Tru Calling
Tru Calling | |
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Genre | |
Created by | Jon Harmon Feldman |
Starring | |
Opening theme | "Somebody Help Me" by Full Blown Rose |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language(s) | English |
No. of seasons | 2 |
No. of episodes | 26 (plus original pilot) (list of episodes) |
Production | |
Executive producer(s) |
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Location(s) | Vancouver, Canada |
Running time | 43 minutes |
Production company(s) |
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Distributor | 20th Century Fox Television |
Release | |
Original network | Fox |
Picture format | |
Audio format |
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Original release |
October 30, 2003 – March 11, 2005 (New Zealand) January 21, 2008 (U.S.) |
Tru Calling is an American television supernatural drama series that aired on Fox. Original episodes aired between October 30, 2003, and March 11, 2005; however, the final episode was shown in other territories before it was aired in the U.S. due to lower than anticipated ratings.[2][3]
The show starred Eliza Dushku as Tru Davies, a twenty-two-year-old medical school student who takes a job at the city morgue when her internship falls through. When the corpse of a murdered woman seems to awaken and asks for her help, Tru discovers that she has the incredible power to relive that day in order to try to prevent that death. Over the course of the series, Tru struggles to keep her secret, juggle her responsibilities with her complicated personal life, and learn to control her power.
Created by Jon Harmon Feldman, the show was produced by Original Film, Oh That Gus!, Inc., and 20th Century Fox Television.[4]
Series overview
The show starred Eliza Dushku as Tru Davies, a medical school student who takes a job at the city morgue when her internship at a local hospital falls through. On her first night, the corpse of a murdered woman seems to awaken and ask for her help and Tru discovers that she has the incredible power to relive the day in order to try to prevent that death. Over the course of the series, Tru struggles to keep her secret, juggle her responsibilities with her complicated personal life, and learn to control her power.
Tru is aided (and at times abetted) by her boss, Davis (Zach Galifianakis), who acts as a sort of guide and mentor, who is later revealed to have known about Tru's mother (who was, apparently, the last person to receive the "calling" before her daughter), her best friend Lindsey (A.J. Cook), who doesn't know Tru's secret, and her impulsive, good-natured and bumbling younger brother Harrison (Shawn Reaves). Tru keeps her secret from her boyfriends, as well as her sister Meredith (Jessica Collins), who has a drug problem.
Halfway through the first season, Tru's life gets much more complicated when she meets Jack Harper (Jason Priestley), a man who shares Tru's abilities but who works to preserve what he sees as the hand of Fate by ensuring that the people Tru tries to help stay dead, though the series was canceled before the conclusion of their struggle was written. In the first season finale, it is revealed that Tru's father knows Jack Harper and that he had played a similarly antagonistic role versus Tru's mother, terminating her by hiring a hitman to kill her, though neither Harrison nor Tru found out.
Cast and characters
Main cast
- Eliza Dushku as Tru Davies
- Shawn Reaves as Harrison Davies
- Zach Galifianakis as Davis
- A.J. Cook as Lindsey Walker (season 1)
- Matt Bomer as Luc Johnston (season 1)
- Jessica Collins as Meredith Davies (season 1)
- Benjamín Benítez as Gardez (season 1)
- Jason Priestley as Jack Harper (season 2, recurring season 1)
Recurring cast
- Liz Vassey as Dr. Carrie Allen (season 2)
- Cotter Smith as Richard Davies (season 2)
- Eric Christian Olsen as Jensen Ritchie (season 2)
- Lizzy Caplan as Avery Bishop (season 2)
- Parry Shen as Tyler Li (season 2)
Episodes
Season | Episodes | Originally aired | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
First aired | Last aired | |||
1 | 20 | October 30, 2003 | April 29, 2004 | |
2 | 6 | March 31, 2005 | January 21, 2008 |
Reception
U.S. Nielsen ratings
Season | Timeslot |
TV season |
U.S. season premiere |
U.S. season finale |
Season rank |
Viewers (in millions) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Thursdays at 8 p.m. | 2003–2004 | October 30, 2003 | April 29, 2004 | #151[5] | 4.50[5] |
2 | Thursdays at 9 p.m. | 2005[lower-alpha 1] | March 31, 2005 | April 21, 2005 | #121[6] | 4.89[6] |
Notes
- Each U.S. network television season begins in late September and ends in late May, which coincides with the completion of May sweeps.
Cancellation
The series was canceled in 2005, due to low ratings, the reasoning behind the final episode airing in many other territories before it screened in the U.S. The cancellation resulted in the second season–and series–finale, ending in multiple cliffhangers:
- Tru's season two romantic interest, a fellow medical student named Jensen, begins to remember reliving an occurrence he and Tru had together from the negated timeline where he was killed, causing him to obsess over death.
- Although initially highly antagonistic to Jack, Tru invites him to a Christmas party with her, hinting he may in time become an ally against her father, Richard.
- Dr. Carrie Allen, the new psychologist at the morgue, who is revealed as an agent of Jack's working to seduce and subvert Davis, learns the truth about Tru from Davis; Davis has yet to tell Tru about this.
- Jack, talking to Tru's father, hints he is still intent on killing Jensen, despite having failed to seal his fated death in a previous episode.
Proposed storylines
After the cancellation, Doris Egan (one of the show's writers) discussed the series mythology and plans they had had for the future story arc in four consecutive live journal entries which set the premise of two opposing forces influencing humanity, one (presumably helping Jack) that refuses to interfere and allows humans to evolve at their own pace and the other which wishes to intervene and 'improve' things in a 'revolt against heaven' (presumably helping Tru). Proposed storylines included:
- Tru's boyfriend Jensen becoming more and more fascinated by death after her narrowly saving his life when he was fated to die. He would eventually become a serial killer and she would be forced to ask Jack for help in killing him to stop his reign of terror. Jack and Tru's father would cite this as justification for them stopping Tru from saving people, as she is messing with pre-destination.
- Harrison would discover that his father is in league with Jack but is torn in deciding whose side to take, given what happened to Tru's boyfriend.
- Davis's fake girlfriend Dr. Carrie Allen, arranged by Jack and Richard to divide him from Tru, begins to genuinely care for him and a romance develops between them. However, he discovers that she really did kill her violent and abusive husband and must decide whether or not to turn her in.
- Davis also discovers that Tru's mother was supposed to be her mentor like Richard is to Jack but, with her dead, he now takes the role.
- Tru and Jack would find themselves beginning to experience other anomalies in reality allowing for more variations on the standard storyline (as was hinted in the last few episodes of the series), including being able to take other people with them on their rewind days and explore parallel dimensions.
- Jack and Tru would become involved in a bank siege in which Jack and her father use a mysterious journal in order to pick which hostages will die. Afterwards, Jack would begin a relationship with a beautiful motorcycle cop he meets during the incident and his feelings for her make him question the morality of his actions and his monk-like solitary existence.
- The last corpse to ask for Tru's help is that of her 12-year-old half sister. Tru succeeds in saving her, and when Jack attempts to stop her, he is killed by Tru's father, who cannot bear to let his youngest child die, whatever else he believes. The series would end on a cliffhanger with Jack's corpse in the morgue asking Tru to save him.
Awards and nominations
Year | Result | Award | Category | Recipients |
---|---|---|---|---|
2004 | Nominated | 2004 Teen Choice Awards | Choice Breakout TV Show | Tru Calling |
Nominated | Choice Breakout TV Star – Female | Eliza Dushku | ||
Nominated | 30th Saturn Awards | Best Actress in a Television Series |
Broadcast
The series completed airing in its entirety in New Zealand first. The second season began airing in the country on TV3 on February 4, 2005, with the final episode shown on March 11, 2005. After nearly a year-long hiatus in the U.S., new episodes began on Fox on March 31, 2005. However, the series was pulled again in favour of Fox's new show Point Pleasant and the final episode was screened in many other territories before it finally aired in the U.S. on January 21, 2008 on Syfy.
The complete series also aired in Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Bulgaria, Chile, Colombia, Croatia, Czech Republic, Denmark, France, Germany, Greece, Hong Kong, Hungary, Iceland, India, Ireland, Israel, Italy, Japan, Malaysia, Pakistan, Portugal, Singapore, Slovakia and the United Kingdom.
Russian adaptation
The series has been adapted in Russia using the title Я отменяю смерть, pronounced as “Jа otmenʲaʲu smart′”, and translated to I Revoke the Death, premiering in the country on TV-3 on October 9, 2012. For more information on the remake, see:
- I Revoke the Death: TV-3 official website[7]
- I Revoke the Death: Promotional trailer(s)[8][9]
- I Revoke the Death: Facebook page and promotional pictures[10]
- I Revoke the Death: fan-page[11]
DVD releases
The Complete First Season | ||||||
Set details | Special features | |||||
| ||||||
U.S. / Canada | United Kingdom | Australia | ||||
Episodes | 20 | N/A | 20 | |||
Aspect Ratio | 1.78:1 | 1.78:1 | ||||
Running Time | 880 minutes | 880 minutes | ||||
Audio | English (Dolby Digital Surround) | English (Dolby Digital Surround) | ||||
Subtitles | English, Spanish, French | None | ||||
No. of Discs | 6 | 6 | ||||
Region(s) | 1 (NTSC) | 2, 4 (PAL) | ||||
Rating | Not Rated | M | ||||
Release dates | November 30, 2004[12] | August 9, 2005 |
The Complete Second Season | ||||||
Set details | Special features | |||||
| ||||||
Canada / United States | United Kingdom | Australia | ||||
Episodes | 6 | N/A | 6 | |||
Aspect Ratio | 1.78:1 | 1.78:1 | ||||
Running Time | 264 minutes | 264 minutes | ||||
Audio | English (Dolby Digital Surround) | English (Dolby Digital Surround) | ||||
Subtitles | English, French, Spanish | None | ||||
No. of Discs | 2 | 2 | ||||
Region(s) | 1 (NTSC) | 2, 4 (PAL) | ||||
Rating | Not Rated | M | ||||
Release dates | November 15, 2005[13] | August 9, 2005 |
The Complete Series | ||||||
Set details | Special features | |||||
| ||||||
Canada / U.S. | United Kingdom | Australia | ||||
Episodes | 26 | 26 | 26 | |||
Aspect Ratio | 1.78:1 | 1.78:1 | 1.78:1 | |||
Running Time | 1094 Minutes | 1094 Minutes | 1094 Minutes | |||
Audio | English (Dolby Digital Surround) | English (Dolby Digital Surround) | English (Dolby Digital Surround) | |||
Subtitles | English, French, Spanish | English, Swedish | None | |||
No. of Discs | 8 | 8 | 8 | |||
Region(s) | 1 (NTSC) | 2, 4 (PAL) | 4 (PAL) | |||
Rating | Not Rated | 15 | M | |||
Release dates | August 12, 2008[15] | June 27, 2005[14] | October 24, 2006 |
References
- ↑ Dawn Parouse. (2004). Finding the Calling: The Pilot (Tru Calling Season 1, Disc 6, Special Feature) [DVD]. 20th Century Fox.
- ↑ Whedonesque.com (January 28, 2005). "Season two unaired episodes of Tru Calling will screen on New Zealand network TV3 beginning February 4 at 7.30pm.". Retrieved January 18, 2010.
- ↑ Whedonesque.com (April 19, 2005). "'Fox dumps Tru Calling finale for The Simple Life'.". Retrieved January 18, 2010.
- ↑ "Tru Calling (TV Series 2003-2005) Company Credits". imdb.com.
- 1 2 ABC Medianet
- 1 2 "2004-05 Final audience and ratings figures". Hollywood Reporter. May 27, 2005. Archived from the original on July 8, 2006.
- ↑ "Я отменяю смерть on TV-3 website".
- ↑ "Facebook page of Я отменяю смерть".
- ↑ "Youtube page of Я отменяю смерть".
- ↑ "Facebook page of Я отменяю смерть".
- ↑ "Fan-page of Я отменяю смерть".
- 1 2 "Tru Calling – The Complete First Season (2003)". amazon.com. Retrieved 2010-01-19.
- 1 2 amazon.com. "Tru Calling – The Complete Second Season (2003)". Retrieved 2010-01-19.
- 1 2 hmv.com. "Tru Calling: Complete Series: 8dvd: Box Set". Retrieved 2010-01-19.
- ↑ amazon.com. "Tru Calling: The Complete Series". Retrieved 2010-01-19.
External links
Wikiquote has quotations related to: Tru Calling |
- Tru Calling at AllMovie
- Tru Calling at the Internet Movie Database
- Tru Calling at TV.com