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==Haven's homage to Stephen King== |
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Allusions to the works of Stephen King are built into the show. According to the official Syfy Haven website, "Haven, based on the Stephen King novella, The Colorado Kid, features other notable Stephen King references on the show each week."<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.syfy.com/haven/stephenking|title=("Stephen King Corner")|work=Syfy|accessdate=August 16, 2011}}</ref> Some of those references are listed here below. |
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{{Trivia|date=August 2011}} |
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* In the opening sequence, a newspaper article on "The Most Revered Flagg" is a reference to [[Randall Flagg]], a recurring villain in ''[[The Dark Tower (series)|The Dark Tower]]'' series by Stephen King. Randall Flagg is also the villain in Stephen King's novel ''[[The Stand]]''. |
* In the opening sequence, a newspaper article on "The Most Revered Flagg" is a reference to [[Randall Flagg]], a recurring villain in ''[[The Dark Tower (series)|The Dark Tower]]'' series by Stephen King. Randall Flagg is also the villain in Stephen King's novel ''[[The Stand]]''. |
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* The episode "Fear and Loathing" revolves around a Troubled person who unwillingly takes the form of a person's worst fear, and appears as a clown to Audrey Parker |
* In the episode "Ain't No Sunshine" the shadow that kills people is called the Dark Man. This is a reference to a poem written by King called ''The Dark Man''. Flagg is often referred to as "The Dark Man" in The Stand. |
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* The episode "Fear and Loathing" revolves around a Troubled person who unwillingly takes the form of a person's worst fear, and appears as a clown to Audrey Parker. This is a direct reference to King's novel ''[[It (novel)|It]]'', also referencing ''[[It (novel)|It]]'' in "A Tale of Two Audreys", there is a little boy in a yellow rain slicker outside the church chasing a newspaper boat that he set in the stream in the gutter and chased until it fell down into a stormdrain on Witcham Street which he then sticks his right arm down into and then screams, the same as George Denbrough did in the opening chapter of ''[[It (novel)|It]]'' |
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* In the episode "Love Machine", machines start to come to life and kill people, a direct reference to King's short story ''[[Trucks (short story)|Trucks]]'' and also to King's novel ''[[Christine (novel)|Christine]]''. |
* In the episode "Love Machine", machines start to come to life and kill people, a direct reference to King's short story ''[[Trucks (short story)|Trucks]]'' and also to King's novel ''[[Christine (novel)|Christine]]''. |
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* The episode "As You Were" contains several references to King's novel ''[[The Shining (novel)|The Shining]]'', starting with the storyline (a group of people are trapped in an abandoned, isolated hotel with a murderous, supernatural entity). The ''[[The Shining (film)|1980 film version]]'' is referenced several times in the props and set, including a fire axe and a bright red tricycle. |
* The episode "As You Were" contains several references to King's novel ''[[The Shining (novel)|The Shining]]'', starting with the storyline (a group of people are trapped in an abandoned, isolated hotel with a murderous, supernatural entity). The ''[[The Shining (film)|1980 film version]]'' is referenced several times in the props and set, including a fire axe and a bright red tricycle. |
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* Also in the episode "As You Were", Audrey Parker receives a copy of the novel ''Misery Unchained'' ("signed by the author just before that lady chopped off his foot"), a reference to King's novel ''[[Misery (novel)|Misery]]''. |
* Also in the episode "As You Were", Audrey Parker receives a copy of the novel ''Misery Unchained'' ("signed by the author just before that lady chopped off his foot"), a reference to King's novel ''[[Misery (novel)|Misery]]''. |
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* In the episode "The Hand You're Dealt" a Troubled person has the ability of Pyrokinesis. This is a reference to King's novel ''Firestarter''. |
* In the episode "The Hand You're Dealt" a Troubled person has the ability of Pyrokinesis. This is a reference to King's novel ''Firestarter''. |
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* In the episode "Ain't No Sunshine" the shadow that kills people is called the Dark Man. This is a reference to a poem written by King called ''The Dark Man''. Also in The Stand Randall Flagg is often referred to as "The Dark Man" |
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==References== |
==References== |
Revision as of 02:58, 16 August 2011
Haven | |
---|---|
Genre | Supernatural drama |
Created by | Stephen King |
Developed by | Sam Ernst Jim Dunn |
Starring | Emily Rose Eric Balfour Lucas Bryant |
Theme music composer | Andre Fratto & Leah Segel |
Opening theme | "Dance With Me" by Sweet Talk Radio |
Composer | Shawn Pierce |
Country of origin | Template:TVUS |
Original language | English |
No. of seasons | 2 |
No. of episodes | 18 (list of episodes) |
Production | |
Executive producers | Laszlo Barna Jim Dunn Sam Ernst Noreen Halpern Matt McGuinness David MacLeod John Morayniss Shawn Piller Michael Rosenberg Lloyd Segan Scott Shepherd |
Producers | Charles Ardai (consulting) Stefanie Deoul Ginny Jones Duzak (line) |
Production location | Nova Scotia, Canada |
Cinematography | Eric Cayla |
Editor | Debbie Berman |
Camera setup | single |
Running time | 42 minutes |
Production companies | Entertainment One Television Big Motion Pictures Productions Piller Segan Shepherd Shaw Media Universal Networks International |
Original release | |
Network | Syfy |
Release | July 9, 2010 present | –
Haven is a supernatural drama television series loosely based on the Stephen King novel The Colorado Kid. The show, filmed on the South Shore of Nova Scotia, Canada, is an American/Canadian co-production. The one-hour drama premiered on July 9, 2010, on Syfy.[1] The series will be the first property to be produced for Syfy Pay channels around the globe, excluding Canada and Scandinavia.[2] On October 7, 2010, Haven was renewed by Syfy for a 13 episode second season, which began airing on July 15, 2011.[3][4][5]
Plot
Shrewd and confident FBI Special Agent Audrey Parker (Emily Rose) has a lost past and an openness to the possibility of the paranormal. When she arrives in the small town of Haven, Maine, on a routine case, she soon finds herself caught up with the return of The Troubles, a plague of supernatural afflictions that occurred in the town at least once before. If that was not enough to draw her in, she also finds a link that may lead her to the mother she has never known.
Cast
Main cast:
- Emily Rose as Audrey Parker, the show's protagonist. She has quit the FBI to help investigate and deal with Haven's Troubles.
- Lucas Bryant as Nathan Wuornos, of Haven PD. He assists Audrey in dealing with The Troubles.
- Eric Balfour as Duke Crocker, the port town's smuggler, who is frequently involved in the investigations.
- Nicholas Campbell as Garland Wuornos, Haven's chief of police, a veteran of The Troubles. (He dies at the end of the first season.)
Minor cast:
- Richard Donat as Vince Teagues and John Dunsworth as Dave Teagues, the editors of the Haven Herald. Vince is an artist and Dave a photographer.
- Stephen McHattie as Ed Driscoll, Haven's preacher. He has a very unsympathetic approach to The Troubles.
- Maurice Dean Wint as Senior FBI Agent Howard. He is a mysterious figure who is not who he seems to be.
- Mary-Colin Chisholm as Eleanor Carr, Haven's bossy EMT. (She dies later in the first season.)
Recurring cast:
- Michelle Monteith as Julia Carr, a love interest of Duke's, daughter of Eleanor. (First season)
- Anne Caillon as Jess Minnion, an animal rights activist and love interest of Nathan. (First season)
- Kathleen Munroe as Audrey Parker (#2), perhaps the real Audrey Parker. (Second season)
- Vinessa Antoine as Evidence "Evi" Ryan, a character who knows Duke's shady past. She is the love interest of Duke. (Second season)
- Edge (Adam Copeland) as Dwight Hendrickson, the town's electrician and handyman. He helps clean up the effects of The Troubles. (Second season)
- Jason Priestley as Chris Brody, a marine biologist and son of the late mayor. (Second season)
The opening credits sequence
The opening sequence contains hints and suggestions regarding the background to the events portrayed in the Haven series. The following list outlines the various clues to be seen in the sequence.
- A flash of lightning, then more overcast skies over the lighthouse
- A ship's porthole, then a sailing ship with an old photo of a woman superimposed
- Woodcuts of an old sea port
- The Herald of Haven (date indistinct, perhaps in the 1650s): "The most revered Flagg to elaborate on the proper devices & most godly mechanisms for the examination and discovery of wytches"
- An old line image of a bonneted woman in custody
- Fast moving shore scene through a ship's window
- Headline of the Haven Herald (Tuesday, February 18, 1725): "Ship breaks up in calm seas"
- A chart displaying a tree of names, the earliest of which date back to before 1800
- A maze symbol on a stone and a ritualistic concoction
- A woodcut of a mermaid with her tail wrapped around a worried young man in the water
- A ship's compass and a blurred sextant
- Headline of the Haven Herald (Thursday, October 13, 1934): "Halleck's Homestead Vanishes Overnight"
- A family praying around a dining table
- Rows of tombstones
- A man in a boat with a seafood trap and a man watching with a young girl
- Headline of the Haven Herald (Thursday, October 13, 1956): "Murder? Police Baffled"
- [first season] A house with the sign "Antiques and Collectables"
- [first season] A room filled with lamps, framed images and many other old items
- A dog on a boat
- [second season] People gathered outside the Good Shepherd Church after a funeral service
- A building whose windows show the same glowing figure in different scenes
- A church spire
- The same spire in flames
- Headline of the Haven Herald (Thursday, May 28, 1983): "Who Killed the Colorado Kid?" [second season, appears after funeral service]
- [second season] Internet home page for the Haven Herald
- The door of a Haven police car
- Audrey Parker's FBI badge
- A black and white of the lighthouse smouldering
- A flyover of the intact lighthouse during the day, with the series name superimposed.
The tattoo
The tattoo is a recurring symbol in the TV series Haven. It consists of a round maze with a tiny human figure at each compass point. It can be seen during the opening credits sequence. This is the form of a tattoo which was first seen on the forearm of a victim of the Troubles.(Ep.105) When she was young, Vanessa Stanley, a person Troubled with seeing what will kill a person, touched the Colorado Kid and she saw an arm with the maze tattoo coming towards him. She describes the circumstances of Duke Crocker's death in the same manner. This makes Duke very interested in the tattoo. Nathan, who investigated the dead man with the tattoo, draws it for Duke.(Ep.110)
When Duke learns that Max Hansen has the tattoo on his forearm, he becomes apprehensive, believing Hansen to be his would-be killer. When Hansen is swallowed by a crack in the road, Duke is very relieved, thinking that the man who was to kill him is now dead. Julia Carr soon robs him of relief when she shows him a photo of her grandfather who also has the very same tattoo. She takes him off to the graveyard where her grandfather is buried and the maze symbol is engraved on his gravestone. Then, she tells Duke to notice the same symbol on all the gravestones. Later we are shown that, unbeknown to Duke, there is a tattoo on Julia's shoulder that comes and goes.(Ep.113)
Duke has a blackboard set up on his boat. Taped to it are photos of the Colorado Kid crime scene, Max Hansen and the other dead man's tattoo, plus Nathan's tattoo drawing. Three names are chalked on the board, Colorado Kid, Max Hansen and Audrey Parker. He adds Julia Carr's name.(Ep.113)
The fleeting glimpse of the symbol on a stone during the opening credits sequence suggests that there is some ritual associated with it, for a figure of a man moves a container filled with a strange concoction towards the stone. There is a feather used as part of the ritual, perhaps indicating a native American involvement. Haven's original name is Tuwiuwok, a Mi'kmaq name we are told meaning "Haven for God's Orphans".(Ep.101)
Development and production
In September 2009, E1 Entertainment announced it was working with Stephen King to develop a television series based on his novel The Colorado Kid. The entertainment company ordered the concept straight to series, with thirteen episodes planned.[6] In November, Syfy announced it had acquired the series.[7]
The pilot episode was written by Sam Ernst and Jim Dunn. In February 2010, Emily Rose was cast in the lead role of Audrey Parker.[8] Eric Balfour and Lucas Bryant came on board in late March.[9]
Canadian broadcaster Canwest Global Communications acquired rights to the series in March.[10]
In April 2010, Adam Kane signed on to direct the pilot.[11] Production began April 20 in Halifax, Nova Scotia and surrounding areas.[12] Filming occurred primarily in Chester, Nova Scotia (including using the local arena as a studio[13]) and throughout the south shore of the Canadian province, including Lunenburg,[14] Halifax, and Mahone Bay.[citation needed]
The series premiere, "Welcome to Haven", aired on Syfy in the U.S. on July 9, 2010,[15] and on Showcase in Canada on July 12.[16] The show became available to other international markets in October 2010.[2]
On October 7, 2010, Syfy announced that the series has been renewed for a second season of 13 episodes.[3]
Broadcast
Haven has been syndicated for broadcast in several countries worldwide, including Canada,[17] the United Kingdom,[18] Denmark,[19] France,[20] Germany,[21] Japan[22] and Portugal.[23]
Home Video release
Entertainment One released season 1 on DVD and Blu-ray Disc in Region 1/Region A on June 14, 2011.
In Region 4, Beyond Home Entertainment released the first season on DVD in Australia on June 1, 2011.
Name | Ep # | Release dates | Additional features | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Region 1 | Region 2 | Region 4 | |||
Season One | 13 | June 14, 2011[24] | TBA | June 1, 2011[25] | Twelve Audio Commentaries with Cast & Crew, "Welcome to Haven" featurette, "Visual FX of Haven" featurette, "Mythology of Haven" featurette, Behind-the-Scenes Video Blogs, Additional Cast Interviews and Season Two Sneak Peek: Inside the Writers' Room. |
Haven's homage to Stephen King
Allusions to the works of Stephen King are built into the show. According to the official Syfy Haven website, "Haven, based on the Stephen King novella, The Colorado Kid, features other notable Stephen King references on the show each week."[26] Some of those references are listed here below.
- In the opening sequence, a newspaper article on "The Most Revered Flagg" is a reference to Randall Flagg, a recurring villain in The Dark Tower series by Stephen King. Randall Flagg is also the villain in Stephen King's novel The Stand.
- In the episode "Ain't No Sunshine" the shadow that kills people is called the Dark Man. This is a reference to a poem written by King called The Dark Man. Flagg is often referred to as "The Dark Man" in The Stand.
- The episode "Fear and Loathing" revolves around a Troubled person who unwillingly takes the form of a person's worst fear, and appears as a clown to Audrey Parker. This is a direct reference to King's novel It, also referencing It in "A Tale of Two Audreys", there is a little boy in a yellow rain slicker outside the church chasing a newspaper boat that he set in the stream in the gutter and chased until it fell down into a stormdrain on Witcham Street which he then sticks his right arm down into and then screams, the same as George Denbrough did in the opening chapter of It
- In the episode "Love Machine", machines start to come to life and kill people, a direct reference to King's short story Trucks and also to King's novel Christine.
- The episode "As You Were" contains several references to King's novel The Shining, starting with the storyline (a group of people are trapped in an abandoned, isolated hotel with a murderous, supernatural entity). The 1980 film version is referenced several times in the props and set, including a fire axe and a bright red tricycle.
- Also in the episode "As You Were", Audrey Parker receives a copy of the novel Misery Unchained ("signed by the author just before that lady chopped off his foot"), a reference to King's novel Misery.
- In the episode "The Hand You're Dealt" a Troubled person has the ability of Pyrokinesis. This is a reference to King's novel Firestarter.
References
- ^ "Syfy celebrates summer 2010 with first ever Thursday night reality bloc". The Futon Critic. March 31, 2010. Retrieved June 23, 2010.
- ^ a b Gorman, Bill (November 30, 2009). "Syfy Finds Haven; Orders Drama Series Based On Novella The Colorado Kid by Stephen King". TVbytheNumbers. Retrieved June 23, 2010.
- ^ a b "Haven Renewed - Syfy Renews Haven For Second Season". October 7, 2010.
- ^ "Breaking News - "Haven" Renewed for Season Two". October 7, 2010.
- ^ "Syfy's Summer 2011 Features Premiere Of 'Alphas', Return Of 'Warehouse 13', 'Eureka', 'Haven,' 'Ghost Hunters Intl.' & More". TVbytheNumbers. April 15, 2011. Retrieved April 16, 2011.
- ^ Schneider, Michael (September 28, 2009). "Stephen King chills tube again". Variety. Archived from the original on June 23, 2010. Retrieved June 23, 2010.
- ^ Schneider, Michael (November 30, 2009). "Syfy picks up thriller 'Haven'". Variety. Archived from the original on June 23, 2010. Retrieved June 23, 2010.
- ^ Andreeva, Nellie (February 4, 2010). "Emily Rose to star in Syfy's 'Haven'". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved December 4, 2010.
- ^ Nguyen, Hanh (March 25, 2010). "'Firefly's' Gina Torres enters 'Warehouse 13,' 'Haven' adds two". Zap2it. Tribune Meida Services. Retrieved June 23, 2010.
- ^ Vlessing, Etan (March 25, 2010). "Canwest acquires 'Haven'". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved December 4, 2010.
- ^ Vlessing, Etan (April 26, 2010). "Stephen King pilot gets a director". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved December 4, 2010.
- ^ "Syfy's Haven begins production in Halifax, Nova Scotia". The Futon Critic. April 26, 2010. Retrieved June 23, 3010.
{{cite web}}
: Check date values in:|accessdate=
(help) - ^ Brioux, Bill (2011-7-14). "Hollywood stars in 'Haven' get comfortable in Chester, N.S." brandonsun.com. Retrieved 18 July 2011.
{{cite web}}
: Check date values in:|date=
(help) - ^ Adam Jacobs. "Movie, Miniseries Being Filmed around Town of Lunenburg". SouthshoreNow.ca. 20 April 2010. Retrieved 10 April 2011.
- ^ Miska, Brad (June 28, 2010). "Synopses of First Four Haven Episodes". Dread Central. Retrieved June 28, 2010.
- ^ Showcase page
- ^ Oickle, Vernon (July 27, 2010). "'Haven' premieres as the highest-rated original series on Showcase". The Bridgewater Bulletin. Retrieved August 19, 2010.
- ^ http://www.digitalspy.co.uk/tv/tubetalk/plp/
- ^ http://www.dr.dk/DR2/Krimi_2011/haven.htm
- ^ http://www.parlonstv.com/scoops-tv/Haven-la-nouvelle-serie-fantastique-de-Syfy-44635
- ^ http://www.serienjunkies.de/news/syfy-haven-27751.html
- ^ Haven ヘイヴン-謎の潜む町- (Japanese)
- ^ [1]
- ^ Lambert, David (March 30, 2011). "Haven - Syfy's Hot New Show, Based on Stephen King's 'The Colorado Kid', Announced for DVD and Blu-ray". TV Shows on DVD. Retrieved April 1, 2011.
- ^ "Haven - The Complete 1st Season (4 Disc Set)". EzyDVD. Retrieved April 30, 2011.
- ^ "("Stephen King Corner")". Syfy. Retrieved August 16, 2011.