➡ Click here: Once upon a time season 7 review
Retrieved November 2, 2017. Inspired reboot or different show altogether? Ela conseguiu chegar ao ponto certo que as cenas iniciais exigiam e inevitavelmente e nos vemos em situação similar com o episódio piloto.
Nimue also says that the difference is to protect her loved ones, which makes me more and more convinced that the reason she turns is to save them somehow, and would explain why she blames them for making her into the Dark One. During the episode, it was revealed that West was portraying an adult Henry Mills, while Fernandez portrayed his daughter, Lucy. Adelaide Kane's arc was way too short and was brushed under the rug a little too quickly. Retrieved November 15, 2017. TV by the Numbers. The actreas that plays Cinderella is a weak actress. She accuses Met, a former classmate-turned-food truck rival, of sabotage.
When the family refuses to give her a second chance, Zelena angrily burns Hansel. On July 22, it was confirmed that would return for the fourth episode in the seventh season. Retrieved May 8, 2018. There was a little glimmer in his eye when he said it, that might not have been intentional, but maybe they are getting bits and pieces of their old lives back.
Once Upon a Time season 7, episode 6 review: Regina 2.0? - Meanwhile, Facilier uses Naveen, who is actually not cursed, to get magic for a voodoo doll that he uses to kill Jack.
And to overcome it all, a young girl named Lucy Alison Fernandez has to convince a grown-up Henry Mills Andrew J. West that his true love, aka her mother, is actually Cinderella Dania Ramirez. Do you see this as more of a new chapter in the story? EDDY KITSIS: You can call it anything you want. HOROWITZ: If you look at the first six seasons as the first movie, this is the requel. When and how did the idea for Season 7 come about? KITSIS: We had a general idea of new curse, new town, which was the premise for the beginning, and we knew that we were going to have adult Henry. Last year, when we really started to realize that this was the reality, we sat down with the actors. We knew some were going to leave, at the end of the season, so creatively, we had to adjust for that, and we knew that some wanted to stay, so we had to creatively adjust for that. Did you ever consider ending the show with Season 6, or did coming up with this idea give you the inspiration to move forward with Season 7? We were so happy that the network gave us so much support. KITSIS: Last season, we ended it the way we would, if that were the end. We wanted to end our version of what we started six seasons ago, in our way. HOROWITZ: Coming from Lost, we always looked at it as, in success, this is a six-season plan. We have a new chapter in a new world. Around Season 4, we started to think that maybe this could be a reality and that we could do this. And then, when we got to Season 6, we thought about the different pieces of storytelling that we would need, to put together Season 7 and beyond. Every year feels like a new show, but this premise incorporates a requel. Nobody had done a show this crazy, with this many worlds and characters. In our mind, the riskiness of it is what makes it worth doing and trying. KITSIS: The riskiness is what made us want to continue. Just to lose characters and pretend like the show is moving forward felt like a stall to us. So, we wanted to end our vision and start a new one. What are you enjoying about flipping things this season, where Henry, who as a young boy was the one who kicked this whole journey off by wanting his mother to believe in magic and fairy tales, is now the one who needs convincing by his own child? How is grown-up Henry different from young Henry? Will we feel echoes of young Henry in him? We always said that Henry had the heart of the truest believer, but when we meet him in Seattle, he no longer believes. Getting his belief back is what the arc of the season is. What is life like, in Hyperion Heights? She is looking to move the residents out. What can you say about villains and adversaries, for at least the first portion of this season? Who will be causing the most mischief, or stirring things up the most? KITSIS: Where the first season of Once was the Snow White mythology, we are doing the Cinderella mythology. There will be a wicked stepsister and a very wicked stepmom. HOROWITZ: There are hopefully surprising places that they come from. Everyone wants to feel hopeful. She came in and blew us away. What we wanted to do was to tell a story that will hopefully be an epic love story, where we can capture the spirit of romance. We know that Once Upon A Time puts its own spin on fairy tales, so what can we expect from this Cinderella and her family? When your stepmother and stepsister have evil as a prefix, you can expect some strain. That said, there is hopefully some depth and some twists to the Cinderella story that will show you why the relationship is strained, why they treat her the way they do, and why she treats them the way she does. How much more challenging will it be for Lucy to make her plan work than it was for Henry? How difficult was it to find your Lucy? HOROWITZ: Casting is always a challenge, and casting a kid is very hard. Finding Jared was an amazing stroke of luck, to find a kid who could do that. And finding Alison, we are very optimistic. KITSIS: Alice is fun. HOROWITZ: Rose Reynolds, the actress playing Alice, has found a really interesting take on Alice. What led you to explore Hook as a cop and Regina as a bartender? HOROWITZ: The starting place was the decision that we wanted to be in a city and we wanted to do something that felt very different than Storybrooke. Once we made that decision, it became about finding the places to put these characters that would open up storytelling avenues and be reflective of who they are, both in their real selves and their new cursed identities. KITSIS: For us, Regina was always the mayor or the queen. And Killian as a cop gets explained in story. KITSIS: That was a lucky one. HOROWITZ: In the requel analogy, you want to see your favorites return, but you want to see them doing something new, and you have to find that balance where they still feel like the characters you love. Seeing Regina in a bar and in this new role has been a lot of fun to write, and seeing what Lana is doing with it has been great. Once Upon A Time airs on Friday nights on ABC.