Wednesday, November 12, 2008

Good Times with Mo, Mojo and Grace Lee ( Jack Bauer is Back in 24: Redemption) : November 12, 2008 blog



Notes from Mo's Diary

I'm so jetlagged that I could barely keep my eyes open, and yet I can't sleep, perhaps because of all the excitement in preparation for my brother's wedding here in the States.

I tried accessing the Magic 899 website and I was successful listening to Mojo Jojo and Grace Lee for a brief three minutes before the reception started getting choppy and completely died. I didn't have the heart to try again, since I didn't have the patience to listen to a choppy interview with Mike Defensor.

Instead I've been staring at this TV Guide cover I snapped up the moment I landed in the airport.

Sweet Jesus in Heaven! Jack Bauer is back with a vengeance! And I don't have to wait till January 2009 to get my 24 fix. There's a prequel set in Africa! Rejoice! Rejoice!

According to the November 17 issue of TV Guide, '24: Redemption', an exotic two-hour prequel movie bridging Seasons 6 and 7 will premiere on November 23.

Here's a slice of the TV Guide interview of Kiefer Sutherland:

"With the prequel it’s like we’re saying, ‘Hey, remember us?’ You want to make sure the interest is still there. So we thought we’d offer a little taste – an appetizer – before the big feast to come.”

But Redemption is 24 with a difference. After years in the Los Angeles sunshine, this one’s shot on location in South Africa, where Jack Bauer has arrived after a globe-trotting journey of self-discovery.

Over a long conversation recently at the actor’s favorite Thai place in an L.A. strip mall, Kiefer tells TV Guide he’s so deeply invested in his character, he keeps a handwritten journal of Jack’s thoughts. “Before each season, I write a character book to get my head in sync with Jack’s and create a backstory,” he says. “This year, I wrote that Jack would have to disappear from the Western world and go back where he started in Season 1 – dealing with the Eastern bloc. He knows people there and could hide out before working his way from Kazakhstan, through the Middle East, across India and then down into Africa to meet his old friend Carl [Robert Carlyle]. That’s where the prequel – and trouble – begins.”

Carlyle is an actor best known for The Full Monty and a good friend of Sutherland. Says Kiefer, “I was so eager for Bobby to play this role, I called him and said, ‘I’ll give you whatever you want. I’ll wash your car for a year. I’ll babysit the kids.’ He said, ‘Actually, I’ll do it if you don’t babysit the kids.’”

Three years have passed since the end of Season 6 and it’s Inauguration Day for the first female commander in chief, Allison Taylor (Cherry Jones). The drama unfolding in Africa is about to become priority one the minute Madame President is sworn in. “In plays, the stakes are often high with one or two characters,” says Jones, a two-time Tony Award winner. “But on 24, every single moment in every scene with every character is a high-stakes moment. It’s very cool.”

Regarding the new setting, Sutherland says he felt a sense of renewal the minute he arrived in Cape Town. “We could have constructed a set to look like Africa, but what you can’t do is fake the faces or the soul or the spirit of the place,” he says. “I hadn’t felt so engaged with the world around me in a very long time, and I think my love for the place shows up on screen.”

During shooting, the crew was frequently mobbed, particularly because actor Hakeem Kae-Kazim, who plays an African rebel leader, is a major star on the continent. But it was the African child actors Sutherland appreciated the most. “This was the first time these kids had done anything even close to this and that was so inspiring,” he says.

“Back home, you can’t see kids going 10 minutes without looking at their iPods or game devices. Here the kids were blissfully running around between takes playing with a rock and a stick. I wanted to go home and throw away all my kids’ computers.”

While there are no signs of series regulars like Mary Lynn Rajskub (Chloe O’Brian) or James Morrison (Bill Buchanan), the prequel does have Powers Boothe returning as outgoing president Noah Daniels and Peter MacNicol as White House chief of staff Tom Lennox. “We wanted to bridge the gap between Days 6 and 7,” says co-executive producer Jon Cassar, “and it gives us a rare chance to show the transfer of power from one administration one season to the next.”

In Season 7, the new day is set in Washington, DC, and while CTU is no more, there’s plenty of firepower at the FBI. Beloved Tony Almeida (Carlos Bernard) is somehow coming back from the presumed-dead. As co-executive producer Howard Gordon says, “Not only is Tony not dead, he’s doing something really bad. It’s going to be a Heart of Darkness moment on the show.”

But that’s for 2009. For now we’ll have to satisfy our 24 withdrawal with a two-hour fix of sweaty gunplay in the make-believe African nation of Sangala. As Kiefer tells TV Guide, “It’s so great to be back in Jack Bauer’s shoes. When the s—t hits the fan, nobody reacts faster or stronger than he does, and I think there’s a lesson in that for all of us.”

I'll be in Manila by the time the prequel airs in Manila, but no worries, I'll be watching it as soon as it's feasible to download it in the Net.Bravo for technology!

Thinking about the show finally lulls me to sleep. Perfect! I don't need any fancy sleeping pill.Thinking of Jack Bauer is the perfect antidote to jetlag. .

Zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz..........

(Postscipt : I was wondering how the Twister would react to this news fresh from TV Guide. Jack Bauer fans all over the world must be jumping up and down now that the prequel is so close to its world screening.

Notes from Mo's Diary is fictional and does not reflect Mo Twister's thoughts, but comes from the imagination and point of view of this blogger. Goodtimes!)

Good Times with Mo,Mojo and Grace Lee (One for Bond) : November 6, show



Notes from Mo's Diary

Boy, did I get a lot of calls for putting my bets on De la Hoya versus our very own Manny Paquiao. What can I do? I've always been a De la Hoya fan, and I've always believed in him. Paquiao is just a newbie in this game, I mean in this weight category, and I don't really care if he's our national hero. No wonder we don't have any medals in the Olympics. Boxing goes beyond national borders and we should not be too onion skinned especially if the topic relates to sports. Any athlete worth his medals knows that he's only as good as his last fight.

Speaking of last fights, I've watched the new Beverly Hills 90210, and boy oh boy, everyone in this show looks smoking hot. I really enjoyed this show in the 1980's, back in the day when I lived in Bulacan and we had no cable, and there were five television stations. This new show looks so good, and the topics are so controversial. I won't say too much. Try to catch it, or download it at the Internet.

I've mentioned the new Bond movie, and I loved Casino Royale. I was skeptical at first with Quantum of Solace and I've said repeatedly that I'm a Jason Bourne and Jack Bauer fan because they can wear simple jeans and t-shirt and still kick all the bad asses of the world. Bond tries to look dapper in his tux, and I hate that. I can't imagine an agent looking so well dressed the whole time.

And so I watched Quantum with trepidation, and Sweet Jesus, this movie is a revelation. For one, I see Bond in a quite disheveled blue t-shirt and dusty white jeans, and the only way he was able to wear a tuxedo was when he stole one from a security guy.His clothes are dapper, but it's more of an afterthought, not his fashin raison d'etre. For the first time, Bond's clothes are utilitarian and serves a purpose.

The fight scenes are just chillingly awesome, with fist fights in highly unusual places like the elevator or in a bell tower. It's so believable that Bond even used a book, an ax, just anything to overthrow an opponent.

This is also the first of the 22 Bond movies where the plot flows organically from the last installment, and Quantum of Solace is a far stronger picture for this plot continuity.

What made me sit up this time also is that this is the most human Bond I've encountered in a long time. Bond used women like Kleenex and I found that quite dehumanizing, and totally disrespectful of women.This is the first time in Bond history that he doesn't bed a Bond girl. The smoking hot Camille Montes (Olga Kurylenko - the next superstar, I reckon. Solid acting as a Bolivian secret agent despite being Ukrainian)got a kiss at the end of the movie, though. Now that I think about it, the kiss was an afterthought, like his clothes.

Well,that quick kiss was appropriate because he was still grieving for Vesper Lynd and and her death so enraged Bond that his thirst for revenge and duty got mixed up so dangerously as he hunts down the shadowy group that blackmailed Lynd to betray him.

It was an altogether fun movie to watch, and not something to miss.

Oops, time has flown by. I still have to buy a nice Barong Tagalog for my brother's wedding in the States next week. Now, where do I buy this? Time to call Mojo Jojo and Grace Lee and ask for fashion pointers. Goodtimes!

(Postscript: Many of the topics were discussed in this blog, specifically the De la Hoya vs.Paquiao fight; the new Beverly Hills 90210 show and Mo's views on Jason Bourne/Jack Bauer vs. James Bond. By the way, the Twister will be gone for a week as he attends his brother's wedding in the US.

Notes from Mo's Diary is purely fictional and does not represent Mo's real thoughts and points of view, but comes from the imagination of this blogger.

This blogger would also like to apologize for the delay in putting out this piece. I was in Boracay last week, and it was unfortunate that when I was there, there was a typhoon in Aklan and I had a hard time getting a radio signal to hear the show. I'm still trying to catch up, and listening at this great website to listen to the past GoodTimes audio recordings. Hopefully I can catch up in time:)