<![CDATA[io9: peter petrelli]]> http://tags.lifehacker.com/assets/base/img/thumbs140x140/io9.com.png <![CDATA[io9: peter petrelli]]> http://io9.com/tag/peterpetrelli http://io9.com/tag/peterpetrelli <![CDATA[Why You Should Give Heroes A Second Chance]]> We can all agree that NBC's Heroes has floundered pretty badly for awhile. But as the third season ends this week, here're some reasons why you should tune in again when it returns this fall.

The Writing Has Improved
No, really. It's very tempting to give most of the credit for this to the return of Bryan Fuller, now acting as "consulting producer" on the show - After all, the turn-around coincided with his first episode back, which also happened to be the best episode they'd had in years - but it's not as if he's the only person who's been delivering recently. Perhaps he just made everyone else step up their game, or maybe he's been reminding everyone what the show is really about, but the show is once again becoming fast-moving, popcorn-smart, funny entertainment again... and the characters are no longer seeming to shift personalities every couple of episodes depending on who the plot needs them to be in order to move forward or shock the viewers (Well, except Sylar, but that's intentional... I think). Also, they titled an episode "Turn And Face The Strange." That's got to be worth something, right?

No More Time Travel
The best thing about "Fugitives," the current arc? There's absolutely no time travel in it at all. For a show that had continually gone back to the same idea of "Character X Has Seen The Future And Must Prevent It" for its last three "volumes," this is nothing short of stunning... and, more than that, very welcome indeed. Instead, the show is slowly coming to terms with the idea that conflict can come less from predestination and more from the characters just doing what they do. Yes, they may still be ripping off the X-Men, but at least they're not still ripping off the one same storyline over and over again. Baby steps, people.

(Also something that seems to be finally being abandoned: The Daddy Issues. Now that we've dealt with Papa Parkman, Papa Petrelli and Papa Sylar, here's hoping that the show can finally move away from basing so much of the drama around characters' unhappy relationships with their fathers. If nothing else, they'll always have the Nathan/Claire/HRG triangle for cheap therapy.)

The Cast Is Shrinking. Ish.
Whether it's essentially sidelining characters (Mohinder keeps disappearing to "find himself" or "find the truth about his father" or something similar, and that's just fine with me), killing them off (Bye, Elle! Bye, Daphne! Bye, Tracy, even though I totally don't believe that you're dead!), or even just forgetting about them altogether (Are we ever going to see Monica again? What about Maya? Actually, no, I don't want to see her again), it's as if the writers had suddenly realized that the series was massively overpopulated, and mostly with characters that no-one cared about. Even though the show has only really started to improve in the last few episodes, a small cull has been underway since the start of this season, and it's something that I hope continues next year. One suggestion, though: Let's start killing off main characters who aren't serving any purpose anymore. Yes, Mohinder, I mean you. You too, Matt Parkman.

(Actually, another suggestion: Can you stop only getting rid of the female characters? It's kind of creepy, the weird gender bias when it comes to the characters who've been disappearing.)

Someone Has Started Thinking About The Powers
More signs of intelligence from the writers room: The Deus Ex Machina characters? Suddenly depowered in a move so welcome that I won't even complain too loudly about how awkwardly it was achieved. One of the show's constant problems has always been "The Flash Dilemma" - that is, the fact that if all of the characters were thinking, the stories would be over before they'd started because everyone involved was so powerful (So named because, if the Flash is really the fastest man alive, if he actually stopped to think, he could run around at superspeed and deal with all the bad guys before they'd had a chance to boast about how unstoppable they were), but now Peter Petrelli has to touch someone to gain their power, and even then, he can only mimic one power at a time, and Hiro can only stop time, not travel in it, nor teleport out of trouble with an overly-squinty blink. Only Sylar remains all-powerful, and that's as it should be; the bad guy should always be the one with all the power, otherwise he's no threat - and, even then, his power comes with a price (Not to mention a cameo from Ellen Greene in last week's episode). The result? Tension that you can believe in, without thinking that your favorite character is stupid.

Less Episodes Means Less Filler
Perhaps most importantly, NBC just announced that there'll be less Heroes next year; they plan on making somewhere between 18-20 episodes in total, compared with the 25 of this season. This is definitely a good thing, because it'll cut down on the random, go-nowhere shenanigans that the show has used to stretch out stories past their desired length so many times in the past (Case in point: Claire helping comic store geek escape the authorities). Hopefully, it'll also make the show's PTB think more about what needs to be said, as opposed to following their desires down creative dead-end alleys (Almost all of the recent "1961" episode) in order to fulfill the season's episode order.

Don't get me wrong; the show's nowhere near perfect, still; there are still moments that you want to throw things at your television and scream that everyone involved just may be retarded, and Nathan's hair continues to get more out of control with each and every episode. But Heroes has, rather remarkably, turned itself around from the carcrash it used to be to become something that, once again, has the potential to fulfill its own potential. It's also, thankfully, become more entertaining in doing so, and is worth your attention for an hour every week again. Tune into Monday's big season finale to see the fireworks and over the top plot resolutions to see if you can fall in love with the show again... and stick around for the final scene that'll show what we have in store for us when the show returns in the fall. You know you want to.

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<![CDATA[Peter Petrelli Is Gay for Werewolves]]> In this priceless clip from 2005 werewolf flick Cursed, a pre-Heroes Milo "Peter Petrelli" Ventimiglia decides to come out to the class nerd - who he thinks is gay, but is actually a wolf.

Directed by Wes "every awesome horror movie ever" Craven, and written by Dawson's Creek creator Kevin Williamson, Cursed is already a forgotten classic of the mid-2000s. Don't forget Williamson also wrote Scream, and this movie has a lot of funny, referencey stuff in it - a cameo from Scott Baio, a scary werewolf PR chick. Plus, there's Joshua "Pacey/Peter Bishop" Jackson, and Lex Luthor from Smallville, and even Christina Ricci doing a sexy wolf routine.

Why haven't you seen this movie yet? It's worth it just to see mean jock Milo finally fess up that he's gay and hit on a werewolf. Plus, his hair!

Cursed via IMDB

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<![CDATA[How Many Futures Does Heroes Actually Need, Anyway?]]> I'm sure you all remember the heart-wrenching first season of episode of Heroes where Hiro realized that, even though he could travel back in time, he still couldn't prevent the death of his girlfriend Charlie, because somethings are just destined to happen. You cried, I cried and we all missed the real lesson of the episode: Hiro is a moron. After all, if there's one thing that Heroes is actually about, it's messing about in time to fix whatever problem is affecting future New York that particular week. Join us as we look at what's to come - and what was to come, before other things started to come instead - in NBC's superhero soap opera, thanks to those meddling kids.

The mechanics of time travel is something that the writers of Heroes seem to have spent some time really thinking about, given the various ways in which they've used it throughout the show. We've seen people who can paint the future (Something that four separate people have done so far on the show, to varying degrees of success - although it's maybe worth noting that only Isaac has a 100% accuracy rate, perhaps because everyone was better at forward planning in the first season), we've visited the future - well, futures - and we've even visited the past a few times, as well. But that doesn't necessarily mean that the laws of time travel on the show are entirely consistent. Fans may argue about whether or not Hiro did change time when he tried to save Charlie, but the writers seemed to be fairly clear that the main events had stayed the same: Charlie still died, Sylar still had her powers afterwards, and Hiro decided that he couldn't change history (Even though he actually already had, by that point). But then, how do you explain the show's multiple futures?

By our count, Heroes has had somewhere between four and six different "futures" that we've actually seen for ourselves - the oracular painters' visions don't count, because people with no irises scare us - and most of those have been undone by the characters changing that future's history based on foreknowledge of what was to come:

Future 1:
New York gets blown up in a nuclear explosion caused by Sylar one year in the future, as seen when Hiro saw when he first discovered his powers in "Don't Look Back," the show's second episode (The cause of the explosion is revealed in "Five Years Gone," later in the season).
Undone because: Peter saved the cheerleader, but didn't save the world. Of course, what caused him to save the cheerleader? Hiro time-traveling and telling him to do it.

Future 2:
New York gets blown up in a nuclear explosion caused by Peter one year in the future, as a result of Peter saving the cheerleader because Hiro told him to. Bad move, Peter. Everyone has gone bad as a result - well, except for Ando, who died in the explosion: Hiro has become a ninja, Nathan has become President and Ali Larter has become a stripper because the writers like to imagine her naked. We saw all of this in "Five Years Gone" in the first season.
Undone because: Nathan flew Peter into the "high-enough-that-a-nuclear-explosion-is-apparently-meaningless-sphere" at the end of the first season. It's unclear why this didn't happen in the Five Years Gone timeline, other than the promise of cheap drama, so this may not have changed as a direct result of time travel (although Hiro's time-traveling antics probably helped, let's face it).
Possibly not undone because: See Future 4a. No, really.
Future 3:
93% of humanity has died as a result of the Shanti Virus, which was a plot device if ever there was one. We see this in "Out of Time," during the second season of the show that we all try to forget ever existed as completely as Peter has forgotten Caitlin, his Irish girlfriend that he accidentally abandoned there. Oops.
Undone because: The virus didn't get released after all at the end of "Powerless," the last episode of the second season, thanks to Peter knowing what would happen if it did, thanks to time travel. So what happened to Caitlin? No-one knows, not even the writers, who've complained that their heads spin when they try and work it out.

Future 3b:
This future definitely doesn't exist but in some strange fan-fiction somewhere, but as originally shot, the Shanti Virus did get released at the end of "Powerless," and the never-completed later episodes of that season would have included Peter's attempts to rescue Caitlin and a town quarantined because of the virus.
Undone because: It never really happened in the first place.

Future 4a:
Four years from now - although when "now" is seems to be a somewhat elastic concept; I think it's actually somewhere around the end of 2007 at best, but "four years" forward brings us to the same time period as "Five Years Gone"'s Future 2, which may be important - future Claire tries to shoot future Peter, because she blames him for the way everything has turned out. It all happened at the start of "The Second Coming" from the third season.
Potentially meaningful point: Both Claire and Peter look exactly like they did in Future 2, whether it's hair color or massive scar on face and stubble. Are the hair and make-up people that lazy, or is there some connection between the apparently undone "Five Years Gone" flashforward to this time period
Undone because: Future Peter shoots present Nathan, thereby stopping him from revealing the existence of superhumans publicly, which was what caused all the problems, apparently. Time travel saves the day again! Except, maybe not. See below.

Future 4b:
Hiro travels to some unspecified point in the future where he is fighting Ando, who now has superpowers - and he's not the only one - before there's a massive explosion that's very similar to the McGuffin behind the first season. But Claire's not a cheerleader anymore! How can they stop this one? Again, from "The Second Coming."
Undone because: Well, it's not, yet.

Future 4c:
Again at some unspecified time in the future, all of the regular characters on the show have been killed by escaped villain Knox, escaped Alias actor Adam Monroe, Matt's telepathic absent father, some Ali Larter character that may or may not be Tracy Strauss (and really who cares that much anymore?) and potentially Sylar. This may or may not have been a true future - We saw it at the start of "The Butterfly Effect" in the third season, but it was Angela Petrelli's dream, and even though she's one of the show's many oracular characters, it was a dream.
Undone because: We don't even know if it's real yet, never mind how to undo it.

The problem with these last three futures - besides the feeling that we've seen them before (perhaps literally, given the crossover between "Five Years Gone" and "The Second Coming") - comes not from the show itself, but from an interview with writers Aron Coliete and Joe Pokaski, who said that not only wasn't future 4a changed by Nathan's shooting, but that "[t]hese are in fact, all the same future." Wait - didn't we see Hiro get killed in two entirely different ways in two of them (Zapped by Ando and then stabbed by a sword, respectively)? How does that work? Tomorrow's episode of the show, "I Am Become Death," promises to either address some of this confusion or increase it, as FuturePeter and PresentPeter travel to a/the future and, let's face it, probably see Hiro die in yet another way just for shits and giggles just to mess with our heads.

So exactly how does time travel work on Heroes? After literally minutes of consideration, the best we can work out - ignoring the always present possibility of "it does whatever the writers need it to at that moment, internal logic be damned" - is this: You can change the details, but not the ultimate outcome, of destiny (or Peter Petrelli's unfortunate shaving accident, it seems) through time travel. Charlie will still die; she'll just have met Hiro six months earlier and been happier. There will always be a legend of Takezo Kensei, but he may end up being Hiro instead of a refugee from a JJ Abrams spy drama... and no matter how many cheerleaders you save or viruses you stop crashing against a vault floor, the future of Earth Heroes will always be dystopian, New York-centric and in need of the kind of help that only comes from the Peacock Network.

If true - and it's something that makes the similarities in Future Claire and Future Peter's appearance between "Five Years Gone" and "The Second Coming" - then it presents a couple of problems for the writers of the show. Firstly, it suggests that we're probably going to continually have some level of time-travel or change-the-future plotline throughout the entire series, never mind the entire season, and secondly, it kills a lot of the dramatic tension if we find out that no matter what the characters do, we're still all going to end up completely screwed by 2011. Have the writers written themselves into a corner, or will we end up seeing the rules of Heroes time travel clearly explained in such a way as to allow for a non-gloomy future sooner rather that later? Only time, ironically, will tell. Just let me know if I end up having to be get my Shanti innoculation.

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<![CDATA[Heroes Avoids Credibility, Grounded By Budget]]> Enjoyed last night's Heroes, but thought that some scenes were a little... underwhelming? You weren't alone; series director Greg Beeman has been spilling the beans on what was originally planned for last night's three set-pieces before budgetary concerns forced them to bring everything back down to earth. One of the cool things that we missed out on? Hiro and Ando getting to re-enact the opening of Indiana Jones And The Last Crusade in the middle of India. Be warned: Thar be spoilers ahead.

While Beeman - who directed last week's second episode, and has been with the show since the beginning - doesn't point out the major flaw in last night's "One of Us, One of Them" (That would be the "Hey, Sylar's a good guy now! Look, he put on a funny accent and ordered that asshole cop around! Ain't he a card?" turnaround, which didn't just stretch what little credibility the show had as much as just gleefully shred it while giggling and telling the audience not to think too much, just look at Zachary Quinto in a suit - Seriously, people, WTF? You couldn't have at least tried to put some effort into that plotline?), he's happy to share some behind the scenes gossip about Claire's showdown with her mom and Hiro and Ando's moviegoing experiences in Germany:

The first draft of the script, from a production standpoint, was very big. It had the bank robbery more-or- less as it currently exists. It also had a Claire/Meredith scene, which currently occurs in a cargo container. This scene originally took place in a deserted warehouse where Claire was surrounded by fire. The Hiro/Ando/Daphne scene, which currently occurs in a German movie theatre, originally took place on a train traveling through India, complete with Hiro and Ando on the roof of the train and Ando nearly falling out the side of a baggage car.

Personally, I loved the first draft of this script. It was a great, incredibly exciting read. I loved the way the bank robbery was written, and the idea that Sylar was to become HRG’s new partner blew my mind. The entire component parts were great – but, collectively, it was also, obviously, too big to be affordable. Beyond that though, the choices we producer’s faced of how to get the budget down became very subjective. The bank robbery was the obvious thing that had to stay because it drove the central story and the key recurring stories for the series– For me, the scripted moment where time freezes and future Peter appears was a key event (it sent a chill down my spine when I first read it.) So the Claire story and the Hiro story were what had to be attacked.

Not that the bank robbery escaped entirely unscathed:

There were changes made to reduce budget in the bank scenes as well. Most noteably – at first Jesse’s power was Earthquake-stomp (Like Gorgon of the Inhumans from the Fantastic Four comics) But this power implied cracking floors and walls and all manner of damage that would be expensive to produce. At the last minute we changed him to a Sonic scream (like DC’s Black Canary) – this was easier to accomplish but was a bummer too us because we already had Echo from the online webisodes with sonic power – Oh well…

The biggest bummer for me was the death of the villains (Well, three of the four) so quickly - Not only does it kind of make me wonder what the point of pretending that they were a big deal in the first place was if they were going to be written out after a botched bank robbery (Also, what was the point of the "hidden Peter" plot at all?), but I'm depressed that Weevil's death robs me of any more potential Veronica Mars reunion moments. But what did the rest of you think?

Season 3, Episode 3 [Beaming Beeman]

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<![CDATA[There Is Reason Behind Heroes Season Three]]> Did you feel that one of the problems with the second season of NBC's Heroes was its seeming lack of reason? As opposed to, you know, its predictable plots, crappy new characters and apparent lack of interest in doing anything other than repeating the first season? Then star Milo Ventimiglia is here to tell you that you won't feel the same about the upcoming Heroes: Villains. In fact, while there may be new characters, they'll definitely have reason... and impact.

Talking to Comic Book Resources from the set of the show, Ventimiglia explained that this season's new characters will be there for a purpose, and will shake up the show:

I think there’s always a concern that when you bring in new people that you limit your time with the old people... I think that the producers have done a very good job this year of balancing that. I think they understood that when we were all separated in the second season, the fans weren’t too into that. When you bring in a new character, bring him in with a reason. Bring him in with a purpose. Don’t just pack it with a bunch of new faces that nobody knows.

Amongst those new faces? Peter Petrelli's father, Arthur:

I think every scene that we do, we’re discovering more than what we had just talked about. [Arthur’s] such a complicated character. He impacts everybody for his own need or want to be important and be the most powerful.

Does this mean that Petrelli Snr. is going to be the big bad of the third season? After seeing previously dealing with both Hiro's and Matt's Daddy Issues over the last couple of years, this doesn't make me too excited about the show's return on September 22nd.

On Set With Milo Ventimiglia, Part 1,

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<![CDATA[The Heroes You'll Never See]]>

Fans may have been so upset with the second season of NBC's Heroes that creator Tim Kring apologized to them, but if they'd known what the WGA writers' strike saved them from seeing in the season's abandoned second half, perhaps they would've been much more likely to thank him for not having to sit through even more endless time-traveling dystopic drama after all.

According to Joe Pokaski and Aron Coleite, two writers and producers on the show, the "lost" third volume to the show, "Villains" - which will now appear in a significantly reworked form as the show's official third season starting in September - would have followed up on a few dangling plot threads from the second volume, "Generations". Ahead of the DVD release of the second season, which will include storyboards and completed footage for the abandoned episodes, the two spilled the beans on what we all missed to comic site Comic Book Resources.

One of the major plot threads for what we will never see involved a difference in what we did see:

We were excited about where season 2 was going to end originally. Instead of catching the [power-stealing and ultimately lethal Shanti] virus - it would be unleashed onto Odessa Texas. Creating a Quarantined town and having our heroes overcome the adversity of failure.

A series where the main characters are quarantined in one town and powerless? How much fun would that be? Not as much fun as a show where time-traveling results in accidentally abandoning characters in now non-existent futures... No, wait:

Peter's trapped Caitlin in a future that doesn't exist anymore [as the result of his time-traveling]. It's pretty hard to get back from that. (We would've seen Peter try to get Caitlin back in the remainder of Season 2, but in Season 3 — he has a whole other slate of problems to deal with.)

Personally, I think the fact that the shortened second season saved us from having to deal with either Angsty Peter weeping about accidentally dumping his girlfriend in a parallel universe (or, for that matter, from ever having to see Faux-Irish Personality-less Caitlin again) is reason enough to forgive the strike for also forcing an early end to the first season of Pushing Daisies. But wasn't there anything that would've been good about the never-to-be seen back half of season two?

As far as a flashback episode of the company founders - it's already happened in an alternate universe. Episode 15 of season 2, "1977" was to do exactly that. Powers in the time of Disco. Angela and Arthur Petrelli. But now it's up for grabs. Fan-fictioners, start your engines.

Oh, come on. There's always time for a good flashback episode, no matter what season you're working on.

Behind The Eclipse Summer Spectacular, Part I, Part II [Comic Book Resources]

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<![CDATA[Peter Petrelli Channels Sylar In New Movie]]> Milo Ventimiglia is getting away from the "lost little boy" look of Peter on Heroes, and playing a nasty dude in Game, the new Gerard Butler-starring dystopian action movie. His character is a "sick fuck" named "Rick Rape," he says. He says Game takes place in a "futuristic society" where prisoners fight on a battlefield for other people who control the prisoners using video-game controllers. "There's a lot of action and a lot of death in this movie. Amazingly beautiful shots." [SuperheroHype]

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<![CDATA[Unanswered Questions for Tonight's Heroes Finale]]> Tonight's episode of Heroes will kinda-sorta cap off the season. But will it answer all of our nagging questions from this year? Maybe, maybe not. Here's a score card, so you can tick them off as they're answered. Or not.



Why did the company keep the deadliest virus in the universe on ice for 30 years? I know they're evil, but how dumb are they? Also, what exactly is that virus? Is it just another derivation of Mohinder's sister's blood, or something else?

How exactly did Sylar lose his powers, and how does he think Mohinder can help him? Was it just Hiro's samurai sword, or did Sylar get the Shanti virus and somehow not die? How on Earth did Sylar get from the bunker in the middle of the jungle to the roadside in the Mexico desert anyway?

Is Claire a robot or an alien after all? Who stole her damn car? More importantly, how exactly can she blow the whistle on the Company without confusing the heck out of everybody?

What exactly was Mohinder and Noah's plan to bring the Company down? Are they still carrying it out, or did Mohinder really switch sides?

Why did Angela Petrelli try to take the fall for the murder of George Takei and the others? Was it just to keep regular folks from knowing all about their mutant superpowers, or was there something else?

What did Adam get up to in the 400 years between the Kyoto stuff and the present day? Once Hiro was gone, why didn't he just go and conquer Japan after all?

What exactly were those pills the Company was giving Peter when they had him locked up? Did they actually negate Peter's powers? If so, then why does the Company need to work on a "vaccine" for superpowers? Why doesn't the Company just dose every mutant it comes across? If the pills weren't negating Peter's powers, what were they? Downers?

Whatever happened to those ipods that were supposed to be in Peter's shipping container?

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