Showing posts with label the wheel of television. Show all posts
Showing posts with label the wheel of television. Show all posts

Wednesday, 24 May 2023

WHEEL OF TIME Season 2 finally gets an airdate

The much-delayed second season of Amazon's Wheel of Time adaptation has finally got an airdate. The season will debut on 1 September this year.

The first season of The Wheel of Time debuted in late 2021 and was a successful launch for the streamer, who were keen to find their own big-budget fantasy epic to compete with the likes of Netflix's The Witcher and HBO's expanded Game of Thrones universe. The show attracted middling reviews and scorn from some fans for its large-scale alterations to the source material's story and characterisation.

Although production of the second season wrapped up last year, scheduling issues saw the season repeatedly delayed to make room for other Amazon launches, including the first season of The Rings of Power and the second season of Carnival Row. Amazon had hoped to use Wheel of Time as a test run of greenlighting multiple seasons of a show at once to shrink the gaps between them to just a year or so. Ironically, the wait for the second season of WoT will be close to two years by the time it finally launches, not great news for trying to hold onto casual viewers.

The second season draws on elements from the second and third novels in the fourteen-book series, The Great Hunt and The Dragon Reborn, and will introduce some fan-favourite characters from the novels, including Aiel warrior Aviendha (Ayoola Smart) and bookish Aes Sedai Verin (Meera Syal). The new season also sees some recasting, with Dónal Finn taking up the role of Mat Cauthon after original actor Barney Harris declined to return from the first year.

The third season of the show has already started production in the Czech Republic and other locations in Europe.

Saturday, 23 April 2022

WHEEL OF TIME casts Aviendha for Season 2

Amazon's Wheel of Time adaptation has cast the key role of Aviendha for Season 2.


The fan-favourite character debuts in the third novel in the series, The Dragon Reborn and plays a key role in most of the rest of the series. Aviendha is a Maiden of the Spear, a member of the only female warrior society among the Aiel, who dwell in the desolate lands to the east of the main continent.

Actress Ayoola Smart is best-known for playing Audrey in Killing Eve, and has also appeared in Death in Paradise, Death in Paradise and Smother.

Season 2 of The Wheel of Time is in the last stages of shooting and is expected to debut on Amazon Prime in late 2022 or early 2023.

Wednesday, 13 April 2022

Bayle Domon cast for WHEEL OF TIME Season 2

Welsh actor Julian Lewis Jones (Invictus, The Eagle, Justice League) has been cast in the fan-favourite role of Bayle Domon in the second season of The Wheel of Time.

The character of Bayle Domon actually debuts in the first Wheel of Time novel (which formed the basis of the first season, which aired last year) but his debut was delayed in the TV show until he had more substantive material. In the second novel, The Great Hunt, Domon commands a ship called the Spray which he takes to the west coast of the continent to start a new trade run only to run into unexpected complications, which eventually lead him to cross paths with the main characters. Domon becomes an occasionally recurring character in the books until the very end of the fourteen-volume series. He is noted for his thick Illianer accent and his (oft reluctant) bravery.

Season 2 only has four confirmed new castmembers: Donal Finn as Mat Cauthon (replacing Barney Harris, who left during the filming of the first season), Ceara Coveney as Elayne Trakand, Arnas Fedaravicius as Masema Dagar and Gregg Chillingirian as Ingtar Shinowa. They will be joined by Natasha O'Keeffe and Meera Syal in unconfirmed roles.

Season 2 of The Wheel of Time, which is wrapping up production now, is expected to air either in very late 2022 or early 2023.

Sunday, 6 February 2022

WHEEL OF TIME renewed for a third season at Amazon...and maybe a fourth

The Wheel of Time has been renewed for a third season at Amazon Prime Video, with a pickup for a fourth season also potentially on the way.


The news, somewhat obliquely, came in a Deadline article discussing the return of Criminal Minds. As cast-watchers should be aware, Wheel of Time star Daniel Henney was a regular on both Criminal Minds and one of its spin-offs for several years. During the article, Deadline confirms that Wheel of Time has been picked up for "two more seasons."

It's unclear whether Deadline was including the already-filming Season 2, which wraps in the next few weeks, in their count. If not, Wheel of Time will make it to fourth season, halfway through its planned eight-season run. If not, the show will definitely get a third year.

This is a bit of a no-brainer. Despite a mixed critical reception, especially its divisive season finale, Wheel of Time became Amazon's biggest-ever TV premiere when it launched in November, outperforming the likes of The Boys, Carnival Row, The Grand Tour and Invincible. Greenlighting a third season well ahead of a time will be essential to keep the gap between the second and third seasons to a minimum, and greenlighting a fourth season would be advantageous in allowing the production team to plan out future episodes and storylines, as well as creating a schedule that works with their much in-demand lead actor, Rosamund Pike.

Amazon have not yet confirmed the news, but Deadline (along with Variety and the Hollywood Reporter) is usually very on the ball with this kind of news.

Season 2 of The Wheel of Time is expected to air late this year or early next.

Saturday, 18 December 2021

WHEEL OF TIME become Amazon's most successful television series premiere to date

The Wheel of Time has become the most successful original series in the history of Prime Video.

The news, which had been circulating behind the scenes for a while, was let out via social media. Amazon had previously committed to merely saying that the show was their most successful Prime Original of 2021, outperforming shows like Invincible and Clarkson's Farm. However, the updated information paints an even broader picture of success, confirming that the show has outdone the launch and premieres of series including The Man in the High Castle, The Expanse, The Boys, Carnival Row, The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel and The Grand Tour.

The news will be a welcome one to Amazon Prime Video and Sony Television, who took something of a gamble on greenlighting the show with a budget of over $10 million per episode and filming on multiple locations across Europe, based on a series of fifteen novels that have sold around 90 million copies and have passionate fans around the world.

It also bodes well for Amazon's commitment to genre programming. Although The Expanse is wrapping up after three seasons on the streamer, Carnival Row is due to launch its second season next year and The Boys its third. More germanely, Amazon is also planning to launch its Lord of the Rings prequel series, about the Second Age of Middle-earth, on 2 September 2022. With a budget conservatively estimated at three times that of Wheel of Time (and possibly a lot more), there's a huge amount riding on that project. Wheel of Time getting more people watching Amazon Prime's video channel can only be a good thing for that project.

The Wheel of Time has already been renewed for a second season, which is now more than halfway through shooting in the Czech Republic, although contrary to some reports it has not yet been renewed for a third. With this news, that now seems inevitable. The final episode of the first season will drop this coming Friday.

Tuesday, 7 December 2021

WHEEL OF TIME adds new Borderlands castmembers for Season 2

Amazon's Wheel of Time TV series has added a number of new actors to its roster for the end of Season 1 and then into Season 2, which is currently shooting.


First up, Amazon have confirmed the long-rumoured casting of Thomas Chaanhing as Lord Agelmar Jagad. Chaanhing is a Danish actor who has appeared in projects such as Pros & Cons, Equinox and Marco Polo. His character is a fan-favourite from the books. Lord Agelmar commands the frontier fortress of Fal Dara in the Borderland kingdom of Shienar. Fal Dara guards the entrance to Tarwin's Gap, the main invasion route into the northern Westlands from the Great Blight, and as such it is part of a martial society where men and women are dedicated to the fight against the Dark One. Agelmar is a key ally of Moiraine and the other Aes Sedai. He is expected to appear at the end of Season 1 and the start of Season 2.


Sandra Yi Sencindiver is an American-Danish-Korean actress, best known for appearing in The Bridge and the video game Assassin's Creed: Valhalla. She is playing Lady Amalisa Jagad, Lord Agelmar's sister. She is expected to appear in the last two episodes of Season 1 and possibly the start of Season 2.


British actor Gregg Chilingirian (A Discovery of Witches, Da Vinci's Demons, Being Human) has been cast as Lord Ingtar Shinowa, a Shienaran nobleman and soldier, and one of Agelmar's most trusted lieutenants. He is expected to debut in the first episode of The Wheel of Time's second season. Some reports indicate that Amar Chadha-Patel had been cast in the role of Ingtar in the final two episodes of Season 1, but when he picked up a higher-profile role in the Disney+ series Willow, his character was renamed as Lord Yakota instead, though this is unconfirmed.


Guy Roberts is a noted Shakespearean actor who founded the Prague Shakespeare Company, an English-language theatre in the Czech Republic. Most of his work has been on stage, but he has also provided voice acting for Japanese anime series, and has appeared in the TV series Borgia, Legends and Hanna. In Wheel of Time, he is playing Uno Nomesta, a grizzled Shienaran warrior with a reputation for honesty, steadfastness and constant swearing. He is under Ingtar's command and is one of his best soldiers.


Possibly the best-known of the new intake is Arnas Fedaravicius, a Lithuanian actor who rose to success in Thicker Than Water before being cast as Sihtric in The Last Kingdom, where he became a fan-favourite actor. He recently wrapped filming on the fifth and final season of The Last Kingdom, which is expected to air on Netflix in 2022. It is as yet unconfirmed if he will be returning for the forthcoming TV movie, Seven Kings Must Die. Fedaravicius is playing Masema Dagar, a Shienaran soldier under Ingtar's command and a comrade of Uno's. Masema is noted for his suspicion of outsiders and his commitment to the Light. Book readers will know that Masema is a minor character who increases in importance in later books. Both Roberts and Fedaravicius are expected to debut early in Season 2.

The Wheel of Time is currently shooting its second season in the Czech Republic, and is expected to wrap after Christmas. The series is currently airing its first season, with the sixth of eight episodes, The Flame of Tar Valon, due to air this Friday on Amazon Prime Video.

Friday, 26 November 2021

The Wheel of Time: Season 1, Episodes 1-4

The peaceful tranquillity of the remote rural region known as the Two Rivers is abruptly shattered by the arrival of an Aes Sedai, a wielder of the One Power, named Moiraine. According to the Aes Sedai, the Dragon - the most powerful channeller who has ever lived - has been Reborn, and their return may herald the approach of the Last Battle against the Shadow. And the Dragon Reborn is one of four young people in the community. When Shadowspawn - Trollocs and Fades - attack the village and leave it in ruins, it appears that Moiraine was right. But three of the four candidates are men, and men who can channel the One Power are doomed to go insane and cause great death and destruction in the process...


It's taken almost thirty-two years since the first book was published, but Robert Jordan's Wheel of Time fantasy sequence has finally made it to the screen. There have been multiple aborted attempts involving strange paid-for adverts, Japanese animation studios and even a planned NBC show, but it's fallen to Sony and Amazon to bring the project to fruition. The lengthy production process has not helped, with filming repeatedly interrupted and delayed by the COVID pandemic. But it's here and the first four episodes - half of the first season - are now available.

The Wheel of Time is the latest big fantasy series to hit the screen but in some respects the most challenging. The novels consist of fourteen fairly massive tomes, with well over two thousand named characters (several hundred of which are semi-important to the narrative), set in a richly-detailed world with almost four thousand years of intricately-detailed history, accompanied by maps, a dictionary for a fictional language and a lengthy concordance of fictional names, terms and concepts. The books borrow heavily from various different religious and philosophical ideals, many of them not familiar to a western audience. There's an entire magic system with deeply-thought-out, complex rules. The sheer amount of information that needs to be transmitted to a newcomer is daunting.

The first episode, Leavetaking, makes the probably wise decision to not even try to frontload all this background in favour of focusing on the five key characters of Rand, Egwene, Mat, Nynaeve and Perrin, along with the newcomer Moiraine and her bodyguard, Lan. The episode spends 40 minutes or so in character and world-building, through scenes like Egwene going through a coming of age ceremony, Moiraine quizzing Nynaeve on her childhood, Rand struggling with what he wants from life, Mat trying to look after his sisters when his parents are wastrels and Perrin facing marital problems.

There are some pretty big changes from the novel here in an attempt to bring out internal character monologues and development into a visual shorthand. Giving Mat lame parents and turning him into a slightly darker character is controversial, but you can see where they are coming from. Giving Perrin a wife and having her die to provide him with character motivation is an egregious example of the fridging trope, and is easily the biggest mistake the show makes in its early going, especially because it leaves Perrin so shell-shocked and suffering from PTSD that the audience is unable to get a hand on the "real" Perrin's character.

The episode culminates in the Trolloc attack on Winternight, which is where Amazon's big bucks come into play. The Shadowspawn are realised mostly through superb prosthetic work (CGI long-shots of them in the distance are more variable) and the fight against them is mostly rendered in-camera with practical effects amidst all the swirling CGI. Seeing Moiraine cut loose with the One Power against the enemy is genuinely impressive, using fire, lightning, wind and earth in combination to lay waste to the Trolloc ranks.

The negatives are grating and, in some cases, inexplicable, but given the volume of information that has to be given to the audience and the amount of setup work that needs to be done whilst telling an interesting story, Wheel of Time's debut episode does work, if inelegantly.

Things improve in the second episode, Shadow's Waiting, where our heroes flee across the countryside to the ruined city of Shadar Logoth, having an awkward encounter with the Children of the Light along the way. Book fans may bemoan the loss of Baerlon and the delayed meeting with Min, but in its place we have more character development and exposition of the backstory, with Moiraine's horseback monologue about the fall of Manetheren being a well-acted highlight of the episode. The Shadar Logoth sequence is well-realised, with a genuinely creepy atmosphere, even if the "Breaking of the Fellowship" moment feels even more contrived than it is in the book.

The third episode, A Place of Safety starts to see the show firing on all cylinders. Rand and Mat's Nightmare Road Trip from The Eye of the World is partially condensed here (exemplified by them visiting the "Four Kings Inn" in Breen's Spring, whereas in the novel Four Kings and Breen's Spring are separate villages) but to great effect, with Izuka Hoyle's excellent performance as innkeeper Dana giving the episode an interesting spin. In the Wheel of Time novels, there is often a lack of convincing motivation given to those who follow the Shadow, but Dana provides very plausible reasons why a normal, sane person might do so. The episode also introduces Thom Merrilin, played with convincing gravitas by The Last Kingdom's Alexandre Willaume. TV Thom is younger and apparently a bit rougher around the edges than the book incarnation, but it's a great performance, hinting at the book character's colourful past. This episode is also where Zoe Robins steps into her own as Nynaeve, as she, Lan and Moiraine begin their three-way sparring.

The fourth episode, The Dragon Reborn, manages the not-inconsiderable feat of taking the largest liberties with the book, with Nynaeve, Lan and Moiraine encountering the Aes Sedai party taking the captive Logain to Tar Valon, whilst also being the truest to the book lore. How men and women channel, how shielding and linking work, what the Aes Sedai Ajahs are and how the Warder/Aes Sedai bond operates are all key parts of the episode, but rather than delivered through bald exposition, these concepts are exemplified through on-screen drama. The dramatically varying behaviour of different Aes Sedai is also shown. Subplots follow Nynaeve and Perrin with the Tuatha'an, a low-key storyline in the books here improved by the fabulous casting of Irish national treasure Maria Doyle Kennedy as Ila and promising up-and-comer Daryl McCormack as Aram, possibly the single most supremely punchable character in the books but here played with sympathy and charisma. The Tuatha'an's slightly iffy Irish traveller vibe from the books is also improved here in two sequences where Ila explains the Way of the Leaf in terms of its philosophical interaction with the ideology of the Wheel of Time. In fact, the show overall improves over the books in showing how the 100% knowledge of reincarnation as a fact of life impacts on everyday existence, with the philosophical belief in death and rebirth rendering traditional religion unnecessary in a way that Robert Jordan never really convinced with in the novels.

The Dragon Reborn culminates in the show's finest set-piece so far, with a large battle and inventive channelling of the One Power, including depicting ideas such as linking, shielding and gentling, which are hard concepts to get across without pages of expository text.

This steadily improving level of quality is quite impressive, and the show benefits from a superb musical score by Lorne Balfe (surprisingly low-key in the mix as it is), mostly effective CGI (some wonky Trolloc long-shots aside) and a battery of excellent performances by the mostly young and inexperienced cast, anchored by reliable stalwarts Rosamund Pike, Michael McElhatton and Daniel Henney.

Overall, the first half of the first season of The Wheel of Time (****) is a qualified success. A somewhat rough opening smooths out and the show grows in confidence and enjoyment as it carries on. Yes, in a perfect universe we'd have 30-episode seasons with each episode costing $40 million to tell the story of the novels in full, but given the time constraints the show has to work with, it's so far made reasonable choices (with that one glaring error of Perrin's backstory). Some clunky lines and uneven levels of exposition are balanced out by fine performances, great music and some fabulous location filming in the Czech Republic and Slovenia. So far, off to a promising start.


The Wheel of Time: Season 1
  1. Leavetaking ***
  2. Shadow's Waiting ***½
  3. A Place of Safety ****
  4. The Dragon Reborn ****½
Forthcoming episodes: Blood Calls Blood (3 December), The Flame of Tar Valon (10 December), The Dark Along the Ways (17 December), The Eye of the World (24 December).

Wednesday, 24 November 2021

Amazon developing a MASS EFFECT television series

Amazon Prime Television are developing a television series based on the popular science fiction video game series, Mass Effect.


The news came as Amazon celebrated the launch of their new Wheel of Time television series. The first three episodes, which dropped last Friday, have exceeded Amazon's launch expectations and become Amazon's highest-rated debut series of 2021, and one of their biggest of all time, in the same bracket as anti-superhero drama The Boys and the highly acclaimed comedy series The Marvellous Mrs. Maisel. A second season is already more than halfway through shooting and reports indicate that a third season has been at least "amberlit," with contingency planning underway before Amazon decides to pull the trigger on that order.

Mass Effect is a popular video game series consisting of a trilogy and a stand-alone sequel game, all developed by BioWare (also known for their Baldur's Gate and Dragon Age franchises). The trilogy - Mass Effect (2007), Mass Effect 2 (2010) and Mass Effect 3 (2012) - was released on PC, Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3. A "Legendary Edition" of the three games was released this year on PlayStation 4, Xbox One and PC, to some success and acclaim. Microsoft published the original game whilst the two sequels and subsequent re-releases were handled by Electronic Arts. Mass Effect: Andromeda (2017), which was supposed to start a new storyline set in a completely different galaxy, was not successful and EA and BioWare have since pivoted to make Mass Effect 5, which reportedly will lean harder on the original trilogy's characters and factions.

Set in the late 22nd Century, Mass Effect is set several decades after first contact between Earth and a community of alien civilisations who control most of the Milky Way. This community is represented by the Citadel Council, a sort-of United Nations in space who are based on the Citadel, a colossal city-space station which acts as a trade and diplomatic hub between the various species. Despite their newcomer status on the galactic scene, humans are petitioning hard for greater prestige and power on the Council, to the annoyance of alien races who've been waiting centuries for promotion to the higher ranks. Key to Earth's hopes is Shepard, a skilled human agent who has become the first of their species to join the Spectres, an elite special forces division which reports directly to the Council. Shepard's investigation of an attack by the cybernetic Geth leads them to uncover evidence of a massive threat to all life in the galaxy, and their attempts to convince other races of the threat before it arrives.

The trilogy was highly praised on release for its writing, characterisation and action, as well as the slowly-growing sense of dread that built until the third game turned fully apocalyptic. The trilogy was also acclaimed for the accumulating weight of meaty decisions the player could make, which could leave individual characters dead or alive, and even entire civilisations destroyed, hostile or allied. However, the ending of the third game was considered underwhelming on original release, resulting in enough of a fuss that the ending was revised in later patches. Despite this, the trilogy retained enough goodwill to make last year's "Legendary Edition" a reasonable success. To date, the franchise has sold almost 20 million copies across all formats.

Rumours of a movie or TV version have circulated for years, with different options on the table. It sounds like Amazon's current plan is the most serious yet. It is unclear if Amazon would directly adapt the trilogy to the screen or develop a new story in the same universe, but the trilogy's storytelling and character focus would make a direct transition more viable than it is for many other games. Amazon would have to make some interesting casting choices, including which gender of actor for Commander Shepard to pick (players could choose their gender in the trilogy, with different vocal performances from Mark Meer and Jennifer Hale).

It's worth noting that Witcher, Enola Holmes and Superman actor Henry Cavill was recently pictured with potential script pages for a Mass Effect project. A noted fan of the video game trilogy, it was assumed he had gotten a voiceover part for Mass Effect 5, but it might be he's also been put in mind for a role on the Amazon project, his other commitments allowing.

Amazon are also developing a Fallout TV series with the Westworld creative team. Meanwhile, Electronic Arts and BioWare are continuing to develop Mass Effect 5 for an estimated 2023-25 release window.

More news on this project if and when it develops,

Wednesday, 17 November 2021

Additional WHEEL OF TIME episode titles revealed

Amazon Prime have (possibly inadvertently) revealed the title of the seventh and penultimate episode of the first season of The Wheel of Time. The episode will be called The Dark Along the Ways.

Update: in another inadvertent slip (spotted by WotSeries), the season finale has now been confirmed to be called The Eye of the World, the same title as the first book in the series.

The current schedule for Season 1 is as follows:

  1. Leavetakings (19 November), written by Rafe Judkins, directed by Uta Briesewitz
  2. Shadow's Waiting (19 November), written by Amanda Kate Shuman, directed by Uta Briesewitz
  3. A Place of Safety (19 November), written by the Clarkson Twins, directed by Wayne Yip
  4. The Dragon Reborn (26 November), written by Dave Hill, directed by Wayne Yip
  5. Blood Calls Blood (3 December), written by Celine Song, directed by Salli Richardson Whitfield
  6. The Flame of Tar Valon (10 December), written by Justine Juel Gillmer, directed by Salli Richardson Whitfield
  7. The Dark Along the Ways (17 December), directed by Ciaran Donnelly
  8. The Eye of the World (24 December), directed by Ciaran Donnelly

Season 1 of the show draws almost entirely on the first novel in the series, The Eye of the World, for source material. Some characters from prequel novel New Spring also appear, and some characters from The Great Hunt appear early (such as Liandrin, Alanna and Siuan Sanche), whilst other characters from Book 1 have been delayed to Season 2 (most notably Elayne Trakand).

Some fans have been confused by the show's use of episode titles, which draw on book chapter titles. However, rather than using chapter titles from just the first novel in chronological order, the production is using chapters from all over the place, making some fans think the show is adapting way more material at a faster rate than it really is. For example, Leavetakings is a chapter title from Book 1 (Chapter 10), Book 2 (Chapter 9), Book 4 (Chapter 16) and Book 5 (Chapter 48), whilst Blood Calls Blood is Chapter 7 of Book 2, and A Taste of Solitude, the first episode of Season 2, comes form Chapter 18 of Book 6!

RUMOUR: WHEEL OF TIME casts GAME OF THRONES actor for Lord Barthanes in Season 2

The reliable Redanian Intelligence has provided a new casting scoop for Season 2 of Amazon's Wheel of Time.

They've scooped three new actors for Season 2. First up is British actor Will Tudor, best-known for playing Odi on Humans, Sebastian Verlac/Jonathan Morgenstern on Shadowhunters and Olyvar, right-hand-man to Littlefinger, on Game of Thrones for three seasons. According to the Intelligence, he will be playing Lord Barthanes Damodred, an important, influential and somewhat sinister nobleman. In the second Wheel of Time novel, Barthanes is something of a foil for Rand al'Thor and Mat Cauthon when their quest to recover two missing artefacts leads them to the capital city of the troubled nation of Cairhien. Barthanes is plotting against King Galldrian Riatin, with their two houses poised for civil war. Although the novels do not make much of the connection, Barthanes is a distant cousin of Moiraine (Rosamund Pike), a connection that may or may not appear in the TV show.

The second new player is Haruka Kuroda, a UK-based Japanese actor. Kuroda has recently appeared in Killing Eve, Claude and EastEnders, as well as providing voicework for the well-received video games Subnautica: Below Zero and Total War: Shogun 2. Kuroda will play the aunt of Min Farshaw (Kae Alexander), a friend and ally of Moiraine. In the novels, Min has three aunts who raised her in a mining village in the Mountains of Mist and taught her self-reliance and toughness. It is unclear if Kuroda is playing one of the three aunts or an amalgamation of the three. It's also unclear if she will appear in flashbacks or the present-day storyline.

The final actor cast is Natasha J. Murley, a relative newcomer with mostly theatre credits to her name. Murley's role has not been disclosed, though the potential roles from the second novel of The Wheel of Time, The Great Hunt (which is believed to provide at least most of the source material for the second season) are numerous. It'd be particularly interesting to see if Murley will play one of the Seanchan, as so far there has been no sighting of Seanchan castmembers for the second season, leading to some speculation if they are being held back for later, or may have even been cut altogether (which does some extremely unlikely).

Amazon's Wheel of Time TV series debuts this Friday. Season 2 is roughly halfway through filming, to debut in 2022.

Wednesday, 27 October 2021

Amazon release new WHEEL OF TIME trailer

With only three (and a bit) weeks until transmission, Amazon has released a new trailer for its adaptation of Robert Jordan's Wheel of Time novels.


The new trailer opens with Moiraine (Rosamund Pike) swearing the Three Oaths that all Aes Sedai sisters have to take upon completing their trailer: to speak no word that is not true, to not make a weapon which may be used by one person to kill another, and to never use the One Power as a weapon (the caveat that Aes Sedai may use the One Power in defence of their own lives or others' is omitted by the trailer, presumably for dramatic purposes). We see Moiraine in the White Tower, possibly a flashback to taking the Oaths.

We then see Moiraine, flanked by Alanna Mosvani (Priyanka Bose) and Liandrin Guirale (Kate Fleetwood), using the One Power to apparently imprison or question the captive false Dragon, Logain Ablar (Álvaro Morte). A Warder, Steppin (Peter Franzén), then reveals that in the Old Tongue, "Aes Sedai" means "Servants of All," meaning that the Aes Sedai serve the world. Moiraine then stands atop the White Tower, considering her mission, and tells her Warder, Lan (Daniel Henney) they must go to the Two Rivers, where the Old Blood still runs strong.

In the Two Rivers we see the Women's Circle walking through mountainous foothills; Egwene (Madeleine Madden) enduring her coming of age ceremony whilst Nynaeve (Zoë Robins) watches on; Egwene in a ruined building in Shadar Logoth; and Rand (Josha Stradowski) and Perrin (Marcus Rutherford) enjoying a drink with Mat (Barney Harris) outside the Winespring Inn.

We then see a Myrddraal or Fade arriving in the village; Lan leading the party into the ruins of Shadar Logoth via massive crack in the walls; Egwene and Rand in the ruined village; Perrin in his forge; Nynaeve dramatically flicking her braid in face of an unknown danger; Mat unsheathing his sword; Rand practising his bow in the courtyard of Fal Dara castle; Moiraine telling the Two Rivers youngsters that one of "the five"* of them will save the world; various scenes of travelling and looking dramatically over impressive vistas; scenes of the attack on the Two Rivers; Tam fighting the Trolloc book fans know as Narg; a sweeping camera shot of Fal Dara Keep and what might be the mountainous pass of Tarwin's Gap beyond (apparently massively compressed from the hundred-mile-long valley from the book); our heroes arriving in Fal Dara and meeting Lord Agelmar Jagad (whose actor has so far not been identified).

We also see Lord Captain Eamon Valda (Abdul Salis) drinking wine whilst apparently burning an Aes Sedai at the stake and taking her Great Serpent Ring as a symbol of victory; Lan and Moiraine partaking in a ceremony of apparent grief; Rand telling Egwene he can't lose her and Egwene promising he won't; three Whitecloak soldiers taking Egwene and Perrin captive; the gang gathering at a Waygate**; a Fade battling an unknown soldier; more scenes of combat during the Trolloc attack; Moiraine weaving Fire and Air to deliver a horrendous firestorm against attacking Trollocs; Logain apparently escaping his prison and (in an earlier scene) using the One Power to stop a Ghealdanin soldier from striking him (in a nice touch, the dagger has the three star sigil of Ghealdan on the hilt); Alanna channelling a massive amount of the Power to fend off an attack; and apparently a Trolloc attack on Fal Dara, with Shienaran soldiers defending the walls.

In an exciting scene, we get a brief flashback to the Battle of the Shining Walls, known as the Blood Snows, with Aiel fighting Westland soldiers at the feet of Dragonmount; Logain marching through a Ghealdanin town; Rand drawing his bow; and Moiraine intoning one of her famous sayings, the "Wheel weaves as Wheel wills." The trailer ends with Perrin asking if they will ever go home and Egwene saying no.

Epic music - apparently the final score by Lorne Balfe - then plays over the logo.

The first three episodes of the first season of The Wheel of Time drop on Amazon Prime on Friday 19 November, with five more episodes to follow at weekly intervals. Season 2 of The Wheel of Time is already in production.


* Interestingly this is a change from the version of the same scene which recently aired at MCM London, where Moiraine says "four."

** Alas, our apparent first glimpse of Loial (Hammed Animashaun) is denied by him being behind the other characters with his back turned.

Saturday, 9 October 2021

Amazon releases WHEEL OF TIME clip, song and new casting information

Amazon has released a number of new clips and some information related to their upcoming Wheel of Time television series.


First up was a clip from the first episode, Leavetaking. This is a dramatisation of the scene where Moiraine (Rosamund Pike) and Lan (Daniel Henney) arrive at the Winespring Inn in the village of Emond's Field. In the novel, this scene takes place off-page and is told to Rand al'Thor (Josha Stradowski) later on. For the more time-pressed TV series, Rand has simply been included in the scene to view it firsthand. Another change is that Moiraine's identity as an Aes Sedai is made clear from the start, whilst in the book she tries to hide her status until becomes clear later on.


Secondly was an excerpt from the musical score. "Al'Naito" is composed by Lorne Balfe with a title that translates from the Old Tongue (a fictional language in the Wheel of Time setting) roughly as "For the Flame." The song has lyrics that also appear to be in the Old Tongue.

Rounding things off is a number of new casting announcements for Season 2 of the show, currently shooting in the Czech Republic.


British newcomer Ceara Coveney will play the role of Elayne Trakand, the Daughter-Heir to the Kingdom of Andor and a novice Aes Sedai. As the first heir to a throne to be trained as Aes Sedai in almost fifteen centuries, Elayne is a potentially powerful player in the politics of the Aes Sedai and the Westlands themselves.


Natasha O'Keeffe is a British actress best-known for playing Lizzie Shelby in Peaky Blinders, Emilia Ricoletti in Sherlock and Abbey in Misfits. What role she is playing in Wheel of Time is unknown, save that it is "one of the most important" roles in the series. Based on her looks, it is possible she is playing Lanfear, one of the most powerful Forsaken, the servants of the Dark One who have been imprisoned alongside that entity for almost three and a half thousand years and released as its prison weakens. It is also possible she might be playing Elaida, an antagonistic Aes Sedai, or possibly Suroth, an important political and military commander among the Seanchan. Lanfear seems to be the most popular guess at present.


Rounding off the new arrivals is veteran British writer, comedian, actress and singer Meera Syal. A hugely-respected actress with a formidable body of work behind her (including comedy series Goodness Gracious Me and The Kumars at No. 42 and a huge array of British dramas, including Doctor Who and Broadchurch), Syal's role is also said to be crucial to the Wheel of Time mythos. The smart money would be on the role of Verin Mathwin, an Aes Sedai of the Brown Ajah, who becomes a key ally of the adventurers from the Two Rivers.

The Wheel of Time debuts on Amazon Prime on 19 November this year.

Tuesday, 21 September 2021

WHEEL OF TIME recasts lead actor for second season

Amazon's Wheel of Time television adaptation has recast one of the major roles for its second season. Barney Harris has left the role of Mat Cauthon and has been replaced by Irish actor Dónal Finn.

Harris had completed shooting of the eight-episode first season, which shot over an extended period of twenty months due to repeated delays during the COVID pandemic. Shooting began on Season 2 earlier this year after only a short break.

The reasons for the recasting are unknown at this time, although other shows have been adversely affected by COVID delays to shooting causing scheduling conflicts with other projects that otherwise would not have taken place.

Although unusual, the situation is not unprecedented: Aml Ameen shot the entire first season of Sense8 for Netflix, but had a falling-out with showrunner Lana Wachowski at the table-read for the second season and was replaced at short notice for Season 2 by Toby Onwumere. Game of Thrones recast the role of Daario Naharis from Ed Skrein, who played him in Season 3, to Michiel Huisman who played him in Seasons 4-6. The role of Ser Gregor Clegane, the Mountain, was also repeatedly recast with three actors ultimately playing the role.

Like Harris, Finn is a newcomer who has only been active in the business for a couple of years, having graduated from the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Arts in 2018. He had a small role in the second episode of The Witcher as Nettly (the peasant who hires Geralt to deal with a devil), and has also appeared in the stage play Albion, the film How to Build a Girl, the short film Love Have I Known and the TV shows SAS: Rogue Heroes and Cursed.

The first season of The Wheel of Time will debut on Amazon Prime on 19 November. Season 2 is expected to air in late 2022.

Thursday, 2 September 2021

HIS DARK MATERIALS composer Lorne Balfe to score THE WHEEL OF TIME

Wheel of Time showrunner Rafe Judkins has confirmed that Lorne Balfe will score The Wheel of Time. Balfe is best known for his excellent work on His Dark Materials, particularly the impressive main title theme:



Balfe's other credits include the Mission: Impossible franchise, Black Widow, The Tomorrow War, Pennyworth, Bad Boys For Life, Pacific Rim: Uprising, The Crown, and various video games including the Assassin's Creed and Skylanders franchises.

None of Balfe's work was used in today's trailer. However, a snipped of his score was used on the previous logo reveal teaser.

There's a good interview here with Balfe where he discusses his work on His Dark Materials.

Amazon reveals first WHEEL OF TIME trailer

Amazon have - at last! - revealed the first trailer for the Wheel of Time television series.



The trailer opens with Nynaeve al'Meara (Zoë Robins), the village Wisdom of Emond's Field, telling  Egwene al'Vere (Madeleine Madden) to "be strong" before pushing her into a river. This scene is not from the books, but may be linked to the idea that Nynaeve is considering training Egwene as her apprentice, although Egwene, as the Mayor's daughter, is also considering other options for her future.


The peaceful village of Emond's Field, the chief settlement of the Two Rivers.


Blacksmith Perrin Aybara (Marcus Rutherford), Mat Cauthon (Barney Harris) and farmer's son Rand al'Thor (Josha Stradowski) enjoying themselves in the Winespring Inn.


Egwene covered in the a pool of colours. This isn't from the books, but may be some kind of dream sequence.


The city of Tar Valon, the stronghold of the Aes Sedai. This image is looking south, past the White Tower towards the forbidding mountain of Dragonmount. Tar Valon and the White Tower have been significantly redesigned from the books, and either Tar Valon is a lot smaller or the White Tower is stupendously huger than it is in the novels.


Moiraine Damodred (Academy Award nominee and Golden Globe winner Rosamund Pike), an Aes Sedai of the Blue Ajah, letting people know she's here to glare disapprovingly a lot and kick arse.


The Hall of the Tower, the governing body of the Aes Sedai, convenes. Front and centre are Liandrin Guirale of the Red Ajah (Kate Fleetwood), Moiraine and Alanna Mosvani of the Green Ajah (Priyanka Bose). The Keeper of the Chronicles, Leane Sharif (Jennifer Cheon Garcia) can be seen at right.


The Amyrlin Sea of the Aes Sedai, Siuan Sanche (Academy Award nominee Sophie Okonedo), the first among equals and effective leader of the Aes Sedai sisterhood.


Moiraine channels the One Power, the energy that drives the Wheel of Time, to destroy attacking enemies.


Liandrin commands a detachment of sisters of the Red Ajah. The Red sisters dedicate themselves to tracking down and gentling (neutralising) any man who can channel the One Power, for men who try to channel are doomed to go insane and die horribly, wreaking great destruction in the process.


Leane keeps order in the Hall of the Tower.


Alanna channels the One Power to stop an arrow attack on the Aes Sedai sisters sent to apprehend the false Dragon and male channeller, Logain Ablar.


Another aerial shot of Tar Valon. In the books, the island of Tar Valon is eight miles long, so if that's the case here, the White Tower is really freaking huge. In the books it is a relatively modest 600 feet high.


Rand and Mat gaze on the ruined city of Shadar Logoth in the distance.


Mat finds an abandoned dagger in Shadar Logoth.


Our heroes flee Shadar Logoth as a strange shadow consumes the city.


Perrin runs into some wolves in the forest.


Rand and Egwene share a moment. In a marked shift from the books, where Rand and Egwene assume they have been promised to one another in marriage by their parents but never actually have a relationship, they appear to be much more intimate here.


Tam al'Thor (Game of Thrones' Michael McElhatton), Rand's honourable father, gives his son some parting words of advice.


Villagers in Emond's Field celebrating the festival of Winternight.


The Aes Sedai count the cost of their victory over Logain.


In a repeat of the aerial wheel motif, the Hall of the Tower as seen from above.


Al'Lan Mandragoran (Daniel Henney) - you can call him Lan - Moiraine's Warder and close ally.


A Myrddraal leads a pack of Trollocs on a raid.


The ragtag followers of the false Dragon mount an attack.


Logain Ablar (Álvaro Morte), a man who can channel the One Power. He has proclaimed himself the Dragon Reborn, the chosen hero of destiny who will stand against the Dark One. The Aes Sedai are disinclined to believe him.


Moiraine arrives in the White Tower. This is another marked change from the books, where Moiraine only visits the Tower on-page in the prequel novel, New Spring.


Lan and Moiraine fight off three Trollocs.


The companions assemble at a Waygate, a mysterious portal leading into a realm known as the Ways. They are joined on their adventure here by the Ogier Loial (Hammed Animashaun), whom I suspect is actually supposed to be in this shot but his CGI wasn't ready.


A Myrddraal, also known as an Eyeless or Fade, a servant of the Dark One who commands his Trolloc hordes in battle. Myrddraal are famed for their blade skill and their ability to make the unwary feel fear with a single "look."


Moiraine unleashes the One Power.

The Wheel of Time's eight-episode first season arrives on 19 November this year with the first three episodes, then one episode will air weekly from 26 November. Season 2 is already in production.