Behind-the-scenes on the "Homeland" set

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  • Опубліковано 16 лют 2017
  • "Homeland" is now in its sixth season. The critically-acclaimed series tackles topical plot lines on national security and terrorism. This season, the drama is once again set in the United States after a couple of seasons abroad. Alex Wagner got a behind-the-scenes look at the espionage drama in New York City.
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 23

  • @abdiaziizserar5255
    @abdiaziizserar5255 4 роки тому +22

    Homeland is a great TV series, Quein carrie and saul are fantastic actors

  • @dr.debajyotibose2928
    @dr.debajyotibose2928 Рік тому +4

    It is a good well-paced series.

  • @dotlittler8993
    @dotlittler8993 6 років тому +3

    Just started the box set of Homeland. In the main we love it. Sometimes it’s a bit daft

  • @swatipendurkar4857
    @swatipendurkar4857 3 роки тому +4

    Why did it end !!!! .. I cannot tolerate any other show now... This is bad.. Come back HOMELAND, COME BACK :( :( :(

  • @fiorellacedres
    @fiorellacedres 6 років тому +5

    I love Claire and Mandy

  • @donjo3722
    @donjo3722 3 роки тому +4

    what happened to quinn makes me rethinking about continuing to watch next seasons 😔

    • @sdhc7606
      @sdhc7606 2 роки тому

      I stopped watching the series in season 5. What they did to Quinn in season 5 was too much to tolerate. I will never watch a single episode of that series. Garbage production by killing Quinn

  • @fiorellacedres
    @fiorellacedres 6 років тому +29

    I also wanted Quinn and Carrie, I was so disappointed when the producers killed him!!!!!

  • @E32DJ-ELB24
    @E32DJ-ELB24 11 місяців тому

    Homeland would be amazing to comeback.

  • @Erica-fk2wp
    @Erica-fk2wp 3 роки тому +1

    look at the expression tone rhythm of speaking mode you will realize why it usually takes whole life for actors actresses to creat one TV series because they fuse the fiction characters with their entire body and spirit already.

  • @thriversoffset
    @thriversoffset 5 років тому +29

    I loved the series until they killed quinn

  • @KRAKOA889
    @KRAKOA889 3 роки тому +2

    Here's why Homeland should do a season 9 without Claire Danes as Carrie. The spy thriller might be coming to an end, but it's more relevant now than ever.
    After eight years, dozens of wild twists and more than a few significant character exits, Homeland will be drawing to a close in 2019.
    Earlier this month, Claire Danes confirmed that she plans to put Carrie Mathieson to rest after 12 final episodes. So that's that... right?
    Except, it doesn't have to be, and, we'd argue, it shouldn't be. Homeland deserves a life after Carrie, and here's why.
    The show started out with a very specific premise, loosely adapted from the Israeli series Prisoners of War: Carrie, a dogged CIA agent with bipolar disorder, becomes involved in a relationship with US marine Nicholas Brody (Damian Lewis), a newly-freed prisoner of war who may have been brainwashed by Al-Qaeda.
    But, in a bold and risky move, Homeland blew up its original format (no pun intended) just a few episodes into its second season. It dispensed with the Brody character altogether a year later and has since evolved to become a mirror on our times, albeit one that's larger than life.
    Series boss Alex Gansa has suggested that a time jump in the upcoming season eight will help the show avoid any direct references or parallels to Trump. But since it dropped Brody, Homeland has told new stories by reflecting the geopolitical situation off screen: from a plot concerning allegations that Iran was 'cheating' on its nuclear deal to introducing a right-wing shock jock character in Brett O'Keefe (Jake Weber), the show post-2013 has been all about contemporary America and its relationship with the rest of the world.
    Though the buzz around the show has undoubtedly faded since the early days, it's actually become a more substantial and more interesting drama since it ditched some of the more familiar spy-thriller tropes and begun delving into the seriously murky world of government policy and international relations.
    So to bring Homeland to a close at a time when real-world politics is becoming increasingly unpredictable and volatile feels short-sighted. There's an opportunity now to tell gripping and complex stories about an America that's seriously divided, from the man on the street to the highest reaches of government.
    The problem, of course, is that Danes is done with playing Carrie. But is that really a deal-breaker?
    The Homeland of today looks and feels very little like the show that first hit our screens in 2011, with not just a radically altered premise but also an almost entirely different cast.
    Unquestionably, Danes is brilliant on Homeland, as is fellow series veteran Mandy Patinkin as her conflicted mentor Saul Berenson. But that doesn't mean the show couldn't go on without either or both of them.
    Losing Carrie and/or Saul would have a significant impact, but arguably no more than losing Brody, or later Rupert Friend as troubled CIA hitman Peter Quinn (So incensed were these angry fans, demanding that the show's creators explain themselves.).
    Losing those two key characters was a blow to Homeland, but a blow that the show withstood, changing and growing in the aftermath. The same would be true of any cast departure, even Carrie's.
    Homeland has reinvented itself before and it could do so again. But seeing as Gansa and his writing team have been plotting the show's conclusion since at least 2017, odds are that we won't get to see the show explore a new format without Danes at the forefront.
    And that's a pity. Because, if nothing else, this difficult period in America's history offers up opportunities for film and TV - and especially politically-minded shows like Homeland - to deliver challenging and provocative storytelling.
    Carrie is a maniac? NOT
    Because a part of her feels bad for the pain and torture he was put through. She recognizes the fact that he served his country dutifully until his capture, and that he really was subjected to inhumane treatment. He was subjected to it for years at a stretch. This is bound to leave even the strongest of men psychologically scarred for life. In Brody’s case he was broken and Abu Nazir took advantage of his psychological state and groomed him into a terrorist.
    Thankfully Brody did not blow up the suicide vest, and listened to his daughter, which highlights the fact that there is still some humanity left in him. It shows the audience that he’s not a cold-blooded killer but rather a misguided and emotionally damaged man who just needs to be brought back on the right path. Carrie sees this, and as a result feels sympathy for him.

  • @Cordelia4219
    @Cordelia4219 6 років тому +5

    Has anyone noticed the interviewer? While interviewing Claire Danes, her face is grim and unsmiling. While interviewing Mandy Patinkin she's full of smiles and laughter.

    • @dotlittler8993
      @dotlittler8993 6 років тому +2

      Cordelia Brown who knows she had some problem in her life

    • @trawlins396
      @trawlins396 4 роки тому +2

      Cause Mandy is hot.

    • @LittleZee3
      @LittleZee3 3 роки тому

      Well Claire was serious when speaking. Mandy was smiling. Guess it rubbed off on her

  • @KRAKOA889
    @KRAKOA889 3 роки тому +1

    Showtime needs to write and deliver Quinn Prequel Missions. Explore the character's background, further reveal Dar Adal's off the book hitmen. The house where Quinn had flashbacks to, in New York with the diner nearby. SHOWTIME--if you want to excite the fans with a jolt, NEW QUINN MATERIAL.
    The 3rd season did not correspond to the 1st and 2nd as it should be.
    Compared to most seasons it was weak, as the plot and plot issues that were overlooked or addressed briefly stood out in season 3. There was no "hunting" in Brody's scenes earlier in the season to make it look like he really was desired NOS.
    Where Roya Hammad and his terrorist partner / Spy X... They were?
    We never received an explanation for the events surrounding how Brody's car was moved and his involvement, only what we got was the "real" author of the bomb at the CIA in a hotel that we must believe to be a super leap that changed the script.
    For such an investment in storytelling around Brody's family over the past 3 seasons, for him to just disappear the way he did, it was a waste of time - to make Dana's story worse, it was shallow. And all those scenes about Mike and Brody's wife continually in love with each other, and just ending up in season three were useless - and Brody's son disappeared.
    What about Brody's marine friends who thought he was part of the conspiracy? And Quinn's underutilization throughout the season after being instrumental in the beginning of the second season's premiere.
    All positive points, they should have made the homeland a show of this 3rd season and address every possible plot!
    Claire Danes and Damian Lewis gave us, in Damian’s words, “two broken-winged birds sort of hobbling and circling around each other” in Carrie and Brody in such a compelling way that even though it really ended in tears, it was a GREAT RIDE as long as it lasted. And if you miss these two as much as we do, you may want to re-live the LOVE with Carrie and Brody: Was It Love? YES.
    Homeland had a sensible ending, closed all of Carrie's stories, while continuing the ongoing story of America's and Russia's rivalry. The series ends, but does not end, only better than that was seeing all these years incredible performances by Davis, Damian Lewis, Rupert Friend and Mandy Patinkin ...

  • @antonioabayte3473
    @antonioabayte3473 4 роки тому +1

    il piu' bello film che hanno fatto per la televisione internazionale. Bravi Dall'Italia con amore