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Howard Gordon, writer and producer: "The important thing is the characters and not wasting people's time"

2023-03-16T10:44:58.048Z


One of those responsible for television hits such as 'Homeland', '24' and 'The X Files' premieres the series 'Accused'


What would you do if you thought your child was a danger to society?

What if she found out that her daughter had been raped and she sees that the police do nothing to bring justice?

And if you mistrust the intentions of someone who cares for a loved one?

The episodes of

Accused

(premiering on March 15 on AXN at 10:50 p.m.) ask the viewer questions and show them the answer chosen by the protagonist.

But that is not revealed until the end.

Before, each chapter begins with the defendant before the judge, without the viewer knowing what has happened or why he is being judged.

The story, a different one in each episode, will always be told with

flashbacks

from the defendant's point of view.

The screenwriter and producer Howard Gordon (New York, 61 years old), responsible for some of the most emblematic titles of

recent television

thrillers such as

Homeland

or

24

and who has participated in series such as

The X Files

or

Buffy the Vampire Slayer

, is responsible for this production based on a British fiction of the same name released in 2010. Among the protagonists of the chapters of the American are actors such as Michael Chiklis, Whitney Cummings, Margo Martindale, Megan Boone and Billy Porter.

Gordon, who has lived in Madrid for several months, is learning Spanish and sneaks some Spanish words and phrases into his answers, found in the British series an attractive format, "simple and familiar" as well as challenging.

“The original series was made 13 years ago in the UK and the world is very different now.

We are in a moment of revolution in thought, identity, gender, capitalism, truth,

More information

The brain behind 'Homeland' and '24'

The anthology format, with standalone stories told in 45 minutes, allows

Accused to move from

drag queen

culture

in Boston to the story of a Navajo activist in New Mexico, and from episodes that are more dramatic or quasi-tragic in tone to ones that border on the absurd. comedy.

Compared to the more classic point of view of police or legal dramas focused on investigators or lawyers, this proposal, from the perspective of the accused, provides a different twist.

“Here there is no investigation, it is all about how one moment leads to another and so on until you cross a line that there is no turning back.

That was what interested me, the moments that make us human.

How, without being a criminal, a murderer or a gang member, just a normal person, how does someone get to be the defendant?

Michael Chiklis (right), in the first episode of 'Accused'.Robyn Cymbaly/Fox/Sony Pictures

The stories of the series pose dilemmas to its protagonists, who move through the different gray scales of morality.

“What I try to do is bring to the heart of every story the idea of ​​'if I were in the same situation, what would I do?'

That is the central question for each chapter”, says Gordon in Spanish.

“I like to spark a conversation and have people ask questions.

Not that they have the answers, but the questions, ”he continues, returning to English.

Accustomed to stories that take place over several seasons of many chapters (

24

had eight seasons and two subsequent returns;

Homeland

it also reached eight installments), telling a complete plot in the 45 minutes of a chapter has been a challenge for the scriptwriter.

"It's terrible," he laughs.

“But it's also easier because you're not held hostage to the same character and the same story.

But it's like making a movie every time.

The first six minutes are very important in this series because you have to tell the audience what the characters are like, get them interested in them and start the journey.”

“It's almost like writing a sonnet, you have 14 lines and a meter and you have to stick to that.

It is an exercise in restricting and distilling to become as efficient as possible”, he continues.

tell good stories

Given the results obtained by many of the titles he has worked on, Howard Gordon seems to have the key to coming up with a

successful

thriller .

“I actually think the important thing is to have a great character at the center.

You can only experience the action and suspense once you are attached to the character.

I think for Carrie Mathison [the lead in

Homeland,

played by Claire Danes] it was very important to know who she was as a human being before you cared if she saved the world or not or if she was bipolar.

The same with the characters in this series or with Jack Bauer [the protagonist of

24,

played by Kiefer Sutherland] or even David Duchovny on the

X-Files.

.

You have to love the characters, or else love to hate them.

They have to be interesting, three-dimensional people.

I work a lot on the characters, I know a lot more about them than what I then show.

Where are they from, where did they grow up, what are their relationships… Even if it doesn't go into the script later.

And another fundamental thing: don't waste people's time”, he completes about the essential ingredients of a good

thriller

.

“And also having the right actors, because if you give the role to the wrong person,

it's game over

.”

Michael Chiklis, star of the first episode of 'Accused'.Steve Wilkie/Fox/Sony Pictures

In the era of overabundance of series, Howard Gordon's lucky star does not go out.

Accused

premiered in the United States on the Fox network in January, and achieved the highest ratings for a fictional series debut on free-to-air or cable television in the last three years (excluding the launch of The Equalizer in 2021

after

the Super Bowl).

They are titles that sound like survivors in the current series scene, where platforms dominate production and conversation.

How has this new environment changed the work of Howard Gordon, who has worked in television for more than three decades?

"It has changed a lot.

When Netflix and tech companies like Apple and Amazon moved over to Hollywood, everything changed.

Since

streaming

it became the new way of watching television, our work has totally changed: the financial part, the type of stories that are told… But in the end, a good story is a good story.

And you have to tell a good story, that hasn't changed."

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Source: elparis

All news articles on 2023-03-16

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