tru's two Medical School friends were also recurring characters in season two.

U.S. television ratings

Seasonal rankings (based on average total viewers per episode) of Tru Calling on FOX.

Note: Each U.S. network television season begins in late September and ends in late May, which coincides with the completion of May sweeps.

Season Timeslot U.S. Season Première U.S. Season Finale TV Season Season
Rank
Viewers
(in millions)
1 Thursdays 8:00pm/7:00pm October 30, 2003 April 29, 2004 2003-2004 #151Cite error: The <ref> tag name cannot be a simple integer (see the help page). 4.5Cite error: The <ref> tag name cannot be a simple integer (see the help page).
2* Thursdays 9:00pm/8:00pm March 31, 2005 April 21, 2005 2004-2005 121Cite error: The <ref> tag name cannot be a simple integer (see the help page). 4.21Cite error: The <ref> tag name cannot be a simple integer (see the help page).

*Please note that the final episode of Tru Calling did not air in the United States, and that the second season originally aired in New Zealand from February 4-March 11, 2005.

DVD releases

Region 1

Tru Calling: The Complete First Season
Set Details Special Features
  • 20 Episodes
  • 6-Disc Set
  • 1.78:1 Aspect Ratio
  • English (Dolby Digital Surround)
  • Subtitles: English, Spanish and French
  • Selected Episode Commentary
  • Deleted Scenes
  • 3 Featurettes
    • "Finding The Calling: The Pilot"
    • "The Tru Path: Season One"
    • "Evil Comes Calling: A Late Season Twist"
  • "Somebody Help Me" Music Video by Full Blown Rose
Release Date
 United States November 30 2004
Tru Calling: The Complete Second Season


This file may be deleted after Friday, 24 August 2007.
Set Details Special Features
  • 6 Episodes
  • 2-Disc Set
  • 1.78:1 Aspect Ratio
  • English (Dolby Digital Surround)
  • Subtitles: Spanish and French
  • Making-Of Featurette
Release Date
 United States November 15 2005

Region 2 & 4

References

External links

Template:Tru Calling